Software bugs are expensive. Recent estimates by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology claim that the cost of software bugs to the US economy alone is approximately 60 billion USD annually. As society becomes increasingly software-dependent, bugs also reduce our productivity and threaten our safety and security. Decreasing these direct and indirect costs represents a significant research challenge as well as an opportunity for businesses. Automatic software bug-finding and verification tools have a potential to completely revolutionize the software engineering industry by improving reliability and decreasing development costs. Since software analysis is in general undecidable, automatic tools have to use various abstraction...
Software bugs are everywhere. Not only do they infest software during development, but they escape o...
The Scalable Analysis Toolkit (SAT) project aimed to demonstrate that it is feasible and useful to s...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness? Today's s...
According to a study in 2002 commissioned by a US Department, software bugs annually costs the US ec...
Although software is pervasive, almost all programs suffer from bugs and errors. To detect software ...
Software is large, complex, and error-prone. According to the US National Institute of Standards and...
Abstract. Precise software analysis and verification require tracking the exact path along which a s...
The increasing availability of information technology in today’s life is a challenge for users as we...
Software bugs are not going away. Millions of dollars and thousands of developer-hours are spent fin...
The risk posed by software bugs has increased tremendously as software is now essential to many aspe...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness?\ud \ud To...
Despite the technological advances in languages and tools to support program development, pro-gramme...
Formal methods techniques for improving software correctness and reliability fall into two categorie...
Picture a world where you can ask questions about a piece of code and have tools that automatically ...
Over the past two decades, formal methods researchers have produced a number of powerful software to...
Software bugs are everywhere. Not only do they infest software during development, but they escape o...
The Scalable Analysis Toolkit (SAT) project aimed to demonstrate that it is feasible and useful to s...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness? Today's s...
According to a study in 2002 commissioned by a US Department, software bugs annually costs the US ec...
Although software is pervasive, almost all programs suffer from bugs and errors. To detect software ...
Software is large, complex, and error-prone. According to the US National Institute of Standards and...
Abstract. Precise software analysis and verification require tracking the exact path along which a s...
The increasing availability of information technology in today’s life is a challenge for users as we...
Software bugs are not going away. Millions of dollars and thousands of developer-hours are spent fin...
The risk posed by software bugs has increased tremendously as software is now essential to many aspe...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness?\ud \ud To...
Despite the technological advances in languages and tools to support program development, pro-gramme...
Formal methods techniques for improving software correctness and reliability fall into two categorie...
Picture a world where you can ask questions about a piece of code and have tools that automatically ...
Over the past two decades, formal methods researchers have produced a number of powerful software to...
Software bugs are everywhere. Not only do they infest software during development, but they escape o...
The Scalable Analysis Toolkit (SAT) project aimed to demonstrate that it is feasible and useful to s...
If software code is developed by humans, can we as users rely on its absolute correctness? Today's s...