Author

Publication

2004-10-25 - Springer

Language

English

Word Count

127,250 words, Guess

Page Count

509 pages

Physical Format

Paperback

Identifiers

and 3 more
  • Library of Congress Control Number2004050410
  • LibraryThing582203
  • Goodreads2560415

Classifications

  • LCCQA76.76.D47 C666 2005

Description

Central to Formal Methods is the so-called Correctness Theorem which relates a specification to its correct Implementations. This theorem is the goal of traditional program testing and, more recently, of program verification (in which the theorem must be proved). Proofs are difficult, though even with the use of powerful theorem provers. This volume explains and illustrates an alternative method, which allows the construction of (necessarily correct) algorithms from a specification using algebraic transformations and refinement techniques which prevent the introduction of errors. Based on teaching material used extensively at Loughborough University, John Cooke introduces the basics, using simple examples and lots of detailed working (which can often be re-used). Constructing Correct Software will provide invaluable reading for students and practitioners of Computer Science and Software Engineering to whom correctness of software is of prime importance.

First Sentence

It is an introduction to the science of writing programs, the engineering of software.

Subjects

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