author | wenzelm |
Wed, 10 Feb 2010 00:50:36 +0100 | |
changeset 35069 | 09154b995ed8 |
parent 30184 | 37969710e61f |
child 42932 | 34ed34804d90 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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\chapter{Theorems and Forward Proof} |
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\index{theorems|(} |
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Theorems, which represent the axioms, theorems and rules of |
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object-logics, have type \mltydx{thm}. This chapter begins by |
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describing operations that print theorems and that join them in |
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forward proof. Most theorem operations are intended for advanced |
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applications, such as programming new proof procedures. Many of these |
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operations refer to signatures, certified terms and certified types, |
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which have the \ML{} types {\tt Sign.sg}, {\tt cterm} and {\tt ctyp} |
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and are discussed in Chapter~\ref{theories}. Beginning users should |
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ignore such complexities --- and skip all but the first section of |
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this chapter. |
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\section{Basic operations on theorems} |
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\subsection{Pretty-printing a theorem} |
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\index{theorems!printing of} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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prth : thm -> thm |
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prths : thm list -> thm list |
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prthq : thm Seq.seq -> thm Seq.seq |
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print_thm : thm -> unit |
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print_goals : int -> thm -> unit |
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string_of_thm : thm -> string |
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\end{ttbox} |
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The first three commands are for interactive use. They are identity |
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functions that display, then return, their argument. The \ML{} identifier |
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{\tt it} will refer to the value just displayed. |
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The others are for use in programs. Functions with result type {\tt unit} |
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are convenient for imperative programming. |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{prth} {\it thm}] |
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prints {\it thm\/} at the terminal. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{prths} {\it thms}] |
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prints {\it thms}, a list of theorems. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{prthq} {\it thmq}] |
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prints {\it thmq}, a sequence of theorems. It is useful for inspecting |
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the output of a tactic. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{print_thm} {\it thm}] |
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prints {\it thm\/} at the terminal. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{print_goals} {\it limit\/} {\it thm}] |
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prints {\it thm\/} in goal style, with the premises as subgoals. It prints |
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at most {\it limit\/} subgoals. The subgoal module calls {\tt print_goals} |
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to display proof states. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{string_of_thm} {\it thm}] |
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converts {\it thm\/} to a string. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Forward proof: joining rules by resolution} |
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\index{theorems!joining by resolution} |
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\index{resolution}\index{forward proof} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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RSN : thm * (int * thm) -> thm \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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RS : thm * thm -> thm \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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MRS : thm list * thm -> thm \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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OF : thm * thm list -> thm \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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RLN : thm list * (int * thm list) -> thm list \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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RL : thm list * thm list -> thm list \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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MRL : thm list list * thm list -> thm list \hfill\textbf{infix} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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Joining rules together is a simple way of deriving new rules. These |
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functions are especially useful with destruction rules. To store |
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the result in the theorem database, use \ttindex{bind_thm} |
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(\S\ref{ExtractingAndStoringTheProvedTheorem}). |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\tt$thm@1$ RSN $(i,thm@2)$] \indexbold{*RSN} |
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resolves the conclusion of $thm@1$ with the $i$th premise of~$thm@2$. |
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Unless there is precisely one resolvent it raises exception |
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\xdx{THM}; in that case, use {\tt RLN}. |
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\item[\tt$thm@1$ RS $thm@2$] \indexbold{*RS} |
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abbreviates \hbox{\tt$thm@1$ RSN $(1,thm@2)$}. Thus, it resolves the |
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conclusion of $thm@1$ with the first premise of~$thm@2$. |
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\item[\tt {$[thm@1,\ldots,thm@n]$} MRS $thm$] \indexbold{*MRS} |
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uses {\tt RSN} to resolve $thm@i$ against premise~$i$ of $thm$, for |
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$i=n$, \ldots,~1. This applies $thm@n$, \ldots, $thm@1$ to the first $n$ |
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premises of $thm$. Because the theorems are used from right to left, it |
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does not matter if the $thm@i$ create new premises. {\tt MRS} is useful |
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for expressing proof trees. |
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\item[\tt {$thm$ OF $[thm@1,\ldots,thm@n]$}] \indexbold{*OF} is the same as |
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\texttt{$[thm@1,\ldots,thm@n]$ MRS $thm$}, with slightly more readable |
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argument order, though. |
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\item[\tt$thms@1$ RLN $(i,thms@2)$] \indexbold{*RLN} |
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joins lists of theorems. For every $thm@1$ in $thms@1$ and $thm@2$ in |
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$thms@2$, it resolves the conclusion of $thm@1$ with the $i$th premise |
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of~$thm@2$, accumulating the results. |
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\item[\tt$thms@1$ RL $thms@2$] \indexbold{*RL} |
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abbreviates \hbox{\tt$thms@1$ RLN $(1,thms@2)$}. |
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\item[\tt {$[thms@1,\ldots,thms@n]$} MRL $thms$] \indexbold{*MRL} |
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is analogous to {\tt MRS}, but combines theorem lists rather than theorems. |
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It too is useful for expressing proof trees. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Expanding definitions in theorems} |
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\index{meta-rewriting!in theorems} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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rewrite_rule : thm list -> thm -> thm |
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rewrite_goals_rule : thm list -> thm -> thm |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rewrite_rule} {\it defs} {\it thm}] |
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unfolds the {\it defs} throughout the theorem~{\it thm}. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rewrite_goals_rule} {\it defs} {\it thm}] |
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unfolds the {\it defs} in the premises of~{\it thm}, but it leaves the |
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conclusion unchanged. This rule is the basis for \ttindex{rewrite_goals_tac}, |
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but it serves little purpose in forward proof. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Instantiating unknowns in a theorem} \label{sec:instantiate} |
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\index{instantiation} |
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\begin{alltt}\footnotesize |
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read_instantiate : (string*string) list -> thm -> thm |
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read_instantiate_sg : Sign.sg -> (string*string) list -> thm -> thm |
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cterm_instantiate : (cterm*cterm) list -> thm -> thm |
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instantiate' : ctyp option list -> cterm option list -> thm -> thm |
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\end{alltt} |
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These meta-rules instantiate type and term unknowns in a theorem. They are |
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occasionally useful. They can prevent difficulties with higher-order |
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unification, and define specialized versions of rules. |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{read_instantiate} {\it insts} {\it thm}] |
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processes the instantiations {\it insts} and instantiates the rule~{\it |
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thm}. The processing of instantiations is described |
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in \S\ref{res_inst_tac}, under {\tt res_inst_tac}. |
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Use {\tt res_inst_tac}, not {\tt read_instantiate}, to instantiate a rule |
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and refine a particular subgoal. The tactic allows instantiation by the |
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subgoal's parameters, and reads the instantiations using the signature |
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associated with the proof state. |
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Use {\tt read_instantiate_sg} below if {\it insts\/} appears to be treated |
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incorrectly. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{read_instantiate_sg} {\it sg} {\it insts} {\it thm}] |
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is like \texttt{read_instantiate {\it insts}~{\it thm}}, but it reads |
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the instantiations under signature~{\it sg}. This is necessary to |
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instantiate a rule from a general theory, such as first-order logic, |
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using the notation of some specialized theory. Use the function {\tt |
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sign_of} to get a theory's signature. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{cterm_instantiate} {\it ctpairs} {\it thm}] |
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is similar to {\tt read_instantiate}, but the instantiations are provided |
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as pairs of certified terms, not as strings to be read. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{instantiate'} {\it ctyps} {\it cterms} {\it thm}] |
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instantiates {\it thm} according to the positional arguments {\it |
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ctyps} and {\it cterms}. Counting from left to right, schematic |
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variables $?x$ are either replaced by $t$ for any argument |
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\texttt{Some\(\;t\)}, or left unchanged in case of \texttt{None} or |
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if the end of the argument list is encountered. Types are |
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instantiated before terms. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Miscellaneous forward rules}\label{MiscellaneousForwardRules} |
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\index{theorems!standardizing} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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standard : thm -> thm |
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zero_var_indexes : thm -> thm |
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make_elim : thm -> thm |
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rule_by_tactic : tactic -> thm -> thm |
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rotate_prems : int -> thm -> thm |
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permute_prems : int -> int -> thm -> thm |
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rearrange_prems : int list -> thm -> thm |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{standard} $thm$] puts $thm$ into the standard form |
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of object-rules. It discharges all meta-assumptions, replaces free |
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variables by schematic variables, renames schematic variables to |
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have subscript zero, also strips outer (meta) quantifiers and |
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removes dangling sort hypotheses. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{zero_var_indexes} $thm$] |
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makes all schematic variables have subscript zero, renaming them to avoid |
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clashes. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{make_elim} $thm$] |
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\index{rules!converting destruction to elimination} |
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converts $thm$, which should be a destruction rule of the form |
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$\List{P@1;\ldots;P@m}\Imp |
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Q$, to the elimination rule $\List{P@1; \ldots; P@m; Q\Imp R}\Imp R$. This |
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is the basis for destruct-resolution: {\tt dresolve_tac}, etc. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rule_by_tactic} {\it tac} {\it thm}] |
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applies {\it tac\/} to the {\it thm}, freezing its variables first, then |
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yields the proof state returned by the tactic. In typical usage, the |
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{\it thm\/} represents an instance of a rule with several premises, some |
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with contradictory assumptions (because of the instantiation). The |
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tactic proves those subgoals and does whatever else it can, and returns |
