Publication year: 2007
ISBN: 978-3-540-69061-0
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features of the programming languages we employ in these programs are plentiful, including object-oriented organizations of data, facilities for specifying di?erent c- trol ?ow for rare situations, constructs for iterating over the elements of a collection, and the grouping together of operations into atomic transactions. These language features were designed to facilitate simpler and more natural encodings of programs, and ideally they are accompanied by simpler proof rules. But the variety and increased number of these features make it harder to remember all that needs to be proved about their uses. As a third problem, we have come to expect a higher degree of rigor from our proofs. A proof carried out or replayed by a machine somehow gets more credibility than one that requires human intellect to understand.
Subject: Computer Science, AI logics, JML, Java, Java Card, OCL, deductive verification, formal methods, formal reasoning, logic reasoning, natural language generation, object-oriented software, program verification, proof obligations, software security, specification languages, systems modeling, theorem proving