Software Engineering 2: Specification of Systems and LanguagesSpringer Science & Business Media, 2007. gada 1. aug. - 780 lappuses The art, craft, discipline, logic, practice and science of developing large-scale software products needs a professional base. The textbooks in this three-volume set combine informal, engineeringly sound approaches with the rigor of formal, mathematics-based approaches. This volume covers the basic principles and techniques of specifying systems and languages. It deals with modelling the semiotics (pragmatics, semantics and syntax of systems and languages), modelling spatial and simple temporal phenomena, and such specialized topics as modularity (incl. UML class diagrams), Petri nets, live sequence charts, statecharts, and temporal logics, including the duration calculus. Finally, the book presents techniques for interpreter and compiler development of functional, imperative, modular and parallel programming languages. This book is targeted at late undergraduate to early graduate university students, and researchers of programming methodologies. Vol. 1 of this series is a prerequisite text. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 60.
... previous chapters of Vol. 2 (notably Chap. 3). Axis (5) will complete our treatment of linguistics. 3. A structuring axis, briefly covering RSL's scheme, class and object concepts, as well as UML's class diagram concepts. This "short ...
... previous, are presented for the first time in textbook form. Please take time to study them carefully. Please think about them as you proceed into your daily software development. Many have found them useful before you. These techniques ...
... previous sentence, would be the case for the railway net of, say a railway company, where the railway net is "spread out" over several islands not connected by railway bridges. There is a lot more the above does not "reveal" — and some ...
... previous exercises, possibly (develop and) present your model in both of two ways, and separately: hierarchically and compositionally. Which presentation do you prefer? 3 Denotations and Computations • The prerequisite for studying this ...
... previous sentence. And we shall claim, and later chapters shall illustrate the point, that not just computer programs but also actual world phenomena and concepts can be viewed, as we shall here present it, denotationally. More properly ...
Saturs
3 | |
31 | |
55 | |
Contexts and States | 93 |
A CRUCIAL DOMAIN AND COMPUTING FACET | 118 |
LINGUISTICS | 142 |
Semantics | 151 |
Syntax | 173 |
CONCURRENCY AND TEMPORALITY | 313 |
Message and Live Sequence Charts | 375 |
Statecharts | 475 |
Quantitative Models of Time | 517 |
INTERPRETER AND COMPILER DEFINITIONS | 570 |
Simple Imperative Language | 659 |
Simple Modular Imperative Language | 671 |
Simple Parallel Imperative Language | 681 |
Semiotics | 213 |
FURTHER SPECIFICATION TECHNIQUES | 240 |
Automata and Machines | 285 |
A Naming Convention 717 | 715 |
References | 751 |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Software Engineering 2: Specification of Systems and Languages Dines Bjørner Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2007 |
Software Engineering 2: Specification of Systems and Languages Dines Bjørner Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2006 |
Software Engineering 2: Specification of Systems and Languages Dines Bjørner Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2006 |