author | wenzelm |
Mon, 06 Oct 1997 18:40:24 +0200 | |
changeset 3784 | 3b15cda31c97 |
parent 3485 | f27a30a18a17 |
child 4274 | 2048e7a79d09 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
3200 | 1 |
|
104 | 2 |
%% $Id$ |
3108 | 3 |
|
286 | 4 |
\chapter{Basic Use of Isabelle}\index{sessions|(} |
3108 | 5 |
The Reference Manual is a comprehensive description of Isabelle |
6 |
proper, including all \ML{} commands, functions and packages. It |
|
7 |
really is intended for reference, perhaps for browsing, but not for |
|
8 |
reading through. It is not a tutorial, but assumes familiarity with |
|
9 |
the basic logical concepts of Isabelle. |
|
104 | 10 |
|
286 | 11 |
When you are looking for a way of performing some task, scan the Table of |
12 |
Contents for a relevant heading. Functions are organized by their purpose, |
|
13 |
by their operands (subgoals, tactics, theorems), and by their usefulness. |
|
14 |
In each section, basic functions appear first, then advanced functions, and |
|
322 | 15 |
finally esoteric functions. Use the Index when you are looking for the |
16 |
definition of a particular Isabelle function. |
|
104 | 17 |
|
286 | 18 |
A few examples are presented. Many examples files are distributed with |
19 |
Isabelle, however; please experiment interactively. |
|
104 | 20 |
|
21 |
||
22 |
\section{Basic interaction with Isabelle} |
|
2225 | 23 |
\index{starting up|bold}\nobreak |
24 |
% |
|
3108 | 25 |
We assume that your local Isabelle administrator (this might be you!) |
26 |
has already installed the \Pure\ system and several object-logics |
|
27 |
properly --- otherwise see the {\tt INSTALL} file in the top-level |
|
28 |
directory of the distribution on how to build it. |
|
29 |
||
30 |
\medskip Let $\langle isabellehome \rangle$ denote the location where |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
31 |
the distribution has been installed. To run Isabelle from a the shell |
3108 | 32 |
prompt within an ordinary text terminal session, simply type: |
33 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
34 |
\({\langle}isabellehome{\rangle}\)/bin/isabelle |
|
35 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
36 |
This should start an interactive \ML{} session with the default |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
37 |
object-logic already preloaded. All Isabelle commands are bound to |
3108 | 38 |
\ML{} identifiers. |
39 |
||
40 |
Subsequently we assume that {\tt \(\langle isabellehome \rangle\)/bin} |
|
41 |
has been added to your shell's search path, in order to avoid typing |
|
42 |
full path specifications of the executable files. |
|
43 |
||
44 |
The object-logic image to load may be also specified explicitly as an |
|
45 |
argument to the {\tt isabelle} command, e.g.: |
|
46 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
47 |
isabelle FOL |
|
48 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
49 |
This should put you into the world of polymorphic first-order logic |
|
50 |
(assuming that {\FOL} has been pre-built). |
|
2225 | 51 |
|
3108 | 52 |
\index{saving your work|bold} Isabelle provides no means of storing |
53 |
theorems or proofs on files. Theorems are simply part of the \ML{} |
|
54 |
state and are named by \ML{} identifiers. To save your work between |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
55 |
sessions, you must dump the \ML{} system state to a file. This is done |
3108 | 56 |
automatically when ending the session normally (e.g.\ by typing |
57 |
control-D), provided that the image has been opened \emph{writable} in |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
58 |
the first place. The standard object-logics are usually read-only, so |
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
59 |
you probably have to create a private working copy first. For example, |
3108 | 60 |
the following shell command puts you into a writable Isabelle session |
61 |
of name \texttt{Foo} that initially contains just \FOL: |
|
62 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
63 |
isabelle FOL Foo |
|
64 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
65 |
Ending the \texttt{Foo} session with control-D will cause the complete |
|
66 |
\ML{} world to be saved somewhere in your home directory\footnote{The |
|
67 |
default location is in \texttt{\~\relax/isabelle/heaps}, but this |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
68 |
depends on your local configuration.}. Make sure there is enough |
3108 | 69 |
space available! Then one may later continue at exactly the same point |
70 |
by running |
|
71 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
72 |
isabelle Foo |
|
73 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
104 | 74 |
|
3200 | 75 |
More details about \texttt{isabelle} may be found in the \emph{System |
76 |
Manual}. |
|
3108 | 77 |
|
78 |
\medskip Saving the state is not enough. Record, on a file, the |
|
79 |
top-level commands that generate your theories and proofs. Such a |
|
80 |
record allows you to replay the proofs whenever required, for instance |
|
81 |
after making minor changes to the axioms. Ideally, your record will |
|
82 |
be somewhat intelligible to others as a formal description of your |
|
83 |
work. |
|
104 | 84 |
|
3108 | 85 |
\medskip There are more comfortable user interfaces than the |
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
86 |
bare-bones \ML{} top-level run from a text terminal. The |
3108 | 87 |
\texttt{Isabelle} executable (note the capital I) runs one such |
88 |
interface, depending on your local configuration. Furthermore there |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
89 |
are a number of external utilities available. These are started |
3108 | 90 |
uniformly via the \texttt{isatool} wrapper. |
104 | 91 |
|
3200 | 92 |
Again, see the \emph{System Manual} for more information user |
93 |
interfaces and utilities. |
|
104 | 94 |
|
95 |
||
96 |
\section{Ending a session} |
|
97 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
3108 | 98 |
quit : unit -> unit |
99 |
exit : int -> unit |
|
100 |
commit : unit -> unit |
|
104 | 101 |
\end{ttbox} |
322 | 102 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
3108 | 103 |
\item[\ttindexbold{quit}();] ends the Isabelle session, without saving |
104 |
the state. |
|
104 | 105 |
|
3108 | 106 |
\item[\ttindexbold{exit}();] same as {\tt quit}, passing a return code |
107 |
to the operating system. |
|
104 | 108 |
|
3108 | 109 |
\item[\ttindexbold{commit}();] saves the current state without ending |
110 |
the session, provided that the logic image is opened read-write. |
|
322 | 111 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 112 |
|
3108 | 113 |
Typing control-D also finishes the session in essentially the same way |
114 |
as the sequence {\tt commit(); quit();} would. |
|
104 | 115 |
|
116 |
||
322 | 117 |
\section{Reading ML files} |
118 |
\index{files!reading} |
|
104 | 119 |
\begin{ttbox} |
138
9ba8bff1addc
added chapter "Defining Theories" and made changes for new Readthy functions
clasohm
parents:
104
diff
changeset
|
120 |
cd : string -> unit |
884 | 121 |
pwd : unit -> string |
138
9ba8bff1addc
added chapter "Defining Theories" and made changes for new Readthy functions
clasohm
parents:
104
diff
changeset
|
122 |
use : string -> unit |
9ba8bff1addc
added chapter "Defining Theories" and made changes for new Readthy functions
clasohm
parents:
104
diff
changeset
|
123 |
time_use : string -> unit |
104 | 124 |
\end{ttbox} |
322 | 125 |
Section~\ref{LoadingTheories} describes commands for loading theory files. |
126 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
127 |
\item[\ttindexbold{cd} "{\it dir}";] |
|
128 |
changes the current directory to {\it dir}. This is the default directory |
|
129 |
for reading files and for writing temporary files. |
|
104 | 130 |
|
3108 | 131 |
\item[\ttindexbold{pwd}();] returns the path of the current directory. |
884 | 132 |
|
322 | 133 |
\item[\ttindexbold{use} "$file$";] |
104 | 134 |
reads the given {\it file} as input to the \ML{} session. Reading a file |
135 |
of Isabelle commands is the usual way of replaying a proof. |
|
136 |
||
322 | 137 |
\item[\ttindexbold{time_use} "$file$";] |
104 | 138 |
performs {\tt use~"$file$"} and prints the total execution time. |
322 | 139 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 140 |
|
141 |
||
3108 | 142 |
\section{Setting flags} |
143 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
144 |
set : bool ref -> bool |
|
145 |
reset : bool ref -> bool |
|
146 |
toggle : bool ref -> bool |
|
147 |
\end{ttbox}\index{*set}\index{*reset}\index{*toggle} |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3200
diff
changeset
|
148 |
These are some shorthands for manipulating boolean references. The new |
3108 | 149 |
value is returned. |
150 |
||
151 |
||
508 | 152 |
\section{Printing of terms and theorems}\label{sec:printing-control} |
322 | 153 |
\index{printing control|(} |
104 | 154 |
Isabelle's pretty printer is controlled by a number of parameters. |
155 |
||
156 |
\subsection{Printing limits} |
|
157 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
158 |
Pretty.setdepth : int -> unit |
|
159 |
Pretty.setmargin : int -> unit |
|
160 |
print_depth : int -> unit |
|
161 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
508 | 162 |
These set limits for terminal output. See also {\tt goals_limit}, which |
163 |
limits the number of subgoals printed (page~\pageref{sec:goals-printing}). |
|
104 | 164 |
|
322 | 165 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
166 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Pretty.setdepth} \(d\);] |
|
167 |
tells Isabelle's pretty printer to limit the printing depth to~$d$. This |
|
168 |
affects Isabelle's display of theorems and terms. The default value |
|
169 |
is~0, which permits printing to an arbitrary depth. Useful values for |
|
170 |
$d$ are~10 and~20. |
|
104 | 171 |
|
322 | 172 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Pretty.setmargin} \(m\);] |
173 |
tells Isabelle's pretty printer to assume a right margin (page width) |
|
174 |
of~$m$. The initial margin is~80. |
|
104 | 175 |
|
322 | 176 |
\item[\ttindexbold{print_depth} \(n\);] |
177 |
limits the printing depth of complex \ML{} values, such as theorems and |
|
178 |
terms. This command affects the \ML{} top level and its effect is |
|
179 |
compiler-dependent. Typically $n$ should be less than~10. |
|
180 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
104 | 181 |
|
182 |
||
508 | 183 |
\subsection{Printing of hypotheses, brackets, types and sorts} |
322 | 184 |
\index{meta-assumptions!printing of} |
185 |
\index{types!printing of}\index{sorts!printing of} |
|
104 | 186 |
\begin{ttbox} |
508 | 187 |
show_hyps : bool ref \hfill{\bf initially true} |
188 |
show_brackets : bool ref \hfill{\bf initially false} |
|
189 |
show_types : bool ref \hfill{\bf initially false} |
|
190 |
show_sorts : bool ref \hfill{\bf initially false} |
|
104 | 191 |
\end{ttbox} |
322 | 192 |
These flags allow you to control how much information is displayed for |
508 | 193 |
terms and theorems. The hypotheses are normally shown; superfluous |
194 |
parentheses are not. Types and sorts are normally hidden. Displaying |
|
195 |
types and sorts may explain why a polymorphic inference rule fails to |
|
196 |
resolve with some goal. |
|
104 | 197 |
|
322 | 198 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
199 |
\item[\ttindexbold{show_hyps} := false;] |
|
332 | 200 |
makes Isabelle show each meta-level hypothesis as a dot. |
104 | 201 |
|
508 | 202 |
\item[\ttindexbold{show_brackets} := true;] |
203 |
makes Isabelle show full bracketing. This reveals the |
|
204 |
grouping of infix operators. |
|
205 |
||
322 | 206 |
\item[\ttindexbold{show_types} := true;] |
104 | 207 |
makes Isabelle show types when printing a term or theorem. |
208 |
||
322 | 209 |
\item[\ttindexbold{show_sorts} := true;] |
1102 | 210 |
makes Isabelle show both types and the sorts of type variables. It does not |
211 |
matter whether {\tt show_types} is also~{\tt true}. |
|
322 | 212 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 213 |
|
214 |
||
215 |
\subsection{$\eta$-contraction before printing} |
|
216 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
217 |
eta_contract: bool ref \hfill{\bf initially false} |
|
218 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
219 |
The {\bf $\eta$-contraction law} asserts $(\lambda x.f(x))\equiv f$, |
|
220 |
provided $x$ is not free in ~$f$. It asserts {\bf extensionality} of |
|
221 |
functions: $f\equiv g$ if $f(x)\equiv g(x)$ for all~$x$. Higher-order |
|
332 | 222 |
unification frequently puts terms into a fully $\eta$-expanded form. For |
158 | 223 |
example, if $F$ has type $(\tau\To\tau)\To\tau$ then its expanded form is |
224 |
$\lambda h.F(\lambda x.h(x))$. By default, the user sees this expanded |
|
225 |
form. |
|
104 | 226 |
|
322 | 227 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
228 |
\item[\ttindexbold{eta_contract} := true;] |
|
104 | 229 |
makes Isabelle perform $\eta$-contractions before printing, so that |
230 |
$\lambda h.F(\lambda x.h(x))$ appears simply as~$F$. The |
|
231 |
distinction between a term and its $\eta$-expanded form occasionally |
|
232 |
matters. |
|
322 | 233 |
\end{ttdescription} |
234 |
\index{printing control|)} |
|
104 | 235 |
|
236 |
||
237 |
\section{Displaying exceptions as error messages} |
|
322 | 238 |
\index{exceptions!printing of} |
104 | 239 |
\begin{ttbox} |
240 |
print_exn: exn -> 'a |
|
241 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
242 |
Certain Isabelle primitives, such as the forward proof functions {\tt RS} |
|
243 |
and {\tt RSN}, are called both interactively and from programs. They |
|
244 |
indicate errors not by printing messages, but by raising exceptions. For |
|
322 | 245 |
interactive use, \ML's reporting of an uncaught exception is |
246 |
uninformative. The Poly/ML function {\tt exception_trace} can generate a |
|
247 |
backtrace.\index{Poly/{\ML} compiler} |
|
104 | 248 |
|
322 | 249 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
104 | 250 |
\item[\ttindexbold{print_exn} $e$] |
251 |
displays the exception~$e$ in a readable manner, and then re-raises~$e$. |
|
322 | 252 |
Typical usage is~\hbox{\tt $EXP$ handle e => print_exn e;}, where |
253 |
$EXP$ is an expression that may raise an exception. |
|
104 | 254 |
|
255 |
{\tt print_exn} can display the following common exceptions, which concern |
|
256 |
types, terms, theorems and theories, respectively. Each carries a message |
|
257 |
and related information. |
|
258 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
259 |
exception TYPE of string * typ list * term list |
|
260 |
exception TERM of string * term list |
|
261 |
exception THM of string * int * thm list |
|
262 |
exception THEORY of string * theory list |
|
263 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
322 | 264 |
\end{ttdescription} |
265 |
\begin{warn} |
|
266 |
{\tt print_exn} prints terms by calling \ttindex{prin}, which obtains |
|
267 |
pretty printing information from the proof state last stored in the |
|
268 |
subgoal module. The appearance of the output thus depends upon the |
|
269 |
theory used in the last interactive proof. |
|
270 |
\end{warn} |
|
104 | 271 |
|
272 |
\index{sessions|)} |