| author | wenzelm |
| Wed, 22 May 2013 16:13:52 +0200 | |
| changeset 52113 | 2d2b049429f3 |
| parent 49628 | 8262d35eff20 |
| child 53015 | a1119cf551e8 |
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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(*<*) |
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theory Sugar |
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imports "~~/src/HOL/Library/LaTeXsugar" "~~/src/HOL/Library/OptionalSugar" |
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begin |
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(*>*) |
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text{*
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\section{Introduction}
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This document is for those Isabelle users who have mastered |
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the art of mixing \LaTeX\ text and Isabelle theories and never want to |
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typeset a theorem by hand anymore because they have experienced the |
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bliss of writing \verb!@!\verb!{thm[display]setsum_cartesian_product[no_vars]}!
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and seeing Isabelle typeset it for them: |
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@{thm[display,eta_contract=false] setsum_cartesian_product[no_vars]}
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No typos, no omissions, no sweat. |
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If you have not experienced that joy, read Chapter 4, \emph{Presenting
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Theories}, \cite{LNCS2283} first.
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If you have mastered the art of Isabelle's \emph{antiquotations},
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i.e.\ things like the above \verb!@!\verb!{thm...}!, beware: in your vanity
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you may be tempted to think that all readers of the stunning ps or pdf |
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documents you can now produce at the drop of a hat will be struck with |
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awe at the beauty unfolding in front of their eyes. Until one day you |
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come across that very critical of readers known as the ``common referee''. |
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He has the nasty habit of refusing to understand unfamiliar notation |
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like Isabelle's infamous @{text"\<lbrakk> \<rbrakk> \<Longrightarrow>"} no matter how many times you
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explain it in your paper. Even worse, he thinks that using @{text"\<lbrakk>
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\<rbrakk>"} for anything other than denotational semantics is a cardinal sin |
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that must be punished by instant rejection. |
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This document shows you how to make Isabelle and \LaTeX\ cooperate to |
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produce ordinary looking mathematics that hides the fact that it was |
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typeset by a machine. You merely need to load the right files: |
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\begin{itemize}
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\item Import theory \texttt{LaTeXsugar} in the header of your own
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theory. You may also want bits of \texttt{OptionalSugar}, which you can
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copy selectively into your own theory or import as a whole. Both |
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theories live in \texttt{HOL/Library} and are found automatically.
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\item Should you need additional \LaTeX\ packages (the text will tell |
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you so), you include them at the beginning of your \LaTeX\ document, |
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typically in \texttt{root.tex}. For a start, you should
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\verb!\usepackage{amssymb}! --- otherwise typesetting
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@{prop[source]"\<not>(\<exists>x. P x)"} will fail because the AMS symbol
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@{text"\<nexists>"} is missing.
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\end{itemize}
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\section{HOL syntax}
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\subsection{Logic}
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The formula @{prop[source]"\<not>(\<exists>x. P x)"} is typeset as @{prop"~(EX x. P x)"}.
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The predefined constructs @{text"if"}, @{text"let"} and
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@{text"case"} are set in sans serif font to distinguish them from
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other functions. This improves readability: |
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\begin{itemize}
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\item @{term"if b then e\<^isub>1 else e\<^isub>2"} instead of @{text"if b then e\<^isub>1 else e\<^isub>2"}.
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\item @{term"let x = e\<^isub>1 in e\<^isub>2"} instead of @{text"let x = e\<^isub>1 in e\<^isub>2"}.
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\item @{term"case x of True \<Rightarrow> e\<^isub>1 | False \<Rightarrow> e\<^isub>2"} instead of\\
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@{text"case x of True \<Rightarrow> e\<^isub>1 | False \<Rightarrow> e\<^isub>2"}.
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\end{itemize}
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\subsection{Sets}
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Although set syntax in HOL is already close to |
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standard, we provide a few further improvements: |
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\begin{itemize}
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\item @{term"{x. P}"} instead of @{text"{x. P}"}.
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\item @{term"{}"} instead of @{text"{}"}, where
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@{term"{}"} is also input syntax.
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\item @{term"insert a (insert b (insert c M))"} instead of @{text"insert a (insert b (insert c M))"}.
