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Verification of Business Rules Programs electronic resource by Bruno Berstel-Da Silva.

By: Berstel-Da Silva, Bruno [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XVII, 236 p. 18 illus., 2 illus. in color. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783642400384Subject(s): Computer Science | Logic design | Database management | Artificial intelligence | Computer Science | Logics and Meanings of Programs | Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) | Database Management | Programming TechniquesDDC classification: 005.1015113 LOC classification: QA76.9.L63QA76.5913QA76.63Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Chap. 1 - Introduction -- Chap. 2 - Related Work -- Chap. 3 - Syntax of Rules and Rule Programs -- Chap. 4 - States and State Assertions -- Chap. 5 - Operational Semantics of Rule Programs -- Chap. 6 - Correctness of Rule Programs -- Chap. 7 - Correctness of Programs: A Comparison -- Chap. 8 - Main Steps in Rule Program Verification -- Chap. 9 - A Verification Method for Rule Programs -- Chap. 10 - Specialized Proof Rules -- Chap. 11 - Conclusion -- Appendix A - Verification in an Industrial Business Rules Management System -- List of Proof Rules -- Index.                                .
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Rules represent a simplified means of programming, congruent with our understanding of human brain constructs. With the advent of business rules management systems, it has been possible to introduce rule-based programming to nonprogrammers, allowing them to map expert intent into code in applications such as fraud detection, financial transactions, healthcare, retail, and marketing. However, a remaining concern is the quality, safety, and reliability of the resulting programs. This book is on business rules programs, that is, rule programs as handled in business rules management systems. Its conceptual contribution is to present the foundation for treating business rules as a topic of scientific investigation in semantics and program verification, while its technical contribution is to present an approach to the formal verification of business rules programs. The author proposes a method for proving correctness properties for a business rules program in a compositional way, meaning that the proof of a correctness property for a program is built up from correctness properties for the individual rules—thus bridging a gap between the intuitive understanding of rules and the formal semantics of rule programs. With this approach the author enables rule authors and tool developers to understand, express formally, and prove properties of the execution behavior of business rules programs. This work will be of interest to practitioners and researchers in the areas of program verification, enterprise computing, database management, and artificial intelligence.
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Chap. 1 - Introduction -- Chap. 2 - Related Work -- Chap. 3 - Syntax of Rules and Rule Programs -- Chap. 4 - States and State Assertions -- Chap. 5 - Operational Semantics of Rule Programs -- Chap. 6 - Correctness of Rule Programs -- Chap. 7 - Correctness of Programs: A Comparison -- Chap. 8 - Main Steps in Rule Program Verification -- Chap. 9 - A Verification Method for Rule Programs -- Chap. 10 - Specialized Proof Rules -- Chap. 11 - Conclusion -- Appendix A - Verification in an Industrial Business Rules Management System -- List of Proof Rules -- Index.                                .

Rules represent a simplified means of programming, congruent with our understanding of human brain constructs. With the advent of business rules management systems, it has been possible to introduce rule-based programming to nonprogrammers, allowing them to map expert intent into code in applications such as fraud detection, financial transactions, healthcare, retail, and marketing. However, a remaining concern is the quality, safety, and reliability of the resulting programs. This book is on business rules programs, that is, rule programs as handled in business rules management systems. Its conceptual contribution is to present the foundation for treating business rules as a topic of scientific investigation in semantics and program verification, while its technical contribution is to present an approach to the formal verification of business rules programs. The author proposes a method for proving correctness properties for a business rules program in a compositional way, meaning that the proof of a correctness property for a program is built up from correctness properties for the individual rules—thus bridging a gap between the intuitive understanding of rules and the formal semantics of rule programs. With this approach the author enables rule authors and tool developers to understand, express formally, and prove properties of the execution behavior of business rules programs. This work will be of interest to practitioners and researchers in the areas of program verification, enterprise computing, database management, and artificial intelligence.

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