
Intensional Programming I: Based On The Papers At Islip '95
World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
Will be published approx. on 1. January 1996
Book
Hardback
308 pages
978-981-02-2400-4 (ISBN)
Description
There is a growing interest in programming languages and systems, and computational models based on intensional logics - such as temporal logic, interval logic and modal logic - and possible world semantics. In fact, a whole new programming model called intensional programming has emerged with applications in a wide range of areas including parallel programming, dataflow computation, temporal reasoning, scientific computation, software version control, real-time programming, temporal query languages, executable temporal logics, spreadsheets, attribute grammars, and hardware synthesis, to name a few. Intensional Programming is especially suited to application domains where the notion of dynamic change is central.This collection will feature papers by leading researchers in the field of intensional programming dealing with theoretical foundations, design, implementation and prototype development issues, comparative studies, and applications, as well as those describing new challenges arising out of applications. It contains revised and extended versions of the papers presented at the Eighth International Symposium on Languages for Intensional Programming held on May 3-5, 1995 at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Singapore
Singapore
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
ISBN-13
978-981-02-2400-4 (9789810224004)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
Portfolio - a graphical system for GLU programming, R. Jagannathan; distributed programming based on graphs, J.-N. Cao and K. Zhang; ALFA fine grain dataflow machine, L. Verdoscia; a new stream processing language, J. Plaice and Y. Haralambous; real-time object-oriented specification and verification, S. Yamane; the possible world-wide web, A. Yoder and W. Wadge; a calculus based on absence of actions, P. Krishnan; a meta-level approach to modal logic programming, S. Akama.