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\end{itemize}
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\subsection{Lists}
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If lists are used heavily, the following notations increase readability: |
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\begin{itemize}
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\item @{term"x # xs"} instead of @{text"x # xs"},
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where @{term"x # xs"} is also input syntax.
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If you prefer more space around the $\cdot$ you have to redefine |
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\verb!\isasymcdot! in \LaTeX: |
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\verb!\renewcommand{\isasymcdot}{\isamath{\,\cdot\,}}!
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\item @{term"length xs"} instead of @{text"length xs"}.
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\item @{term"nth xs n"} instead of @{text"nth xs n"},
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the $n$th element of @{text xs}.
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\item Human readers are good at converting automatically from lists to |
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sets. Hence \texttt{OptionalSugar} contains syntax for suppressing the
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conversion function @{const set}: for example, @{prop[source]"x \<in> set xs"}
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becomes @{prop"x \<in> set xs"}.
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\item The @{text"@"} operation associates implicitly to the right,
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which leads to unpleasant line breaks if the term is too long for one |
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line. To avoid this, \texttt{OptionalSugar} contains syntax to group
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@{text"@"}-terms to the left before printing, which leads to better
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line breaking behaviour: |
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@{term[display]"term\<^isub>0 @ term\<^isub>1 @ term\<^isub>2 @ term\<^isub>3 @ term\<^isub>4 @ term\<^isub>5 @ term\<^isub>6 @ term\<^isub>7 @ term\<^isub>8 @ term\<^isub>9 @ term\<^isub>1\<^isub>0"}
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\end{itemize}
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\subsection{Numbers}
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Coercions between numeric types are alien to mathematicians who |
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consider, for example, @{typ nat} as a subset of @{typ int}.
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\texttt{OptionalSugar} contains syntax for suppressing numeric coercions such
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as @{const int} @{text"::"} @{typ"nat \<Rightarrow> int"}. For example,
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@{term[source]"int 5"} is printed as @{term "int 5"}. Embeddings of types
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@{typ nat}, @{typ int}, @{typ real} are covered; non-injective coercions such
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as @{const nat} @{text"::"} @{typ"int \<Rightarrow> nat"} are not and should not be
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hidden. |
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\section{Printing theorems}
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\subsection{Question marks}
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If you print anything, especially theorems, containing |
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schematic variables they are prefixed with a question mark: |
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm conjI}! results in @{thm conjI}. Most of the time
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you would rather not see the question marks. There is an attribute |
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\verb!no_vars! that you can attach to the theorem that turns its |
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schematic into ordinary free variables: \verb!@!\verb!{thm conjI[no_vars]}!
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results in @{thm conjI[no_vars]}.
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This \verb!no_vars! business can become a bit tedious. |
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If you would rather never see question marks, simply put |
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!options [show_question_marks = false]! |
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\end{quote}
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into the relevant \texttt{ROOT} file, just before the \texttt{theories} for that session.
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The rest of this document is produced with this flag set to \texttt{false}.
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Hint: Setting \verb!show_question_marks! to \texttt{false} only
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suppresses question marks; variables that end in digits, |
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e.g. @{text"x1"}, are still printed with a trailing @{text".0"},
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e.g. @{text"x1.0"}, their internal index. This can be avoided by
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turning the last digit into a subscript: write \verb!x\<^isub>1! and |
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obtain the much nicer @{text"x\<^isub>1"}. *}
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(*<*)declare [[show_question_marks = false]](*>*) |
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subsection {*Qualified names*}
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text{* If there are multiple declarations of the same name, Isabelle prints
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the qualified name, for example @{text "T.length"}, where @{text T} is the
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theory it is defined in, to distinguish it from the predefined @{const[source]
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"List.length"}. In case there is no danger of confusion, you can insist on |
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short names (no qualifiers) by setting the \verb!names_short! |
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configuration option in the context. |
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\subsection {Variable names\label{sec:varnames}}
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It sometimes happens that you want to change the name of a |
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variable in a theorem before printing it. This can easily be achieved |
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with the help of Isabelle's instantiation attribute \texttt{where}:
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@{thm conjI[where P = \<phi> and Q = \<psi>]} is the result of
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm conjI[where P = \<phi> and Q = \<psi>]}!
