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This book presents the refereed proceedings of the International
Workshop on Parallel Symbolic Languages and Systems, PSLS '95, held
in Beaune, France, in October 1995.
The 21 full papers included in the book were carefully selected for
presentation at the meeting and thoroughly revised afterwards.
Parallel symbolic computing has gained in importance for
high-performance computing; in recent years, many applications have
been implemented using C, C++, and their parallel extensions. This
volume is organized in sections on evaluation strategies,
programming tools, irregular data structures and applications,
systems, and distributed models and systems.
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Parallel Symbolic Computing: Languages, Systems, and Applications - US/Japan Workshop, Cambridge, MA, USA, October 14-17, 1992. Proceedings (Paperback, 1993 ed.)
Robert H. Jr. Halstead, Takayasu Ito
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R1,698
Discovery Miles 16 980
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Parallel and distributed computing are becoming increasingly
important as cost-effective ways to achieve high computational
performance. Symbolic computations are notable for their use of
irregular data structures and hence parallel symbolic computing has
its own distinctive set of technical challenges. The papers in this
book are based on presentations made at a workshop at MIT in
October 1992. They present results in a wide range of areas
including: speculative computation, scheduling techniques, program
development tools and environments, programming languages and
systems, models of concurrency and distribution, parallel computer
architecture, and symbolic applications.
This volume presents the proceedings of a workshop at which major
Parallel Lisp activities in the US and Japan were explained. Work
covered includes Multilisp and Mul-T at MIT, Qlisp at Stanford,
Lucid and Parcel at Illinois, PaiLisp at Tohoku University,
Multiprocessor Lisp on TOP-1 at IBM Tokyo Research, and concurrent
programming in TAO. Most papers present languages and systems of
Parallel Lisp and are in particular concerned with: - Language
constructs of Parallel Lisp and their meanings from the standpoint
of implementing Parallel Lisp systems; - Some important technical
issues such as parallel garbage collection, dynamic task
partitioning, futures and continuations in parallelism, automatic
parallelization of Lisp programs, and the kernel concept of
Parallel Lisp. Some performance results are reported that suggest
practical applicability of Parallel Lisp systems in the near
future. Several papers on concurrent object-oriented systems are
also included.
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