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whatever is left. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rotate_prems} $k$ $thm$] rotates the premises of $thm$ to |
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the left by~$k$ positions (to the right if $k<0$). It simply calls |
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\texttt{permute_prems}, below, with $j=0$. Used with |
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\texttt{eresolve_tac}\index{*eresolve_tac!on other than first premise}, it |
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gives the effect of applying the tactic to some other premise of $thm$ than |
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the first. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{permute_prems} $j$ $k$ $thm$] rotates the premises of $thm$ |
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leaving the first $j$ premises unchanged. It |
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requires $0\leq j\leq n$, where $n$ is the number of premises. If $k$ is |
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positive then it rotates the remaining $n-j$ premises to the left; if $k$ is |
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negative then it rotates the premises to the right. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rearrange_prems} $ps$ $thm$] permutes the premises of $thm$ |
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where the value at the $i$-th position (counting from $0$) in the list $ps$ |
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gives the position within the original thm to be transferred to position $i$. |
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Any remaining trailing positions are left unchanged. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Taking a theorem apart} |
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\index{theorems!taking apart} |
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\index{flex-flex constraints} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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cprop_of : thm -> cterm |
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concl_of : thm -> term |
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prems_of : thm -> term list |
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cprems_of : thm -> cterm list |
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nprems_of : thm -> int |
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tpairs_of : thm -> (term*term) list |
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sign_of_thm : thm -> Sign.sg |
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theory_of_thm : thm -> theory |
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dest_state : thm * int -> (term*term) list * term list * term * term |
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rep_thm : thm -> \{sign_ref: Sign.sg_ref, der: bool * deriv, maxidx: int, |
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shyps: sort list, hyps: term list, prop: term\} |
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crep_thm : thm -> \{sign_ref: Sign.sg_ref, der: bool * deriv, maxidx: int, |
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shyps: sort list, hyps: cterm list, prop:{\ts}cterm\} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{cprop_of} $thm$] returns the statement of $thm$ as |
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a certified term. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{concl_of} $thm$] returns the conclusion of $thm$ as |
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a term. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{prems_of} $thm$] returns the premises of $thm$ as a |
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list of terms. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{cprems_of} $thm$] returns the premises of $thm$ as |
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a list of certified terms. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{nprems_of} $thm$] |
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returns the number of premises in $thm$, and is equivalent to {\tt |
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length~(prems_of~$thm$)}. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{tpairs_of} $thm$] returns the flex-flex constraints |
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of $thm$. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{sign_of_thm} $thm$] returns the signature |
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associated with $thm$. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{theory_of_thm} $thm$] returns the theory associated |
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with $thm$. Note that this does a lookup in Isabelle's global |
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database of loaded theories. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{dest_state} $(thm,i)$] |
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decomposes $thm$ as a tuple containing a list of flex-flex constraints, a |
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list of the subgoals~1 to~$i-1$, subgoal~$i$, and the rest of the theorem |
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(this will be an implication if there are more than $i$ subgoals). |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rep_thm} $thm$] decomposes $thm$ as a record |
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containing the statement of~$thm$ ({\tt prop}), its list of |
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meta-assumptions ({\tt hyps}), its derivation ({\tt der}), a bound |
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on the maximum subscript of its unknowns ({\tt maxidx}), and a |
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reference to its signature ({\tt sign_ref}). The {\tt shyps} field |
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is discussed below. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{crep_thm} $thm$] like \texttt{rep_thm}, but returns |
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the hypotheses and statement as certified terms. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{*Sort hypotheses} \label{sec:sort-hyps} |
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\index{sort hypotheses} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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strip_shyps : thm -> thm |
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strip_shyps_warning : thm -> thm |
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\end{ttbox} |
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Isabelle's type variables are decorated with sorts, constraining them to |
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certain ranges of types. This has little impact when sorts only serve for |
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syntactic classification of types --- for example, FOL distinguishes between |
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terms and other types. But when type classes are introduced through axioms, |
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this may result in some sorts becoming {\em empty\/}: where one cannot exhibit |
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a type belonging to it because certain sets of axioms are unsatisfiable. |
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If a theorem contains a type variable that is constrained by an empty |
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sort, then that theorem has no instances. It is basically an instance |
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of {\em ex falso quodlibet}. But what if it is used to prove another |
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theorem that no longer involves that sort? The latter theorem holds |
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only if under an additional non-emptiness assumption. |
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314 |
Therefore, Isabelle's theorems carry around sort hypotheses. The {\tt |
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315 |
shyps} field is a list of sorts occurring in type variables in the current |
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|
316 |
{\tt prop} and {\tt hyps} fields. It may also includes sorts used in the |
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|
317 |
theorem's proof that no longer appear in the {\tt prop} or {\tt hyps} |
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|
318 |
fields --- so-called {\em dangling\/} sort constraints. These are the |
2044
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|
319 |
critical ones, asserting non-emptiness of the corresponding sorts. |
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|
320 |
|
7644 | 321 |
Isabelle automatically removes extraneous sorts from the {\tt shyps} field at |
322 |
the end of a proof, provided that non-emptiness can be established by looking |
|
323 |
at the theorem's signature: from the {\tt classes} and {\tt arities} |
|
324 |
information. This operation is performed by \texttt{strip_shyps} and |
|
325 |
\texttt{strip_shyps_warning}. |
|
326 |
||
327 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
328 |
||
329 |
\item[\ttindexbold{strip_shyps} $thm$] removes any extraneous sort hypotheses |
|
330 |
that can be witnessed from the type signature. |
|
331 |
||
332 |
\item[\ttindexbold{strip_shyps_warning}] is like \texttt{strip_shyps}, but |
|
333 |
issues a warning message of any pending sort hypotheses that do not have a |
|
334 |
(syntactic) witness. |
|
335 |
||
336 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
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|
337 |
|
104 | 338 |
|
339 |
\subsection{Tracing flags for unification} |
|
326 | 340 |
\index{tracing!of unification} |
104 | 341 |
\begin{ttbox} |
8136 | 342 |
Unify.trace_simp : bool ref \hfill\textbf{initially false} |
343 |
Unify.trace_types : bool ref \hfill\textbf{initially false} |
|
344 |
Unify.trace_bound : int ref \hfill\textbf{initially 10} |
|
345 |
Unify.search_bound : int ref \hfill\textbf{initially 20} |
|
104 | 346 |
\end{ttbox} |
347 |
Tracing the search may be useful when higher-order unification behaves |
|
348 |
unexpectedly. Letting {\tt res_inst_tac} circumvent the problem is easier, |
|
349 |
though. |
|
326 | 350 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
4317 | 351 |
\item[set Unify.trace_simp;] |
104 | 352 |
causes tracing of the simplification phase. |
353 |
||
4317 | 354 |
\item[set Unify.trace_types;] |
104 | 355 |
generates warnings of incompleteness, when unification is not considering |
356 |
all possible instantiations of type unknowns. |
|
357 |
||
326 | 358 |
\item[Unify.trace_bound := $n$;] |
104 | 359 |
causes unification to print tracing information once it reaches depth~$n$. |
360 |
Use $n=0$ for full tracing. At the default value of~10, tracing |
|
361 |
information is almost never printed. |
|
362 |
||
8136 | 363 |
\item[Unify.search_bound := $n$;] prevents unification from |
364 |
searching past the depth~$n$. Because of this bound, higher-order |
|
4317 | 365 |
unification cannot return an infinite sequence, though it can return |
8136 | 366 |
an exponentially long one. The search rarely approaches the default value |
4317 | 367 |
of~20. If the search is cut off, unification prints a warning |
368 |
\texttt{Unification bound exceeded}. |
|
326 | 369 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 370 |
|
371 |
||
4317 | 372 |
\section{*Primitive meta-level inference rules} |
104 | 373 |
\index{meta-rules|(} |
4317 | 374 |
These implement the meta-logic in the style of the {\sc lcf} system, |
375 |
as functions from theorems to theorems. They are, rarely, useful for |
|
376 |
deriving results in the pure theory. Mainly, they are included for |
|
377 |
completeness, and most users should not bother with them. The |
|
378 |
meta-rules raise exception \xdx{THM} to signal malformed premises, |
|
379 |
incompatible signatures and similar errors. |
|
104 | 380 |
|
326 | 381 |
\index{meta-assumptions} |
104 | 382 |
The meta-logic uses natural deduction. Each theorem may depend on |
332 | 383 |
meta-level assumptions. Certain rules, such as $({\Imp}I)$, |
104 | 384 |
discharge assumptions; in most other rules, the conclusion depends on all |
385 |
of the assumptions of the premises. Formally, the system works with |
|
386 |
assertions of the form |
|
387 |
\[ \phi \quad [\phi@1,\ldots,\phi@n], \] |
|
3108 | 388 |
where $\phi@1$,~\ldots,~$\phi@n$ are the assumptions. This can be |
389 |
also read as a single conclusion sequent $\phi@1,\ldots,\phi@n \vdash |
|
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|
390 |
\phi$. Do not confuse meta-level assumptions with the object-level |
3108 | 391 |
assumptions in a subgoal, which are represented in the meta-logic |
392 |
using~$\Imp$. |
|
104 | 393 |
|
394 |
Each theorem has a signature. Certified terms have a signature. When a |
|
395 |
rule takes several premises and certified terms, it merges the signatures |
|
396 |
to make a signature for the conclusion. This fails if the signatures are |
|
397 |
incompatible. |
|
398 |
||
5777 | 399 |
\medskip |
400 |
||
401 |
The following presentation of primitive rules ignores sort |
|
402 |
hypotheses\index{sort hypotheses} (see also \S\ref{sec:sort-hyps}). These are |
|
403 |
handled transparently by the logic implementation. |
|
404 |
||
405 |
\bigskip |
|
406 |
||
326 | 407 |
\index{meta-implication} |
8136 | 408 |
The \textbf{implication} rules are $({\Imp}I)$ |
104 | 409 |
and $({\Imp}E)$: |
410 |
\[ \infer[({\Imp}I)]{\phi\Imp \psi}{\infer*{\psi}{[\phi]}} \qquad |
|
411 |
\infer[({\Imp}E)]{\psi}{\phi\Imp \psi & \phi} \] |
|
412 |
||
326 | 413 |
\index{meta-equality} |
104 | 414 |
Equality of truth values means logical equivalence: |
3524 | 415 |
\[ \infer[({\equiv}I)]{\phi\equiv\psi}{\phi\Imp\psi & |
416 |
\psi\Imp\phi} |
|
104 | 417 |
\qquad |
418 |
\infer[({\equiv}E)]{\psi}{\phi\equiv \psi & \phi} \] |
|
419 |
||
8136 | 420 |
The \textbf{equality} rules are reflexivity, symmetry, and transitivity: |
104 | 421 |
\[ {a\equiv a}\,(refl) \qquad |
422 |
\infer[(sym)]{b\equiv a}{a\equiv b} \qquad |
|
423 |
\infer[(trans)]{a\equiv c}{a\equiv b & b\equiv c} \] |
|
424 |
||
326 | 425 |
\index{lambda calc@$\lambda$-calculus} |
104 | 426 |
The $\lambda$-conversions are $\alpha$-conversion, $\beta$-conversion, and |
427 |
extensionality:\footnote{$\alpha$-conversion holds if $y$ is not free |
|
428 |
in~$a$; $(ext)$ holds if $x$ is not free in the assumptions, $f$, or~$g$.} |
|
429 |
\[ {(\lambda x.a) \equiv (\lambda y.a[y/x])} \qquad |
|
430 |
{((\lambda x.a)(b)) \equiv a[b/x]} \qquad |
|
431 |
\infer[(ext)]{f\equiv g}{f(x) \equiv g(x)} \] |
|
432 |
||
8136 | 433 |
The \textbf{abstraction} and \textbf{combination} rules let conversions be |
332 | 434 |
applied to subterms:\footnote{Abstraction holds if $x$ is not free in the |
104 | 435 |
assumptions.} |
436 |
\[ \infer[(abs)]{(\lambda x.a) \equiv (\lambda x.b)}{a\equiv b} \qquad |
|
437 |
\infer[(comb)]{f(a)\equiv g(b)}{f\equiv g & a\equiv b} \] |
|
438 |
||
326 | 439 |
\index{meta-quantifiers} |
8136 | 440 |
The \textbf{universal quantification} rules are $(\Forall I)$ and $(\Forall |
104 | 441 |
E)$:\footnote{$(\Forall I)$ holds if $x$ is not free in the assumptions.} |
442 |
\[ \infer[(\Forall I)]{\Forall x.\phi}{\phi} \qquad |
|
286 | 443 |
\infer[(\Forall E)]{\phi[b/x]}{\Forall x.\phi} \] |
104 | 444 |
|
445 |
||
326 | 446 |
\subsection{Assumption rule} |
447 |
\index{meta-assumptions} |
|
104 | 448 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3108 | 449 |
assume: cterm -> thm |
104 | 450 |
\end{ttbox} |
326 | 451 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 452 |
\item[\ttindexbold{assume} $ct$] |
332 | 453 |
makes the theorem \(\phi \;[\phi]\), where $\phi$ is the value of~$ct$. |
104 | 454 |
The rule checks that $ct$ has type $prop$ and contains no unknowns, which |
332 | 455 |
are not allowed in assumptions. |
326 | 456 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 457 |
|
326 | 458 |
\subsection{Implication rules} |
459 |
\index{meta-implication} |
|
104 | 460 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3108 | 461 |
implies_intr : cterm -> thm -> thm |
462 |
implies_intr_list : cterm list -> thm -> thm |
|
104 | 463 |
implies_intr_hyps : thm -> thm |
464 |
implies_elim : thm -> thm -> thm |
|
465 |
implies_elim_list : thm -> thm list -> thm |
|
466 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
326 | 467 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 468 |
\item[\ttindexbold{implies_intr} $ct$ $thm$] |
469 |
is $({\Imp}I)$, where $ct$ is the assumption to discharge, say~$\phi$. It |
|
332 | 470 |
maps the premise~$\psi$ to the conclusion $\phi\Imp\psi$, removing all |
471 |
occurrences of~$\phi$ from the assumptions. The rule checks that $ct$ has |
|
472 |
type $prop$. |
|
104 | 473 |
|
474 |
\item[\ttindexbold{implies_intr_list} $cts$ $thm$] |
|
475 |
applies $({\Imp}I)$ repeatedly, on every element of the list~$cts$. |
|
476 |
||
477 |
\item[\ttindexbold{implies_intr_hyps} $thm$] |
|
332 | 478 |
applies $({\Imp}I)$ to discharge all the hypotheses (assumptions) of~$thm$. |
479 |
It maps the premise $\phi \; [\phi@1,\ldots,\phi@n]$ to the conclusion |
|
104 | 480 |
$\List{\phi@1,\ldots,\phi@n}\Imp\phi$. |
481 |
||
482 |
\item[\ttindexbold{implies_elim} $thm@1$ $thm@2$] |
|
483 |
applies $({\Imp}E)$ to $thm@1$ and~$thm@2$. It maps the premises $\phi\Imp |
|
484 |
\psi$ and $\phi$ to the conclusion~$\psi$. |
|
485 |
||
486 |
\item[\ttindexbold{implies_elim_list} $thm$ $thms$] |
|
487 |
applies $({\Imp}E)$ repeatedly to $thm$, using each element of~$thms$ in |
|
151 | 488 |
turn. It maps the premises $\List{\phi@1,\ldots,\phi@n}\Imp\psi$ and |
104 | 489 |
$\phi@1$,\ldots,$\phi@n$ to the conclusion~$\psi$. |
326 | 490 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 491 |
|
326 | 492 |
\subsection{Logical equivalence rules} |
493 |
\index{meta-equality} |
|
104 | 494 |
\begin{ttbox} |
326 | 495 |
equal_intr : thm -> thm -> thm |
496 |
equal_elim : thm -> thm -> thm |
|
104 | 497 |
\end{ttbox} |
326 | 498 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 499 |
\item[\ttindexbold{equal_intr} $thm@1$ $thm@2$] |
332 | 500 |
applies $({\equiv}I)$ to $thm@1$ and~$thm@2$. It maps the premises~$\psi$ |
501 |
and~$\phi$ to the conclusion~$\phi\equiv\psi$; the assumptions are those of |
|
502 |
the first premise with~$\phi$ removed, plus those of |
|
503 |
the second premise with~$\psi$ removed. |
|
104 | 504 |
|
505 |
\item[\ttindexbold{equal_elim} $thm@1$ $thm@2$] |
|
506 |
applies $({\equiv}E)$ to $thm@1$ and~$thm@2$. It maps the premises |
|
507 |
$\phi\equiv\psi$ and $\phi$ to the conclusion~$\psi$. |
|
326 | 508 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 509 |
|
510 |
||
511 |
\subsection{Equality rules} |
|
326 | 512 |
\index{meta-equality} |
104 | 513 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3108 | 514 |
reflexive : cterm -> thm |
104 | 515 |
symmetric : thm -> thm |
516 |
transitive : thm -> thm -> thm |
|
517 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
326 | 518 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 519 |
\item[\ttindexbold{reflexive} $ct$] |
151 | 520 |
makes the theorem \(ct\equiv ct\). |
104 | 521 |
|
522 |
\item[\ttindexbold{symmetric} $thm$] |
|
523 |
maps the premise $a\equiv b$ to the conclusion $b\equiv a$. |
|
524 |
||
525 |
\item[\ttindexbold{transitive} $thm@1$ $thm@2$] |
|
526 |
maps the premises $a\equiv b$ and $b\equiv c$ to the conclusion~${a\equiv c}$. |
|
326 | 527 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 528 |
|
529 |
||
530 |
\subsection{The $\lambda$-conversion rules} |
|
326 | 531 |
\index{lambda calc@$\lambda$-calculus} |
104 | 532 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3108 | 533 |
beta_conversion : cterm -> thm |
104 | 534 |
extensional : thm -> thm |
3108 | 535 |
abstract_rule : string -> cterm -> thm -> thm |
104 | 536 |
combination : thm -> thm -> thm |
537 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
326 | 538 |
There is no rule for $\alpha$-conversion because Isabelle regards |
539 |
$\alpha$-convertible theorems as equal. |
|
540 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
104 | 541 |
\item[\ttindexbold{beta_conversion} $ct$] |
542 |
makes the theorem $((\lambda x.a)(b)) \equiv a[b/x]$, where $ct$ is the |
|
543 |
term $(\lambda x.a)(b)$. |
|
544 |
||
545 |
\item[\ttindexbold{extensional} $thm$] |
|
546 |
maps the premise $f(x) \equiv g(x)$ to the conclusion $f\equiv g$. |
|
547 |
Parameter~$x$ is taken from the premise. It may be an unknown or a free |
|
332 | 548 |
variable (provided it does not occur in the assumptions); it must not occur |
104 | 549 |
in $f$ or~$g$. |
550 |
||
551 |
\item[\ttindexbold{abstract_rule} $v$ $x$ $thm$] |
|
552 |
maps the premise $a\equiv b$ to the conclusion $(\lambda x.a) \equiv |
|
553 |
(\lambda x.b)$, abstracting over all occurrences (if any!) of~$x$. |
|
554 |
Parameter~$x$ is supplied as a cterm. It may be an unknown or a free |
|
332 | 555 |
variable (provided it does not occur in the assumptions). In the |
104 | 556 |
conclusion, the bound variable is named~$v$. |
557 |
||
558 |
\item[\ttindexbold{combination} $thm@1$ $thm@2$] |
|
559 |
maps the premises $f\equiv g$ and $a\equiv b$ to the conclusion~$f(a)\equiv |
|
560 |
g(b)$. |
|
326 | 561 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 562 |
|
563 |
||
326 | 564 |
\subsection{Forall introduction rules} |
565 |
\index{meta-quantifiers} |
|
104 | 566 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3108 | 567 |
forall_intr : cterm -> thm -> thm |
568 |
forall_intr_list : cterm list -> thm -> thm |
|
569 |
forall_intr_frees : thm -> thm |
|
104 | 570 |
\end{ttbox} |
571 |
||
326 | 572 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 573 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_intr} $x$ $thm$] |
574 |
applies $({\Forall}I)$, abstracting over all occurrences (if any!) of~$x$. |
|
575 |
The rule maps the premise $\phi$ to the conclusion $\Forall x.\phi$. |
|
576 |
Parameter~$x$ is supplied as a cterm. It may be an unknown or a free |
|
332 | 577 |
variable (provided it does not occur in the assumptions). |
104 | 578 |
|
579 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_intr_list} $xs$ $thm$] |
|
580 |
applies $({\Forall}I)$ repeatedly, on every element of the list~$xs$. |
|
581 |
||
582 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_intr_frees} $thm$] |
|
583 |
applies $({\Forall}I)$ repeatedly, generalizing over all the free variables |
|
584 |
of the premise. |
|
326 | 585 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 586 |
|
587 |
||
326 | 588 |
\subsection{Forall elimination rules} |
104 | 589 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3108 | 590 |
forall_elim : cterm -> thm -> thm |
591 |
forall_elim_list : cterm list -> thm -> thm |
|
592 |
forall_elim_var : int -> thm -> thm |
|
593 |
forall_elim_vars : int -> thm -> thm |
|
104 | 594 |
\end{ttbox} |
595 |
||
326 | 596 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 597 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_elim} $ct$ $thm$] |
598 |
applies $({\Forall}E)$, mapping the premise $\Forall x.\phi$ to the conclusion |
|
599 |
$\phi[ct/x]$. The rule checks that $ct$ and $x$ have the same type. |
|
600 |
||
601 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_elim_list} $cts$ $thm$] |
|
602 |
applies $({\Forall}E)$ repeatedly, on every element of the list~$cts$. |
|
603 |
||
604 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_elim_var} $k$ $thm$] |
|
605 |
applies $({\Forall}E)$, mapping the premise $\Forall x.\phi$ to the conclusion |
|
606 |
$\phi[\Var{x@k}/x]$. Thus, it replaces the outermost $\Forall$-bound |
|
607 |
variable by an unknown having subscript~$k$. |
|
608 |
||
9258 | 609 |
\item[\ttindexbold{forall_elim_vars} $k$ $thm$] |
610 |
applies {\tt forall_elim_var}~$k$ repeatedly until the theorem no longer has |
|
611 |
the form $\Forall x.\phi$. |
|
326 | 612 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 613 |
|
8135
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changeset
|
614 |
|
326 | 615 |
\subsection{Instantiation of unknowns} |
616 |
\index{instantiation} |
|
8136 | 617 |
\begin{alltt}\footnotesize |
3135 | 618 |
instantiate: (indexname * ctyp){\thinspace}list * (cterm * cterm){\thinspace}list -> thm -> thm |
8136 | 619 |
\end{alltt} |
8135
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
620 |
There are two versions of this rule. The primitive one is |
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
621 |
\ttindexbold{Thm.instantiate}, which merely performs the instantiation and can |
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
622 |
produce a conclusion not in normal form. A derived version is |
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
623 |
\ttindexbold{Drule.instantiate}, which normalizes its conclusion. |
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
624 |
|
326 | 625 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
8136 | 626 |
\item[\ttindexbold{instantiate} ($tyinsts$,$insts$) $thm$] |
326 | 627 |
simultaneously substitutes types for type unknowns (the |
104 | 628 |
$tyinsts$) and terms for term unknowns (the $insts$). Instantiations are |
629 |
given as $(v,t)$ pairs, where $v$ is an unknown and $t$ is a term (of the |
|
630 |
same type as $v$) or a type (of the same sort as~$v$). All the unknowns |
|
8135
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
