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Cliff B. Jones

    Cliff Jones
    FM 2014: Formal Methods
    Norvis
    Another Brick in the Wall. The Stories Behind Every Pink Floyd Song
    Building a better mousetrap: studies in the science of management
    Echoes
    • This in-depth, revealing look at the music that has made Pink Floyd one of the most phenomenally successful bands in rock history is being published to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the group's debut album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, as well as a major stadium tour. A comprehensive discography and a list of sources and references are also included. 160 photos, 110 in color. Radio & online promos.

      Another Brick in the Wall. The Stories Behind Every Pink Floyd Song
    • Norvis

      • 64 Seiten
      • 3 Lesestunden
      Norvis
    • FM 2014: Formal Methods

      19th International Symposium, Singapore, May 12-16, 2014. Proceedings

      • 768 Seiten
      • 27 Lesestunden

      This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 19th International Symposium on Formal Methods, FM 2014, held in Singapore, May 2014. The 45 papers presented together with 3 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 150 submissions. The focus of the papers is on the following topics: Interdisciplinary Formal Methods, Practical Applications of Formal Methods in Industrial and Research Settings, Experimental Validation of Tools and Methods as well as Construction and Evolution of Formal Methods Tools.

      FM 2014: Formal Methods
    • Cliff Jones

      • 288 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden

      Cliff Jones was a key part of Tottenham's famous and much-loved Double winning side of 1961. Tremendously quick, a great crosser, and a brilliant header of the ball, Cliff was considered to be the best left winger in the world in his pomp. This is his story.

      Cliff Jones
    • The book concludes with a discussion of the eight key challenges: delimiting a language (concrete representation), delimiting the abstract content of a language, recording semantics (deterministic languages), operational semantics (non-determinism), context dependency, modelling sharing, modelling concurrency, and modelling exits.

      Understanding Programming Languages
    • Symposium on Real-Time and Hybrid Systems

      Essays Dedicated to Professor Chaochen Zhou on the Occasion of His 80th Birthday

      • 275 Seiten
      • 10 Lesestunden

      This volume is published in honor of Professor Chaochen Zhou’s 80th birthday. The Festschrift contains 13 refereed papers by leading researchers who were among the participants of the celebratory conference in Changsha, China that took place in October 2017. The papers cover a broad spectrum of subjects related to Formal Methods for the development of computer systems. Topics include Probabilistic Programming, Concurrency, Quantum Computing, Domain Engineering, Real-time and Hybrid Systems, and Cloud Computing. Chaochen Zhou is internationally recognized for his own contributions and for the wide influence that he has had through his appointments in Oxford (UK) where he collaborated with Professor Tony Hoare, Lyngby (Denmark) where he worked with Professor Dines Bjørner, UNU-IIST (Macau) where he moved from being Principal Research Fellow to his appointed as Director of the Institute, as well as in Beijing. His book on the Duration Calculus (joint with Michael Hansen) made a seminal contribution to specifying and reasoning about real-time systems. Chaochen Zhou’s contributions have been marked by his election as a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

      Symposium on Real-Time and Hybrid Systems
    • This Festschrift volume, published in honor of Brian Randell on the occasion of his 75th birthday, contains a total of 37 refereed contributions. Two biographical papers are followed by the six invited papers that were presented at the conference 'Dependable and Historic Computing: The Randell Tales', held during April 7-8, 2011 at Newcastle University, UK. The remaining contributions are authored by former scientific colleagues of Brian Randell. The papers focus on the core of Brian Randell’s work: the development of computing science and the study of its history. Moreover, his wider interests are reflected and so the collection comprises papers on software engineering, storage fragmentation, computer architecture, programming languages and dependability. There is even a paper that echoes Randell’s love of maps. After an early career with English Electric and then with IBM in New York and California, Brian Randell joined Newcastle University. His main research has been on dependable computing in all its forms, especially reliability, safety and security aspects, and he has led several major European collaborative projects.

      Dependable and historic computing
    • This collection explores various aspects of formal methods and system modeling, focusing on applications in areas such as distributed file replication, traffic systems, and embedded systems. It delves into denotational semantics for programming languages like Handel-C and discusses generating polynomial invariants using tools like DISCOVERER and QEPCAD. The text highlights the CoCoME experience in harnessing rCOS for tool support and automating verification processes in cooperative and control systems. It also covers specifying time models with temporal propositional variables in Duration Calculus and the importance of ordering connections to relate domain concepts intensionally. The work emphasizes the significance of formal methods in industrial contexts, proving theorems about JML classes, and developing specifications for testing. It presents a model-based approach for constructing and verifying railway control systems, addresses compensable programs, and discusses the engineering of embedded systems. The collection also features design verification patterns, the revival of Algol concepts in modern programming, and symbolic test generation using temporal logic. It concludes with a formal approach to railway applications and the paradigm of services as a computation model, showcasing the breadth and depth of formal methods in contemporary software engineering.

      Formal methods and hybrid real time systems