International Summer School directed by F.L. Bauer, M. Broy, E.W. Dijkstra, C.A.R. Hoare
First Statement of Responsibility
edited by Manfred Broy.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Berlin, Heidelberg
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1989
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
(VIII, 478 pages 28 illustrations)
SERIES
Series Title
NATO ASI series., Series F,, Computer and systems sciences ;, 55.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
A Visionary Decision (After-dinner Speech) --; I Constructive Logic and Type Theory --; Constructive Type Theory --; An Introduction --; Assigning Meaning to Proofs: A Semantic Basis for Problem Solving Environments --; The Addition of Bounded Quantification and Partial Functions to a Computational Logic and Its Theorem Prover --; II Design Calculi --; Lectures on Constructive Functional Programming --; On a Problem Transmitted by Doug McIlroy --; A Computing Scientist's Approach to a Once-deep Theorem of Sylvester's --; The Derivation of a Proof by J.C.S.P. van der Woude --; Notes on an Approach to Category Theory for Computer Scientists --; III Specification, Construction, and Verification Calculi for Distributed Systems --; Towards a Design Methodology for Distributed Systems --; Specifying Distributed Systems --; A Foundation of Parallel Programming --; Design of Synchronization Algorithms.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Computing Science is a science of constructive methods. The solution of a problem has to be described formally by constructive techniques, if it is to be evaluated on a computer. The Marktoberdorf Advanced Study Institute 1988 presented a comprehensive survey of the recent research in constructive methods in Computing Science. Some approaches to a methodological framework and to supporting tools for specification, development and verification of software systems were discussed in detail. Other lectures dealt with the relevance of the foundations of logic for questions of program construction and with new programming paradigms and formalisms which have proven to be useful for a constructive approach to software development. The construction, specification, design and verification especially of distributed and communicating systems was discussed in a number of complementary lectures. Examples for those approaches were given on several levels such as semaphores, nondeterministic state transition systems with fairness assumptions, decomposition of specifications for concurrent systems in liveness and safety properties and functional specifications of distributed systems. Construction methods in programming that were presented range from type theory, the theory of evidence, theorem provers for proving properties of functional programs to category theory as an abstract and general concept for the description of programming paradigms.
PARALLEL TITLE PROPER
Parallel Title
Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Constructive Methods in Computing Science held at Marktoberdorf, Federal Republic of Germany, July 24 - August 5, 1988