CSA Preface
Standards development within the Information Technology sector is harmonized with international standards development. Through the CSA Technical Committee on Information Technology (TCIT), Canadians serve as the SCC Mirror Committee (SMC) on ISO/IEC Joint Technical Committee 1 on Information Technology (ISO/IEC JTC1) for the Standards Council of Canada (SCC), the ISO member body for Canada and sponsor of the Canadian National Committee of the IEC. Also, as a member of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), Canada participates in the International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee (ITU-T).
This Standard has been formally approved, without modification, by the Technical Committee and has been developed in compliance with Standards Council of Canada requirements for National Standards of Canada. It has been published as a National Standard of Canada by CSA Group.
Scope
This document specifies a family of logic languages designed for use in the representation and interchange of information and data among disparate computer systems.
The following features are essential to the design of this document.
— Languages in the family have declarative semantics. It is possible to understand the meaning of expressions in these languages without appeal to an interpreter for manipulating those expressions.
— Languages in the family are logically comprehensive – at its most general, they provide for the expression of arbitrary first-order logical sentences.
— Languages in the family are translatable by a semantics-preserving transformation to a common XML-based syntax, facilitating interchange of information among heterogeneous computer systems.
The following are within the scope of this document:
— representation of information in ontologies and knowledge bases;
— specification of expressions that are the input or output of inference engines;
— formal interpretations of the symbols in the language.
The following are outside the scope of this document:
— specification of proof theory or inference rules;
— specification of translators between the notations of heterogeneous computer systems;
— computer-based operational methods of providing relationships between symbols in the logical universe of discourse and individuals in the real world.
This document describes Common Logic’s syntax and semantics.
This document defines an abstract syntax and an associated model-theoretic semantics for a specific extension of first-order logic. The intent is that the content of any system using first-order logic can be represented in this document. The purpose is to facilitate interchange of first-order logic-based information between systems.
Issues relating to computability using this document (including efficiency, optimization, etc.) are not addressed.