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\end{quote}
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To support the ``\_''-notation for irrelevant variables |
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the constant \texttt{DUMMY} has been introduced:
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@{thm fst_conv[where b = DUMMY]} is produced by
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm fst_conv[where b = DUMMY]}!
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\end{quote}
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Variables that are bound by quantifiers or lambdas cannot be renamed |
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like this. Instead, the attribute \texttt{rename\_abs} does the
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job. It expects a list of names or underscores, similar to the |
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\texttt{of} attribute:
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm split_paired_All[rename_abs _ l r]}!
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\end{quote}
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produces @{thm split_paired_All[rename_abs _ l r]}.
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\subsection{Inference rules}
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To print theorems as inference rules you need to include Didier |
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R\'emy's \texttt{mathpartir} package~\cite{mathpartir}
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for typesetting inference rules in your \LaTeX\ file. |
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Writing \verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=Rule] conjI}! produces
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@{thm[mode=Rule] conjI}, even in the middle of a sentence.
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If you prefer your inference rule on a separate line, maybe with a name, |
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\begin{center}
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@{thm[mode=Rule] conjI} {\sc conjI}
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\end{center}
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is produced by |
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!\begin{center}!\\
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=Rule] conjI} {\sc conjI}!\\
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\verb!\end{center}!
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\end{quote}
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It is not recommended to use the standard \texttt{display} option
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together with \texttt{Rule} because centering does not work and because
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the line breaking mechanisms of \texttt{display} and \texttt{mathpartir} can
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clash. |
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Of course you can display multiple rules in this fashion: |
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!\begin{center}!\\
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=Rule] conjI} {\sc conjI} \\[1ex]!\\
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=Rule] conjE} {\sc disjI$_1$} \qquad!\\
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=Rule] disjE} {\sc disjI$_2$}!\\
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\verb!\end{center}!
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\end{quote}
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yields |
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\begin{center}\small
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@{thm[mode=Rule] conjI} {\sc conjI} \\[1ex]
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@{thm[mode=Rule] disjI1} {\sc disjI$_1$} \qquad
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@{thm[mode=Rule] disjI2} {\sc disjI$_2$}
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\end{center}
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The \texttt{mathpartir} package copes well if there are too many
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premises for one line: |
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\begin{center}
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@{prop[mode=Rule] "\<lbrakk> A \<longrightarrow> B; B \<longrightarrow> C; C \<longrightarrow> D; D \<longrightarrow> E; E \<longrightarrow> F; F \<longrightarrow> G;
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G \<longrightarrow> H; H \<longrightarrow> I; I \<longrightarrow> J; J \<longrightarrow> K \<rbrakk> \<Longrightarrow> A \<longrightarrow> K"} |
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\end{center}
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Limitations: 1. Premises and conclusion must each not be longer than |
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the line. 2. Premises that are @{text"\<Longrightarrow>"}-implications are again
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displayed with a horizontal line, which looks at least unusual. |
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In case you print theorems without premises no rule will be printed by the |
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\texttt{Rule} print mode. However, you can use \texttt{Axiom} instead:
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!\begin{center}!\\
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=Axiom] refl} {\sc refl}! \\
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\verb!\end{center}!
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\end{quote}
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yields |
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\begin{center}
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@{thm[mode=Axiom] refl} {\sc refl}
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\end{center}
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\subsection{Displays and font sizes}
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When displaying theorems with the \texttt{display} option, for example as in
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[display] refl}! @{thm[display] refl} the theorem is
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set in small font. It uses the \LaTeX-macro \verb!\isastyle!, |
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which is also the style that regular theory text is set in, e.g. *} |
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lemma "t = t" |
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(*<*)oops(*>*) |
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text{* \noindent Otherwise \verb!\isastyleminor! is used,
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which does not modify the font size (assuming you stick to the default |
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\verb!\isabellestyle{it}! in \texttt{root.tex}). If you prefer
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normal font size throughout your text, include |
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!\renewcommand{\isastyle}{\isastyleminor}!
