Designing Embedded Systems with the SIGNAL Programming Language Synchronous, Reactive Specification

Designing Embedded Systems with the SIGNAL Programming Language Synchronous, Reactive Specification by Abdoulaye Gamatié is published by Springer New York and was released on November 26, 2014. This edition spans 259 pages and is presented in English. The book explores the SIGNAL language and its environment, POLYCHRONY, highlighting its significance in the development of synchronous computing and the dataflow approach to computation.
Readers will find a detailed examination of how data travels in streams through a network of processing stations, often referred to as filters. The text discusses the advantages of the dataflow model, particularly its alignment with real-world processes in production, transportation, and communication. This work aims to provide insights into the design and implementation of embedded systems, focusing on the principles of technology and engineering, particularly in the fields of electronics and circuit design.
Official synopsis Publisher
I am very pleased to play even a small part in the publication of this book on the SIGNAL language and its environment POLYCHRONY. I am sure it will be a s- ni?cant milestone in the development of the SIGNAL language, of synchronous computing in general, and of the data?ow approach to computation. In data?ow, the computation takes place in a producer–consumer network of – dependent processing stations. Data travels in streams and is transformed as these streams pass through the processing stations (often called ?lters). Data?ow is an attractive model for many reasons, not least because it corresponds to the way p- duction,transportation,andcommunicationare typicallyorganizedin the real world (outside cyberspace). I myself stumbled into data?ow almost against my will. In the mid-1970s, Ed Ashcroft and I set out to design a “super” structured programming language that, we hoped, would radically simplify proving assertions about programs. In the end, we decided that it had to be declarative. However, we also were determined that iterative algorithms could be expressed directly, without circumlocutions such as the use of a tail-recursive function. The language that resulted, which we named LUCID, was much less traditional then we would have liked. LUCID statements are equations in a kind of executable temporallogic thatspecifythe (time)sequencesof variablesinvolvedin aniteration.
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