| 1 | Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2018 17:01:14 -0400 (EDT)
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| 2 | From: "Software: Practice and Experience" <onbehalfof@manuscriptcentral.com>
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| 3 | Reply-To: judithbishop@outlook.com
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| 4 | To: a3moss@uwaterloo.ca, rschlunt@uwaterloo.ca, pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca
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| 5 | Subject: Software: Practice and Experience - Decision on Manuscript ID SPE-18-0065
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| 6 | 
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| 7 | 19-Apr-2018
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| 8 | 
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| 9 | Dear Dr Buhr,
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| 10 | 
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| 11 | Many thanks for submitting SPE-18-0065 entitled "Cforall : Adding Modern Programming
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| 12 | Language Features to C" to Software: Practice and Experience. The paper has now
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| 13 | been reviewed and the comments of the referee(s) are included at the bottom of
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| 14 | this letter.
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| 15 | 
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| 16 | I am delighted to inform you that the referee(s) have recommended publication,
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| 17 | but also suggest some minor revisions to your manuscript.  Therefore, I invite
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| 18 | you to respond to the referee(s)' comments and revise your manuscript. All of
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| 19 | the referees' comments are important, but I would like you to pay special
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| 20 | attention to the following general points:
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| 21 | 
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| 22 | 1. If there is any more evaluation that a stack, please add it.
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| 23 | 2. How is the compiler implemented?
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| 24 | 3. What features are actually implemented?
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| 25 | 4. The article lacks some related work. such as Haskell, ML etc.
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| 26 | 5. Most of the content in Section 10 RELATED WORK appears to belong to Section 1 INTRODUCTION as a Subsection or as a new Section after Section 1.
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| 27 | 6. Many references are not properly formatted
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| 28 | 7. A statement about any presence or absence of conflicts of interest with Huawei should be explicitly added.
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| 29 | 
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| 30 | The paper is long by SPE standards (33 pages). We have a maximum of 40
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| 31 | pages. Please do not extend the paper beyond 35 pages. If necessary, find ways
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| 32 | to cut the examples or text. If you have an accompanying website for the system
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| 33 | where some examples are stored, please mention it.
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| 34 | 
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| 35 | You have 42 days from the date of this email to submit your revision. If you
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| 36 | are unable to complete the revision within this time, please contact me to
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| 37 | request a short extension.
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| 38 | 
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| 39 | You can upload your revised manuscript and submit it through your Author
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| 40 | Center. Log into https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/spe and enter your Author
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| 41 | Center, where you will find your manuscript title listed under "Manuscripts
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| 42 | with Decisions".
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| 43 | 
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| 44 | When submitting your revised manuscript, you will be able to respond to the
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| 45 | comments made by the referee(s) in the space provided.  You can use this space
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| 46 | to document any changes you make to the original manuscript.
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| 47 | 
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| 48 | If you feel that your paper could benefit from English language polishing, you
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| 49 | may wish to consider having your paper professionally edited for English
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| 50 | language by a service such as Wiley's at
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| 51 | http://wileyeditingservices.com. Please note that while this service will
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| 52 | greatly improve the readability of your paper, it does not guarantee acceptance
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| 53 | of your paper by the journal.
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| 54 | 
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| 55 | Once again, thank you for submitting your manuscript to Software: Practice and Experience. I look forward to receiving your revision.
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| 56 | 
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| 57 | Sincerely,
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| 58 | 
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| 59 | Dr Judith Bishop
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| 60 | Editor, Software: Practice and Experience
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| 61 | judithbishop@outlook.com
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| 62 | 
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| 63 | 
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| 64 | We have attempted to response to all the issues raised by the Editor and referee's comments. For two
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| 65 | of the issues, we have "pushed back", with an explanation. Specifically, moving the related work
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| 66 | forward, and moving text from Section 9 into the captions of Table2 and Figure 10.  Our reasons for
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| 67 | not making these changes are address below. Finally, as pointed out below, there are a couple of
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| 68 | issues with the Wiley LaTeX macros that we worked around as best as possible.
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| 69 | 
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| 70 |    The paper is long by SPE standards (33 pages). We have a maximum of 40 pages. Please do not
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| 71 |    extend the paper beyond 35 pages. If necessary, find ways to cut the examples or text. If you
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| 72 |    have an accompanying website for the system where some examples are stored, please mention it.