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\end{quote}
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in \texttt{root.tex}. On the other hand, if you like the small font,
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just put \verb!\isastyle! in front of the text in question, |
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e.g.\ at the start of one of the center-environments above. |
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The advantage of the display option is that you can display a whole |
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list of theorems in one go. For example, |
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[display] append.simps}!
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generates @{thm[display] append.simps}
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\subsection{If-then}
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If you prefer a fake ``natural language'' style you can produce |
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the body of |
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\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}
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\begin{theorem}
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@{thm[mode=IfThen] le_trans}
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\end{theorem}
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by typing |
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\begin{quote}
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\verb!@!\verb!{thm[mode=IfThen] le_trans}!
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\end{quote}
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In order to prevent odd line breaks, the premises are put into boxes. |
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At times this is too drastic: |
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\begin{theorem}
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@{prop[mode=IfThen] "longpremise \<Longrightarrow> longerpremise \<Longrightarrow> P(f(f(f(f(f(f(f(f(f(x)))))))))) \<Longrightarrow> longestpremise \<Longrightarrow> conclusion"}
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\end{theorem}
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In which case you should use \texttt{IfThenNoBox} instead of
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\texttt{IfThen}:
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\begin{theorem}
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@{prop[mode=IfThenNoBox] "longpremise \<Longrightarrow> longerpremise \<Longrightarrow> P(f(f(f(f(f(f(f(f(f(x)))))))))) \<Longrightarrow> longestpremise \<Longrightarrow> conclusion"}
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\end{theorem}
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\subsection{Doing it yourself\label{sec:yourself}}
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If for some reason you want or need to present theorems your |
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own way, you can extract the premises and the conclusion explicitly |
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and combine them as you like: |
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\begin{itemize}
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\item \verb!@!\verb!{thm (prem 1)! $thm$\verb!}!
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prints premise 1 of $thm$. |
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\item \verb!@!\verb!{thm (concl)! $thm$\verb!}!
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prints the conclusion of $thm$. |
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\end{itemize}
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|
| 32891 | 309 |
For example, ``from @{thm (prem 2) conjI} and
|
310 |
@{thm (prem 1) conjI} we conclude @{thm (concl) conjI}''
|
|
| 16153 | 311 |
is produced by |
312 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
| 32891 | 313 |
\verb!from !\verb!@!\verb!{thm (prem 2) conjI}! \verb!and !\verb!@!\verb!{thm (prem 1) conjI}!\\
|
314 |
\verb!we conclude !\verb!@!\verb!{thm (concl) conjI}!
|
|
| 16153 | 315 |
\end{quote}
|
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Thus you can rearrange or hide premises and typeset the theorem as you like. |
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Styles like \verb!(prem 1)! are a general mechanism explained |
| 16153 | 318 |
in \S\ref{sec:styles}.
|
| 49239 | 319 |
|
320 |
||
321 |
\subsection{Patterns}
|
|
322 |
||
323 |
||
324 |
In \S\ref{sec:varnames} we shows how to create patterns containing ``@{term DUMMY}''.
|
|
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You can drive this game even further and extend the syntax of let |
|
326 |
bindings such that certain functions like @{term fst}, @{term hd},
|
|
327 |
etc.\ are printed as patterns. \texttt{OptionalSugar} provides the following:
|
|
| 16153 | 328 |
|
| 49239 | 329 |
\begin{center}
|
330 |
\begin{tabular}{l@ {~~produced by~~}l}
|
|
331 |
@{term "let x = fst p in t"} & \verb!@!\verb!{term "let x = fst p in t"}!\\
|
|
332 |
@{term "let x = snd p in t"} & \verb!@!\verb!{term "let x = snd p in t"}!\\
|
|
333 |
@{term "let x = hd xs in t"} & \verb!@!\verb!{term "let x = hd xs in t"}!\\
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|
334 |
@{term "let x = tl xs in t"} & \verb!@!\verb!{term "let x = tl xs in t"}!\\
|
|
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@{term "let x = the y in t"} & \verb!@!\verb!{term "let x = the y in t"}!\\
|
|
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\end{tabular}
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|
337 |
\end{center}
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|
338 |
||
339 |
||
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\section {Styles\label{sec:styles}}
|
|
| 15366 | 341 |
|
| 49239 | 342 |
The \verb!thm! antiquotation works nicely for single theorems, but |
343 |
sets of equations as used in definitions are more difficult to |
|
344 |
typeset nicely: people tend to prefer aligned @{text "="} signs.
