Wed 28 Oct 2015 18:00 - 21:00 at Admiral and Reflections - Posters Chair(s): Sam Guyer, Patrick Lam

Spreadsheets are considered one of the most widely used end-user programming environments. Just as it is important for software to be free of bugs, spreadsheets need to be free of errors. This is important because in some cases, errors in spreadsheets can cost a financial entity thousands of dollars. In this work, we formulate a class of commonplace errors based on our manual inspection of real life spreadsheets, and further provide an analysis algorithm to detect these errors. We introduce “reference counting” as a simple yet effective algorithm to detect range errors. Then we provide our preliminary results based on analysis of real life spreadsheets from the EUSES corpus. We finally demonstrate how reference counting can effectively point out erroneous cells in faulty spreadsheets.

Wed 28 Oct

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18:00 - 21:00
PostersStudent Research Competition at Admiral and Reflections
Chair(s): Sam Guyer Tufts University, Patrick Lam University of Waterloo, Canada
18:00
3h
Talk
Efficient Support for Strong Semantics in Transactional and Non-transactional Programs
Student Research Competition
Aritra Sengupta Ohio State University
18:00
3h
Talk
Automatic Array Property Detection Via Static Analysis
Student Research Competition
18:00
3h
Talk
KinEdit: A Tool to Help Developers Refactor Manually
Student Research Competition
Josh Terrell California Polytechnic University
18:00
3h
Talk
Finding Bugs in Spreadsheets Using Reference Counting
Student Research Competition
Nima Joharizadeh University of California, Davis
18:00
3h
Talk
Viser: Providing Serializability in Hardware With Simplified Cache Coherence
Student Research Competition
Swarnendu Biswas Ohio State University, USA
18:00
3h
Talk
Concurrency Control for Multithreaded Reactive Programming
Student Research Competition
Ragnar Mogk Technische Universität Darmstadt
18:00
3h
Talk
Gradual Mode Types for Energy-Aware Programming
Student Research Competition
Anthony Canino SUNY Binghamton
18:00
3h
Talk
Race-driven UI-level Test Generation for JavaScript-based Web Applications
Student Research Competition
18:00
3h
Talk
Contributions of the Under-Appreciated: Gender Bias in an Open-Source Ecology
Student Research Competition
Andrew Kofink North Carolina State University
18:00
3h
Talk
Safely Evolving Configurable Systems
Student Research Competition
Flavio Medeiros Federal University of Campina Grande
18:00
3h
Talk
SIRe: An Efficient Snapshot Isolation-based Memory Model for Detecting and Tolerating Region Conflicts
Student Research Competition
Minjia Zhang Ohio State University, USA
18:00
3h
Talk
The Oprop Verification Tool: Object Propositions in Action
Student Research Competition
Nistor Ligia Carnegie Mellon University