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| 73 | 
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| 74 | The paper is 35 pages using the supplied Wiley LaTeX macros.
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| 75 | 
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| 76 | 
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| 77 | Referee(s)' Comments to Author:
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| 78 | 
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| 79 | Reviewing: 1
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| 80 | 
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| 81 |    Most of the content in Section 10 RELATED WORK appears to belong to Section 1 INTRODUCTION as a
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| 82 |    Subsection or as a new Section after Section 1. (Please also see #4.1 below.) Remaining
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| 83 |    discussion that cannot be moved earlier can become a DISCUSSION Section or a Subsection within
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| 84 |    the last Section of the paper.
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| 85 | 
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| 86 | Sometimes it is appropriate to put related work at the start of a paper and sometimes at the
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| 87 | end. For this paper, it seems appropriate to put the related work at the end of the paper. The
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| 88 | purpose of the related work in this paper is two fold: to introduce prior work and to contrast it
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| 89 | with Cforall.  Only at the end of the paper does the reader have sufficient knowledge about Cforall
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| 90 | to make detailed contrasts with other programming languages possible. If the related work is moved
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| 91 | to the end of the introduction, the reader knows nothing about Cforall so talking about other
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| 92 | programming languages in isolation makes little sense, especially non-C-related languages, like
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| 93 | Java, Go, Rust, Haskell. We see no easy way to separate the related work into a general discussion
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| 94 | at the start and a specific discussion at the end. We explicitly attempt to deal with the reader's
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| 95 | anticipation at the end of the introduction:
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| 96 | 
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| 97 |  Finally, it is impossible to describe a programming language without usages before definitions.
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| 98 |  Therefore, syntax and semantics appear before explanations; hence, patience is necessary until
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| 99 |  details are presented.
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| 100 | 
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| 101 | 
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| 102 |    2.1 More information should be moved from the text and added to Figure 10 and Table 2 so that
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| 103 |    readers can understand the comparison quickly. Imagine a reader read the summary and jump
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| 104 |    directly to these two display elements. Questions would be raised about the binary size and pop
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| 105 |    pair result of Cforall and it would take time to find answers in the text.
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| 106 | 
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| 107 | This suggestion is an alternative writing style. The experiment is complex enough that it is
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| 108 | unlikely a reader could jump to the table/graph and understand the experiment without putting a
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| 109 | substantive amount of the text from Section 9 into the table and figure, which the reader then has
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| 110 | to read anyway.  In fact, we prefer a writing style where the reader does not have to look at the
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| 111 | table/figure to understand the experiment and the results, i.e., the table/figure are only there to
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| 112 | complement the discussion.
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| 113 | 
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| 114 | 
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| 115 |    2.2 The pronunciation of ("C-for-all") should be provided in the summary (page 1 line 22) so that
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| 116 |    people not having an access to the full-text can see it.
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| 117 | 
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| 118 | Done.
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| 119 | 
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| 120 | 
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| 121 |    2.3 Error comment in the code should be written with the same capitalization and it will be
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| 122 |    helpful if you say specifically compilation error or runtime error. (Please see attached
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| 123 |    annotated manuscript.)
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| 124 | 
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| 125 | Fixed. All errors in the paper are compilation errors because they are related to the type system.
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| 126 | 
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| 127 | 
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| 128 |    2.4 It is possible to provide a bit more information in Appendix A e.g. how many lines/bytes of
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| 129 |    code and some details about software/hardware can be added/moved here. The aim is to provide
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| 130 |    sufficient information for readers to reproduce the results and to appreciate the context of the
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| 131 |    comparison.
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| 132 | 
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| 133 | Table 2 indicates the source-code size in lines of code. The third paragraph of Section 9 gives
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| 134 | precise details of the software/hardware used in the experiments.
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| 135 | 
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| 136 |    3. Practical information about the work
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| 137 | 
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| 138 |    There are three separate pieces of information on pages 2 ("All features discussed in this paper
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| 139 |    are working, unless otherwise stated as under construction."),
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| 140 | 
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| 141 | This sentence is replace with:
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| 142 | 
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| 143 |  All languages features discussed in this paper are working, except some advanced exception-handling
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| 144 |  features.
