
October 16 - October 17, 2025
Haskell Workshop
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Overview
The Haskell Symposium 2025, co-located with ICFP and SPLASH 2025 in Singapore from October 12-18, 2025, presents original research, practical experiences, and future developments related to the Haskell programming language and declarative programming. It features both a Call for Papers and a Call for Talks track, with keynotes from Richard A. Eisenberg and Simon Peyton Jones.
Haskell Symposium 2025: Call for Papers and Talks
The ACM SIGPLAN Haskell Symposium 2025 will be co-located with the 2025 International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP) and the 2025 International Conference on Systems, Programming, Languages and Applications: Software for Humanity (SPLASH) in Singapore from October 12-18, 2025.
The Haskell Symposium presents original research on Haskell, discusses practical experience and future development of the language, and promotes other forms of declarative programming.
New this year
In addition to the regular Call for Papers track, there is a separate Call for Talks track.
Keynotes
- Richard A. Eisenberg
- Simon Peyton Jones
Call for Talks
Talk proposals need not be full-length and should report work in progress relevant to Haskell language design, theory, tools, or applications. Talk proposals will be evaluated by the PC for novelty and relevance to the Haskell community but are not expected to include finished results. Talk proposals will not be distributed to attendees, but authors of talk proposals may provide links to materials to be included on the program.
Submission Details
The tentative submission deadline is 15 Sept 2025. Detailed information will be released closer to the deadline.
Call for Papers
The ACM SIGPLAN Haskell Symposium 2025 aims to present original research on Haskell, discuss practical experience and future development of the language, and promote other forms of declarative programming.
Topics of interest include:
- Language design, with a focus on possible extensions and modifications of Haskell as well as critical discussions of the status quo;
- Theory, such as formal semantics of the present language or future extensions, type systems, effects, metatheory, and foundations for program analysis and transformation;
- Implementations, including program analysis and transformation, static and dynamic compilation for sequential, parallel, and distributed architectures, memory management, as well as foreign function and component interfaces;
- Libraries, that demonstrate new ideas or techniques for functional programming in Haskell;
- Tools, such as profilers, tracers, debuggers, preprocessors, and testing tools;
- Applications, to scientific and symbolic computing, databases, multimedia, telecommunication, the web, and so forth;
- Functional Pearls, being elegant and instructive programming examples;
- Experience Reports, to document general practice and experience in education, industry, or other contexts;
- Tutorials, to document how to use a particular language feature, programming technique, tool or library within the Haskell ecosystem;
- System Demonstrations, based on running software rather than novel research results.
Regular papers should explain their research contributions in both general and technical terms, identifying what has been accomplished, explaining why it is significant, and relating it to previous work, and to other languages where appropriate.
Experience reports and functional pearls need not necessarily report original academic research results. For example, they may instead report reusable programming idioms, elegant ways to approach a problem, or practical experience that will be useful to other users, implementers, or researchers. The key criterion for such a paper is that it makes a contribution from which other Haskellers can benefit.
Like an experience report and a functional pearl, tutorials should make a contribution from which other Haskellers can benefit. What distinguishes a tutorial is that its focus is on explaining an aspect of the Haskell language and/or ecosystem in a way that is generally useful to a Haskell audience.
System demonstrations should summarize the system capabilities that would be demonstrated. The proposals will be judged on whether the ensuing session is likely to be important and interesting to the Haskell community at large, whether on grounds academic or industrial, theoretical or practical, technical, social or artistic.
If your contribution is not a research paper, please mark the title of your experience report, functional pearl, tutorial or system demonstration as such, by supplying a subtitle (Experience Report, Functional Pearl, Tutorial Paper, System Demonstration).
Submission Details
Formatting
Submitted papers should be in portable document format (PDF), formatted using the ACM SIGPLAN style guidelines. Authors should use the acmart format, with the sigplan sub-format for ACM proceedings. For details, see: http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/#acmart-format
It is recommended to use the review option when submitting a paper; this option enables line numbers for easy reference in reviews.
Functional pearls, experience reports, tutorials and demo proposals should be labelled clearly as such.
Lightweight Double-blind Reviewing
Haskell Symposium 2025 will use a lightweight double-blind reviewing process. To facilitate this, submitted papers must adhere to two rules:
- Author names and institutions must be omitted, and
- References to authors’ own related work should be in the third person (e.g., not “We build on our previous work” but rather "We build on the work of ").
The purpose of this process is to help the reviewers come to an initial judgment about the paper without bias, not to make it impossible for them to discover the authors if they were to try. Nothing should be done in the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of reviewing the paper more difficult (e.g., important background references should not be omitted or anonymized). In addition, authors should feel free to disseminate their ideas or draft versions of their paper as they normally would.
A reviewer will learn the identity of the author(s) of a paper after a review is submitted.
Page Limits
The length of submissions should not exceed the following limits:
- Regular paper: 12 pages
- Functional pearl: 12 pages
- Tutorial: 12 pages
- Experience report: 6 pages
- Demo proposal: 2 pages
In all cases, the list of references is not counted against these page limits.
Deadlines
Deadlines are end of day Anywhere on Earth (UTC-12).
Item | Date |
---|---|
Paper submission | 9 June 2025 |
Author Notification | 17 July 2025 |
Submission
Submissions must adhere to SIGPLAN’s republication policy, and authors should be aware of ACM’s policies on plagiarism.
Papers should be submitted through HotCRP at: https://haskell25.hotcrp.com/
Supplementary material
Authors have the option to attach supplementary material to a submission, on the understanding that reviewers may choose not to look at it.
Resubmitted Papers
Authors who submit a revised version of a paper that has previously been rejected by another conference have the option to attach an annotated copy of the reviews of their previous submission(s), explaining how they have addressed these previous reviews in the present submission.
Proceedings
Accepted papers will be included in the ACM Digital Library. Their authors will be required to choose one of the following options:
- Author retains copyright of the work and grants ACM a non-exclusive permission-to-publish license (and, optionally, licenses the work with a Creative Commons license);
- Author retains copyright of the work and grants ACM an exclusive permission-to-publish license;
- Author transfers copyright of the work to ACM.
For more information, please see ACM Copyright Policy and ACM Author Rights.
Accepted proposals for system demonstrations will be posted on the symposium website but not formally published in the proceedings.
The official publication date of accepted papers is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library.
Artifacts
Authors of accepted papers are encouraged to make auxiliary material (artifacts like source code, test data, etc.) available with their paper. They can opt to have these artifacts published alongside their paper in the ACM Digital Library (copyright of artifacts remains with the authors).
If an accepted paper’s artifacts are made permanently available for retrieval in a publicly accessible archival repository like the ACM Digital Library, that paper qualifies for an Artifacts Available badge (https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/artifact-review-badging#available). Applications for such a badge can be made after paper acceptance and will be reviewed by the PC chair.
Contact
If you have questions, please contact the chairs at: ningningxie@cs.toronto.edu and garrett-morris@uiowa.edu.
Conference Dates
Conference Date
October 16, 2025 → October 17, 2025
Submission
Paper submission
June 9, 2025
(Call for Talks) Talk proposal submission
September 15, 2025
Notification
Author Notification
July 17, 2025
Source Rank
Source: CORE2023
Rank: C
Field of Research: Software engineering