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This volume constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Third International Conference on Foundations of Software Science and Computation Structures, FOSSACS 2000, held as part of ETAPS 2000 in Berlin, Germany in March/April 2000. The 25 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from a total of 68 submissions. Among the topics covered are rewriting, pi-calculus, lambda-calculus, formal languages, proof systems, type theory, mobile processes, automata theory, predicate logic, etc.
This volume contains revised refereed versions of the best papers
presented during the CSL '94 conference, held in Kazimierz, Poland
in September 1994; CSL '94 is the eighth event in the series of
workshops held for the third time as the Annual Conference of the
European Association for Computer Science Logic.
This book provides the first comprehensive introduction to Dynamic Logic. Among the many approaches to formal reasoning about programs, Dynamic Logic enjoys the singular advantage of being strongly related to classical logic. Its variants constitute natural generalizations and extensions of classical formalisms. For example, Propositional Dynamic Logic (PDL) can be described as a blend of three complementary classical ingredients: propositional calculus, modal logic, and the algebra of regular events. In First-Order Dynamic Logic (DL), the propositional calculus is replaced by classical first-order predicate calculus. Dynamic Logic is a system of remarkable unity that is theoretically rich as well as of practical value. It can be used for formalizing correctness specifications and proving rigorously that those specifications are met by a particular program. Other uses include determining the equivalence of programs, comparing the expressive power of various programming constructs, and synthesizing programs from specifications. This book provides the first comprehensive introduction to Dynamic Logic. It is divided into three parts. The first part reviews the appropriate fundamental concepts of logic and computability theory and can stand alone as an introduction to these topics. The second part discusses PDL and its variants, and the third part discusses DL and its variants. Examples are provided throughout, and exercises and a short historical section are included at the end of each chapter.
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