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| 145 | 
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| 146 | and Section 5.4 Exception Handling states:
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| 147 | 
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| 148 |  The following framework for Cforall exception handling is in place, excluding some runtime
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| 149 |  type-information and virtual functions.
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| 150 | 
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| 151 | 
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| 152 |    page 4 ("Under construction is a mechanism to distribute...")
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| 153 | 
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| 154 | The feature on page 4 is now complete.
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| 155 | 
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| 156 | 
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| 157 |    and page 33 ("There is ongoing work on a wide range ... ")
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| 158 | 
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| 159 | This sentence is replace to indicate the ongoing work is future work.
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| 160 | 
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| 161 |  While all examples in the paper compile and run, a public beta-release of Cforall will take 6-8
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| 162 |  months to reduce compilation time, provide better debugging, and add a few more libraries.  There
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| 163 |  is also new work on a number of Cforall features, including arrays with size, runtime
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| 164 |  type-information, virtual functions, user-defined conversions, and modules.
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| 165 | 
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| 166 | 
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| 167 |    My recommendation is to move them to an appendix so that the length is preserved.
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| 168 | 
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| 169 | There is nothing to move into an appendix, except 3 sentences. We do not intend to discuss these
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| 170 | items in this paper.
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| 171 | 
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| 172 | 
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| 173 |    3.1 Any under construction work (only small part of page 4) should not be mingled into the main
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| 174 |    part of the manuscript.
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| 175 | 
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| 176 | See above.
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| 177 | 
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| 178 | 
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| 179 |    3.2 Instructions on how to access/use the working functionality of Cforall should be given.
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| 180 | 
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| 181 | We will indicate release of Cforall in a public location, when we believe the code base is
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| 182 | acceptable. In the interim, we have made public all the experimental code from section 9, and there
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| 183 | is a reference in the paper to access this code. We can make a private beta-copy of Cforall
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| 184 | available to the SP&E editor for distribution to the referees so they can verify our claims.
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| 185 | 
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| 186 |    3.3 Planned work should be given a specific time of completion/release not just "8-12 months".
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| 187 | 
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| 188 | Software development is not a rigorous engineering discipline. Given our small research
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| 189 | development-team and the size of the project, we cannot give a specific time for completion of
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| 190 | anything associated with the project. Having said that, we have reduced our expected time for
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| 191 | Cforall release to 6-8 months as work is progressing well.
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| 192 | 
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| 193 | 
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| 194 |    4.1 The impression after reading Section 1 INTRODUCTION is that the referencing is poor. It is
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| 195 |    not until Section 10 RELATED WORK where majority of the prior literature are discussed. Please
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| 196 |    consider moving the content and improve citations - at least cite all main variations of C
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| 197 |    languages.
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| 198 | 
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| 199 | See point 1.
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| 200 | 
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| 201 | 
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| 202 |    4.2 I also would like to see citations at these specific places: Page 2 after Phil Karlton, page
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| 203 |    22 after const hell problem.
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| 204 | 
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| 205 | The Phil-Karlton quote is an urban legend without a specific academic citation:
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| 206 | 
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| 207 |   https://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/19836/has-phil-karlton-ever-said-there-are-only-two-hard-things-in-computer-science
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| 208 | 
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| 209 | The term "const hell" is replaced with "const poisoning" with a citation.
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| 210 | 
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| 211 | 
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| 212 |    5.1 Footnotes and citations will need to have different schemes - number and perhaps letter.
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| 213 | 
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| 214 | Switched to letters. SP&E uses symbol footnotes but this macros fails with their macros:
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| 215 | 
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| 216 |  \renewcommand*{\thefootnote}{\fnsymbol{footnote}}
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| 217 | 
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| 218 | 
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| 219 |    5.2 Many references are not properly formatted e.g. date is incomplete, extra/missing white
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| 220 |    spaces, extra dots, use of page number or section number as part of superscript ref
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| 221 |    number. Please refer to attached document.
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| 222 | 
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| 223 | Agreed. The bibtex BST macros are at fault. I have fixed some issues but I cannot fix them all as my
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| 224 | BST macro-knowledge is limited.
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| 225 | 
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| 226 | 
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| 227 |    5.3 Typos:
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| 228 |    - Page 3 "eager" should be "earlier"
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| 229 | 
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| 230 | Fixed.
