‹Programming› 2026
Mon 16 - Fri 20 March 2026 Munich, Germany

The International Conference on the Art, Science, and Engineering of Programming is a new conference focused on programming topics including the experience of programming. We have named it ‹Programming› for short.

‹Programming› seeks for papers that advance knowledge of programming on any relevant topic, including programming practice and experience.

To present at ‹Programming› 2025, papers must be submitted to the ‹Programming› journal (see details of the timeline). In particular, this edition presents papers from the following issues:

Dates
Plenary

This program is tentative and subject to change.

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Wed 18 Mar

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

10:00 - 10:30
Coffee BreakCatering at Foyer
10:00
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

10:30 - 12:00
Programming system implementationResearch Papers at Lecture Hall
Chair(s): Tom Beckmann Hasso Plattner Institute
10:30
45m
Talk
Chorex: Restartable, Language-Integrated Choreographies
Research Papers
Ashton Wiersdorf University of Utah, Ben Greenman University of Utah
11:15
45m
Talk
JoinActors: A Modular Library for Actors with Join Patterns
Research Papers
Ayman Hussein Technical University of Denmark, Philipp Haller KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Ioannis Karras DTU Compute - Technical University of Denmark, Hernan Melgratti University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Alceste Scalas Technical University of Denmark, Emilio Tuosto Gran Sasso Science Institute, L'Aquila, Italy
12:00 - 13:30
LunchCatering at Foyer
12:00
90m
Lunch
Lunch
Catering

13:30 - 15:00
Type systemsResearch Papers at Lecture Hall
Chair(s): Ben Greenman University of Utah, USA
13:30
45m
Talk
Filling the Gaps of Polarity
Research Papers
Bohdan Liesnikov Delft University of Technology, David Binder University of Kent, UK, Tim Süberkrüb University of Tübingen
14:15
45m
Talk
A Type System for Data Privacy Compliance in Active Object Languages
Research Papers
Chinmayi Prabhu Baramashetru University of Oslo, Paola Giannini University of Eastern Piedmont, Silvia Lizeth Tapia Tarifa University of Oslo, Norway, Olaf Owe University of Oslo
15:00 - 15:30
Coffee BreakCatering at Foyer
15:00
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

15:30 - 17:00
Programming education, awards, and anniversaryResearch Papers at Lecture Hall
Chair(s): Shigeru Chiba The University of Tokyo
15:30
45m
Talk
Evaluating LLMs in the Context of a Functional Programming Course: A Comprehensive Study
Research Papers
Yihan Zhang McGill University, Brigitte Pientka McGill University, Xujie Si University of Toronto
16:15
45m
Social Event
Awards and 10th Anniversary
Research Papers

Thu 19 Mar

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

10:00 - 10:30
Coffee BreakCatering at Foyer
10:00
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

10:30 - 12:00
Programming toolsResearch Papers at Lecture Hall
Chair(s): Gordana Rakić University of Novi Sad
10:30
45m
Talk
Generating Inputs for Grammar Mining using Dynamic Symbolic Execution
Research Papers
Andreas Pointner University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, Hagenberg, Austria, Josef Pichler University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, Herbert Prähofer Johannes Kepler University Linz
11:15
45m
Talk
Hybrid Structured Editing: Structures for Tools, Text for Users
Research Papers
Tom Beckmann Hasso Plattner Institute, Christoph Thiede Hasso Plattner Institute, University of Potsdam, Germany, Jens Lincke Hasso Plattner Institute; University of Potsdam, Robert Hirschfeld Hasso Plattner Institute; University of Potsdam
12:00 - 13:30
LunchCatering at Foyer
12:00
90m
Lunch
Lunch
Catering

13:30 - 15:00
Gradual typingResearch Papers at Lecture Hall
13:30
45m
Talk
If-T: A Benchmark for Type Narrowing
Research Papers
Hanwen Guo University of Utah, Ben Greenman University of Utah
14:15
45m
Talk
Efficient Selection of Type Annotations for Performance Improvement in Gradual Typing
Research Papers
Senxi Li The University of Tokyo, Feng Dai The University of Tokyo, Tetsuro Yamazaki University of Tokyo, Shigeru Chiba The University of Tokyo
15:00 - 15:30
Coffee BreakCatering at Foyer
15:00
30m
Coffee break
Break
Catering

15:30 - 17:00
Virtual machinesResearch Papers at Lecture Hall
Chair(s): Stefan Marr Johannes Kepler University Linz
15:30
45m
Talk
BlueScript: A Disaggregated Virtual Machine for Microcontrollers
Research Papers
Fumika Mochizuki University of Tokyo, Tetsuro Yamazaki University of Tokyo, Shigeru Chiba The University of Tokyo
16:15
45m
Talk
Pitfalls in VM Implementation on CHERI: Lessons from Porting CRuby
Research Papers
Hanhaotian Liu The University of Tokyo, Tetsuro Yamazaki University of Tokyo, Tomoharu Ugawa University of Tokyo

Unscheduled Events

Not scheduled
Keynote
Keynote 2
Research Papers

Not scheduled
Keynote
Keynote 1
Research Papers

Call for Papers

Scope

The Art, Science, and Engineering of Programming accepts papers that advance knowledge of programming. Almost anything about programming is in scope, but in each case there should be a clear relevance to the act and experience of programming. Additionally, papers must be written in a scholarly form. Scholarly works are those that describe ideas in the context of other ideas that are already known, so to contribute to the systematic and long-standing chaining of knowledge. Papers that fail to properly contextualize the work will not be considered.

