KORSO: Methods, Languages, and Tools for the Construction of Correct Software Final Report / [electronic resource] : edited by Manfred Broy, Stefan Jähnichen. - Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1995. - X, 458 p. online resource. - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 1009 0302-9743 ; . - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 1009 .

Correct software: From experiments to applications -- A method for the development of correct software -- Realizing sets by hash tables -- Event automata as a generic model of reactive systems -- On object-oriented design and verification -- Design of modular software systems with reuse -- AVL trees revisited: A case study in Spectrum -- KORSO reference languages concepts and application domains -- How to cope with the Spectrum of Spectrum -- A fine-grain sort discipline and its application to formal program construction -- TROLL light — The language and its development environment -- Formalization of algebraic specification in the development language Deva -- Construction and deduction methods for the formal development of software -- Experiences with a specification environment -- Towards correct, efficient and reusable transformational developments -- The verification system Tatzelwurm -- Seduct — A proof compiler for first order logic -- Traverdi — Transformation and verification of distributed systems -- The Kiv-approach to software verification -- Three selected case studies in verification -- Case study “production cell”: A comparative study in formal specification and verification -- The Korso case study for software engineering with formal methods: A medical information system.

This book constitutes the final report of the work carried out in the project KORSO ("Korrekte Software") funded by the German Federal Ministry for Research and Technology. KORSO is an evolutionary, prototype-oriented project aimed at improving the theoretical foundations of quality-driven software engineering and at implementing known techniques for applications of practical relevance. The 21 strictly refereed papers presented are organized in five sections on methods for correctness, languages, development systems and logical frameworks, tools, and case studies. In addition, the preface and introductory paper give valuable background information and a concise state-of-the-art overview.

9783540478027

10.1007/BFb0015452 doi


Computer science.
Software engineering.
Logic design.
Computer Science.
Software Engineering.
Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters.
Logics and Meanings of Programs.

QA76.758

005.1
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

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