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| 231 | 
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| 232 |    - Page 4 "vals" should be "arr"
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| 233 | 
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| 234 | Actually it is "vals", and the example is changed so it is clear why.
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| 235 | 
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| 236 |    - Page 21 "than" should be "then"
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| 237 | 
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| 238 | Fixed.
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| 239 | 
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| 240 | 
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| 241 |    6. Conflict of interest
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| 242 |    I see that the work is partially supported by Huawei. Perhaps statement about any presence or
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| 243 |    absence of conflicts of interest should be explicitly added. Please get a clear direction on this
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| 244 |    from the editor of the journal.
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| 245 | 
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| 246 | The paper now states the project is open-source, hence there is no conflict of interest with the
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| 247 | funding received from Huawei.
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| 248 | 
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| 249 | 
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| 250 | Reviewing: 2
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| 251 | 
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| 252 | Comments to the Author
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| 253 | 
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| 254 |    Overloading requires the compiler to mangle a function's signature into its name in the object
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| 255 |    file.  I'm pretty sure that this will complicate the build process of mixed Cforall/C projects.
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| 256 | 
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| 257 | There is no complexity with building Cforall/C programs, and there is an existence proof because C++
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| 258 | has name mangling for overloading and has no problem interacting with C.
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| 259 | 
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| 260 | 
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| 261 |    I found the evaluation underwhelming.  There were only ~200 LoC ported from C to Cforall.  This
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| 262 |    is too less to encounter potential caveats Cforall's type system might impose.
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| 263 | 
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| 264 | We have clarified that the evaluation is not for the type system, but rather the underlying
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| 265 | implementation approach for the parametric polymorphism. Section 9 now starts:
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| 266 | 
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| 267 |  Cforall adds parametric polymorphism to C.  A runtime evaluation is performed to compare the cost
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| 268 |  of alternative styles of polymorphism.  The goal is to compare just the underlying mechanism for
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| 269 |  implementing different kinds of polymorphism.
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| 270 | 
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| 271 | and ends with:
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| 272 | 
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| 273 |  We conjecture these results scale across most generic data-types as the underlying polymorphic
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| 274 |  implement is constant.
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| 275 |  
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| 276 | 
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| 277 |    Also, how is the compiler implemented?  I guess, Cforall is a source-to-source compiler (from
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| 278 |    Cforall to C).  But this is left in the dark.  What features are actually implemented?
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| 279 | 
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| 280 | The following paragraph has been added to the introduction to address this comment:
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| 281 | 
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| 282 |  All languages features discussed in this paper are working, except some advanced exception-handling
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| 283 |  features.  Not discussed in this paper are the integrated concurrency-constructs and user-level
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| 284 |  threading-library~\cite{Delisle18}.  Cforall is an open-source project implemented as an
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| 285 |  source-to-source translator from Cforall to the gcc-dialect of C~\cite{GCCExtensions}, allowing it
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| 286 |  to leverage the portability and code optimizations provided by gcc, meeting goals (1)--(3).
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| 287 |  Ultimately, a compiler is necessary for advanced features and optimal performance.  The Cforall
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| 288 |  translator is 200+ files and 46,000+ lines of code written in C/C++.  Starting with a translator
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| 289 |  versus a compiler makes it easier and faster to generate and debug C object-code rather than
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| 290 |  intermediate, assembler or machine code.  The translator design is based on the visitor pattern,
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| 291 |  allowing multiple passes over the abstract code-tree, which works well for incrementally adding new
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| 292 |  feature through additional visitor passes.  At the heart of the translator is the type resolver,
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| 293 |  which handles the polymorphic routine/type overload-resolution.  The Cforall runtime system is 100+
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| 294 |  files and 11,000+ lines of code, written in Cforall.  Currently, the Cforall runtime is the largest
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| 295 |  user of Cforall providing a vehicle to test the language features and implementation.  The Cforall
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| 296 |  tests are 290+ files and 27,000+ lines of code.  The tests illustrate syntactic and semantic
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| 297 |  features in Cforall, plus a growing number of runtime benchmarks.  The tests check for correctness
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| 298 |  and are used for daily regression testing of commits (3800+).
