International Conference on Developments in Language Theory
DLT, the International Conference on Developments in Language Theory is an academic conference in the field
of computer science
held annually under the auspices of the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science. Like most theoretical computer science conferences its contributions are strongly peer-reviewed; the articles appear in proceedings published in Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Extended versions of selected papers of each year's conference appear in international journals, such as Theoretical Computer Science and International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science.Topics of the conference
Typical topics include:
- grammars, acceptors and transducers for words, trees and graphs
- algebraic theories of automata
- algorithmic, combinatorial and algebraic properties of words and languages
- variable length codes
- symbolic dynamics
- cellular automata
- polyominoes and multidimensional patterns
- decidability questions
- image manipulation and compression
- efficient text algorithms
- relationships between formal language theory and cryptography, concurrency, complexity theory and logic
- bio-inspired computing and quantum computing
History of the Conference
The DLT conference series was established by Grzegorz Rozenberg and Arto Salomaa in 1993. Since 2010, the Steering Committee chairman is Juhani Karhumäki.
- in Warsaw, Poland
- in Tokyo, Japan
- in Liège, Belgium
- in Montreal, Canada
- in Liverpool, England
- in Ekaterinburg, Russia
- in Marne-la-Vallée, France
- in Taipei, Taiwan
- in Milan, Italy
- in London, Canada
- in Stuttgart, Germany
- in Kyoto, Japan
- in Turku, Finland
- in Santa Barbara, CA, USA
- in Palermo, Italy
- in Auckland, New Zealand
- in Szeged, Hungary
- 6th DLT 2002 in Kyoto, Japan
- in Vienna, Austria
- 4th DLT 1999 in Aachen, Germany
- 3rd DLT 1997 in Thessaloniki, Greece
- 2nd DLT 1995 in Magdeburg, Germany
- 1st DLT 1993 in Turku, Finland