CASL, the Common Algebraic Specification Language, was designed
by the members of CoFI, the Common Framework Initiative for
algebraic specification and development, and is a general-purpose
language for practical use in software development for specifying
both requirements and design. CASL is already regarded as a de
facto standard, and various sublanguages and extensions are
available for specific tasks.
This book illustrates and discusses how to write CASL
specifications. The authors first describe the origins, aims and
scope of CoFI, and review the main concepts of algebraic
specification languages. The main part of the book explains CASL
specifications, with chapters on loose, generated and free
specifications, partial functions, sub- and supersorts, structuring
specifications, genericity and reusability, architectural
specifications, and version control. The final chapters deal with
tool support and libraries, and present a realistic case study
involving the standard benchmark for comparing specification
frameworks. The book is aimed at software researchers and
professionals, and follows a tutorial style with highlighted
points, illustrative examples, and a full specification and library
index.
A separate, complementary LNCS volume contains the CASL
Reference Manual.
General
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