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AMAST
2004
Springer

Linear Temporal Logic and Z Refinement

13 years 8 months ago
Linear Temporal Logic and Z Refinement
Since Z, being a state-based language, describes a system in terms of its state and potential state changes, it is natural to want to describe properties of a specified system also in terms of its state. One means of doing this is to use Linear Temporal Logic (LTL) in which properties about the state of a system over time can be captured. This, however, raises the question of whether these properties are preserved under refinement. Refinement is observation preserving and the state of a specified system is regarded as internal and, hence, non-observable. In this paper, we investigate this issue by addressing the following questions. Given that a Z specification A is refined by a Z specification C, and that P is a temporal logic property which holds for A, what temporal logic property Q can we deduce holds for C? Furthermore, under what circumstances does the property Q preserve the intended meaning of the property P? The paper answers these questions for LTL, but the approach could als...
John Derrick, Graeme Smith
Added 20 Aug 2010
Updated 20 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where AMAST
Authors John Derrick, Graeme Smith
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