OOPSLA

OOPSLA (Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages & Applications) is an annual ACM research conference. OOPSLA mainly takes place in the United States, while the sister conference of OOPSLA, ECOOP, is typically held in Europe. It is operated by the Special Interest Group for Programming Languages (SIGPLAN) group of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

OOPSLA
AbbreviationOOPSLA
DisciplineObject-oriented programming
Publication details
PublisherACM
History1986–present
Frequencyannual

OOPSLA has been instrumental in helping object-oriented programming develop into a mainstream programming paradigm. It has also helped incubate a number of related topics, including design patterns, refactoring, aspect-oriented programming, model-driven engineering, agile software development, and domain specific languages.

The first OOPSLA conference was held in Portland, Oregon in 1986. As of 2010, OOPSLA became a part of the SPLASH conference.[1] SPLASH stands for Systems, Programming, Languages, and Applications: Software for Humanity.

Locations and organizers

YearLocationConference ChairProgram Chair
2023 Cascais, Portugal Vasco Vasconcelos
2022 Auckland, New Zealand Alex Potanin
2021 Chicago, Illinois, USA Hridesh Rajan
2020 Virtual Hridesh Rajan
2019 Athens, Greece Yannis Smaragdakis Eelco Visser
2018 Boston, Massachusetts, USA Jan Vitek Manu Sridharan
2017 Vancouver, Canada Gail Murphy Jonathan Aldrich
2016 Amsterdam, Netherlands Eelco Visser Yannis Smaragdakis
2015 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Jonathan Aldrich Patrick Eugster
2014 Portland, Oregon, USA Andrew Black Todd Millstein
2013 Indianapolis, Indiana, USA Antony Hosking, Patrick Eugster Cristina V. Lopes
2012 Tucson, Arizona, USA Gary T. Leavens Matt Dwyer
2011 Portland, Oregon, USA Cristina V. Lopes Kathleen S. Fisher
2010 Reno, Nevada, USA William R. Cook Martin Rinard
2009 Orlando, Florida, USA Shail Arora Gary T. Leavens
2008 Nashville, Tennessee, USA Gail E. Harris Gregor Kiczales
2007 Montreal, Quebec, Canada Richard P. Gabriel David Bacon
2006 Portland, Oregon, USA Peri Tarr William R. Cook
2005 San Diego, California, USA Ralph Johnson Richard P. Gabriel
2004 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada John Vlissides Doug Schmidt
2003 Anaheim, California, USA Ron Crocker Guy L. Steele, Jr.
2002 Seattle, Washington, USA Mamdouh Ibrahim Satoshi Matsuoka
2001 Tampa Bay, Florida, USA Linda Northrop John Vlissides
2000 Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA Mary Beth Rosson Doug Lea
1999 Denver, Colorado, USA Brent Hailpern Linda Northrop
1998 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Bjorn Freeman-Benson Craig Chambers
1997 Atlanta, Georgia, USA Mary Loomis Toby Bloom
1996 San Jose, California, USA Lougie Anderson James Coplien
1995 Austin, Texas, USA Rebecca J. Wirfs-Brock Mary Loomis
1994 Portland, Oregon, USA Jeff McKenna J. Eliot B. Moss
1993 Washington, D.C., USA Timlynn Babitsky and Jim Salmons Ralph Johnson
1992 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada John Pugh Rebecca J. Wirfs-Brock
1991 Phoenix, Arizona, USA John Richards Alan Snyder
1990 Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (co-located with ECOOP) David Thomas and Pierre Cointe Akinori Yonezawa
1989 New Orleans, Louisiana, USA George Bosworth Kent Beck
1988 San Diego, California, USA Alan Otis and Larry Tesler Kurt Shmucker
1987 Orlando, Florida, USA Adele Goldberg and Chet Wisinski Jerry L. Archibald
1986 Portland, Oregon, USA Daniel G. Bobrow and Alan Purdy Daniel Ingalls

References

  1. ".doc document at SPLASH website". Archived from the original on 2018-01-09. Retrieved 2018-12-02.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.