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Finished 2011 pass through Intro
author Adam Chlipala <adam@chlipala.net>
date Thu, 25 Aug 2011 14:41:49 -0400
parents 20c742997dae
children d092baf477ae
rev   line source
adamc@39 1 <html>
adamc@39 2 <head>
adamc@268 3 <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="Updates RSS Feed" href="updates.rss">
adamc@39 4 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/style.css">
adamc@39 5 <title>Certified Programming with Dependent Types</title>
adamc@39 6 </head><body>
adamc@39 7 <h1>Certified Programming with Dependent Types</h1>
adamc@69 8 <h2><a href="http://adam.chlipala.net/">Adam Chlipala</a></h2>
adamc@39 9
adamc@39 10 <div class="summary">
adamc@39 11 <p>This is the web site for an in-progress textbook about practical engineering with <a href="http://coq.inria.fr/">the Coq proof assistant</a>. The focus is on building programs with proofs of correctness, using dependent types and scripted proof automation.</p>
adamc@267 12
adamc@267 13 <p>I'm following an unusual philosophy in this book, so it may be of interest even to long-time Coq users. At the same time, I hope that it provides an easier introduction for newcomers, since short and automated proofs are the starting point, rather than an advanced topic.</p>
adamc@267 14
adamc@267 15 <p>The final part of the book applies the earlier parts' tools to examples in programming languages and compilers.</p>
adamc@267 16
adamc@270 17 <p>Interested in beta testing this book in a course you're teaching? Please <a href="mailto:adam@chlipala.net">drop me a line</a>!</p>
adam@299 18
adam@299 19 <p>A traditional hardcopy version will appear from <a href="http://mitpress.mit.edu/">MIT Press</a> Real Soon Now.</p>
adamc@39 20 </div>
adamc@39 21
adamc@39 22 <div class="project">
adamc@226 23 <h2>Distribution Formats</h2>
adamc@39 24 <ul>
adamc@39 25 <li> <a href="cpdt.pdf">Latest draft as a PDF</a></li>
adamc@39 26 <li> <a href="html/toc.html">Online version of latest draft, as hyperlinked HTML</a></li>
adamc@39 27 <li> <a href="cpdt.tgz">Tarball of Coq source to latest draft</a></li>
adamc@268 28 <li> <a href="updates.rss">RSS feed of updates</a></li>
adamc@226 29 </ul>
adamc@226 30 </div>
adamc@226 31
adamc@226 32 <div class="project">
adamc@226 33 <h2>Used by:</h2>
adamc@226 34 <ul>
adamc@226 35 <li> CS252 at Harvard <a href="http://www.cs.harvard.edu/~adamc/cpdt/">(Fall 2008)</a></li>
adamc@226 36 </ul>
adamc@226 37 </div>
adamc@226 38
adamc@226 39 <div class="project">
adamc@226 40 <h2>Status</h2>
adamc@226 41
adam@299 42 <p>Updated on November 16, 2009 with a version retargeted to Coq 8.2pl1, and then again on January 14, 2011 to support Coq 8.3.</p>
adamc@231 43
adamc@266 44 <p>The current version is effectively a beta release. It is intended to be consistent, self-contained, and useful, both for individual study and for introductory theorem-proving classes aimed at students with ML or Haskell experience and with basic familiarity with programming language theory.</p>
adamc@266 45
adamc@266 46 <p>The main omissions have to do with some supporting resources that I didn't get around to implementing when I used this book for a course. Some suggested exercises are present, but only at points where I was looking to assign an exercise in the course. Some chapters are lacking the annotations used to build reduced versions of their source code, where some definitions and proofs have been elided; the course instructor can step through such a file, guiding class participants in filling in the omitted code.</p>
adamc@267 47
adamc@267 48 <p>I'm also not sure how much of the final part, on programming languages and compilers, belongs in this book. It might change significantly or go away.</p>
adamc@39 49 </div>
adamc@39 50
adamc@39 51 </body></html>