Refinement calculus, part II: parallel and reactive programs
REX workshop Proceedings on Stepwise refinement of distributed systems: models, formalisms, correctness
The B-book: assigning programs to meanings
The B-book: assigning programs to meanings
Refinement Calculus: A Systematic Introduction
Refinement Calculus: A Systematic Introduction
A new approach to program testing
Proceedings of the international conference on Reliable software
Refinement, Decomposition, and Instantiation of Discrete Models: Application to Event-B
Fundamenta Informaticae - This is a SPECIAL ISSUE ON ASM'05
ZB'03 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Formal specification and development in Z and B
Boogie: a modular reusable verifier for object-oriented programs
FMCO'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Formal Methods for Components and Objects
An open extensible tool environment for event-b
ICFEM'06 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Formal Methods and Software Engineering
Using b as a high level programming language in an industrial project: roissy VAL
ZB'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Formal Specification and Development in Z and B
B in large-scale projects: the canarsie line CBTC experience
B'07 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Formal Specification and Development in B
Redevelopment of an industrial case study using event-B and Rodin
FACS-FMI'07 Proceedings of the 2007th internatioanal conference on Formal Methods in Industry
Decomposition tool for event-B
Software—Practice & Experience
On an extensible rule-based prover for event-b
ABZ'10 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Abstract State Machines, Alloy, B and Z
Scenario-based testing using symbolic animation of B models
Software Testing, Verification & Reliability
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We present a software tool, the Rodin tool, for formal modelling in Event-B. Event-B is a notation and method developed from the B-Method and is intended to be used with an incremental style of modelling. The idea of incremental modelling has been taken from programming: modern programming languages come with integrated development environments that make it easy to modify and improve programs. The Rodin tool provides such an environment for Event-B. The two main characteristics of the Rodin tool are its ease of use and its extensibility. The tool focuses on modelling. It is easy to modify models and try out variations of a model. The tool can also be extended easily. This will make it possible to adapt the tool specific needs. So the tool can be adapted to fit into existing development processes instead demanding the opposite. We believe that these two characteristics are major points for industrial uptake.