Reasoning About Program Transformations: Imperative Programming and Flow of Data - Jean-francois Collard - Books - Springer-Verlag New York Inc. - 9781441929815 - December 3, 2010
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Reasoning About Program Transformations: Imperative Programming and Flow of Data Softcover Reprint of the Original 1st Ed. 2003 edition

Jean-francois Collard

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Reasoning About Program Transformations: Imperative Programming and Flow of Data Softcover Reprint of the Original 1st Ed. 2003 edition

Description for Sales People: A new book providing a detailed and current presentation of the program analysses and transformations that extract the flow of data in computer memory systems. The emphasis is on a framework for the optimization of code for imperative programs and greater computer systems efficiency. Professionals and researchers in software engineering, computer engineering, program design analysis, and compiler design will benefit from its presentation of data-flow methods and memory optimization of compilers. Table of Contents: * Introduction * Describing program executions * Labels * Revisiting some classical compiler concepts * Reaching defintion analysis * Applications of reaching definition analysis * Some classical compiler concepts, part II * Single assignment forms * Maximal static expansion * Parallel languages * Toward algorithm recognition * References * IndexMarc Notes: Originally published: 2002.; This book focuses on analyses that extract the flow of data, which imperative programming hides through its use and reuse of memory in computer systems and compilers. It details some programme transformations that conserve this data flow and introduces reaching definition analyses. Publisher Marketing: Overview The motivation of this text lies in what we believe is the inadequacy of current frameworks to reason about the ?ow of data in imperative programs. This inadequacy clearly shows up when dealing with the individual side effects of loop iterations. - deed, we face a paradoxical situation where, on the one hand, a typical program spends most of its execution time iterating or recursing on a few lines of codes, and, on the other hand, current optimization frameworks are clumsy when trying to capture the effects of each incarnation of these few lines frameworks we inherited from designs made decades ago. The reasons are manyfold, but one of them stands out: The same concepts have been used, on the one hand, to represent and manipulate programs internally in compilers and, on the other hand, to allow us humans to reason about optimizations. Unfortunately, these two uses have different aims and constraints. An example of such a situation is given by control-?ow graphs of basic blocks, which have been - tremely useful in practice as an internal representation of programs, but which are not always adequate or convenient to formally think about programs and specify their transformations. In some cases, de?nitions based on control-?ow graphs can be overly restrictive. Dominance, studied in Chapter 4, is a good example."


238 pages, biography

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released December 3, 2010
ISBN13 9781441929815
Publishers Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Pages 238
Dimensions 156 × 234 × 13 mm   ·   367 g
Language English  

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