TY - BOOK AU - Bruynooghe,Maurice AU - Lau,Kung-Kiu ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Program Development in Computational Logic: A Decade of Research Advances in Logic-Based Program Development T2 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, SN - 9783540259510 AV - QA76.9.L63 U1 - 005.1015113 23 PY - 2004/// CY - Berlin, Heidelberg PB - Springer Berlin Heidelberg KW - Computer science KW - Software engineering KW - Logic design KW - Artificial intelligence KW - Computer Science KW - Logics and Meanings of Programs KW - Programming Techniques KW - Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages KW - Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) KW - Software Engineering KW - Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters N1 - Specification and Synthesis -- Specifying Compositional Units for Correct Program Development in Computational Logic -- Synthesis of Programs in Computational Logic -- Developing Logic Programs from Specifications Using Stepwise Refinement -- Semantics -- Declarative Semantics of Input Consuming Logic Programs -- On the Semantics of Logic Program Composition -- Analysis -- Analysing Logic Programs by Reasoning Backwards -- Binding-Time Analysis for Mercury -- A Generic Framework for Context-Sensitive Analysis of Modular Programs -- Transformation and Specialisation -- Unfold/Fold Transformations for Automated Verification of Parameterized Concurrent Systems -- Transformation Rules for Locally Stratified Constraint Logic Programs -- Specialising Interpreters Using Offline Partial Deduction -- Termination -- Characterisations of Termination in Logic Programming -- On the Inference of Natural Level Mappings -- Proving Termination for Logic Programs by the Query-Mapping Pairs Approach -- Systems -- Herbrand Constraints in HAL N2 - 1 The tenth anniversary of the LOPSTR symposium provided the incentive for this volume. LOPSTR started in 1991 as a workshop on logic program synthesis and transformation, but later it broadened its scope to logic-based program development in general, that is, program development in computational logic, and hence the title of this volume. The motivating force behind LOPSTR has been the belief that declarative paradigms such as logic programming are better suited to program development tasks than traditional non-declarative ones such as the imperative paradigm. Speci?cation, synthesis, transformation or specialization, analysis, debugging and veri?cation can all be given logical foundations, thus providing a unifying framework for the whole development process. In the past 10 years or so, such a theoretical framework has indeed begun to emerge. Even tools have been implemented for analysis, veri?cation and speci- ization. However,itisfairtosaythatsofarthefocushaslargelybeenonprogrammi- in-the-small. So the future challenge is to apply or extend these techniques to programming-in-the-large, in order to tackle software engineering in the real world. Returning to this volume, our aim is to present a collection of papers that re?ect signi?cant research e?orts over the past 10 years. These papers cover the wholedevelopmentprocess:speci?cation,synthesis,analysis,transformationand specialization, as well as semantics and systems UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b98187 ER -