author | kuncar |
Mon, 26 Mar 2012 15:32:54 +0200 | |
changeset 47116 | 529d2a949bd4 |
parent 46262 | 912b42e64fde |
child 47180 | c14fda8fee38 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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theory "ML" |
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imports Base |
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begin |
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chapter {* Isabelle/ML *} |
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text {* Isabelle/ML is best understood as a certain culture based on |
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Standard ML. Thus it is not a new programming language, but a |
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certain way to use SML at an advanced level within the Isabelle |
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environment. This covers a variety of aspects that are geared |
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towards an efficient and robust platform for applications of formal |
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logic with fully foundational proof construction --- according to |
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the well-known \emph{LCF principle}. There is specific |
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infrastructure with library modules to address the needs of this |
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difficult task. For example, the raw parallel programming model of |
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Poly/ML is presented as considerably more abstract concept of |
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\emph{future values}, which is then used to augment the inference |
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kernel, proof interpreter, and theory loader accordingly. |
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The main aspects of Isabelle/ML are introduced below. These |
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first-hand explanations should help to understand how proper |
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Isabelle/ML is to be read and written, and to get access to the |
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wealth of experience that is expressed in the source text and its |
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history of changes.\footnote{See |
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\url{http://isabelle.in.tum.de/repos/isabelle} for the full |
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Mercurial history. There are symbolic tags to refer to official |
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Isabelle releases, as opposed to arbitrary \emph{tip} versions that |
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merely reflect snapshots that are never really up-to-date.} *} |
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section {* Style and orthography *} |
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text {* The sources of Isabelle/Isar are optimized for |
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\emph{readability} and \emph{maintainability}. The main purpose is |
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to tell an informed reader what is really going on and how things |
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really work. This is a non-trivial aim, but it is supported by a |
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certain style of writing Isabelle/ML that has emerged from long |
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years of system development.\footnote{See also the interesting style |
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guide for OCaml |
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\url{http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/guides/guidelines.en.html} |
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which shares many of our means and ends.} |
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The main principle behind any coding style is \emph{consistency}. |
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For a single author of a small program this merely means ``choose |
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your style and stick to it''. A complex project like Isabelle, with |
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long years of development and different contributors, requires more |
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standardization. A coding style that is changed every few years or |
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with every new contributor is no style at all, because consistency |
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is quickly lost. Global consistency is hard to achieve, though. |
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Nonetheless, one should always strive at least for local consistency |
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of modules and sub-systems, without deviating from some general |
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principles how to write Isabelle/ML. |
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In a sense, good coding style is like an \emph{orthography} for the |
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sources: it helps to read quickly over the text and see through the |
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main points, without getting distracted by accidental presentation |
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of free-style code. |
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*} |
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subsection {* Header and sectioning *} |
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text {* Isabelle source files have a certain standardized header |
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format (with precise spacing) that follows ancient traditions |
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reaching back to the earliest versions of the system by Larry |
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Paulson. See @{file "~~/src/Pure/thm.ML"}, for example. |
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The header includes at least @{verbatim Title} and @{verbatim |
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Author} entries, followed by a prose description of the purpose of |
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the module. The latter can range from a single line to several |
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paragraphs of explanations. |
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The rest of the file is divided into sections, subsections, |
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subsubsections, paragraphs etc.\ using a simple layout via ML |
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comments as follows. |
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\begin{verbatim} |
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(*** section ***) |
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(** subsection **) |
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(* subsubsection *) |
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(*short paragraph*) |
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(* |
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long paragraph, |
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with more text |
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*) |
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\end{verbatim} |
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As in regular typography, there is some extra space \emph{before} |
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section headings that are adjacent to plain text (not other headings |
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as in the example above). |
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\medskip The precise wording of the prose text given in these |
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headings is chosen carefully to introduce the main theme of the |
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subsequent formal ML text. |
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*} |
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subsection {* Naming conventions *} |
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text {* Since ML is the primary medium to express the meaning of the |
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source text, naming of ML entities requires special care. |
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\paragraph{Notation.} A name consists of 1--3 \emph{words} (rarely |
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4, but not more) that are separated by underscore. There are three |
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variants concerning upper or lower case letters, which are used for |
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certain ML categories as follows: |
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\medskip |
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\begin{tabular}{lll} |
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variant & example & ML categories \\\hline |
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lower-case & @{ML_text foo_bar} & values, types, record fields \\ |
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capitalized & @{ML_text Foo_Bar} & datatype constructors, structures, functors \\ |
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upper-case & @{ML_text FOO_BAR} & special values, exception constructors, signatures \\ |
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\end{tabular} |
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\medskip |
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For historical reasons, many capitalized names omit underscores, |
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e.g.\ old-style @{ML_text FooBar} instead of @{ML_text Foo_Bar}. |
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Genuine mixed-case names are \emph{not} used, bacause clear division |
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of words is essential for readability.\footnote{Camel-case was |
