author | wenzelm |
Mon, 12 Jun 2017 21:14:38 +0200 | |
changeset 66077 | 1700b74ebbb9 |
parent 58860 | fee7cfa69c50 |
child 67406 | 23307fd33906 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
17914 | 1 |
(*<*)theory Partial imports While_Combinator begin(*>*) |
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text{*\noindent Throughout this tutorial, we have emphasized |
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that all functions in HOL are total. We cannot hope to define |
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truly partial functions, but must make them total. A straightforward |
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method is to lift the result type of the function from $\tau$ to |
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$\tau$~@{text option} (see \ref{sec:option}), where @{term None} is |
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returned if the function is applied to an argument not in its |
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domain. Function @{term assoc} in \S\ref{sec:Trie} is a simple example. |
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We do not pursue this schema further because it should be clear |
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how it works. Its main drawback is that the result of such a lifted |
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function has to be unpacked first before it can be processed |
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further. Its main advantage is that you can distinguish if the |
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function was applied to an argument in its domain or not. If you do |
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not need to make this distinction, for example because the function is |
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never used outside its domain, it is easier to work with |
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\emph{underdefined}\index{functions!underdefined} functions: for |
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certain arguments we only know that a result exists, but we do not |
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know what it is. When defining functions that are normally considered |
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partial, underdefinedness turns out to be a very reasonable |
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alternative. |
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We have already seen an instance of underdefinedness by means of |
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non-exhaustive pattern matching: the definition of @{term last} in |
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\S\ref{sec:fun}. The same is allowed for \isacommand{primrec} |
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*} |
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consts hd :: "'a list \<Rightarrow> 'a" |
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primrec "hd (x#xs) = x" |
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text{*\noindent |
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although it generates a warning. |
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Even ordinary definitions allow underdefinedness, this time by means of |
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preconditions: |
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*} |
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definition subtract :: "nat \<Rightarrow> nat \<Rightarrow> nat" where |
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"n \<le> m \<Longrightarrow> subtract m n \<equiv> m - n" |
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text{* |
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The rest of this section is devoted to the question of how to define |
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partial recursive functions by other means than non-exhaustive pattern |
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matching. |
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*} |
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subsubsection{*Guarded Recursion*} |
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text{* |
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\index{recursion!guarded}% |
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Neither \isacommand{primrec} nor \isacommand{recdef} allow to |
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prefix an equation with a condition in the way ordinary definitions do |
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(see @{const subtract} above). Instead we have to move the condition over |
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to the right-hand side of the equation. Given a partial function $f$ |
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that should satisfy the recursion equation $f(x) = t$ over its domain |
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$dom(f)$, we turn this into the \isacommand{recdef} |
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@{prop[display]"f(x) = (if x \<in> dom(f) then t else arbitrary)"} |
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where @{term arbitrary} is a predeclared constant of type @{typ 'a} |
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which has no definition. Thus we know nothing about its value, |
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which is ideal for specifying underdefined functions on top of it. |
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As a simple example we define division on @{typ nat}: |
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*} |
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consts divi :: "nat \<times> nat \<Rightarrow> nat" |
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recdef divi "measure(\<lambda>(m,n). m)" |
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"divi(m,0) = arbitrary" |
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"divi(m,n) = (if m < n then 0 else divi(m-n,n)+1)" |
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text{*\noindent Of course we could also have defined |
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@{term"divi(m,0)"} to be some specific number, for example 0. The |
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latter option is chosen for the predefined @{text div} function, which |
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simplifies proofs at the expense of deviating from the |
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standard mathematical division function. |
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As a more substantial example we consider the problem of searching a graph. |
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For simplicity our graph is given by a function @{term f} of |
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type @{typ"'a \<Rightarrow> 'a"} which |
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maps each node to its successor; the graph has out-degree 1. |
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The task is to find the end of a chain, modelled by a node pointing to |
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itself. Here is a first attempt: |
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@{prop[display]"find(f,x) = (if f x = x then x else find(f, f x))"} |
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This may be viewed as a fixed point finder or as the second half of the well |
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known \emph{Union-Find} algorithm. |
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The snag is that it may not terminate if @{term f} has non-trivial cycles. |
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Phrased differently, the relation |
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*} |
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definition step1 :: "('a \<Rightarrow> 'a) \<Rightarrow> ('a \<times> 'a)set" where |
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"step1 f \<equiv> {(y,x). y = f x \<and> y \<noteq> x}" |
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text{*\noindent |
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must be well-founded. Thus we make the following definition: |
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*} |
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consts find :: "('a \<Rightarrow> 'a) \<times> 'a \<Rightarrow> 'a" |
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recdef find "same_fst (\<lambda>f. wf(step1 f)) step1" |
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"find(f,x) = (if wf(step1 f) |
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then if f x = x then x else find(f, f x) |
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else arbitrary)" |
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(hints recdef_simp: step1_def) |
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text{*\noindent |
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The recursion equation itself should be clear enough: it is our aborted |
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first attempt augmented with a check that there are no non-trivial loops. |
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To express the required well-founded relation we employ the |
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predefined combinator @{term same_fst} of type |
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@{text[display]"('a \<Rightarrow> bool) \<Rightarrow> ('a \<Rightarrow> ('b\<times>'b)set) \<Rightarrow> (('a\<times>'b) \<times> ('a\<times>'b))set"} |
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defined as |
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@{thm[display]same_fst_def[no_vars]} |
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This combinator is designed for |
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recursive functions on pairs where the first component of the argument is |
