In computer programming, a postcondition is a condition or predicate that must always be true just after the execution of some section of code or after an operation in a formal specification. Postconditions are sometimes tested using assertions within the code itself. Often, postconditions are simply included in the documentation of the affected section of code.

For example: The result of a factorial is always an integer and greater than or equal to 1. So a program that calculates the factorial of an input number would have postconditions that the result after the calculation be an integer and that it be greater than or equal to 1. Another example: a program that calculates the square root of an input number might have the postconditions that the result be a number and that its square be equal to the input.

Postconditions in object-oriented programming

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In some software design approaches, postconditions, along with preconditions and class invariants, are components of the software construction method design by contract.

The postcondition for any routine is a declaration of the properties which are guaranteed upon completion of the routine's execution.[1] As it relates to the routine's contract, the postcondition offers assurance to potential callers that in cases in which the routine is called in a state in which its precondition holds, the properties declared by the postcondition are assured.

Eiffel example

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The following example written in Eiffel sets the value of a class attribute hour based on a caller-provided argument a_hour. The postcondition follows the keyword ensure. In this example, the postcondition guarantees, in cases in which the precondition holds (i.e., when a_hour represents a valid hour of the day), that after the execution of set_hour, the class attribute hour will have the same value as a_hour. The tag hour_set describes this postcondition clause and serves to identify it in case of a runtime postcondition violation.

    set_hour (a_hour: INTEGER)
            -- Set `hour' to `a_hour'
        require
            valid_argument: 0 <= a_hour and a_hour < 24
        do
            hour := a_hour
        ensure
            hour_set: hour = a_hour
        end

Postconditions and inheritance

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In the presence of inheritance, the routines inherited by descendant classes (subclasses) do so with their contracts, that is their preconditions and postconditions, in force. This means that any implementations or redefinitions of inherited routines also have to be written to comply with their inherited contracts. Postconditions can be modified in redefined routines, but they may only be strengthened.[2] That is, the redefined routine may increase the benefits it provides to the client, but may not decrease those benefits.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Meyer, Bertrand, Object-Oriented Software Construction, second edition, Prentice Hall, 1997, p. 342.
  2. ^ Meyer, 1997, pp. 570–573.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Design by contract

the ordinary definition of abstract data types with preconditions, postconditions and invariants. These specifications are referred to as "contracts"

Hoare logic

and Q {\displaystyle Q} the postcondition: when the precondition is met, executing the command establishes the postcondition. Assertions are formulae in

Predicate transformer semantics

weakest-preconditions, or runs forward in the case of strongest-postconditions. For a statement S and a postcondition R, a weakest precondition is a predicate Q such

Behavioral subtyping

given by a precondition Ps and a postcondition Qs is stronger than one given by a precondition Pt and a postcondition Qt (formally: (Ps, Qs) ⇒ (Pt, Qt))

Precondition

of design by contract. Design by contract also includes notions of postcondition and class invariant. The precondition for any routine defines any constraints

Liskov substitution principle

that it considers the interaction of subtyping with preconditions, postconditions and invariants. Liskov's notion of a behavioural subtype defines a notion

Eiffel (programming language)

engineering is design by contract (DbC), in which assertions, preconditions, postconditions, and class invariants are employed to help ensure program correctness

Python (programming language)

2018. Retrieved 27 June 2009. "PyDBC: method preconditions, method postconditions and class invariants for Python". Archived from the original on 23 November