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invented to workaround the lack of underscore in some early |
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non-ASCII character sets. Later it became habitual in some language |
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communities that are now strong in numbers.} |
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A single (capital) character does not count as ``word'' in this |
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respect: some Isabelle/ML names are suffixed by extra markers like |
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this: @{ML_text foo_barT}. |
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Name variants are produced by adding 1--3 primes, e.g.\ @{ML_text |
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foo'}, @{ML_text foo''}, or @{ML_text foo'''}, but not @{ML_text |
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foo''''} or more. Decimal digits scale better to larger numbers, |
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e.g.\ @{ML_text foo0}, @{ML_text foo1}, @{ML_text foo42}. |
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\paragraph{Scopes.} Apart from very basic library modules, ML |
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structures are not ``opened'', but names are referenced with |
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explicit qualification, as in @{ML Syntax.string_of_term} for |
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example. When devising names for structures and their components it |
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is important aim at eye-catching compositions of both parts, because |
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this is how they are seen in the sources and documentation. For the |
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same reasons, aliases of well-known library functions should be |
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avoided. |
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Local names of function abstraction or case/let bindings are |
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typically shorter, sometimes using only rudiments of ``words'', |
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while still avoiding cryptic shorthands. An auxiliary function |
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called @{ML_text helper}, @{ML_text aux}, or @{ML_text f} is |
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considered bad style. |
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Example: |
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\begin{verbatim} |
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(* RIGHT *) |
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fun print_foo ctxt foo = |
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let |
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fun print t = ... Syntax.string_of_term ctxt t ... |
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in ... end; |
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(* RIGHT *) |
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fun print_foo ctxt foo = |
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let |
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val string_of_term = Syntax.string_of_term ctxt; |
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fun print t = ... string_of_term t ... |
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in ... end; |
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(* WRONG *) |
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val string_of_term = Syntax.string_of_term; |
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fun print_foo ctxt foo = |
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let |
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fun aux t = ... string_of_term ctxt t ... |
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in ... end; |
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\end{verbatim} |
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\paragraph{Specific conventions.} Here are some specific name forms |
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that occur frequently in the sources. |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item A function that maps @{ML_text foo} to @{ML_text bar} is |
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called @{ML_text foo_to_bar} or @{ML_text bar_of_foo} (never |
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@{ML_text foo2bar}, @{ML_text bar_from_foo}, @{ML_text |
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bar_for_foo}, or @{ML_text bar4foo}). |
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\item The name component @{ML_text legacy} means that the operation |
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is about to be discontinued soon. |
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\item The name component @{ML_text old} means that this is historic |
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material that might disappear at some later stage. |
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\item The name component @{ML_text global} means that this works |
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with the background theory instead of the regular local context |
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(\secref{sec:context}), sometimes for historical reasons, sometimes |
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due a genuine lack of locality of the concept involved, sometimes as |
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a fall-back for the lack of a proper context in the application |
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code. Whenever there is a non-global variant available, the |
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application should be migrated to use it with a proper local |
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context. |
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\item Variables of the main context types of the Isabelle/Isar |
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framework (\secref{sec:context} and \chref{ch:local-theory}) have |
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firm naming conventions as follows: |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item theories are called @{ML_text thy}, rarely @{ML_text theory} |
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(never @{ML_text thry}) |
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\item proof contexts are called @{ML_text ctxt}, rarely @{ML_text |
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context} (never @{ML_text ctx}) |
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\item generic contexts are called @{ML_text context}, rarely |
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@{ML_text ctxt} |
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\item local theories are called @{ML_text lthy}, except for local |
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theories that are treated as proof context (which is a semantic |
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super-type) |
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\end{itemize} |
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Variations with primed or decimal numbers are always possible, as |
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well as sematic prefixes like @{ML_text foo_thy} or @{ML_text |
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bar_ctxt}, but the base conventions above need to be preserved. |
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This allows to visualize the their data flow via plain regular |
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expressions in the editor. |
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\item The main logical entities (\secref{ch:logic}) have established |
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naming convention as follows: |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item sorts are called @{ML_text S} |
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\item types are called @{ML_text T}, @{ML_text U}, or @{ML_text |
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ty} (never @{ML_text t}) |
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\item terms are called @{ML_text t}, @{ML_text u}, or @{ML_text |
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tm} (never @{ML_text trm}) |
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\item certified types are called @{ML_text cT}, rarely @{ML_text |
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T}, with variants as for types |
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\item certified terms are called @{ML_text ct}, rarely @{ML_text |
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t}, with variants as for terms |
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\item theorems are called @{ML_text th}, or @{ML_text thm} |
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\end{itemize} |
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Proper semantic names override these conventions completely. For |
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example, the left-hand side of an equation (as a term) can be called |
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@{ML_text lhs} (not @{ML_text lhs_tm}). Or a term that is known |
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to be a variable can be called @{ML_text v} or @{ML_text x}. |
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\item Tactics (\secref{sec:tactics}) are sufficiently important to |
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have specific naming conventions. The name of a basic tactic |
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definition always has a @{ML_text "_tac"} suffix, the subgoal index |
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(if applicable) is always called @{ML_text i}, and the goal state |
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(if made explicit) is usually called @{ML_text st} instead of the |
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somewhat misleading @{ML_text thm}. Any other arguments are given |
