CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2011/ch18 6a sc
Programming by Contract
Common programming errors
Programming by contract
Programming by Contract or Design by Contract (DbC) was first introduced by Bertrand Meyer, the creator of Eiffel programming language. Although Eiffel has implemented assertions as built in DbC support, the concepts can be applied in any language. It uses pre-conditions and post-conditions to document or programmatically assert the change in state caused by a piece of a program. (1)
Background
Programming by Contract or Design by Contract (DbC) has its roots in work on formal verification, formal specification and Hoare logic. The original contributions includes:
- A clear metaphor to guide the design process.
- The application to inheritance, in particular a formalism for redefinition and dynamic binding.
- The application to exception handling.
- The connection with automatic software documentation.
Methodology
Programming by Contract creates a contract between the software developer and software user - in Meyer's terms the supplier (callee) and the consumer (caller/client).
Before entering a method or routine, a pre-condition must be satisfied by the consumer of the routine. Each routine ends with a post-conditions which the supplier guarantees to be true (if and only if the preconditions were met). Also, each class has an invariant which must be satisfied after any changes to an object are represented by the class. In other words, the invariant guarantees the object is in a valid state. (2)
A Java Example
Here is a Java example that shows where the checks can be placed.
class Supplier{ //the supplier class public Supplier() { //some code that initializes the supplier constructor checkInvariant(); //verify class invariant } public supplier_method(Data data) { //some actions performed by supplier method postCondition(); //check if we have done what has been promised checkInvariant(); //verify class invariant } } class Client { // the client class public client_method (Data data){ //client method, calls supplier method Supplier s = new Supplier(); //initialize supplier constructor preCondition(data); //verify the preCondition before calling the supplier method s.supplier_method(data); } }
Design by Contract Metaphor
DbC is a metaphor on how elements of a software system collaborate with each other, on the basis of mutual obligations and benefits. The metaphor comes from business life, where a "client" and a "supplier" agree on a "contract" which documents that:
- The supplier must provide a certain product (obligation) and is entitled to expect that the client has paid its fee (benefit).
- The client must pay the fee (obligation) and is entitled to get the product (benefit).
- Both parties must satisfy certain obligations, such as laws and regulations, applying to all contracts. (3)
We can use the previous Java example to show the relationship between obligation and benefit.
Obligations | Benefit | |
---|---|---|
Client | Satisfy preCondition() | Result from supplier_method |
Supplier | Satisfy postCondition() | Know that preCondition() is satisfied by client_method |
Apply Programming by Contract to Applications
Inheritance
When programming by contract used with inheritance, a subcontracting is added to the inherited class.
The subcontracting may keep or weaken the precondition; it may keep or strengthen the postcondition.
class A { public int foo(int x) { assert(1<x<3); // pre-condition ... assert(result<15); //post-condition return result; } } class B extends A { public int foo(int x) { assert(0<x<5); //weakened pre-condition ... assert(result<3); //strengthened post-condition return result; } }
Exception Handling
Summary
References
1. Cunningham & Cunningham, Inc., Design by Contract
2. University of North Carolina
3. Eiffel Software, Design by Contract
http://www.cs.usfca.edu/~parrt/course/601/lectures/programming.by.contract.html