![]() | SCLIT 2026: 10th Symposium on Computer Languages, Implementations and Tools Munich, Germany, March 16-20, 2026 |
| Conference website | https://2026.programming-conference.org/home/sclit-2026 |
| Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sclit2026 |
| Abstract registration deadline | January 5, 2026 |
| Submission deadline | January 5, 2026 |
Research on programming languages is among the core and ‘classic’ disciplines of computer science. Today, the term computer languages usually encompasses not only programming languages but also all sorts of artificial languages for different purposes whose ‘sentences’ can be processed by a computer.
The aim of the event is to provide a forum for the dissemination of research accomplishments in areas that include all aspects of computer languages: theory, implementation, and processing and analysis tools. Following the current trends in software development, SCLIT 2026 will pay special attention to supporting multilingual software development and dedicated cross-language implementations, techniques and tools.
List of Topics
SCLIT welcomes submissions that are the result of original and unpublished research. The scope of the workshop is wide and versatile within the theme of computer languages. Particularly, SCLIT invites papers that include, but are not limited to the following topics:
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Languages: theoretical aspects of programming languages, programming paradigms, script languages, modelling languages, domain-specific languages, graphical languages, markup languages, specification languages, transformation languages, formal languages, intermediate languages…
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Implementations: Compilers, debuggers, interpreters, virtual machines, transformation systems, translators, transpilers, intermediate representations, …
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Tools: software metrics, static analysers, clone detectors, abstract interpreters, visualizers, …
We especially encourage submissions addressing problems that encompass multiple languages in a language-independent or cross-language manner.
Submission Guidelines
Paper contributions should not exceed 8 pages, including all figures, tables and bibliography, following the ACM primary two-column article template.
The submissions will be managed on the EasyChair submission portal
All submissions will be peer-reviewed by at least three members of the international program committee. Accepted submissions will be published as part of the companion of Programming 2026 in the ACM DL (in LaTeX, please use the sigconf option, i.e. \documentclass[sigconf]{acmart}).
Chairs
- Nicolás Cardozo, Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
- Gordana Rakić, University of Novi Sad, Serbia
Publication
Accepted submissions will be published as part of the companion of <Programming> 2026 in the ACM DL.
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to sclit@dmi.uns.ac.rs.