|
|
345 |
||
346 |
To deal with such cases where it is desirable to dive into the structure |
|
347 |
of terms and theorems, Isabelle offers antiquotations featuring ``styles'': |
|
348 |
||
349 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
350 |
\verb!@!\verb!{thm (style) thm}!\\
|
|
351 |
\verb!@!\verb!{prop (style) thm}!\\
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|
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\verb!@!\verb!{term (style) term}!\\
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|
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\verb!@!\verb!{term_type (style) term}!\\
|
|
354 |
\verb!@!\verb!{typeof (style) term}!\\
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|
355 |
\end{quote}
|
|
| 15366 | 356 |
|
| 49239 | 357 |
A ``style'' is a transformation of a term. There are predefined |
358 |
styles, namely \verb!lhs! and \verb!rhs!, \verb!prem! with one argument, and \verb!concl!. |
|
359 |
For example, the output |
|
360 |
\begin{center}
|
|
361 |
\begin{tabular}{l@ {~~@{text "="}~~}l}
|
|
362 |
@{thm (lhs) append_Nil} & @{thm (rhs) append_Nil}\\
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|
363 |
@{thm (lhs) append_Cons} & @{thm (rhs) append_Cons}
|
|
364 |
\end{tabular}
|
|
365 |
\end{center}
|
|
366 |
is produced by the following code: |
|
367 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
368 |
\verb!\begin{center}!\\
|
|
369 |
\verb!\begin{tabular}{l@ {~~!\verb!@!\verb!{text "="}~~}l}!\\
|
|
370 |
\verb!@!\verb!{thm (lhs) append_Nil} & @!\verb!{thm (rhs) append_Nil}\\!\\
|
|
371 |
\verb!@!\verb!{thm (lhs) append_Cons} & @!\verb!{thm (rhs) append_Cons}!\\
|
|
372 |
\verb!\end{tabular}!\\
|
|
373 |
\verb!\end{center}!
|
|
374 |
\end{quote}
|
|
375 |
Note the space between \verb!@! and \verb!{! in the tabular argument.
|
|
376 |
It prevents Isabelle from interpreting \verb!@ {~~...~~}!
|
|
377 |
as an antiquotation. The styles \verb!lhs! and \verb!rhs! |
|
378 |
extract the left hand side (or right hand side respectively) from the |
|
379 |
conclusion of propositions consisting of a binary operator |
|
380 |
(e.~g.~@{text "="}, @{text "\<equiv>"}, @{text "<"}).
|
|
| 15366 | 381 |
|
| 49239 | 382 |
Likewise, \verb!concl! may be used as a style to show just the |
383 |
conclusion of a proposition. For example, take \verb!hd_Cons_tl!: |
|
384 |
\begin{center}
|
|
385 |
@{thm hd_Cons_tl}
|
|
386 |
\end{center}
|
|
387 |
To print just the conclusion, |
|
388 |
\begin{center}
|
|
389 |
@{thm (concl) hd_Cons_tl}
|
|
390 |
\end{center}
|
|
391 |
type |
|
392 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
393 |
\verb!\begin{center}!\\
|
|
394 |
\verb!@!\verb!{thm (concl) hd_Cons_tl}!\\
|
|
395 |
\verb!\end{center}!
|
|
396 |
\end{quote}
|
|
397 |
Beware that any options must be placed \emph{before} the style, as in this example.
|
|
| 15366 | 398 |
|
| 49239 | 399 |
Further use cases can be found in \S\ref{sec:yourself}.
|
400 |
If you are not afraid of ML, you may also define your own styles. |
|
401 |
Have a look at module @{ML_struct Term_Style}.
