• DocumentCode
    1535247
  • Title

    The case for formal methods in standards

  • Author

    Blyth, David ; Boldyreff, Cornelia ; Ruggles, Clive ; Tetteh-Lartey, Nik

  • Author_Institution
    British Comp. Soc., London, UK
  • Volume
    7
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    1990
  • Firstpage
    65
  • Lastpage
    67
  • Abstract
    It is argued that applying formal methods to standards making would result in more accurate, more understandable, and more useful standards. The main benefit seen in using formal methods in a standard´s development and expression is improving the standard´s quality. In the early stages of standards development, formal methods can result in considerable clarification during the development and expression of the underlying conceptual model for a standard or family of related standards. They can also define precisely the relation among the components of both the standard being developed and other standards. Later in the development process, formal methods can improve a standard´s quality during its use by letting it be expressed clearly, unambiguously, and concisely in a way that natural language does not allow. Finally, formal methods can aid standards development at the maintenance stage, for example, by allowing the adequacy of a proposed change to be proved. Guidelines for applying formal methods in the standardization process are provided.<>
  • Keywords
    formal specification; standards; conceptual model; development process; formal methods; maintenance stage; quality; standardization process; standards development; ANSI standards; Computer aided software engineering; Computer graphics; Computer languages; Costs; Error correction; ISO standards; Natural languages; Specification languages; Standards development;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Software, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0740-7459
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/52.57893
  • Filename
    57893