Summary
Lars Schütze is a compiler researcher and postdoctoral fellow at TU Dresden with 14 years of software and research experience focused on domain-specific compilers and runtime systems. He holds a Dr.-Ing. in Computer Science and has deep hands-on expertise in MLIR, Graal JIT, and polyglot programming, bridging language runtimes and just-in-time compilation techniques. His work at the cfaed chair spans both long-running research projects and practical tooling—maintaining open-source artifacts like Dresden OCL and contributing to SMAGS—highlighting a commitment to reproducible infrastructure. Known for combining formal research rigor with production-aware implementation, he excels at turning compiler theory into usable tooling for hybrid systems. Based in Dresden, he brings a rare mix of academic depth and sustained engineering practice across compiler construction and language interoperability.
14 years of coding experience
14 years of employment as a software developer
Dr.-Ing., Computer Science, Dr.-Ing., Computer Science at Technische Universität Dresden
Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.), Computer Science, 2.2, Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.), Computer Science, 2.2 at Technische Universität Dresden / TU Dresden
English, German