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The core idea of this book is that object- oriented technology is a
generic technology whose various technical aspects can be presented
in a unified and consistent framework. This applies to both
practical and formal aspects of object-oriented technology. Course
tested in a variety of object-oriented courses, numerous examples,
figures and exercises are presented in each chapter. The approach
in this book is based on typed technologies, and the core notions
fit mainstream object-oriented languages such as Java and C#. The
book promotes object-oriented constraints (assertions), their
specification and verification. Object-oriented constraints apply
to specification and verification of object-oriented programs,
specification of the object-oriented platform, more advanced
concurrent models, database integrity constraints and
object-oriented transactions, their specification and verification.
This book presents a unified collection of concepts, tools, and
techniques that constitute the most important technology available
today for the design and implementation of information systems. The
framework adopted for this integration goal is the one offered by
the relational model of data, its applica tions, and
implementations in multiuser and distributed environments. The
topics presented in the book include conceptual modeling of
application environments using the relational model, formal
properties of that model, and tools such as relational languages
which go with it, techniques for the logical and physical design of
relational database systems and their imple mentations. The book
attempts to develop an integrated methodology for addressing all
these issues on the basis of the relational approach and various
research and practical developments related to that approach. This
book is the only one available today that presents such an inte
gration. The diversity of approaches to data models, to logical and
physical database design, to database application programming, and
to use and imple mentation of database systems calls for a common
framework for all of them. It has become difficult to study modern
database technology with out such a unified approach to a diversity
of results developed during the vigorous growth of the database
area in recent years, let alone to teach a course on the subject."
This book takes a formal approach to teaching software engineering,
using not only UML, but also Object Constraint Language (OCL) for
specification and analysis of designed models. Employing technical
details typically missing from existing textbooks on software
engineering, the author shows how precise specifications lead to
static verification of software systems. In addition, data
management is given the attention that is required in order to
produce a successful software project. Uses constraints in all
phases of software development Follows recent developments in
software technologies Technical coverage of data management issues
and software verification Illustrated throughout to present
analysis, specification, implementation and verification of
multiple applications Includes end-of-chapter exercises and
Instructor Presentation Slides
The major goal of this book is to present the techniques of
top-down program design and verification of program correctness
hand-in-hand. It thus aims to give readers a new way of looking at
algorithms and their design, synthesizing ten years of research in
the process. It provides many examples of program and proof
development with the aid of a formal and informal treatment of
Hoare's method of invariants. Modem widely accepted control
structures and data structures are explained in detail, together
with their formal definitions, as a basis for their use in the
design of correct algorithms. We provide and apply proof rules for
a wide range of program structures, including conditionals, loops,
procedures and recur sion. We analyze situations in which the
restricted use of gotos can be justified, providing a new approach
to proof rules for such situations. We study several important
techniques of data structuring, including arrays, files, records
and linked structures. The secondary goal of this book is to teach
the reader how to use the programming language Pascal. This is the
first text to teach Pascal pro gramming in a fashion which not only
includes advanced algorithms which operate on advanced data
structures, but also provides the full axiomatic definition of
Pascal due to Wirth and Hoare. Our approach to the language is very
different from that of a conventional programming text."
The major topic of this book is the integration of data and
programming languages and the associated methodologies. To my
knowledge, this is the first book on modern programming languages
and programming meth odology devoted entirely to database
application environments. At the same time, it is written with the
goal of reconciling the relational and object-oriented approaches
to database management. One of the reasons that influenced my
decision to write this book is my dissatisfaction with the fact
that the existing books on programming methodology and the
associated concepts, techniques, and programming language notation
are largely based on mathematical problems and math ematically
oriented algorithms. As such, they give the impression that modern
program structures, associated techniques, and methodologies, not
to speak of the formal ones, are applicable only to problems of
that sort. Although important, such problems are of limited
applicability and scale. This does not apply to books in which
modem concepts, techniques, methodologies, and programming language
notation are applied to systems programming. But, even so, this
does not demonstrate that in entirely application-oriented
problems-those in which modern computer tech nology is most widely
used-modern programming methodology is just as important. This book
is meant to be a step toward providing a more convincing support of
such a claim and, thus, is based entirely on common, what one might
call business-oriented, problems in which database technology has
been successfully used."
The core idea of this book is that object- oriented technology is a
generic technology whose various technical aspects can be presented
in a unified and consistent framework. This applies to both
practical and formal aspects of object-oriented technology. Course
tested in a variety of object-oriented courses, numerous examples,
figures and exercises are presented in each chapter. The approach
in this book is based on typed technologies, and the core notions
fit mainstream object-oriented languages such as Java and C#. The
book promotes object-oriented constraints (assertions), their
specification and verification. Object-oriented constraints apply
to specification and verification of object-oriented programs,
specification of the object-oriented platform, more advanced
concurrent models, database integrity constraints and
object-oriented transactions, their specification and verification.
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