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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Hans-Wolfgang Loidl , Phil Trinder , Greg MichaelsonPublisher: Intellect Imprint: Intellect Books Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.560kg ISBN: 9781841500249ISBN 10: 1841500240 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 01 December 2000 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements i Preface iii I PARALLEL SYSTEMS AND PROGRAMMING 1 1 Bypassing of Channels in Eden 2 Ulrike Klusike, Ricardo Peña and Clara Segura 1.1 Introduction 2 1.2 Eden and Bypassing 3 1.3 CoreEden and Annotated CoreEden 4 1.4 Bypassing Analysis 5 1.5 The Bypassing Protocol 6 1.6 Communication Costs and Conclusions 10 2 From GrandSim to Paradise 11 Félix Hernández, Ricardo Peña and Fernando Rubio 2.1 Introduction 11 2.2 GrandSim 12 2.3 Eden 12 2.4 Paradise 14 2.5 Current State of the Implementation 19 2.6 Related Work, Future Work and Conclusion 19 3 BSP-based Cost Analysis of Skeletal Programs 20 Yashushi Hayashi and Murray Cole 3.1 Introduction 20 3.2 Background and Previous Work 21 3.3 A BSP Cost Algebra 22 3.4 A VEC-BSP Implementation Strategy 23 3.5 A Cost Translation Framework 27 3.6 Example and Discussion 27 3.7 Summary and Future Work 27 4 High Level BSP Programming: BSML and BSλ 29 4.1 Introduction 29 4.2 Explicit Processes + Flat Parallelism = Direct Mode 29 4.3 BSML 30 4.4 The BSMLlib Experiment 31 4.5 Timings for BSMLlib 33 4.6 Conclusions and Future Work 38 II TYPES 39 5 Deep Type Inference for Mobile Functions 40 Stephen Gilmore 5.1 Introduction 40 5.2 Compiling to Java Byte Code 41 5.3 Understanding the Static Semantics 46 5.4 Using Deep Types to Detect Unchecked Updates 47 5.5 Related Work 48 6 Generalizing Techniques for Type Debugging 49 Bruce J. McAdam 6.1 Introduction 49 6.2 Graphs 49 6.3 Basic Analysis of Graphs 51 6.4 Bernstein and Stark's Assumption Environments 53 6.5 Wand's Source of Type Errors 55 6.6 Duggan's Correct Type Explanations 56 6.7 Conclusions 57 7 Explaining Type Errors by Finding the Source of a Type Conflict 58 Jun Yang 7.1 Introduction 58 7.2 Unification of Assumption Environments (μAE) 60 7.3 Incremental Error Inference 61 7.4 Conclusions 64 7.5 Acknowledgements 66 8 How to Combine the Benefits of Strict and Soft Typing 67 Manfred Widera and Christoph Beierle 8.1 Introduction 67 8.2 The Use of Complete Type Checking 68 8.3 The Definition of Complete Subtyping 70 8.4 Conclusion and Future Work 75 III ARCHITECTURES AND IMPLEMENTATION 77 9 Interfacing Java with Haskell 78 Mark Green and Ali E. Abdallah 9.1 Introduction 78 9.2 Possible Approaches 79 9.3 Java-Haskell Interface Implementation 80 9.4 Examples of Use 83 9.5 Conclusion 86 10 An Abstract Machine for Memory Management 88 10.1 Introduction 88 10.2 Abstract Machines 89 10.3 Garbage Collection 91 10.4 Further Work 95 11 The MT Architecture and Allocation Algorithm 97 Marco T. Morazán and Douglas R. Troeger 11.1 The MT System 97 11.2 Expected Advantages of MT 99 11.3 Experiment I: List of Fibonacci Numbers Using References to Objects 100 11.4 Experiment II: Simple Lists in MT 102 11.5 Experiment III: A List of Simple Lists 103 11.6 Summarising Remarks 104 12 ZG-machine: a Space-Efficient G-machine 105 Gyun Woo and Taisook Han 12.1 Introduction 105 12.2 Tag-forwarding 106 12.3 Experiments 107 12.4 Summary and Related Work 112 IV APPLICATIONS 114 13 A Functional Design Framework for Genetic Algorithms 115 Fethi A. Rabhi, Guy Lapalme and Albert Y. Zomaya 13.1 Introduction 115 13.2 Genetic Algorithms 116 13.3 The Single-row Routing (SRR) Problem 119 13.4 Solving the SRR Problem with the GA Framework 121 13.5 Conclusion and Future Work 123 14 An Industrial use of FP: A Tool for Generating Test Scripts from Sys- tem Specifications 125 Paul Baker, Clive Jervis and David J. King 14.1 Introduction 125 14.2 Motivation for Using Formal Methods 126 14.3 Formal Specification with Message Sequence Charts 126 14.4 Generating Test Scripts from MSCs 127 14.5 Implementation of ptk 129 14.6 How could Functional Languages be Improved to Better Meet the Requirements of Industry 131 14.7 Conclusions 132 V THEORY 133 15 List Homomorphisms with Accumulation and Indexing 134 Walter Dosch and Bernd Wiedemann 15.1 Introduction 134 15.2 Data Parallel List Programming 135 15.3 List Homomorphisms With Accumulation 137 15.4 Conclusion and Related Work 141 16 Reuse by Program Transformation 143 Ralf Lämmel 16.1 Introduction 143 16.2 Motivation by Examples 144 16.3 Transformation Operators 147 16.4 Concluding Remarks 151 17 An Abstract Machine for Parallel Lazy Evaluation 153 Clem Baker-Finch 17.1 Introduction 153 17.2 Sequential Lazy Abstract Machines 154 17.3 Fully Speculative Evaluation 155 17.4 Parallelism with par and seq 158 17.5 Modelling Limited Resources 159 17.6 Conclusion 160 Bibliography 162ReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |