Djeddai, S.Mezghiche, MohamedStrecker, M.2015-06-112015-06-1120128th International Conference on ICT in Education, Research and Industrial Applications: Integration, Harmonization and Knowledge Transfer, ICTERI 2012; Kherson; Ukraine; 6 June 2012 through 10 June 2012; Code 10200616130073https://dspace.univ-boumerdes.dz123456789/1679Formal methods are increasingly used in software engineering. They offer a formal frame that guarentees the correctness of developments. However, they use complex notations that might be difficult to understand for unaccustomed users. It thus becomes interesting to formally specify the core components of a language, implement a provably correct development, and manipulate its components in a graphical/ textual editor. This paper constitutes a first step towards using Model Driven Engineering (MDE) technology in an interactive proof development. It presents a transformation process from functional data structures, commonly used in proof assistants, to Ecore Models. The transformation is based on an MDE methodology. The resulting meta-models are used to generate graphical or textual editors. We will take an example to illustrate our approach: a simple domain specific language. This guiding example is a Java-like language enriched with assertions.enFormal MethodsModel Driven EngineeringModel TransformationFormal methodsIndustrial applicationsIndustrial researchKnowledge managementSoftware engineeringVerificationDomain specific languagesFormal verificationsInteractive proof developmentModel transformationModel-driven EngineeringProof assistantTransformation processJava programming languageA case study in combining formal verification and model-driven engineeringArticle