The Little Prover
By (Author) Daniel P. Friedman
By (author) Carl Eastlund
Drawings by Duane Bibby
Foreword by J Strother Moore
Afterword by Matthias Felleisen
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
10th July 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Web programming
Software Engineering
005.25
Paperback
248
Width 178mm, Height 229mm, Spine 14mm
An introduction to writing proofs about computer programs, written in an accessible question-and-answer style, complete with step-by-step examples and a simple proof assistant.The Little Prover introduces inductive proofs as a way to determine facts about computer programs. It is written in an approachable, engaging style of question-and-answer, with the characteristic humor of The Little Schemer (fourth edition, MIT Press). Sometimes the best way to learn something is to sit down and do it; the book takes readers through step-by-step examples showing how to write inductive proofs. The Little Prover assumes only knowledge of recursive programs and lists (as presented in the first three chapters of The Little Schemer) and uses only a few terms beyond what novice programmers already know. The book comes with a simple proof assistant to help readers work through the book and complete solutions to every example.
Daniel P. Friedman is Professor of Computer Science in the School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering at Indiana University and is the author of many books published by the MIT Press, including The Little Schemer and The Seasoned Schemer (with Matthias Felleisen); The Little Prover (with Carl Eastlund); and The Reasoned Schemer (with William E. Byrd, Oleg Kiselyov, and Jason Hemann). Carl Eastlund is a software engineer at Jane Street Capital in New York City. Matthias Felleisen is Trustee Professor in the College of Computer Science at Northeastern University.