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before the latter two, and the general context is given first. |
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Example: |
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\begin{verbatim} |
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fun my_tac ctxt arg1 arg2 i st = ... |
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\end{verbatim} |
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Note that the goal state @{ML_text st} above is rarely made |
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explicit, if tactic combinators (tacticals) are used as usual. |
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\end{itemize} |
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*} |
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subsection {* General source layout *} |
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text {* The general Isabelle/ML source layout imitates regular |
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type-setting to some extent, augmented by the requirements for |
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deeply nested expressions that are commonplace in functional |
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programming. |
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\paragraph{Line length} is 80 characters according to ancient |
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standards, but we allow as much as 100 characters (not |
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more).\footnote{Readability requires to keep the beginning of a line |
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in view while watching its end. Modern wide-screen displays do not |
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change the way how the human brain works. Sources also need to be |
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printable on plain paper with reasonable font-size.} The extra 20 |
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characters acknowledge the space requirements due to qualified |
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library references in Isabelle/ML. |
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\paragraph{White-space} is used to emphasize the structure of |
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expressions, following mostly standard conventions for mathematical |
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typesetting, as can be seen in plain {\TeX} or {\LaTeX}. This |
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defines positioning of spaces for parentheses, punctuation, and |
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infixes as illustrated here: |
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\begin{verbatim} |
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val x = y + z * (a + b); |
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val pair = (a, b); |
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val record = {foo = 1, bar = 2}; |
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\end{verbatim} |
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Lines are normally broken \emph{after} an infix operator or |
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punctuation character. For example: |
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\begin{verbatim} |
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val x = |
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a + |
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b + |
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c; |
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val tuple = |
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(a, |
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b, |
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c); |
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\end{verbatim} |
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Some special infixes (e.g.\ @{ML_text "|>"}) work better at the |
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start of the line, but punctuation is always at the end. |
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Function application follows the tradition of @{text "\<lambda>"}-calculus, |
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not informal mathematics. For example: @{ML_text "f a b"} for a |
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|
333 |
curried function, or @{ML_text "g (a, b)"} for a tupled function. |
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|
334 |
Note that the space between @{ML_text g} and the pair @{ML_text |
39879 | 335 |
"(a, b)"} follows the important principle of |
40149
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|
336 |
\emph{compositionality}: the layout of @{ML_text "g p"} does not |
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|
337 |
change when @{ML_text "p"} is refined to the concrete pair |
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|
338 |
@{ML_text "(a, b)"}. |
39878 | 339 |
|
340 |
\paragraph{Indentation} uses plain spaces, never hard |
|
341 |
tabulators.\footnote{Tabulators were invented to move the carriage |
|
342 |
of a type-writer to certain predefined positions. In software they |
|
343 |
could be used as a primitive run-length compression of consecutive |
|
344 |
spaces, but the precise result would depend on non-standardized |
|
345 |
editor configuration.} |
|
346 |
||
39879 | 347 |
Each level of nesting is indented by 2 spaces, sometimes 1, very |
40126 | 348 |
rarely 4, never 8 or any other odd number. |
39878 | 349 |
|
39879 | 350 |
Indentation follows a simple logical format that only depends on the |
351 |
nesting depth, not the accidental length of the text that initiates |
|
352 |
a level of nesting. Example: |
|
39878 | 353 |
|
354 |
\begin{verbatim} |
|
39880 | 355 |
(* RIGHT *) |
356 |
||
39878 | 357 |
if b then |
39879 | 358 |
expr1_part1 |
359 |
expr1_part2 |
|
39878 | 360 |
else |
39879 | 361 |
expr2_part1 |
362 |
expr2_part2 |
|
39878 | 363 |
|
39880 | 364 |
|
365 |
(* WRONG *) |
|
366 |
||
39879 | 367 |
if b then expr1_part1 |
368 |
expr1_part2 |
|
369 |
else expr2_part1 |
|
370 |
expr2_part2 |
|
39878 | 371 |
\end{verbatim} |
372 |
||
373 |
The second form has many problems: it assumes a fixed-width font |
|
39879 | 374 |
when viewing the sources, it uses more space on the line and thus |
375 |
makes it hard to observe its strict length limit (working against |
|
39878 | 376 |
\emph{readability}), it requires extra editing to adapt the layout |
39879 | 377 |
to changes of the initial text (working against |
39878 | 378 |
\emph{maintainability}) etc. |
379 |
||
39879 | 380 |
\medskip For similar reasons, any kind of two-dimensional or tabular |
40126 | 381 |
layouts, ASCII-art with lines or boxes of asterisks etc.\ should be |
39879 | 382 |
avoided. |
39881 | 383 |
|
40126 | 384 |
\paragraph{Complex expressions} that consist of multi-clausal |
40149
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|
385 |
function definitions, @{ML_text handle}, @{ML_text case}, |
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|
386 |
@{ML_text let} (and combinations) require special attention. The |
40126 | 387 |
syntax of Standard ML is quite ambitious and admits a lot of |
388 |
variance that can distort the meaning of the text. |
|
39881 | 389 |
|
40149
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|
390 |
Clauses of @{ML_text fun}, @{ML_text fn}, @{ML_text handle}, |
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|
391 |
@{ML_text case} get extra indentation to indicate the nesting |
40126 | 392 |
clearly. Example: |
39881 | 393 |
|
394 |
\begin{verbatim} |
|
395 |
(* RIGHT *) |
|
396 |
||
397 |
fun foo p1 = |
|
398 |
expr1 |
|
399 |
| foo p2 = |
|
400 |
expr2 |
|
401 |
||
402 |
||
403 |
(* WRONG *) |
|
404 |
||
405 |
fun foo p1 = |
|
406 |
expr1 |
|
407 |
| foo p2 = |
|
408 |
expr2 |
|
409 |
\end{verbatim} |
|
410 |
||
40149
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proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
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|
411 |
Body expressions consisting of @{ML_text case} or @{ML_text let} |
39881 | 412 |
require care to maintain compositionality, to prevent loss of |
40126 | 413 |
logical indentation where it is especially important to see the |
414 |
structure of the text. Example: |
|
39881 | 415 |
|
416 |
\begin{verbatim} |
|
417 |
(* RIGHT *) |
|
418 |
||
419 |
fun foo p1 = |
|
420 |
(case e of |
|
421 |
q1 => ... |
|
422 |
| q2 => ...) |
|
423 |
| foo p2 = |
|
424 |
let |
|
425 |
... |
|
426 |
in |
|
427 |
... |
|
428 |
end |
|
429 |
||
430 |
||
431 |
(* WRONG *) |
|
432 |
||
433 |
fun foo p1 = case e of |
|
434 |
q1 => ... |
|
435 |
| q2 => ... |
|
436 |
| foo p2 = |
|
437 |
let |
|
438 |
... |
|
439 |
in |
|
440 |
... |
|
441 |
end |
|
442 |
\end{verbatim} |
|
443 |
||
40149
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|
444 |
Extra parentheses around @{ML_text case} expressions are optional, |
40126 | 445 |
but help to analyse the nesting based on character matching in the |
446 |
editor. |
|
39881 | 447 |
|
448 |
\medskip There are two main exceptions to the overall principle of |
|
449 |
compositionality in the layout of complex expressions. |
|
450 |
||
451 |
\begin{enumerate} |
|
452 |
||
40149
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changeset
|
453 |
\item @{ML_text "if"} expressions are iterated as if there would be |
39881 | 454 |
a multi-branch conditional in SML, e.g. |
455 |
||
456 |
\begin{verbatim} |
|
457 |
(* RIGHT *) |
|
458 |
||
459 |
if b1 then e1 |
|
460 |
else if b2 then e2 |
|
461 |
else e3 |
|
462 |
\end{verbatim} |
|
463 |
||
40149
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proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
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|
464 |
\item @{ML_text fn} abstractions are often layed-out as if they |
39881 | 465 |
would lack any structure by themselves. This traditional form is |
466 |
motivated by the possibility to shift function arguments back and |
|
40126 | 467 |
forth wrt.\ additional combinators. Example: |
39881 | 468 |
|
469 |
\begin{verbatim} |
|
470 |
(* RIGHT *) |
|
471 |
||
472 |
fun foo x y = fold (fn z => |
|
473 |
expr) |
|
474 |
\end{verbatim} |
|
475 |
||
40149
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proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
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|
476 |
Here the visual appearance is that of three arguments @{ML_text x}, |
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
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changeset
|
477 |
@{ML_text y}, @{ML_text z}. |
39881 | 478 |
|
479 |
\end{enumerate} |
|
480 |
||
481 |
Such weakly structured layout should be use with great care. Here |
|
40153 | 482 |
are some counter-examples involving @{ML_text let} expressions: |
39881 | 483 |
|
484 |
\begin{verbatim} |
|
485 |
(* WRONG *) |
|
486 |
||
487 |
fun foo x = let |
|
488 |
val y = ... |
|
489 |
in ... end |
|
490 |
||
41162 | 491 |
|
492 |
(* WRONG *) |
|
493 |
||
40153 | 494 |
fun foo x = let |
495 |
val y = ... |
|
496 |
in ... end |
|
497 |
||
41162 | 498 |
|
499 |
(* WRONG *) |
|
500 |
||
39881 | 501 |
fun foo x = |
502 |
let |
|
503 |
val y = ... |
|
504 |
in ... end |
|
505 |
\end{verbatim} |
|
506 |
||
507 |
\medskip In general the source layout is meant to emphasize the |
|
508 |
structure of complex language expressions, not to pretend that SML |
|
509 |
had a completely different syntax (say that of Haskell or Java). |
|
39878 | 510 |
*} |
511 |
||
512 |
||
39823 | 513 |
section {* SML embedded into Isabelle/Isar *} |
514 |
||
39824 | 515 |
text {* ML and Isar are intertwined via an open-ended bootstrap |
516 |
process that provides more and more programming facilities and |
|
517 |
logical content in an alternating manner. Bootstrapping starts from |
|
518 |
the raw environment of existing implementations of Standard ML |
|
519 |
(mainly Poly/ML, but also SML/NJ). |
|
39823 | 520 |
|
39824 | 521 |
Isabelle/Pure marks the point where the original ML toplevel is |
40126 | 522 |
superseded by the Isar toplevel that maintains a uniform context for |
523 |
arbitrary ML values (see also \secref{sec:context}). This formal |
|
524 |
environment holds ML compiler bindings, logical entities, and many |
|
525 |
other things. Raw SML is never encountered again after the initial |
|
526 |
bootstrap of Isabelle/Pure. |
|
39823 | 527 |
|
40126 | 528 |
Object-logics like Isabelle/HOL are built within the |
529 |
Isabelle/ML/Isar environment by introducing suitable theories with |
|
530 |
associated ML modules, either inlined or as separate files. Thus |
|
531 |
Isabelle/HOL is defined as a regular user-space application within |
|
532 |
the Isabelle framework. Further add-on tools can be implemented in |
|
533 |
ML within the Isar context in the same manner: ML is part of the |
|
534 |
standard repertoire of Isabelle, and there is no distinction between |
|
535 |
``user'' and ``developer'' in this respect. |
|
39823 | 536 |
*} |
537 |
||
39824 | 538 |
|
39827
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basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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diff
changeset
|
539 |
subsection {* Isar ML commands *} |
39823 | 540 |
|
40126 | 541 |
text {* The primary Isar source language provides facilities to ``open |
542 |
a window'' to the underlying ML compiler. Especially see the Isar |
|
543 |
commands @{command_ref "use"} and @{command_ref "ML"}: both work the |
|
39824 | 544 |
same way, only the source text is provided via a file vs.\ inlined, |
545 |
respectively. Apart from embedding ML into the main theory |
|
546 |
definition like that, there are many more commands that refer to ML |
|
547 |
source, such as @{command_ref setup} or @{command_ref declaration}. |
|
40126 | 548 |
Even more fine-grained embedding of ML into Isar is encountered in |
549 |
the proof method @{method_ref tactic}, which refines the pending |
|
550 |
goal state via a given expression of type @{ML_type tactic}. |
|
39824 | 551 |
*} |
39823 | 552 |
|
39824 | 553 |
text %mlex {* The following artificial example demonstrates some ML |
554 |
toplevel declarations within the implicit Isar theory context. This |
|
555 |
is regular functional programming without referring to logical |
|
556 |
entities yet. |
|
39823 | 557 |
*} |
558 |
||
559 |
ML {* |
|
560 |
fun factorial 0 = 1 |
|
561 |
| factorial n = n * factorial (n - 1) |
|
562 |
*} |
|
563 |
||
40126 | 564 |
text {* Here the ML environment is already managed by Isabelle, i.e.\ |
39861
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use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
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39859
diff
changeset
|
565 |
the @{ML factorial} function is not yet accessible in the preceding |
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
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39859
diff
changeset
|
566 |
paragraph, nor in a different theory that is independent from the |
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
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39859
diff
changeset
|
567 |
current one in the import hierarchy. |
39823 | 568 |
|
569 |
Removing the above ML declaration from the source text will remove |
|
570 |
any trace of this definition as expected. The Isabelle/ML toplevel |
|
571 |
environment is managed in a \emph{stateless} way: unlike the raw ML |
|
40126 | 572 |
toplevel there are no global side-effects involved |
573 |
here.\footnote{Such a stateless compilation environment is also a |
|
574 |
prerequisite for robust parallel compilation within independent |
|
575 |
nodes of the implicit theory development graph.} |
|
39823 | 576 |
|
40126 | 577 |
\medskip The next example shows how to embed ML into Isar proofs, using |
578 |
@{command_ref "ML_prf"} instead of Instead of @{command_ref "ML"}. |
|
579 |
As illustrated below, the effect on the ML environment is local to |
|
580 |
the whole proof body, ignoring the block structure. |
|
581 |
*} |
|
39823 | 582 |
|
40964 | 583 |
notepad |
584 |
begin |
|
39851 | 585 |
ML_prf %"ML" {* val a = 1 *} |
40126 | 586 |
{ |
39851 | 587 |
ML_prf %"ML" {* val b = a + 1 *} |
39824 | 588 |
} -- {* Isar block structure ignored by ML environment *} |
39851 | 589 |
ML_prf %"ML" {* val c = b + 1 *} |
40964 | 590 |
end |
39823 | 591 |
|
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
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diff
changeset
|
592 |
text {* By side-stepping the normal scoping rules for Isar proof |
40126 | 593 |
blocks, embedded ML code can refer to the different contexts and |
594 |
manipulate corresponding entities, e.g.\ export a fact from a block |
|
595 |
context. |
|
39823 | 596 |
|
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
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diff
changeset
|
597 |
\medskip Two further ML commands are useful in certain situations: |
40126 | 598 |
@{command_ref ML_val} and @{command_ref ML_command} are |
39824 | 599 |
\emph{diagnostic} in the sense that there is no effect on the |
600 |
underlying environment, and can thus used anywhere (even outside a |
|
601 |
theory). The examples below produce long strings of digits by |
|
602 |
invoking @{ML factorial}: @{command ML_val} already takes care of |
|
603 |
printing the ML toplevel result, but @{command ML_command} is silent |
|
39861
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use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
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diff
changeset
|
604 |
so we produce an explicit output message. *} |
39823 | 605 |
|
606 |
ML_val {* factorial 100 *} |
|
607 |
ML_command {* writeln (string_of_int (factorial 100)) *} |
|
608 |
||
40964 | 609 |
notepad |
610 |
begin |
|
39824 | 611 |
ML_val {* factorial 100 *} (* FIXME check/fix indentation *) |
39823 | 612 |
ML_command {* writeln (string_of_int (factorial 100)) *} |
40964 | 613 |
end |
39823 | 614 |
|
615 |
||
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
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39825
diff
changeset
|
616 |
subsection {* Compile-time context *} |
39823 | 617 |
|
39825
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
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39824
diff
changeset
|
618 |
text {* Whenever the ML compiler is invoked within Isabelle/Isar, the |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
619 |
formal context is passed as a thread-local reference variable. Thus |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
620 |
ML code may access the theory context during compilation, by reading |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
621 |
or writing the (local) theory under construction. Note that such |
40126 | 622 |
direct access to the compile-time context is rare. In practice it |
623 |
is typically done via some derived ML functions instead. |
|
39825
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
624 |
*} |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
625 |
|
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
626 |
text %mlref {* |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
627 |
\begin{mldecls} |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
628 |
@{index_ML ML_Context.the_generic_context: "unit -> Context.generic"} \\ |
40126 | 629 |
@{index_ML "Context.>>": "(Context.generic -> Context.generic) -> unit"} \\ |
39850 | 630 |
@{index_ML bind_thms: "string * thm list -> unit"} \\ |
631 |
@{index_ML bind_thm: "string * thm -> unit"} \\ |
|
39825
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
632 |
\end{mldecls} |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
633 |
|
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
634 |
\begin{description} |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
635 |
|
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
636 |
\item @{ML "ML_Context.the_generic_context ()"} refers to the theory |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
637 |
context of the ML toplevel --- at compile time. ML code needs to |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
638 |
take care to refer to @{ML "ML_Context.the_generic_context ()"} |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
639 |
correctly. Recall that evaluation of a function body is delayed |
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
parents:
39825
diff
changeset
|
640 |
until actual run-time. |
39825
