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Algebraic-coalgebraic specification in CoCasl
- J. LOGIC ALGEBRAIC PROGRAMMING
, 2006
"... We introduce CoCasl as a simple coalgebraic extension of the algebraic specification language Casl. CoCasl allows the nested combination of algebraic datatypes and coalgebraic process types. We show that the well-known coalgebraic modal logic can be expressed in CoCasl. We present sufficient criter ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 16 (7 self)
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We introduce CoCasl as a simple coalgebraic extension of the algebraic specification language Casl. CoCasl allows the nested combination of algebraic datatypes and coalgebraic process types. We show that the well-known coalgebraic modal logic can be expressed in CoCasl. We present sufficient criteria for the existence of cofree models, also for several variants of nested cofree and free specifications. Moreover, we describe an extension of the existing proof support for Casl (in the shape of an encoding into higher-order logic) to CoCasl.
Algebraic Model Checking
"... Abstract. Several more or less algebraic approaches to model checking are presented and compared with each other with respect to their range of applications and their degree of automation. All of them have been implemented and tested in our Haskell-based formal-reasoning system Expander2. Besides re ..."
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Abstract. Several more or less algebraic approaches to model checking are presented and compared with each other with respect to their range of applications and their degree of automation. All of them have been implemented and tested in our Haskell-based formal-reasoning system Expander2. Besides realizing and integrating state-of-the art proof and computation rules the system admits rarely restricted specifications of the models to be checked in terms of rewrite rules and functional-logic programs. It also offers flexible features for visualizing and even animating models and computations. Indeed, this paper does not present purely theoretical work. Due to the increasing abstraction potential of programming languages like Haskell the boundaries between developing a formal system and implementing it or making it ‘user-friendly ’ as well as between systems developed in different communities become more and more obsolete. The individual topics discussed in the paper reflect this observation. 1