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passed unchanged to all recursive calls. Given a constraint on the first |
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component and a relation on the second component, @{term same_fst} builds the |
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required relation on pairs. The theorem |
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@{thm[display]wf_same_fst[no_vars]} |
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is known to the well-foundedness prover of \isacommand{recdef}. Thus |
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well-foundedness of the relation given to \isacommand{recdef} is immediate. |
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Furthermore, each recursive call descends along that relation: the first |
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argument stays unchanged and the second one descends along @{term"step1 |
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f"}. The proof requires unfolding the definition of @{const step1}, |
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as specified in the \isacommand{hints} above. |
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Normally you will then derive the following conditional variant from |
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the recursion equation: |
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*} |
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lemma [simp]: |
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"wf(step1 f) \<Longrightarrow> find(f,x) = (if f x = x then x else find(f, f x))" |
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by simp |
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text{*\noindent Then you should disable the original recursion equation:*} |
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declare find.simps[simp del] |
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text{* |
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Reasoning about such underdefined functions is like that for other |
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recursive functions. Here is a simple example of recursion induction: |
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*} |
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lemma "wf(step1 f) \<longrightarrow> f(find(f,x)) = find(f,x)" |
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apply(induct_tac f x rule: find.induct) |
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apply simp |
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done |
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subsubsection{*The {\tt\slshape while} Combinator*} |
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text{*If the recursive function happens to be tail recursive, its |
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definition becomes a triviality if based on the predefined \cdx{while} |
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combinator. The latter lives in the Library theory \thydx{While_Combinator}. |
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% which is not part of {text Main} but needs to |
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% be included explicitly among the ancestor theories. |
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Constant @{term while} is of type @{text"('a \<Rightarrow> bool) \<Rightarrow> ('a \<Rightarrow> 'a) \<Rightarrow> 'a"} |
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and satisfies the recursion equation @{thm[display]while_unfold[no_vars]} |
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That is, @{term"while b c s"} is equivalent to the imperative program |
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\begin{verbatim} |
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x := s; while b(x) do x := c(x); return x |
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\end{verbatim} |
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In general, @{term s} will be a tuple or record. As an example |
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consider the following definition of function @{const find}: |
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*} |
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d8d7d1b785af
replaced a couple of constsdefs by definitions (also some old primrecs by modern ones)
haftmann
parents:
25258
diff
changeset
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definition find2 :: "('a \<Rightarrow> 'a) \<Rightarrow> 'a \<Rightarrow> 'a" where |
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"find2 f x \<equiv> |
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fst(while (\<lambda>(x,x'). x' \<noteq> x) (\<lambda>(x,x'). (x',f x')) (x,f x))" |
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text{*\noindent |
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The loop operates on two ``local variables'' @{term x} and @{term x'} |
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containing the ``current'' and the ``next'' value of function @{term f}. |
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They are initialized with the global @{term x} and @{term"f x"}. At the |
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end @{term fst} selects the local @{term x}. |
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Although the definition of tail recursive functions via @{term while} avoids |
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termination proofs, there is no free lunch. When proving properties of |
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functions defined by @{term while}, termination rears its ugly head |
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again. Here is \tdx{while_rule}, the well known proof rule for total |
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correctness of loops expressed with @{term while}: |
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@{thm[display,margin=50]while_rule[no_vars]} @{term P} needs to be true of |
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the initial state @{term s} and invariant under @{term c} (premises 1 |
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and~2). The post-condition @{term Q} must become true when leaving the loop |
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(premise~3). And each loop iteration must descend along a well-founded |
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relation @{term r} (premises 4 and~5). |
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Let us now prove that @{const find2} does indeed find a fixed point. Instead |
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of induction we apply the above while rule, suitably instantiated. |
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Only the final premise of @{thm[source]while_rule} is left unproved |
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by @{text auto} but falls to @{text simp}: |
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*} |
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lemma lem: "wf(step1 f) \<Longrightarrow> |
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\<exists>y. while (\<lambda>(x,x'). x' \<noteq> x) (\<lambda>(x,x'). (x',f x')) (x,f x) = (y,y) \<and> |
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f y = y" |
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apply(rule_tac P = "\<lambda>(x,x'). x' = f x" and |
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r = "inv_image (step1 f) fst" in while_rule) |
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apply auto |
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apply(simp add: inv_image_def step1_def) |
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done |
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text{* |
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The theorem itself is a simple consequence of this lemma: |
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*} |
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theorem "wf(step1 f) \<Longrightarrow> f(find2 f x) = find2 f x" |
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apply(drule_tac x = x in lem) |
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apply(auto simp add: find2_def) |
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done |
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text{* Let us conclude this section on partial functions by a |
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discussion of the merits of the @{term while} combinator. We have |
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already seen that the advantage of not having to |
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provide a termination argument when defining a function via @{term |
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while} merely puts off the evil hour. On top of that, tail recursive |
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functions tend to be more complicated to reason about. So why use |
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@{term while} at all? The only reason is executability: the recursion |
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equation for @{term while} is a directly executable functional |
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program. This is in stark contrast to guarded recursion as introduced |
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above which requires an explicit test @{prop"x \<in> dom f"} in the |
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function body. Unless @{term dom} is trivial, this leads to a |
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definition that is impossible to execute or prohibitively slow. |
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Thus, if you are aiming for an efficiently executable definition |
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of a partial function, you are likely to need @{term while}. |
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*} |
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(*<*)end(*>*) |