Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Jeannette M. Wing
-
Computer Science Department, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA
-
Jim Woodcock
-
Oxford University Computing Laboratory, Software Engineering Programme, Oxford, UK
-
Jim Davies
-
Oxford University Computing Laboratory, Software Engineering Programme, Oxford, UK
Access this book
Other ways to access
Table of contents (62 papers)
-
Front Matter
Pages I-XVIII
-
Foundations of System Specification (IFIP WG 1.3)
-
- Pascal Poizat, Christine Choppy, Jean-Claude Royer
Pages 939-962
-
- Frédéric Lang, Pierre Lescanne, Luigi Liquori
Pages 963-982
-
European Theory and Practice of Software (ETAPS)
-
- S. A. Seshia, R. K. Shyamasundar, A. K. Bhattacharjee, S. D. Dhodapkar
Pages 983-1007
-
-
-
- Fiona Polack, Susan Stepney
Pages 1048-1067
-
- Perry Alexander, Murali Rangarajan, Phillip Baraona
Pages 1068-1086
-
- Gary T. Leavens, Albert L. Baker
Pages 1087-1106
-
Program Verification
-
- Markus Müller-Olm, Andreas Wolf
Pages 1107-1127
-
- Richard Verhoeven, Roland Backhouse
Pages 1128-1146
-
- S. Dellacherie, S. Devulder, J-L. Lambert
Pages 1147-1165
-
Integration of Notation and Techniques
-
- Brendan Mahony, Jin Song Dong
Pages 1166-1185
-
- Bernd Krieg-Brückner, Jan Peleska, Ernst-Rüdiger Olderog, Alexander Baer
Pages 1186-1205
-
- Bernhard Schätz, Franz Huber
Pages 1206-1225
-
Formal Description of Programming Concepts (IFIP WG 2.2)
-
-
- F. S. de Boer, U. Hannemann, W. -P. de Roever
Pages 1245-1265
-
-
Open Information Systems
-
- João Pedro Sousa, David Garlan
Pages 1281-1300
-
- Leonid Mikhajlov, Linas Laibinis, Emil Sekerinski
Pages 1301-1320
About this book
Formal methods are coming of age. Mathematical techniques and tools are now regarded as an important part of the development process in a wide range of industrial and governmental organisations. A transfer of technology into the mainstream of systems development is slowly, but surely, taking place. FM’99, the First World Congress on Formal Methods in the Development of Computing Systems, is a result, and a measure, of this new-found maturity. It brings an impressive array of industrial and applications-oriented papers that show how formal methods have been used to tackle real problems. These proceedings are a record of the technical symposium ofFM’99:alo- side the papers describingapplicationsofformalmethods,youwill ndtechnical reports,papers,andabstracts detailing new advances in formaltechniques,from mathematical foundations to practical tools. The World Congress is the successor to the four Formal Methods Europe Symposia, which in turn succeeded the four VDM Europe Symposia. This s- cession re?ects an increasing openness within the international community of researchers and practitioners: papers were submitted covering a wide variety of formal methods and application areas. The programmecommittee re?ects the Congress’s international nature, with a membership of 84 leading researchersfrom 38 di erent countries.The comm- tee was divided into 19 tracks, each with its own chair to oversee the reviewing process. Our collective task was a di cult one: there were 259 high-quality s- missions from 35 di erent countries.
Editors and Affiliations
-
Computer Science Department, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA
Jeannette M. Wing
-
Oxford University Computing Laboratory, Software Engineering Programme, Oxford, UK
Jim Woodcock,
Jim Davies