Integrated program verification tools in education

Automated software verification is an active field of research, which has made enormous progress both in theoretical and practical aspects. Even if not ready for large-scale industrial adoption, the technology behind automated program verifiers is now mature enough to gracefully handle the kind of p...

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Autores principales: de Caso, Guido, Garbervetsky, Diego, Gorín, Daniel Alejandro
Publicado: 2013
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00380644_v43_n4_p403_DeCaso
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00380644_v43_n4_p403_DeCaso
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Sumario:Automated software verification is an active field of research, which has made enormous progress both in theoretical and practical aspects. Even if not ready for large-scale industrial adoption, the technology behind automated program verifiers is now mature enough to gracefully handle the kind of programs that arise in introductory programming courses. This opens exciting new opportunities in teaching the basics of reasoning about program correctness to novice students. However, for these tools to be effective, command-line-style user-interfaces need to be replaced. In this paper, we report on our experience using the verifying compiler for PEST in an introductory programming course as well as in a more advanced course on program analysis. PEST is an extremely basic programming language, but with expressive annotations capabilities and semantics amenable to verification. In particular, we comment on the crucial role played by the integration of this verifying compiler with the Eclipse integrated development environment. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.