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
641 |
|
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
642 |
\item @{ML "Context.>>"}~@{text f} applies context transformation |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
643 |
@{text f} to the implicit context of the ML toplevel. |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
644 |
|
39850 | 645 |
\item @{ML bind_thms}~@{text "(name, thms)"} stores a list of |
646 |
theorems produced in ML both in the (global) theory context and the |
|
647 |
ML toplevel, associating it with the provided name. Theorems are |
|
648 |
put into a global ``standard'' format before being stored. |
|
649 |
||
650 |
\item @{ML bind_thm} is similar to @{ML bind_thms} but refers to a |
|
40126 | 651 |
singleton fact. |
39850 | 652 |
|
39825
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
653 |
\end{description} |
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
654 |
|
40126 | 655 |
It is important to note that the above functions are really |
39825
f9066b94bf07
eliminated fancy \ML logo for the sake of simpler source text (less dependence on LaTeX);
wenzelm
parents:
39824
diff
changeset
|
656 |
restricted to the compile time, even though the ML compiler is |
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
parents:
39825
diff
changeset
|
657 |
invoked at run-time. The majority of ML code either uses static |
39825
f9066b94bf07
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|
658 |
antiquotations (\secref{sec:ML-antiq}) or refers to the theory or |
f9066b94bf07
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diff
changeset
|
659 |
proof context at run-time, by explicit functional abstraction. |
f9066b94bf07
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
660 |
*} |
39823 | 661 |
|
662 |
||
39827
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|
663 |
subsection {* Antiquotations \label{sec:ML-antiq} *} |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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diff
changeset
|
664 |
|
d829ce302ca4
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diff
changeset
|
665 |
text {* A very important consequence of embedding SML into Isar is the |
40126 | 666 |
concept of \emph{ML antiquotation}. The standard token language of |
667 |
ML is augmented by special syntactic entities of the following form: |
|
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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diff
changeset
|
668 |
|
42510
b9c106763325
use @{rail} antiquotation (with some nested markup);
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
669 |
@{rail " |
42665 | 670 |
@{syntax_def antiquote}: '@{' nameref args '}' | '\<lbrace>' | '\<rbrace>' |
42510
b9c106763325
use @{rail} antiquotation (with some nested markup);
wenzelm
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diff
changeset
|
671 |
"} |
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
672 |
|
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
673 |
Here @{syntax nameref} and @{syntax args} are regular outer syntax |
40126 | 674 |
categories \cite{isabelle-isar-ref}. Attributes and proof methods |
675 |
use similar syntax. |
|
39823 | 676 |
|
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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|
677 |
\medskip A regular antiquotation @{text "@{name args}"} processes |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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|
678 |
its arguments by the usual means of the Isar source language, and |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
679 |
produces corresponding ML source text, either as literal |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
680 |
\emph{inline} text (e.g. @{text "@{term t}"}) or abstract |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
681 |
\emph{value} (e.g. @{text "@{thm th}"}). This pre-compilation |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
682 |
scheme allows to refer to formal entities in a robust manner, with |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
683 |
proper static scoping and with some degree of logical checking of |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
684 |
small portions of the code. |
39823 | 685 |
|
39827
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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diff
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|
686 |
Special antiquotations like @{text "@{let \<dots>}"} or @{text "@{note |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
687 |
\<dots>}"} augment the compilation context without generating code. The |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
688 |
non-ASCII braces @{text "\<lbrace>"} and @{text "\<rbrace>"} allow to delimit the |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
689 |
effect by introducing local blocks within the pre-compilation |
d829ce302ca4
basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
39825
diff
changeset
|
690 |
environment. |
39829 | 691 |
|
40126 | 692 |
\medskip See also \cite{Wenzel-Chaieb:2007b} for a broader |
39861
b8d89db3e238
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parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
693 |
perspective on Isabelle/ML antiquotations. *} |
39829 | 694 |
|
39830 | 695 |
text %mlantiq {* |
39829 | 696 |
\begin{matharray}{rcl} |
697 |
@{ML_antiquotation_def "let"} & : & @{text ML_antiquotation} \\ |
|
698 |
@{ML_antiquotation_def "note"} & : & @{text ML_antiquotation} \\ |
|
699 |
\end{matharray} |
|
700 |
||
42510
b9c106763325
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diff
changeset
|
701 |
@{rail " |
42517
b68e1c27709a
simplified keyword markup (without formal checking);
wenzelm
parents:
42510
diff
changeset
|
702 |
@@{ML_antiquotation let} ((term + @'and') '=' term + @'and') |
39829 | 703 |
; |
42517
b68e1c27709a
simplified keyword markup (without formal checking);
wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
704 |
@@{ML_antiquotation note} (thmdef? thmrefs + @'and') |
42510
b9c106763325
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wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
705 |
"} |
39829 | 706 |
|
707 |
\begin{description} |
|
708 |
||
709 |
\item @{text "@{let p = t}"} binds schematic variables in the |
|
710 |
pattern @{text "p"} by higher-order matching against the term @{text |
|
711 |
"t"}. This is analogous to the regular @{command_ref let} command |
|
712 |
in the Isar proof language. The pre-compilation environment is |
|
713 |
augmented by auxiliary term bindings, without emitting ML source. |
|
714 |
||
715 |
\item @{text "@{note a = b\<^sub>1 \<dots> b\<^sub>n}"} recalls existing facts @{text |
|
716 |
"b\<^sub>1, \<dots>, b\<^sub>n"}, binding the result as @{text a}. This is analogous to |
|
717 |
the regular @{command_ref note} command in the Isar proof language. |
|
718 |
The pre-compilation environment is augmented by auxiliary fact |
|
719 |
bindings, without emitting ML source. |
|
720 |
||
721 |
\end{description} |
|
722 |
*} |
|
723 |
||
40126 | 724 |
text %mlex {* The following artificial example gives some impression |
725 |
about the antiquotation elements introduced so far, together with |
|
726 |
the important @{text "@{thm}"} antiquotation defined later. |
|
39829 | 727 |
*} |
728 |
||
729 |
ML {* |
|
730 |
\<lbrace> |
|
731 |
@{let ?t = my_term} |
|
732 |
@{note my_refl = reflexive [of ?t]} |
|
733 |
fun foo th = Thm.transitive th @{thm my_refl} |
|
734 |
\<rbrace> |
|
735 |
*} |
|
736 |
||
40126 | 737 |
text {* The extra block delimiters do not affect the compiled code |
738 |
itself, i.e.\ function @{ML foo} is available in the present context |
|
739 |
of this paragraph. |
|
39827
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basic setup for ML antiquotations -- with rail diagrams;
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
740 |
*} |
39823 | 741 |
|
39835 | 742 |
|
39883 | 743 |
section {* Canonical argument order \label{sec:canonical-argument-order} *} |
744 |
||
745 |
text {* Standard ML is a language in the tradition of @{text |
|
746 |
"\<lambda>"}-calculus and \emph{higher-order functional programming}, |
|
747 |
similar to OCaml, Haskell, or Isabelle/Pure and HOL as logical |
|
748 |
languages. Getting acquainted with the native style of representing |
|
749 |
functions in that setting can save a lot of extra boiler-plate of |
|
750 |
redundant shuffling of arguments, auxiliary abstractions etc. |
|
751 |
||
40126 | 752 |
Functions are usually \emph{curried}: the idea of turning arguments |
753 |
of type @{text "\<tau>\<^sub>i"} (for @{text "i \<in> {1, \<dots> n}"}) into a result of |
|
754 |
type @{text "\<tau>"} is represented by the iterated function space |
|
755 |
@{text "\<tau>\<^sub>1 \<rightarrow> \<dots> \<rightarrow> \<tau>\<^sub>n \<rightarrow> \<tau>"}. This is isomorphic to the well-known |
|
756 |
encoding via tuples @{text "\<tau>\<^sub>1 \<times> \<dots> \<times> \<tau>\<^sub>n \<rightarrow> \<tau>"}, but the curried |
|
757 |
version fits more smoothly into the basic calculus.\footnote{The |
|
758 |
difference is even more significant in higher-order logic, because |
|
759 |
the redundant tuple structure needs to be accommodated by formal |
|
760 |
reasoning.} |
|
39883 | 761 |
|
762 |
Currying gives some flexiblity due to \emph{partial application}. A |
|
763 |
function @{text "f: \<tau>\<^sub>1 \<rightarrow> \<tau>\<^bsub>2\<^esub> \<rightarrow> \<tau>"} can be applied to @{text "x: \<tau>\<^sub>1"} |
|
40126 | 764 |
and the remaining @{text "(f x): \<tau>\<^sub>2 \<rightarrow> \<tau>"} passed to another function |
39883 | 765 |
etc. How well this works in practice depends on the order of |
766 |
arguments. In the worst case, arguments are arranged erratically, |
|
767 |
and using a function in a certain situation always requires some |
|
768 |
glue code. Thus we would get exponentially many oppurtunities to |
|
769 |
decorate the code with meaningless permutations of arguments. |
|
770 |
||
771 |
This can be avoided by \emph{canonical argument order}, which |
|
40126 | 772 |
observes certain standard patterns and minimizes adhoc permutations |
40229 | 773 |
in their application. In Isabelle/ML, large portions of text can be |
40126 | 774 |
written without ever using @{text "swap: \<alpha> \<times> \<beta> \<rightarrow> \<beta> \<times> \<alpha>"}, or the |