631 |
must be distinct. |
4376 | 632 |
|
8135
ad1c4a678196
Documented Thm.instantiate (not normalizing) and Drule.instantiate
paulson
parents:
7871
diff
changeset
|
633 |
In some cases, \ttindex{instantiate'} (see \S\ref{sec:instantiate}) |
4376 | 634 |
provides a more convenient interface to this rule. |
326 | 635 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 636 |
|
637 |
||
8135
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diff
changeset
|
638 |
|
ad1c4a678196
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paulson
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7871
diff
changeset
|
639 |
|
326 | 640 |
\subsection{Freezing/thawing type unknowns} |
641 |
\index{type unknowns!freezing/thawing of} |
|
104 | 642 |
\begin{ttbox} |
643 |
freezeT: thm -> thm |
|
644 |
varifyT: thm -> thm |
|
645 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
326 | 646 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 647 |
\item[\ttindexbold{freezeT} $thm$] |
648 |
converts all the type unknowns in $thm$ to free type variables. |
|
649 |
||
650 |
\item[\ttindexbold{varifyT} $thm$] |
|
651 |
converts all the free type variables in $thm$ to type unknowns. |
|
326 | 652 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 653 |
|
654 |
||
655 |
\section{Derived rules for goal-directed proof} |
|
656 |
Most of these rules have the sole purpose of implementing particular |
|
657 |
tactics. There are few occasions for applying them directly to a theorem. |
|
658 |
||
659 |
\subsection{Proof by assumption} |
|
326 | 660 |
\index{meta-assumptions} |
104 | 661 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4276 | 662 |
assumption : int -> thm -> thm Seq.seq |
104 | 663 |
eq_assumption : int -> thm -> thm |
664 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
326 | 665 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 666 |
\item[\ttindexbold{assumption} {\it i} $thm$] |
667 |
attempts to solve premise~$i$ of~$thm$ by assumption. |
|
668 |
||
669 |
\item[\ttindexbold{eq_assumption}] |
|
670 |
is like {\tt assumption} but does not use unification. |
|
326 | 671 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 672 |
|
673 |
||
674 |
\subsection{Resolution} |
|
326 | 675 |
\index{resolution} |
104 | 676 |
\begin{ttbox} |
677 |
biresolution : bool -> (bool*thm)list -> int -> thm |
|
4276 | 678 |
-> thm Seq.seq |
104 | 679 |
\end{ttbox} |
326 | 680 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 681 |
\item[\ttindexbold{biresolution} $match$ $rules$ $i$ $state$] |
326 | 682 |
performs bi-resolution on subgoal~$i$ of $state$, using the list of $\it |
104 | 683 |
(flag,rule)$ pairs. For each pair, it applies resolution if the flag |
684 |
is~{\tt false} and elim-resolution if the flag is~{\tt true}. If $match$ |
|
685 |
is~{\tt true}, the $state$ is not instantiated. |
|
326 | 686 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 687 |
|
688 |
||
689 |
\subsection{Composition: resolution without lifting} |
|
326 | 690 |
\index{resolution!without lifting} |
104 | 691 |
\begin{ttbox} |
692 |
compose : thm * int * thm -> thm list |
|
693 |
COMP : thm * thm -> thm |
|
694 |
bicompose : bool -> bool * thm * int -> int -> thm |
|
4276 | 695 |
-> thm Seq.seq |
104 | 696 |
\end{ttbox} |
697 |
In forward proof, a typical use of composition is to regard an assertion of |
|
698 |
the form $\phi\Imp\psi$ as atomic. Schematic variables are not renamed, so |
|
699 |
beware of clashes! |
|
326 | 700 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 701 |
\item[\ttindexbold{compose} ($thm@1$, $i$, $thm@2$)] |
702 |
uses $thm@1$, regarded as an atomic formula, to solve premise~$i$ |
|
703 |
of~$thm@2$. Let $thm@1$ and $thm@2$ be $\psi$ and $\List{\phi@1; \ldots; |
|
704 |
\phi@n} \Imp \phi$. For each $s$ that unifies~$\psi$ and $\phi@i$, the |
|
705 |
result list contains the theorem |
|
706 |
\[ (\List{\phi@1; \ldots; \phi@{i-1}; \phi@{i+1}; \ldots; \phi@n} \Imp \phi)s. |
|
707 |
\] |
|
708 |
||
1119 | 709 |
\item[$thm@1$ \ttindexbold{COMP} $thm@2$] |
104 | 710 |
calls \hbox{\tt compose ($thm@1$, 1, $thm@2$)} and returns the result, if |
326 | 711 |
unique; otherwise, it raises exception~\xdx{THM}\@. It is |
104 | 712 |
analogous to {\tt RS}\@. |
713 |
||
714 |
For example, suppose that $thm@1$ is $a=b\Imp b=a$, a symmetry rule, and |
|
332 | 715 |
that $thm@2$ is $\List{P\Imp Q; \neg Q} \Imp\neg P$, which is the |
104 | 716 |
principle of contrapositives. Then the result would be the |
717 |
derived rule $\neg(b=a)\Imp\neg(a=b)$. |
|
718 |
||
719 |
\item[\ttindexbold{bicompose} $match$ ($flag$, $rule$, $m$) $i$ $state$] |
|
720 |
refines subgoal~$i$ of $state$ using $rule$, without lifting. The $rule$ |
|
721 |
is taken to have the form $\List{\psi@1; \ldots; \psi@m} \Imp \psi$, where |
|
326 | 722 |
$\psi$ need not be atomic; thus $m$ determines the number of new |
104 | 723 |
subgoals. If $flag$ is {\tt true} then it performs elim-resolution --- it |
724 |
solves the first premise of~$rule$ by assumption and deletes that |
|
725 |
assumption. If $match$ is~{\tt true}, the $state$ is not instantiated. |
|
326 | 726 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 727 |
|
728 |
||
729 |
\subsection{Other meta-rules} |
|
730 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
3108 | 731 |
trivial : cterm -> thm |
104 | 732 |
lift_rule : (thm * int) -> thm -> thm |
733 |
rename_params_rule : string list * int -> thm -> thm |
|
4276 | 734 |
flexflex_rule : thm -> thm Seq.seq |
104 | 735 |
\end{ttbox} |
326 | 736 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 737 |
\item[\ttindexbold{trivial} $ct$] |
738 |
makes the theorem \(\phi\Imp\phi\), where $\phi$ is the value of~$ct$. |
|
739 |
This is the initial state for a goal-directed proof of~$\phi$. The rule |
|
740 |
checks that $ct$ has type~$prop$. |
|
741 |
||
742 |
\item[\ttindexbold{lift_rule} ($state$, $i$) $rule$] \index{lifting} |
|
743 |
prepares $rule$ for resolution by lifting it over the parameters and |
|
744 |
assumptions of subgoal~$i$ of~$state$. |
|
745 |
||
746 |
\item[\ttindexbold{rename_params_rule} ({\it names}, {\it i}) $thm$] |
|
747 |
uses the $names$ to rename the parameters of premise~$i$ of $thm$. The |
|
748 |
names must be distinct. If there are fewer names than parameters, then the |
|
749 |
rule renames the innermost parameters and may modify the remaining ones to |
|
750 |
ensure that all the parameters are distinct. |
|
751 |
\index{parameters!renaming} |
|
752 |
||
753 |
\item[\ttindexbold{flexflex_rule} $thm$] \index{flex-flex constraints} |
|
754 |
removes all flex-flex pairs from $thm$ using the trivial unifier. |
|
326 | 755 |
\end{ttdescription} |
1590 | 756 |
\index{meta-rules|)} |
757 |
||
758 |
||
11622 | 759 |
\section{Proof terms}\label{sec:proofObjects} |
760 |
\index{proof terms|(} Isabelle can record the full meta-level proof of each |
|
761 |
theorem. The proof term contains all logical inferences in detail. |
|
762 |
%while |
|
763 |
%omitting bookkeeping steps that have no logical meaning to an outside |
|
764 |
%observer. Rewriting steps are recorded in similar detail as the output of |
|
765 |
%simplifier tracing. |
|
766 |
Resolution and rewriting steps are broken down to primitive rules of the |
|
767 |
meta-logic. The proof term can be inspected by a separate proof-checker, |
|
768 |
for example. |
|
1590 | 769 |
|
11622 | 770 |
According to the well-known {\em Curry-Howard isomorphism}, a proof can |
771 |
be viewed as a $\lambda$-term. Following this idea, proofs |
|
772 |
in Isabelle are internally represented by a datatype similar to the one for |
|
773 |
terms described in \S\ref{sec:terms}. |
|
774 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
775 |
infix 8 % %%; |
|
776 |
||
777 |
datatype proof = |
|
778 |
PBound of int |
|
779 |
| Abst of string * typ option * proof |
|
780 |
| AbsP of string * term option * proof |
|
781 |
| op % of proof * term option |
|
782 |
| op %% of proof * proof |
|
783 |
| Hyp of term |
|
784 |
| PThm of (string * (string * string list) list) * |
|
785 |
proof * term * typ list option |
|
786 |
| PAxm of string * term * typ list option |
|
787 |
| Oracle of string * term * typ list option |
|
788 |
| MinProof of proof list; |
|
789 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1590 | 790 |
|
11622 | 791 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
792 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Abst} ($a$, $\tau$, $prf$)] is the abstraction over |
|
793 |
a {\it term variable} of type $\tau$ in the body $prf$. Logically, this |
