Description
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 modeling the semiotics (pragmatics, semantics and syntax of systems and languages), modeling 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.
Opening
Specification facets
A crucial domain & computing facet
Linguistics
Further specification techniques
Concurrency & temporality
Interpreter & compiler definitions
Closing
Published
01 Feb 2006
Publisher
SPRINGER
ISBN
9783540211501
Pages
600




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