A specification language design for the Java Modeling Language (JML) using Java 5 annotations

Design by contract specification languages help programmers write their intentions for a piece of code in a formal mathematical language. Most programming languages do not have built-in syntax for such specifications, so many design by contract languages place specifications in comments. The Java Mo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taylor, Kristina Boysen
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses 01.01.2008
Subjects:
ISBN:0549540997, 9780549540991
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Summary:Design by contract specification languages help programmers write their intentions for a piece of code in a formal mathematical language. Most programming languages do not have built-in syntax for such specifications, so many design by contract languages place specifications in comments. The Java Modeling Language (JML) is one such specification language for Java that uses comments to specify contracts. However, starting with version 5, Java has introduced annotations, a syntactical structure to place metadata in various places in the code. This thesis proposes an initial design to writing JML contracts in the Java 5 annotation syntax and evaluates several criteria in the areas of specification languages and Java language design: whether these annotations are expressive enough to take advantage of annotation simplicity and tool support, and whether the annotation syntax is expressive enough to support handling a large specification language such as JML.
Bibliography:SourceType-Dissertations & Theses-1
ObjectType-Dissertation/Thesis-1
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ISBN:0549540997
9780549540991