775 |
combinator @{text "C: (\<alpha> \<rightarrow> \<beta> \<rightarrow> \<gamma>) \<rightarrow> (\<beta> \<rightarrow> \<alpha> \<rightarrow> \<gamma>)"} that is not even |
|
39883 | 776 |
defined in our library. |
777 |
||
778 |
\medskip The basic idea is that arguments that vary less are moved |
|
779 |
further to the left than those that vary more. Two particularly |
|
780 |
important categories of functions are \emph{selectors} and |
|
781 |
\emph{updates}. |
|
782 |
||
783 |
The subsequent scheme is based on a hypothetical set-like container |
|
784 |
of type @{text "\<beta>"} that manages elements of type @{text "\<alpha>"}. Both |
|
785 |
the names and types of the associated operations are canonical for |
|
786 |
Isabelle/ML. |
|
787 |
||
788 |
\medskip |
|
789 |
\begin{tabular}{ll} |
|
790 |
kind & canonical name and type \\\hline |
|
791 |
selector & @{text "member: \<beta> \<rightarrow> \<alpha> \<rightarrow> bool"} \\ |
|
792 |
update & @{text "insert: \<alpha> \<rightarrow> \<beta> \<rightarrow> \<beta>"} \\ |
|
793 |
\end{tabular} |
|
794 |
\medskip |
|
795 |
||
796 |
Given a container @{text "B: \<beta>"}, the partially applied @{text |
|
797 |
"member B"} is a predicate over elements @{text "\<alpha> \<rightarrow> bool"}, and |
|
798 |
thus represents the intended denotation directly. It is customary |
|
799 |
to pass the abstract predicate to further operations, not the |
|
800 |
concrete container. The argument order makes it easy to use other |
|
801 |
combinators: @{text "forall (member B) list"} will check a list of |
|
802 |
elements for membership in @{text "B"} etc. Often the explicit |
|
40126 | 803 |
@{text "list"} is pointless and can be contracted to @{text "forall |
804 |
(member B)"} to get directly a predicate again. |
|
39883 | 805 |
|
40126 | 806 |
In contrast, an update operation varies the container, so it moves |
39883 | 807 |
to the right: @{text "insert a"} is a function @{text "\<beta> \<rightarrow> \<beta>"} to |
808 |
insert a value @{text "a"}. These can be composed naturally as |
|
40126 | 809 |
@{text "insert c \<circ> insert b \<circ> insert a"}. The slightly awkward |
40229 | 810 |
inversion of the composition order is due to conventional |
40126 | 811 |
mathematical notation, which can be easily amended as explained |
812 |
below. |
|
39883 | 813 |
*} |
814 |
||
815 |
||
816 |
subsection {* Forward application and composition *} |
|
817 |
||
818 |
text {* Regular function application and infix notation works best for |
|
819 |
relatively deeply structured expressions, e.g.\ @{text "h (f x y + g |
|
40126 | 820 |
z)"}. The important special case of \emph{linear transformation} |
821 |
applies a cascade of functions @{text "f\<^sub>n (\<dots> (f\<^sub>1 x))"}. This |
|
822 |
becomes hard to read and maintain if the functions are themselves |
|
823 |
given as complex expressions. The notation can be significantly |
|
39883 | 824 |
improved by introducing \emph{forward} versions of application and |
825 |
composition as follows: |
|
826 |
||
827 |
\medskip |
|
828 |
\begin{tabular}{lll} |
|
829 |
@{text "x |> f"} & @{text "\<equiv>"} & @{text "f x"} \\ |
|
41162 | 830 |
@{text "(f #> g) x"} & @{text "\<equiv>"} & @{text "x |> f |> g"} \\ |
39883 | 831 |
\end{tabular} |
832 |
\medskip |
|
833 |
||
834 |
This enables to write conveniently @{text "x |> f\<^sub>1 |> \<dots> |> f\<^sub>n"} or |
|
835 |
@{text "f\<^sub>1 #> \<dots> #> f\<^sub>n"} for its functional abstraction over @{text |
|
836 |
"x"}. |
|
837 |
||
838 |
\medskip There is an additional set of combinators to accommodate |
|
839 |
multiple results (via pairs) that are passed on as multiple |
|
840 |
arguments (via currying). |
|
841 |
||
842 |
\medskip |
|
843 |
\begin{tabular}{lll} |
|
844 |
@{text "(x, y) |-> f"} & @{text "\<equiv>"} & @{text "f x y"} \\ |
|
41162 | 845 |
@{text "(f #-> g) x"} & @{text "\<equiv>"} & @{text "x |> f |-> g"} \\ |
39883 | 846 |
\end{tabular} |
847 |
\medskip |
|
848 |
*} |
|
849 |
||
850 |
text %mlref {* |
|
851 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
46262 | 852 |
@{index_ML_op "|> ": "'a * ('a -> 'b) -> 'b"} \\ |
853 |
@{index_ML_op "|-> ": "('c * 'a) * ('c -> 'a -> 'b) -> 'b"} \\ |
|
854 |
@{index_ML_op "#> ": "('a -> 'b) * ('b -> 'c) -> 'a -> 'c"} \\ |
|
855 |
@{index_ML_op "#-> ": "('a -> 'c * 'b) * ('c -> 'b -> 'd) -> 'a -> 'd"} \\ |
|
39883 | 856 |
\end{mldecls} |
857 |
||
858 |
%FIXME description!? |
|
859 |
*} |
|
860 |
||
861 |
||
862 |
subsection {* Canonical iteration *} |
|
863 |
||
864 |
text {* As explained above, a function @{text "f: \<alpha> \<rightarrow> \<beta> \<rightarrow> \<beta>"} can be |
|
40126 | 865 |
understood as update on a configuration of type @{text "\<beta>"}, |
39883 | 866 |
parametrized by arguments of type @{text "\<alpha>"}. Given @{text "a: \<alpha>"} |
867 |
the partial application @{text "(f a): \<beta> \<rightarrow> \<beta>"} operates |
|
868 |
homogeneously on @{text "\<beta>"}. This can be iterated naturally over a |
|
869 |
list of parameters @{text "[a\<^sub>1, \<dots>, a\<^sub>n]"} as @{text "f a\<^sub>1 #> \<dots> #> f |
|
870 |
a\<^bsub>n\<^esub>\<^bsub>\<^esub>"}. The latter expression is again a function @{text "\<beta> \<rightarrow> \<beta>"}. |
|
871 |
It can be applied to an initial configuration @{text "b: \<beta>"} to |
|
872 |
start the iteration over the given list of arguments: each @{text |
|
873 |
"a"} in @{text "a\<^sub>1, \<dots>, a\<^sub>n"} is applied consecutively by updating a |
|
874 |
cumulative configuration. |
|
875 |
||
876 |
The @{text fold} combinator in Isabelle/ML lifts a function @{text |
|
877 |
"f"} as above to its iterated version over a list of arguments. |
|
878 |
Lifting can be repeated, e.g.\ @{text "(fold \<circ> fold) f"} iterates |
|
879 |
over a list of lists as expected. |
|
880 |
||
881 |
The variant @{text "fold_rev"} works inside-out over the list of |
|
882 |
arguments, such that @{text "fold_rev f \<equiv> fold f \<circ> rev"} holds. |
|
883 |
||
884 |
The @{text "fold_map"} combinator essentially performs @{text |
|
885 |
"fold"} and @{text "map"} simultaneously: each application of @{text |
|
886 |
"f"} produces an updated configuration together with a side-result; |
|
887 |
the iteration collects all such side-results as a separate list. |
|
888 |
*} |
|
889 |
||
890 |
text %mlref {* |
|
891 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
892 |
@{index_ML fold: "('a -> 'b -> 'b) -> 'a list -> 'b -> 'b"} \\ |
|
893 |
@{index_ML fold_rev: "('a -> 'b -> 'b) -> 'a list -> 'b -> 'b"} \\ |
|
894 |
@{index_ML fold_map: "('a -> 'b -> 'c * 'b) -> 'a list -> 'b -> 'c list * 'b"} \\ |
|
895 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
896 |
||
897 |
\begin{description} |
|
898 |
||
899 |
\item @{ML fold}~@{text f} lifts the parametrized update function |
|
900 |
@{text "f"} to a list of parameters. |
|
901 |
||
902 |
\item @{ML fold_rev}~@{text "f"} is similar to @{ML fold}~@{text |
|
903 |
"f"}, but works inside-out. |
|
904 |
||
905 |
\item @{ML fold_map}~@{text "f"} lifts the parametrized update |
|
906 |
function @{text "f"} (with side-result) to a list of parameters and |
|
907 |
cumulative side-results. |
|
908 |
||
909 |
\end{description} |
|
910 |
||
911 |
\begin{warn} |
|
912 |
The literature on functional programming provides a multitude of |
|
913 |
combinators called @{text "foldl"}, @{text "foldr"} etc. SML97 |
|
914 |
provides its own variations as @{ML List.foldl} and @{ML |
|
40126 | 915 |
List.foldr}, while the classic Isabelle library also has the |
916 |
historic @{ML Library.foldl} and @{ML Library.foldr}. To avoid |
|
917 |
further confusion, all of this should be ignored, and @{ML fold} (or |
|
918 |
@{ML fold_rev}) used exclusively. |
|
39883 | 919 |
\end{warn} |
920 |
*} |
|
921 |
||
922 |
text %mlex {* The following example shows how to fill a text buffer |
|
923 |
incrementally by adding strings, either individually or from a given |
|
924 |
list. |
|
925 |
*} |
|
926 |
||
927 |
ML {* |
|
928 |
val s = |
|
929 |
Buffer.empty |
|
930 |
|> Buffer.add "digits: " |
|
931 |
|> fold (Buffer.add o string_of_int) (0 upto 9) |
|
932 |
|> Buffer.content; |
|
933 |
||
934 |
@{assert} (s = "digits: 0123456789"); |
|
935 |
*} |
|
936 |
||
937 |
text {* Note how @{ML "fold (Buffer.add o string_of_int)"} above saves |
|
938 |
an extra @{ML "map"} over the given list. This kind of peephole |
|
939 |
optimization reduces both the code size and the tree structures in |
|
940 |
memory (``deforestation''), but requires some practice to read and |
|
941 |
write it fluently. |
|
942 |
||
40126 | 943 |
\medskip The next example elaborates the idea of canonical |
944 |
iteration, demonstrating fast accumulation of tree content using a |
|
945 |
text buffer. |
|
39883 | 946 |
*} |
947 |
||
948 |
ML {* |
|
949 |
datatype tree = Text of string | Elem of string * tree list; |
|
950 |
||
951 |
fun slow_content (Text txt) = txt |
|
952 |
| slow_content (Elem (name, ts)) = |
|
953 |
"<" ^ name ^ ">" ^ |
|
954 |
implode (map slow_content ts) ^ |
|
955 |
"</" ^ name ^ ">" |
|
956 |
||
957 |
fun add_content (Text txt) = Buffer.add txt |
|
958 |
| add_content (Elem (name, ts)) = |
|
959 |
Buffer.add ("<" ^ name ^ ">") #> |
|
960 |
fold add_content ts #> |
|
961 |
Buffer.add ("</" ^ name ^ ">"); |
|
962 |
||
963 |
fun fast_content tree = |
|
964 |
Buffer.empty |> add_content tree |> Buffer.content; |
|
965 |
*} |
|
966 |
||
967 |
text {* The slow part of @{ML slow_content} is the @{ML implode} of |
|
968 |
the recursive results, because it copies previously produced strings |
|
40126 | 969 |
again. |
39883 | 970 |
|
971 |
The incremental @{ML add_content} avoids this by operating on a |
|
40149
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
wenzelm
parents:
40126
diff
changeset
|
972 |
buffer that is passed through in a linear fashion. Using @{ML_text |
40126 | 973 |
"#>"} and contraction over the actual buffer argument saves some |
974 |
additional boiler-plate. Of course, the two @{ML "Buffer.add"} |
|
975 |
invocations with concatenated strings could have been split into |
|
976 |
smaller parts, but this would have obfuscated the source without |
|
977 |
making a big difference in allocations. Here we have done some |
|
39883 | 978 |
peephole-optimization for the sake of readability. |
979 |
||
980 |
Another benefit of @{ML add_content} is its ``open'' form as a |
|
40126 | 981 |