|
|
402 |
||
403 |
||
404 |
\section {Proofs}
|
|
405 |
||
406 |
Full proofs, even if written in beautiful Isar style, are |
|
| 24497 | 407 |
likely to be too long and detailed to be included in conference |
408 |
papers, but some key lemmas might be of interest. |
|
409 |
It is usually easiest to put them in figures like the one in Fig.\ |
|
410 |
\ref{fig:proof}. This was achieved with the \isakeyword{text\_raw} command:
|
|
| 15366 | 411 |
*} |
412 |
text_raw {*
|
|
413 |
\begin{figure}
|
|
414 |
\begin{center}\begin{minipage}{0.6\textwidth}
|
|
| 24497 | 415 |
\isastyleminor\isamarkuptrue |
| 15366 | 416 |
*} |
417 |
lemma True |
|
418 |
proof - |
|
419 |
-- "pretty trivial" |
|
420 |
show True by force |
|
421 |
qed |
|
| 15428 | 422 |
text_raw {*
|
| 15366 | 423 |
\end{minipage}\end{center}
|
424 |
\caption{Example proof in a figure.}\label{fig:proof}
|
|
425 |
\end{figure}
|
|
426 |
*} |
|
427 |
text {*
|
|
428 |
||
429 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
430 |
\small |
|
431 |
\verb!text_raw {!\verb!*!\\
|
|
432 |
\verb! \begin{figure}!\\
|
|
433 |
\verb! \begin{center}\begin{minipage}{0.6\textwidth}!\\
|
|
| 24497 | 434 |
\verb! \isastyleminor\isamarkuptrue!\\ |
| 15366 | 435 |
\verb!*!\verb!}!\\ |
436 |
\verb!lemma True!\\ |
|
437 |
\verb!proof -!\\ |
|
438 |
\verb! -- "pretty trivial"!\\ |
|
439 |
\verb! show True by force!\\ |
|
440 |
\verb!qed!\\ |
|
441 |
\verb!text_raw {!\verb!*!\\
|
|
442 |
\verb! \end{minipage}\end{center}!\\
|
|
443 |
\verb! \caption{Example proof in a figure.}\label{fig:proof}!\\
|
|
444 |
\verb! \end{figure}!\\
|
|
445 |
\verb!*!\verb!}! |
|
446 |
\end{quote}
|
|
| 24497 | 447 |
|
448 |
Other theory text, e.g.\ definitions, can be put in figures, too. |
|
| 15342 | 449 |
|
| 49239 | 450 |
\section{Theory snippets}
|
|
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|
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|
| 49239 | 452 |
This section describes how to include snippets of a theory text in some other \LaTeX\ document. |
453 |
The typical scenario is that the description of your theory is not part of the theory text but |
|
454 |
a separate document that antiquotes bits of the theory. This works well for terms and theorems |
|
455 |
but there are no antiquotations, for example, for function definitions or proofs. Even if there are antiquotations, |
|
456 |
the output is usually a reformatted (by Isabelle) version of the input and may not look like |
|
457 |
you wanted it to look. Here is how to include a snippet of theory text (in \LaTeX\ form) in some |
|
458 |
other \LaTeX\ document, in 4 easy steps. Beware that these snippets are not processed by |
|
459 |
any antiquotation mechanism: the resulting \LaTeX\ text is more or less exactly what you wrote |
|
460 |
in the theory, without any added sugar. |
|
|
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|
461 |
|
| 49239 | 462 |
\subsection{Theory markup}
|
|
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|
463 |
|
| 49239 | 464 |
Include some markers at the beginning and the end of the theory snippet you want to cut out. |
465 |
You have to place the following lines before and after the snippet, where snippets must always be |
|
466 |
consecutive lines of theory text: |
|
467 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
468 |
\verb!\text_raw{!\verb!*\snip{!\emph{snippetname}\verb!}{1}{2}{%*!\verb!}!\\
|
|
469 |
\emph{theory text}\\
|
|
470 |
\verb!\text_raw{!\verb!*!\verb!}%endsnip*!\verb!}!
|
|
471 |
\end{quote}
|
|
472 |
where \emph{snippetname} should be a unique name for the snippet. The numbers \texttt{1}
|
|
473 |
and \texttt{2} are explained in a moment.
|
|
474 |
||
475 |
\subsection{Generate the \texttt{.tex} file}
|
|
|
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|
476 |
|
| 49239 | 477 |
Run your theory \texttt{T} with the \texttt{isabelle} \texttt{build} tool
|
478 |
to generate the \LaTeX-file \texttt{T.tex} which is needed for the next step,
|
|
479 |
extraction of marked snippets. |
|
480 |
You may also want to process \texttt{T.tex} to generate a pdf document.
