Project 1671 - ISO/IEC 24707:2007, Information technology
- Common Logic (CL): A framework for a family of logic-based languages
ISO/IEC 24707:2007 defines Common Logic: a first-order logic framework
intended for information exchange and transmission. The heart of the framework
is a complete abstract syntax and abstract semantics for Common Logic,
which provides the basis for many different concrete syntactic forms, called
dialects, which conform to the syntax and semantics. Common Logic has some
novel features, chief among them being a syntax which is signature-free
and permits 'higher-order' constructions such as quantification over classes
or relations while preserving a first-order model theory, and a semantics
which allows theories to describe intensional entities such as classes
or properties. It also fixes the meanings of a few conventions in widespread
use, such as numerals to denote integers and quotation marks to denote
character strings, and has provision for the use of datatypes and for naming,
importing and transmitting content on the World Wide Web. ISO/IEC 24707:2007
defines the abstract syntax and semantics, and three concrete dialects
are defined in the annexes. The three conforming dialects specified are
Common Logic Interchange Format (CLIF), Conceptual Graph Interchange Format
(CGIF) and XML for Common Logic (XCL).