function on buffers that can be continued in further linear |
982 |
transformations, folding etc. Thus it is more compositional than |
|
983 |
the naive @{ML slow_content}. As realistic example, compare the |
|
984 |
old-style @{ML "Term.maxidx_of_term: term -> int"} with the newer |
|
985 |
@{ML "Term.maxidx_term: term -> int -> int"} in Isabelle/Pure. |
|
39883 | 986 |
|
40126 | 987 |
Note that @{ML fast_content} above is only defined as example. In |
988 |
many practical situations, it is customary to provide the |
|
989 |
incremental @{ML add_content} only and leave the initialization and |
|
990 |
termination to the concrete application by the user. |
|
39883 | 991 |
*} |
992 |
||
993 |
||
39854 | 994 |
section {* Message output channels \label{sec:message-channels} *} |
39835 | 995 |
|
996 |
text {* Isabelle provides output channels for different kinds of |
|
997 |
messages: regular output, high-volume tracing information, warnings, |
|
998 |
and errors. |
|
999 |
||
1000 |
Depending on the user interface involved, these messages may appear |
|
1001 |
in different text styles or colours. The standard output for |
|
1002 |
terminal sessions prefixes each line of warnings by @{verbatim |
|
1003 |
"###"} and errors by @{verbatim "***"}, but leaves anything else |
|
1004 |
unchanged. |
|
1005 |
||
1006 |
Messages are associated with the transaction context of the running |
|
1007 |
Isar command. This enables the front-end to manage commands and |
|
1008 |
resulting messages together. For example, after deleting a command |
|
1009 |
from a given theory document version, the corresponding message |
|
39872 | 1010 |
output can be retracted from the display. |
1011 |
*} |
|
39835 | 1012 |
|
1013 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1014 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1015 |
@{index_ML writeln: "string -> unit"} \\ |
|
1016 |
@{index_ML tracing: "string -> unit"} \\ |
|
1017 |
@{index_ML warning: "string -> unit"} \\ |
|
1018 |
@{index_ML error: "string -> 'a"} \\ |
|
1019 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1020 |
||
1021 |
\begin{description} |
|
1022 |
||
1023 |
\item @{ML writeln}~@{text "text"} outputs @{text "text"} as regular |
|
1024 |
message. This is the primary message output operation of Isabelle |
|
1025 |
and should be used by default. |
|
1026 |
||
1027 |
\item @{ML tracing}~@{text "text"} outputs @{text "text"} as special |
|
1028 |
tracing message, indicating potential high-volume output to the |
|
1029 |
front-end (hundreds or thousands of messages issued by a single |
|
1030 |
command). The idea is to allow the user-interface to downgrade the |
|
1031 |
quality of message display to achieve higher throughput. |
|
1032 |
||
1033 |
Note that the user might have to take special actions to see tracing |
|
1034 |
output, e.g.\ switch to a different output window. So this channel |
|
1035 |
should not be used for regular output. |
|
1036 |
||
1037 |
\item @{ML warning}~@{text "text"} outputs @{text "text"} as |
|
1038 |
warning, which typically means some extra emphasis on the front-end |
|
40126 | 1039 |
side (color highlighting, icons, etc.). |
39835 | 1040 |
|
1041 |
\item @{ML error}~@{text "text"} raises exception @{ML ERROR}~@{text |
|
1042 |
"text"} and thus lets the Isar toplevel print @{text "text"} on the |
|
1043 |
error channel, which typically means some extra emphasis on the |
|
40126 | 1044 |
front-end side (color highlighting, icons, etc.). |
39835 | 1045 |
|
1046 |
This assumes that the exception is not handled before the command |
|
1047 |
terminates. Handling exception @{ML ERROR}~@{text "text"} is a |
|
1048 |
perfectly legal alternative: it means that the error is absorbed |
|
1049 |
without any message output. |
|
1050 |
||
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
1051 |
\begin{warn} |
39835 | 1052 |
The actual error channel is accessed via @{ML Output.error_msg}, but |
1053 |
the interaction protocol of Proof~General \emph{crashes} if that |
|
1054 |
function is used in regular ML code: error output and toplevel |
|
40126 | 1055 |
command failure always need to coincide. |
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
1056 |
\end{warn} |
39835 | 1057 |
|
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
1058 |
\end{description} |
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
1059 |
|
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
1060 |
\begin{warn} |
39835 | 1061 |
Regular Isabelle/ML code should output messages exclusively by the |
1062 |
official channels. Using raw I/O on \emph{stdout} or \emph{stderr} |
|
1063 |
instead (e.g.\ via @{ML TextIO.output}) is apt to cause problems in |
|
1064 |
the presence of parallel and asynchronous processing of Isabelle |
|
1065 |
theories. Such raw output might be displayed by the front-end in |
|
1066 |
some system console log, with a low chance that the user will ever |
|
1067 |
see it. Moreover, as a genuine side-effect on global process |
|
1068 |
channels, there is no proper way to retract output when Isar command |
|
40126 | 1069 |
transactions are reset by the system. |
39861
b8d89db3e238
use continental paragraph style, which works better with mixture of (in)formal text;
wenzelm
parents:
39859
diff
changeset
|
1070 |
\end{warn} |
39872 | 1071 |
|
1072 |
\begin{warn} |
|
1073 |
The message channels should be used in a message-oriented manner. |
|
40126 | 1074 |
This means that multi-line output that logically belongs together is |
1075 |
issued by a \emph{single} invocation of @{ML writeln} etc.\ with the |
|
1076 |
functional concatenation of all message constituents. |
|
39872 | 1077 |
\end{warn} |
1078 |
*} |
|
1079 |
||
1080 |
text %mlex {* The following example demonstrates a multi-line |
|
1081 |
warning. Note that in some situations the user sees only the first |
|
1082 |
line, so the most important point should be made first. |
|
1083 |
*} |
|
1084 |
||
1085 |
ML_command {* |
|
1086 |
warning (cat_lines |
|
1087 |
["Beware the Jabberwock, my son!", |
|
1088 |
"The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!", |
|
1089 |
"Beware the Jubjub Bird, and shun", |
|
1090 |
"The frumious Bandersnatch!"]); |
|
39835 | 1091 |
*} |
1092 |
||
39854 | 1093 |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1094 |
section {* Exceptions \label{sec:exceptions} *} |
39854 | 1095 |
|
1096 |
text {* The Standard ML semantics of strict functional evaluation |
|
1097 |
together with exceptions is rather well defined, but some delicate |
|
1098 |
points need to be observed to avoid that ML programs go wrong |
|
1099 |
despite static type-checking. Exceptions in Isabelle/ML are |
|
1100 |
subsequently categorized as follows. |
|
1101 |
||
1102 |
\paragraph{Regular user errors.} These are meant to provide |
|
1103 |
informative feedback about malformed input etc. |
|
1104 |
||
1105 |
The \emph{error} function raises the corresponding \emph{ERROR} |
|
1106 |
exception, with a plain text message as argument. \emph{ERROR} |
|
1107 |
exceptions can be handled internally, in order to be ignored, turned |
|
1108 |
into other exceptions, or cascaded by appending messages. If the |
|
1109 |
corresponding Isabelle/Isar command terminates with an \emph{ERROR} |
|
39855 | 1110 |
exception state, the toplevel will print the result on the error |
1111 |
channel (see \secref{sec:message-channels}). |
|
39854 | 1112 |
|
1113 |
It is considered bad style to refer to internal function names or |
|
1114 |
values in ML source notation in user error messages. |
|
1115 |
||
1116 |
Grammatical correctness of error messages can be improved by |
|
1117 |
\emph{omitting} final punctuation: messages are often concatenated |
|
1118 |
or put into a larger context (e.g.\ augmented with source position). |
|
1119 |
By not insisting in the final word at the origin of the error, the |
|
1120 |
system can perform its administrative tasks more easily and |
|
1121 |
robustly. |
|
1122 |
||
1123 |
\paragraph{Program failures.} There is a handful of standard |
|
1124 |
exceptions that indicate general failure situations, or failures of |
|
1125 |
core operations on logical entities (types, terms, theorems, |
|
39856 | 1126 |
theories, see \chref{ch:logic}). |
39854 | 1127 |
|
1128 |
These exceptions indicate a genuine breakdown of the program, so the |
|
1129 |
main purpose is to determine quickly what has happened where. |
|
39855 | 1130 |
Traditionally, the (short) exception message would include the name |
40126 | 1131 |
of an ML function, although this is no longer necessary, because the |
1132 |
ML runtime system prints a detailed source position of the |
|
40149
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
wenzelm
parents:
40126
diff
changeset
|
1133 |
corresponding @{ML_text raise} keyword. |
39854 | 1134 |
|
1135 |
\medskip User modules can always introduce their own custom |
|
1136 |
exceptions locally, e.g.\ to organize internal failures robustly |
|
1137 |
without overlapping with existing exceptions. Exceptions that are |
|
1138 |
exposed in module signatures require extra care, though, and should |
|
40126 | 1139 |
\emph{not} be introduced by default. Surprise by users of a module |
1140 |
can be often minimized by using plain user errors instead. |
|
39854 | 1141 |
|
1142 |
\paragraph{Interrupts.} These indicate arbitrary system events: |
|
1143 |
both the ML runtime system and the Isabelle/ML infrastructure signal |
|
1144 |
various exceptional situations by raising the special |
|
1145 |
\emph{Interrupt} exception in user code. |
|
1146 |
||
1147 |
This is the one and only way that physical events can intrude an |
|
1148 |
Isabelle/ML program. Such an interrupt can mean out-of-memory, |
|
1149 |
stack overflow, timeout, internal signaling of threads, or the user |
|
39855 | 1150 |
producing a console interrupt manually etc. An Isabelle/ML program |
1151 |
that intercepts interrupts becomes dependent on physical effects of |
|
1152 |
the environment. Even worse, exception handling patterns that are |
|
1153 |
too general by accident, e.g.\ by mispelled exception constructors, |
|
40126 | 1154 |
will cover interrupts unintentionally and thus render the program |
39855 | 1155 |
semantics ill-defined. |
39854 | 1156 |
|
1157 |
Note that the Interrupt exception dates back to the original SML90 |
|
1158 |
language definition. It was excluded from the SML97 version to |
|
1159 |
