@INPROCEEDINGS{HanusSadre97ILPS,
author = "Hanus, M. and Sadre, R.",
title = "A Concurrent Implementation of Curry in Java",
year = "1997",
booktitle = "Proc.\ ILPS'97 Workshop on
Parallelism and Implementation Technology for (Constraint)
Logic Programming Languages",
address = "Port Jefferson (New York)",
abstract = {
Curry is a multi-paradigm declarative language aiming to amalgamate
functional, logic, and concurrent programming paradigms. Curry
combines in a seamless way features from functional programming and
(concurrent) logic programming. Curry's operational semantics is
based on the combination of lazy reduction of expressions together
with a possibly non-deterministic binding of free variables occurring
in expressions. Moreover, (equational) constraints can be executed
concurrently which provides for passive constraints and concurrent
computation threads that are synchronized on logical variables. This
paper sketches a first prototype implementation of Curry in Java.
The main emphasis of this implementation is the exploitation of Java
threads to implement the concurrent and non-deterministic features of
Curry.
},
}

