Predicative programming
Predicative programming is a methodology for program specification and refinement. The central idea of predicative programming is that each specification is a predicate (generally written as a boolean expression) that is true of acceptable behaviours and false of unacceptable behaviours. It follows that refinement is reversed implication universally quantified over behaviours:
Commands in a programming language are considered to be a special case of specifications—special only because they are compilable. For example, in an environment where the program variables are , , and , the command is considered equivalent to the predicate (represented here by a boolean expression)
in which , , and represent the initial values of the program variables and , , and represent the final values of the program variables. Thus
Bibliography
- E.C.R. Hehner, a Practical Theory of Programming, Springer-Verlag 1993. Most recent edition online at a Practical Theory of Programming.
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