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| 299 | 
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| 300 | 
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| 301 |    Furthermore, the article lacks some related work.  Many proposed features are present in
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| 302 |    functional languages such as Haskell, ML etc.  In particular, the dealing of parametric
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| 303 |    polymorphism reminds me of Haskell.
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| 304 | 
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| 305 | The following paragraph has been added at the start of Section 10.1:
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| 306 | 
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| 307 |  ML~\cite{ML} was the first language to support parametric polymorphism.  Like Cforall, it supports
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| 308 |  universal type parameters, but not the use of assertions and traits to constrain type arguments.
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| 309 |  Haskell~\cite{Haskell10} combines ML-style polymorphism, polymorphic data types, and type inference
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| 310 |  with the notion of type classes, collections of overloadable methods that correspond in intent to
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| 311 |  traits in Cforall.  Unlike Cforall, Haskell requires an explicit association between types and
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| 312 |  their classes that specifies the implementation of operations.  These associations determine the
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| 313 |  functions that are assertion arguments for particular combinations of class and type, in contrast
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| 314 |  to Cforall where the assertion arguments are selected at function call sites based upon the set of
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| 315 |  operations in scope at that point.  Haskell also severely restricts the use of overloading: an
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| 316 |  overloaded name can only be associated with a single class, and methods with overloaded names can
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| 317 |  only be defined as part of instance declarations.
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| 318 | 
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| 319 | 
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| 320 |    Cforall's approach to tuples is also quite similar to many functional languages.
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| 321 | 
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| 322 | At the end of Section 10.2, we state:
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| 323 | 
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| 324 |  Tuples are a fundamental abstraction in most functional programming languages, such as Standard ML,
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| 325 |  Haskell}, and Scala, which decompose tuples using pattern matching.
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| 326 | 
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| 327 | 
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| 328 | From: Judith Bishop <judithbishop@outlook.com>
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| 329 | To: "Peter A. Buhr" <pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca>
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| 330 | Subject: RE: Software: Practice and Experience - Decision on Manuscript ID
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| 331 |  SPE-18-0065
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| 332 | Date: Tue, 24 Apr 2018 16:45:51 +0000
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| 333 | Accept-Language: em-US
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| 334 | 
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| 335 | Hi Peter
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| 336 | 
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| 337 | Great to hear from you. I am also glad your paper got through, as it is in the
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| 338 | mainline of the SPE scope.
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| 339 | 
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| 340 | It is important to mention that the software is open source. People really
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| 341 | value that. In the acknowledgements, you can refer to Huawei for funding. It is
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| 342 | quite normal to have industrial funding, and in fact it is a plus.
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| 343 | 
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| 344 | I think that sorts out the comment from the referee.
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| 345 | 
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| 346 | Looking forward to your revised submission.
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| 347 | 
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| 348 | Kind regards
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| 349 | 
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| 350 | Judith Bishop
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| 351 | Extraordinary Professor, Computer Science
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| 352 | Stellenbosch University, South Africa
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| 353 | 082 301 5220 / 021 671 5133
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| 354 | judithbishop@outlook.com     LinkedIn
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| 355 | 
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| 356 | -----Original Message-----
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| 357 | From: Peter A. Buhr <pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca> 
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| 358 | Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2018 6:25 PM
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| 359 | To: judithbishop@outlook.com
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| 360 | Cc: a3moss@uwaterloo.ca; rschlunt@uwaterloo.ca
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| 361 | Subject: Re: Software: Practice and Experience - Decision on Manuscript ID SPE-18-0065
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| 362 | 
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| 363 | Hi Judy! Hope all is well.
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| 364 | 
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| 365 | We are over-the-moon to get our paper accepted at SP&E, and we are actively
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| 366 | working on your and the referee's comments.
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| 367 | 
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| 368 | One comment where we need assistance is:
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| 369 | 
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| 370 |   7. A statement about any presence or absence of conflicts of interest with
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| 371 |      Huawei should be explicitly added.
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| 372 | 
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| 373 | We forgotten to mention in the paper that our project is open-source. So Huawei
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| 374 | was funding an open-source project. In fact, the Huawei funding ends soon, so
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| 375 | there will be no direct affiliation in a couple of months, although there are a
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| 376 | few people at Huawei who remain very interested in the project.
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| 377 | 
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| 378 | So does stating that the Cforall project is an open-source project deal with
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| 379 | the issue of conflict of interest?
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