We accept descriptions of work under different perspectives:

  • Art: knowledge and technical skills acquired through practice and personal experiences. Examples include libraries, frameworks, languages, APIs, programming models and styles, programming pearls, and essays about programming.

  • Science (Theoretical): knowledge and technical skills acquired through mathematical formalisms. Examples include formal programming models and proofs.

  • Science (Empirical): knowledge and technical skills acquired through experiments and systematic observations. Examples include user studies and programming-related data mining.

  • Engineering: knowledge and technical skills acquired through designing and building large systems and through calculated application of principles in building those systems. Examples include measurements of artifacts’ properties, development processes and tools, and quality assurance methods.

Independent of the type of work, the journal accepts submissions covering several areas of expertise, including but not limited to:

  • General-purpose programming
  • Distributed systems programming
  • Parallel and multi-core programming
  • Graphics and GPU programming
  • Security programming
  • User interface programming
  • Database programming
  • Visual and live programming
  • Data mining and machine learning programming, and for programming
  • Interpreters, virtual machines, and compilers
  • Modularity and separation of concerns
  • Model-based development
  • Metaprogramming and reflection
  • Testing and debugging
  • Program verification
  • Programming education
  • Programming environments
  • Social coding

Upon submission, authors are requested to state what type of paper they are submitting and what areas of expertise are covered by the paper. These two classifications, combined, are used to select reviewers and to apply suitable assessment criteria for the papers. They are not used beyond that purpose. Misclassification by the authors may lead to negative assessments from reviewers.

Paper Selection

The following criteria are used when evaluating submitted papers:

  • Novelty and Importance: The paper presents new insights or results, and contributes significantly to the advancement, analysis, or synthesis of knowledge in the field.
  • Scholarship and Clarity: The paper places its ideas and results appropriately and clearly within the context established by previous research in the field.

More specific criteria for assessing papers depends on the type of the paper:

  • Papers submitted as “The Art” should include a very solid contextualization of the work, and, when applicable, they should include the artifacts themselves.
  • Papers submitted as “Science” should describe the methods or formalisms in detail, as well as any data and scripts used to analyze it.
  • Papers submitted as “Engineering” should present the methods in detail, unveil results that are clearly better than some accepted baseline, and include the artifacts used to reach the conclusions.

Artifacts are recommended, but not required, for the initial submission. Depending on the papers, reviewers may take the existence of artifacts as a positive signal about the work. Also depending on the papers, artifacts may be required as a condition for publication.

Reviewing and Selection Process

There are two rounds of review. The first round assesses the papers according to the quality criteria stated above, and results in the selection of a subset of submissions that are either accepted as-is or are deemed potentially acceptable. All other papers are rejected. Authors of potentially acceptable papers are requested to improve specific aspects of the research and the paper. Authors are given a specified period of time to perform the revisions and re-submit the paper. During the second and final reviewing round, the same reviewers assess how well the revision requests have been addressed by the authors, and whether the final paper maintains or improves the level of contribution of the original submission. Revisions that significantly lessen the contribution of the work or that fail to adequately address the reviewers’ original concerns will result in the paper’s rejection.

Papers rejected in either the first or second phases may be resubmitted one more time to the journal. The resubmission will be treated as a new submission, and the paper may be assigned to new reviewers. After a second rejection, subsequent submissions of the same paper will be desk-rejected.

Submission

Use the the online submission system.

Typesetting

Submissions must use the LaTeX template of the journal. Please download the template package; a manual is included.

Language and Page Limits

Papers must be written in English using high standards of writing. Papers that show poor mastery of the English language will be rejected without review.

The main part of the paper should not exceed 22 pages (in the provided style), but there is no limit for bibliography and appendices. The page limit for the main part of the paper is in place in order to keep the paper on focus and to avoid overloading the reviewers. Authors are encouraged to move important details to appendices, which may be consulted by the reviewers. In some cases, if authors feel that the main part requires substantially more pages, they should explain the reasons why in the additional comments field of the submission form; examples of these cases may include papers with substantial source code listings, and essays. Papers whose length is incommensurate with their contribution will be rejected.

The submission is required to contain an ACM subject classification.

Abstract

Each submission must be accompanied by a plain-language abstract of up to 500 words that presents the key points in the paper in a manner understandable by experienced practitioners and researchers in nearby disciplines. The abstract should avoid mathematical symbols whenever possible, and it must address the following:

  • Context: What is the broad context of the work? What is the importance of the general research area?
  • Inquiry: What problem or question does the paper address? How has this problem or question been addressed by others (if at all)?
  • Approach: What was done that unveiled new knowledge?
  • Knowledge: What new facts were uncovered? If the research was not results oriented, what new capabilities are enabled by the work?
  • Grounding: What argument, feasibility proof, artifacts, or results and evaluation support this work?
  • Importance: Why does this work matter?

NOTE: The absence of an abstract conforming to this specification is grounds for the rejection of the paper without review.

Attribution, Prior Papers, and Concurrent Submissions

Submitted papers must present original work made by the authors, must not overlap significantly with the authors’ previously published work, and must not be under review on another journal or conference.

Single-Blind Review

Currently, review uses a traditional process where author names are visible to reviewers. Submissions do not need to be anonymized to hide author names.