|
794 |
corresponds to $\bigwedge$ introduction. The name $a$ is used only for |
|
795 |
parsing and printing. |
|
796 |
\item[\ttindexbold{AbsP} ($a$, $\varphi$, $prf$)] is the abstraction |
|
797 |
over a {\it proof variable} standing for a proof of proposition $\varphi$ |
|
798 |
in the body $prf$. This corresponds to $\Longrightarrow$ introduction. |
|
799 |
\item[$prf$ \% $t$] \index{\%@{\tt\%}|bold} |
|
800 |
is the application of proof $prf$ to term $t$ |
|
801 |
which corresponds to $\bigwedge$ elimination. |
|
802 |
\item[$prf@1$ \%\% $prf@2$] \index{\%\%@{\tt\%\%}|bold} |
|
803 |
is the application of proof $prf@1$ to |
|
804 |
proof $prf@2$ which corresponds to $\Longrightarrow$ elimination. |
|
805 |
\item[\ttindexbold{PBound} $i$] is a {\em proof variable} with de Bruijn |
|
806 |
\cite{debruijn72} index $i$. |
|
807 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Hyp} $\varphi$] corresponds to the use of a meta level |
|
808 |
hypothesis $\varphi$. |
|
809 |
\item[\ttindexbold{PThm} (($name$, $tags$), $prf$, $\varphi$, $\overline{\tau}$)] |
|
810 |
stands for a pre-proved theorem, where $name$ is the name of the theorem, |
|
811 |
$prf$ is its actual proof, $\varphi$ is the proven proposition, |
|
812 |
and $\overline{\tau}$ is |
|
813 |
a type assignment for the type variables occurring in the proposition. |
|
814 |
\item[\ttindexbold{PAxm} ($name$, $\varphi$, $\overline{\tau}$)] |
|
815 |
corresponds to the use of an axiom with name $name$ and proposition |
|
816 |
$\varphi$, where $\overline{\tau}$ is a type assignment for the type |
|
817 |
variables occurring in the proposition. |
|
818 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Oracle} ($name$, $\varphi$, $\overline{\tau}$)] |
|
819 |
denotes the invocation of an oracle with name $name$ which produced |
|
820 |
a proposition $\varphi$, where $\overline{\tau}$ is a type assignment |
|
821 |
for the type variables occurring in the proposition. |
|
822 |
\item[\ttindexbold{MinProof} $prfs$] |
|
823 |
represents a {\em minimal proof} where $prfs$ is a list of theorems, |
|
824 |
axioms or oracles. |
|
825 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
826 |
Note that there are no separate constructors |
|
827 |
for abstraction and application on the level of {\em types}, since |
|
828 |
instantiation of type variables is accomplished via the type assignments |
|
829 |
attached to {\tt Thm}, {\tt Axm} and {\tt Oracle}. |
|
1590 | 830 |
|
831 |
Each theorem's derivation is stored as the {\tt der} field of its internal |
|
832 |
record: |
|
833 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
11622 | 834 |
#2 (#der (rep_thm conjI)); |
835 |
{\out PThm (("HOL.conjI", []),} |
|
836 |
{\out AbsP ("H", None, AbsP ("H", None, \dots)), \dots, None) %} |
|
837 |
{\out None % None : Proofterm.proof} |
|
1590 | 838 |
\end{ttbox} |
11622 | 839 |
This proof term identifies a labelled theorem, {\tt conjI} of theory |
840 |
\texttt{HOL}, whose underlying proof is |
|
841 |
{\tt AbsP ("H", None, AbsP ("H", None, $\dots$))}. |
|
842 |
The theorem is applied to two (implicit) term arguments, which correspond |
|
843 |
to the two variables occurring in its proposition. |
|
1590 | 844 |
|
11622 | 845 |
Isabelle's inference kernel can produce proof objects with different |
846 |
levels of detail. This is controlled via the global reference variable |
|
847 |
\ttindexbold{proofs}: |
|
848 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
849 |
\item[proofs := 0;] only record uses of oracles |
|
850 |
\item[proofs := 1;] record uses of oracles as well as dependencies |
|
851 |
on other theorems and axioms |
|
852 |
\item[proofs := 2;] record inferences in full detail |
|
1590 | 853 |
\end{ttdescription} |
11622 | 854 |
Reconstruction and checking of proofs as described in \S\ref{sec:reconstruct_proofs} |
855 |
will not work for proofs constructed with {\tt proofs} set to |
|
856 |
{\tt 0} or {\tt 1}. |
|
857 |
Theorems involving oracles will be printed with a |
|
858 |
suffixed \verb|[!]| to point out the different quality of confidence achieved. |
|
5371 | 859 |
|
7871 | 860 |
\medskip |
861 |
||
11622 | 862 |
The dependencies of theorems can be viewed using the function |
863 |
\ttindexbold{thm_deps}\index{theorems!dependencies}: |
|
7871 | 864 |
\begin{ttbox} |
865 |
thm_deps [\(thm@1\), \(\ldots\), \(thm@n\)]; |
|
866 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
867 |
generates the dependency graph of the theorems $thm@1$, $\ldots$, $thm@n$ and |
|
11622 | 868 |
displays it using Isabelle's graph browser. For this to work properly, |
869 |
the theorems in question have to be proved with {\tt proofs} set to a value |
|
870 |
greater than {\tt 0}. You can use |
|
871 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
872 |
ThmDeps.enable : unit -> unit |
|
873 |
ThmDeps.disable : unit -> unit |
|
874 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
875 |
to set \texttt{proofs} appropriately. |
|
876 |
||
877 |
\subsection{Reconstructing and checking proof terms}\label{sec:reconstruct_proofs} |
|
878 |
\index{proof terms!reconstructing} |
|
879 |
\index{proof terms!checking} |
|
880 |
||
881 |
When looking at the above datatype of proofs more closely, one notices that |
|
882 |
some arguments of constructors are {\it optional}. The reason for this is that |
|
883 |
keeping a full proof term for each theorem would result in enormous memory |
|
884 |
requirements. Fortunately, typical proof terms usually contain quite a lot of |
|
885 |
redundant information that can be reconstructed from the context. Therefore, |
|
886 |
Isabelle's inference kernel creates only {\em partial} (or {\em implicit}) |
|
887 |
\index{proof terms!partial} proof terms, in which |
|
888 |
all typing information in terms, all term and type labels of abstractions |
|
889 |
{\tt AbsP} and {\tt Abst}, and (if possible) some argument terms of |
|
890 |
\verb!%! are omitted. The following functions are available for |
|
891 |
reconstructing and checking proof terms: |
|
892 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
893 |
Reconstruct.reconstruct_proof : |
|
894 |
Sign.sg -> term -> Proofterm.proof -> Proofterm.proof |
|
895 |
Reconstruct.expand_proof : |
|
896 |
Sign.sg -> string list -> Proofterm.proof -> Proofterm.proof |
|
897 |
ProofChecker.thm_of_proof : theory -> Proofterm.proof -> thm |
|
898 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
899 |
||
900 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
901 |
\item[Reconstruct.reconstruct_proof $sg$ $t$ $prf$] |
|
902 |
turns the partial proof $prf$ into a full proof of the |
|
903 |
proposition denoted by $t$, with respect to signature $sg$. |
|
904 |
Reconstruction will fail with an error message if $prf$ |
|
905 |
is not a proof of $t$, is ill-formed, or does not contain |
|
906 |
sufficient information for reconstruction by |
|
907 |
{\em higher order pattern unification} |
|
908 |
\cite{nipkow-patterns, Berghofer-Nipkow:2000:TPHOL}. |
|
909 |
The latter may only happen for proofs |
|
910 |
built up ``by hand'' but not for those produced automatically |
|
911 |
by Isabelle's inference kernel. |
|
912 |
\item[Reconstruct.expand_proof $sg$ |
|
913 |
\ttlbrack$name@1$, $\ldots$, $name@n${\ttrbrack} $prf$] |
|
914 |
expands and reconstructs the proofs of all theorems with names |
|
915 |
$name@1$, $\ldots$, $name@n$ in the (full) proof $prf$. |
|
916 |
\item[ProofChecker.thm_of_proof $thy$ $prf$] turns the (full) proof |
|
917 |
$prf$ into a theorem with respect to theory $thy$ by replaying |
|
918 |
it using only primitive rules from Isabelle's inference kernel. |
|
919 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
920 |
||
921 |
\subsection{Parsing and printing proof terms} |
|
922 |
\index{proof terms!parsing} |
|
923 |
\index{proof terms!printing} |
|
924 |
||
925 |
Isabelle offers several functions for parsing and printing |
|
926 |
proof terms. The concrete syntax for proof terms is described |
|
927 |
in Fig.\ts\ref{fig:proof_gram}. |
|
928 |
Implicit term arguments in partial proofs are indicated |
|
929 |
by ``{\tt _}''. |
|
930 |
Type arguments for theorems and axioms may be specified using |
|
931 |
\verb!%! or ``$\cdot$'' with an argument of the form {\tt TYPE($type$)} |
|
932 |
(see \S\ref{sec:basic_syntax}). |
|
933 |
They must appear before any other term argument of a theorem |
|
934 |
or axiom. In contrast to term arguments, type arguments may |
|
935 |
be completely omitted. |
|
7871 | 936 |
\begin{ttbox} |
11625
74cdf24724ea
Tuned section about parsing and printing proof terms.
