Reuse and integration of specification logics: the hybridisation perspective


Autoria(s): Barbosa, Luís S.; Martins, Manuel A.; Madeira, Alexandre; Neves, Renato
Data(s)

02/09/2016

02/04/2016

Resumo

Hybridisation is a systematic process along which the characteristic features of hybrid logic, both at the syntactic and the semantic levels, are developed on top of an arbitrary logic framed as an institution. It also captures the construction of first-order encodings of such hybridised institutions into theories in first-order logic. The method was originally developed to build suitable logics for the specification of reconfigurable software systems on top of whatever logic is used to describe local requirements of each system’s configuration. Hybridisation has, however, a broader scope, providing a fresh example of yet another development in combining and reusing logics driven by a problem from Computer Science. This paper offers an overview of this method, proposes some new extensions, namely the introduction of full quantification leading to the specification of dynamic modalities, and exemplifies its potential through a didactical application. It is discussed how hybridisation can be successfully used in a formal specification course in which students progress from equational to hybrid specifications in a uniform setting, integrating paradigms, combining data and behaviour, and dealing appropriately with systems evolution and reconfiguration.

Identificador

978-3-319-31309-2

http://hdl.handle.net/10773/16061

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer International Publishing

Relação

UID/MAT/04106/2013

POCI-01-0145-FEDER-006961

SFRH/BPD/103004/2014

SFRH/BD/52234/2013

SFRH/BSAB/ 113890/2015

Theoretical Information Reuse and Integration

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31311-5_1

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Software specification #Hybrid logic #Hybridization
Tipo

bookPart