|
|
481 |
This requires a definition of \texttt{\char`\\snippet}:
|
|
482 |
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
483 |
\newcommand{\repeatisanl}[1]
|
|
484 |
{\ifnum#1=0\else\isanewline\repeatisanl{\numexpr#1-1}\fi}
|
|
485 |
\newcommand{\snip}[4]{\repeatisanl#2#4\repeatisanl#3}
|
|
486 |
\end{verbatim}
|
|
487 |
Parameter 2 and 3 of \texttt{\char`\\snippet} are numbers (the \texttt{1}
|
|
488 |
and \texttt{2} above) and determine how many newlines are inserted before and after the snippet.
|
|
489 |
Unfortunately \texttt{text\_raw} eats up all preceding and following newlines
|
|
490 |
and they have to be inserted again in this manner. Otherwise the document generated from \texttt{T.tex}
|
|
491 |
will look ugly around the snippets. It can take some iterations to get the number of required |
|
492 |
newlines exactly right. |
|
493 |
||
494 |
\subsection{Extract marked snippets}
|
|
495 |
\label{subsec:extract}
|
|
|
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|
496 |
|
| 49239 | 497 |
Extract the marked bits of text with a shell-level script, e.g. |
498 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
499 |
\verb!sed -n '/\\snip{/,/endsnip/p' T.tex > !\emph{snippets}\verb!.tex!
|
|
500 |
\end{quote}
|
|
501 |
File \emph{snippets}\texttt{.tex} (the name is arbitrary) now contains a sequence of blocks like this
|
|
502 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
503 |
\verb!\snip{!\emph{snippetname}\verb!}{1}{2}{%!\\
|
|
504 |
\emph{theory text}\\
|
|
505 |
\verb!}%endsnip! |
|
506 |
\end{quote}
|
|
507 |
||
508 |
\subsection{Including snippets}
|
|
|
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changeset
|
509 |
|
| 49239 | 510 |
In the preamble of the document where the snippets are to be used you define \texttt{\char`\\snip}
|
511 |
and input \emph{snippets}\texttt{.tex}:
|
|
512 |
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
513 |
\newcommand{\snip}[4]
|
|
514 |
{\expandafter\newcommand\csname #1\endcsname{#4}}
|
|
515 |
\input{snippets}
|
|
516 |
\end{verbatim}
|
|
517 |
This definition of \texttt{\char`\\snip} simply has the effect of defining for each snippet
|
|
518 |
\emph{snippetname} a \LaTeX\ command \texttt{\char`\\}\emph{snippetname}
|
|
519 |
that produces the corresponding snippet text. In the body of your document you can display that text |
|
520 |
like this: |
|
521 |
\begin{quote}
|
|
522 |
\verb!\begin{isabelle}!\\
|
|
523 |
\texttt{\char`\\}\emph{snippetname}\\
|
|
524 |
\verb!\end{isabelle}!
|
|
525 |
\end{quote}
|
|
526 |
The \texttt{isabelle} environment is the one defined in the standard file
|
|
527 |
\texttt{isabelle.sty} which most likely you are loading anyway.
|
|
| 49628 | 528 |
|
529 |
||
530 |
\section{Antiquotation}
|
|
531 |
||
532 |
You want to show a constant and its type? Instead of going |
|
533 |
\verb!@!\verb!{const myconst}! \verb!@!\verb!{text "::"}! \verb!@!\verb!{typeof myconst}!,
|
|
534 |
you can just write \verb!@!\verb!{const_typ myconst}! using the new antiquotation
|
|
535 |
\texttt{const\_typ} defined in \texttt{LaTeXsugar}. For example,
|
|
536 |
\verb!@!\verb!{const_typ length}! produces @{const_typ length}.
|
|
537 |
||
|
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|
538 |
*} |
|
cd4983c76548
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changeset
|
539 |
|
| 15337 | 540 |
(*<*) |
541 |
end |
|
| 16175 | 542 |
(*>*) |