berghofe
parents:
11622
diff
changeset
|
937 |
ProofSyntax.read_proof : theory -> bool -> string -> Proofterm.proof |
74cdf24724ea
Tuned section about parsing and printing proof terms.
berghofe
parents:
11622
diff
changeset
|
938 |
ProofSyntax.pretty_proof : Sign.sg -> Proofterm.proof -> Pretty.T |
74cdf24724ea
Tuned section about parsing and printing proof terms.
berghofe
parents:
11622
diff
changeset
|
939 |
ProofSyntax.pretty_proof_of : bool -> thm -> Pretty.T |
74cdf24724ea
Tuned section about parsing and printing proof terms.
berghofe
parents:
11622
diff
changeset
|
940 |
ProofSyntax.print_proof_of : bool -> thm -> unit |
7871 | 941 |
\end{ttbox} |
11622 | 942 |
\begin{figure} |
943 |
\begin{center} |
|
944 |
\begin{tabular}{rcl} |
|
945 |
$proof$ & $=$ & {\tt Lam} $params${\tt .} $proof$ ~~$|$~~ |
|
946 |
$\Lambda params${\tt .} $proof$ \\ |
|
947 |
& $|$ & $proof$ \verb!%! $any$ ~~$|$~~ |
|
948 |
$proof$ $\cdot$ $any$ \\ |
|
949 |
& $|$ & $proof$ \verb!%%! $proof$ ~~$|$~~ |
|
950 |
$proof$ {\boldmath$\cdot$} $proof$ \\ |
|
951 |
& $|$ & $id$ ~~$|$~~ $longid$ \\\\ |
|
952 |
$param$ & $=$ & $idt$ ~~$|$~~ $idt$ {\tt :} $prop$ ~~$|$~~ |
|
953 |
{\tt (} $param$ {\tt )} \\\\ |
|
954 |
$params$ & $=$ & $param$ ~~$|$~~ $param$ $params$ |
|
955 |
\end{tabular} |
|
956 |
\end{center} |
|
957 |
\caption{Proof term syntax}\label{fig:proof_gram} |
|
958 |
\end{figure} |
|
959 |
The function {\tt read_proof} reads in a proof term with |
|
960 |
respect to a given theory. The boolean flag indicates whether |
|
961 |
the proof term to be parsed contains explicit typing information |
|
962 |
to be taken into account. |
|
963 |
Usually, typing information is left implicit and |
|
964 |
is inferred during proof reconstruction. The pretty printing |
|
965 |
functions operating on theorems take a boolean flag as an |
|
966 |
argument which indicates whether the proof term should |
|
967 |
be reconstructed before printing. |
|
968 |
||
969 |
The following example (based on Isabelle/HOL) illustrates how |
|
970 |
to parse and check proof terms. We start by parsing a partial |
|
971 |
proof term |
|
972 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
973 |
val prf = ProofSyntax.read_proof Main.thy false |
|
974 |
"impI % _ % _ %% (Lam H : _. conjE % _ % _ % _ %% H %% |
|
975 |
(Lam (H1 : _) H2 : _. conjI % _ % _ %% H2 %% H1))"; |
|
976 |
{\out val prf = PThm (("HOL.impI", []), \dots, \dots, None) % None % None %%} |
|
977 |
{\out AbsP ("H", None, PThm (("HOL.conjE", []), \dots, \dots, None) %} |
|
978 |
{\out None % None % None %% PBound 0 %%} |
|
979 |
{\out AbsP ("H1", None, AbsP ("H2", None, \dots))) : Proofterm.proof} |
|
980 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
981 |
The statement to be established by this proof is |
|
982 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
983 |
val t = term_of |
|
984 |
(read_cterm (sign_of Main.thy) ("A & B --> B & A", propT)); |
|
985 |
{\out val t = Const ("Trueprop", "bool => prop") $} |
|
986 |
{\out (Const ("op -->", "[bool, bool] => bool") $} |
|
987 |
{\out \dots $ \dots : Term.term} |
|
988 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
989 |
Using {\tt t} we can reconstruct the full proof |
|
990 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
991 |
val prf' = Reconstruct.reconstruct_proof (sign_of Main.thy) t prf; |
|
992 |
{\out val prf' = PThm (("HOL.impI", []), \dots, \dots, Some []) %} |
|
993 |
{\out Some (Const ("op &", \dots) $ Free ("A", \dots) $ Free ("B", \dots)) %} |
|
994 |
{\out Some (Const ("op &", \dots) $ Free ("B", \dots) $ Free ("A", \dots)) %%} |
|
995 |
{\out AbsP ("H", Some (Const ("Trueprop", \dots) $ \dots), \dots)} |
|
996 |
{\out : Proofterm.proof} |
|
997 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
998 |
This proof can finally be turned into a theorem |
|
999 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
1000 |
val thm = ProofChecker.thm_of_proof Main.thy prf'; |
|
1001 |
{\out val thm = "A & B --> B & A" : Thm.thm} |
|
1002 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1003 |
||
1004 |
\index{proof terms|)} |
|
1005 |
\index{theorems|)} |
|
7871 | 1006 |
|
5371 | 1007 |
|
1008 |
%%% Local Variables: |
|
1009 |
%%% mode: latex |
|
1010 |
%%% TeX-master: "ref" |
|
1011 |
%%% End: |