Common Algebraic Specification Language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Common Algebraic Specification Language (CASL) is a general-purpose specification language based on first-order logic with induction. Partial functions and subsorting are also supported.
CASL has been designed by CoFI, the Common Framework Initiative, with the aim to subsume many existing specification languages.
CASL comprises four levels:
- basic specifications, for the specification of single software modules,
- structured specifications, for the modular specification of modules,
- architectural specifications, for the prescription of the structure of implementations,
- specification libraries, for storing specifications distributed over the Internet.
The four levels are orthogonal to each other. In particular, it is possible to use CASL structured and architectural specifications and libraries also with other logics than the CASL logic. For this purpose, the logic has to be formalized as an institution. This provides also the basis for CASL extensions.
[edit] Extensions
Several extensions of CASL have been designed:
- HasCASL, a higher-order extension
- CoCASL, a coalgebraic extension
- CspCASL, a concurrent extension based on CSP
- ModalCASL, a modal logic extension
- CASL-LTL, a temporal logic extension
- HetCASL, an extension for heterogeneous specification
[edit] External links
- Official CoFI website
- CASL at the University of Bremen
- The heterogeneous tool set Hets, the main analysis tool for CASL