Hoare logic is a formal system developed by the British computer scientist C. A. R. Hoare, and published in his 1969 paper "An axiomatic basis for computer programming". The purpose of the system is to provide a set of logical rules which one can use to reason about computer programs.
Let C be a line, or sequence of lines, in a computer program, and let P and Q be logical predicates such that if P is true before C is executed then Q will necessarily be true after C is executed. Then the following expression
- {P} C {Q}
See also:
Further reading
- C. A. R. Hoare. "An axiomatic basis for computer programming". Communications of the ACM, 12(10):576-585, October 1969. (Copy of the paper on the ACM website.)