avoid its malign impact on ML program semantics, but without |
|
1160 |
providing a viable alternative. Isabelle/ML recovers physical |
|
40229 | 1161 |
interruptibility (which is an indispensable tool to implement |
1162 |
managed evaluation of command transactions), but requires user code |
|
1163 |
to be strictly transparent wrt.\ interrupts. |
|
39854 | 1164 |
|
1165 |
\begin{warn} |
|
1166 |
Isabelle/ML user code needs to terminate promptly on interruption, |
|
1167 |
without guessing at its meaning to the system infrastructure. |
|
1168 |
Temporary handling of interrupts for cleanup of global resources |
|
1169 |
etc.\ needs to be followed immediately by re-raising of the original |
|
1170 |
exception. |
|
1171 |
\end{warn} |
|
1172 |
*} |
|
1173 |
||
39855 | 1174 |
text %mlref {* |
1175 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1176 |
@{index_ML try: "('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b option"} \\ |
|
1177 |
@{index_ML can: "('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> bool"} \\ |
|
39856 | 1178 |
@{index_ML ERROR: "string -> exn"} \\ |
1179 |
@{index_ML Fail: "string -> exn"} \\ |
|
1180 |
@{index_ML Exn.is_interrupt: "exn -> bool"} \\ |
|
39855 | 1181 |
@{index_ML reraise: "exn -> 'a"} \\ |
1182 |
@{index_ML exception_trace: "(unit -> 'a) -> 'a"} \\ |
|
1183 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1184 |
||
1185 |
\begin{description} |
|
1186 |
||
1187 |
\item @{ML try}~@{text "f x"} makes the partiality of evaluating |
|
1188 |
@{text "f x"} explicit via the option datatype. Interrupts are |
|
1189 |
\emph{not} handled here, i.e.\ this form serves as safe replacement |
|
40149
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
wenzelm
parents:
40126
diff
changeset
|
1190 |
for the \emph{unsafe} version @{ML_text "(SOME"}~@{text "f |
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
wenzelm
parents:
40126
diff
changeset
|
1191 |
x"}~@{ML_text "handle _ => NONE)"} that is occasionally seen in |
39855 | 1192 |
books about SML. |
1193 |
||
1194 |
\item @{ML can} is similar to @{ML try} with more abstract result. |
|
1195 |
||
39856 | 1196 |
\item @{ML ERROR}~@{text "msg"} represents user errors; this |
40126 | 1197 |
exception is normally raised indirectly via the @{ML error} function |
1198 |
(see \secref{sec:message-channels}). |
|
39856 | 1199 |
|
1200 |
\item @{ML Fail}~@{text "msg"} represents general program failures. |
|
1201 |
||
1202 |
\item @{ML Exn.is_interrupt} identifies interrupts robustly, without |
|
1203 |
mentioning concrete exception constructors in user code. Handled |
|
1204 |
interrupts need to be re-raised promptly! |
|
1205 |
||
39855 | 1206 |
\item @{ML reraise}~@{text "exn"} raises exception @{text "exn"} |
1207 |
while preserving its implicit position information (if possible, |
|
1208 |
depending on the ML platform). |
|
1209 |
||
40149
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
wenzelm
parents:
40126
diff
changeset
|
1210 |
\item @{ML exception_trace}~@{ML_text "(fn () =>"}~@{text |
4c35be108990
proper markup of uninterpreted ML text as @{ML_text}, not @{verbatim};
wenzelm
parents:
40126
diff
changeset
|
1211 |
"e"}@{ML_text ")"} evaluates expression @{text "e"} while printing |
39855 | 1212 |
a full trace of its stack of nested exceptions (if possible, |
40126 | 1213 |
depending on the ML platform).\footnote{In versions of Poly/ML the |
1214 |
trace will appear on raw stdout of the Isabelle process.} |
|
39855 | 1215 |
|
1216 |
Inserting @{ML exception_trace} into ML code temporarily is useful |
|
1217 |
for debugging, but not suitable for production code. |
|
1218 |
||
1219 |
\end{description} |
|
1220 |
*} |
|
1221 |
||
39866
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1222 |
text %mlantiq {* |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1223 |
\begin{matharray}{rcl} |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1224 |
@{ML_antiquotation_def "assert"} & : & @{text ML_antiquotation} \\ |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1225 |
\end{matharray} |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1226 |
|
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1227 |
\begin{description} |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1228 |
|
40110 | 1229 |
\item @{text "@{assert}"} inlines a function |
1230 |
@{ML_type "bool -> unit"} that raises @{ML Fail} if the argument is |
|
1231 |
@{ML false}. Due to inlining the source position of failed |
|
1232 |
assertions is included in the error output. |
|
39866
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1233 |
|
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1234 |
\end{description} |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1235 |
*} |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1236 |
|
39859 | 1237 |
|
39863 | 1238 |
section {* Basic data types *} |
39859 | 1239 |
|
40126 | 1240 |
text {* The basis library proposal of SML97 needs to be treated with |
39859 | 1241 |
caution. Many of its operations simply do not fit with important |
1242 |
Isabelle/ML conventions (like ``canonical argument order'', see |
|
40126 | 1243 |
\secref{sec:canonical-argument-order}), others cause problems with |
1244 |
the parallel evaluation model of Isabelle/ML (such as @{ML |
|
1245 |
TextIO.print} or @{ML OS.Process.system}). |
|
39859 | 1246 |
|
1247 |
Subsequently we give a brief overview of important operations on |
|
1248 |
basic ML data types. |
|
1249 |
*} |
|
1250 |
||
1251 |
||
39863 | 1252 |
subsection {* Characters *} |
1253 |
||
1254 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1255 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1256 |
@{index_ML_type char} \\ |
|
1257 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1258 |
||
1259 |
\begin{description} |
|
1260 |
||
39864 | 1261 |
\item Type @{ML_type char} is \emph{not} used. The smallest textual |
40126 | 1262 |
unit in Isabelle is represented as a ``symbol'' (see |
39864 | 1263 |
\secref{sec:symbols}). |
39863 | 1264 |
|
1265 |
\end{description} |
|
1266 |
*} |
|
1267 |
||
1268 |
||
39862 | 1269 |
subsection {* Integers *} |
1270 |
||
1271 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1272 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1273 |
@{index_ML_type int} \\ |
|
1274 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1275 |
||
1276 |
\begin{description} |
|
1277 |
||
39864 | 1278 |
\item Type @{ML_type int} represents regular mathematical integers, |
1279 |
which are \emph{unbounded}. Overflow never happens in |
|
39862 | 1280 |
practice.\footnote{The size limit for integer bit patterns in memory |
1281 |
is 64\,MB for 32-bit Poly/ML, and much higher for 64-bit systems.} |
|
1282 |
This works uniformly for all supported ML platforms (Poly/ML and |
|
1283 |
SML/NJ). |
|
1284 |
||
40126 | 1285 |
Literal integers in ML text are forced to be of this one true |
39862 | 1286 |
integer type --- overloading of SML97 is disabled. |
1287 |
||
40126 | 1288 |
Structure @{ML_struct IntInf} of SML97 is obsolete and superseded by |
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1289 |
@{ML_struct Int}. Structure @{ML_struct Integer} in @{file |
39862 | 1290 |
"~~/src/Pure/General/integer.ML"} provides some additional |
1291 |
operations. |
|
1292 |
||
1293 |
\end{description} |
|
1294 |
*} |
|
1295 |
||
1296 |
||
40302 | 1297 |
subsection {* Time *} |
1298 |
||
1299 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1300 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1301 |
@{index_ML_type Time.time} \\ |
|
1302 |
@{index_ML seconds: "real -> Time.time"} \\ |
|
1303 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1304 |
||
1305 |
\begin{description} |
|
1306 |
||
1307 |
\item Type @{ML_type Time.time} represents time abstractly according |
|
1308 |
to the SML97 basis library definition. This is adequate for |
|
1309 |
internal ML operations, but awkward in concrete time specifications. |
|
1310 |
||
1311 |
\item @{ML seconds}~@{text "s"} turns the concrete scalar @{text |
|
1312 |
"s"} (measured in seconds) into an abstract time value. Floating |
|
1313 |
point numbers are easy to use as context parameters (e.g.\ via |
|
1314 |
configuration options, see \secref{sec:config-options}) or |
|
1315 |
preferences that are maintained by external tools as well. |
|
1316 |
||
1317 |
\end{description} |
|
1318 |
*} |
|
1319 |
||
1320 |
||
39859 | 1321 |
subsection {* Options *} |
1322 |
||
1323 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1324 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1325 |
@{index_ML Option.map: "('a -> 'b) -> 'a option -> 'b option"} \\ |
|
1326 |
@{index_ML is_some: "'a option -> bool"} \\ |
|
1327 |
@{index_ML is_none: "'a option -> bool"} \\ |
|
1328 |
@{index_ML the: "'a option -> 'a"} \\ |
|
1329 |
@{index_ML these: "'a list option -> 'a list"} \\ |
|
1330 |
@{index_ML the_list: "'a option -> 'a list"} \\ |
|
1331 |
@{index_ML the_default: "'a -> 'a option -> 'a"} \\ |
|
1332 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1333 |
*} |
|
1334 |
||
1335 |
text {* Apart from @{ML Option.map} most operations defined in |
|
1336 |
structure @{ML_struct Option} are alien to Isabelle/ML. The |
|
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1337 |
operations shown above are defined in @{file |
39859 | 1338 |
"~~/src/Pure/General/basics.ML"}, among others. *} |
1339 |
||
1340 |
||
39863 | 1341 |
subsection {* Lists *} |
1342 |
||
1343 |
text {* Lists are ubiquitous in ML as simple and light-weight |
|
1344 |
``collections'' for many everyday programming tasks. Isabelle/ML |
|
39874 | 1345 |
provides important additions and improvements over operations that |
1346 |
are predefined in the SML97 library. *} |
|
39863 | 1347 |
|
1348 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1349 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1350 |
@{index_ML cons: "'a -> 'a list -> 'a list"} \\ |
|
39874 | 1351 |
@{index_ML member: "('b * 'a -> bool) -> 'a list -> 'b -> bool"} \\ |
1352 |
@{index_ML insert: "('a * 'a -> bool) -> 'a -> 'a list -> 'a list"} \\ |
|
1353 |
@{index_ML remove: "('b * 'a -> bool) -> 'b -> 'a list -> 'a list"} \\ |
|
1354 |
@{index_ML update: "('a * 'a -> bool) -> 'a -> 'a list -> 'a list"} \\ |
|
39863 | 1355 |
\end{mldecls} |
1356 |
||
1357 |
\begin{description} |
|
1358 |
||
1359 |
\item @{ML cons}~@{text "x xs"} evaluates to @{text "x :: xs"}. |
|
1360 |
||
1361 |
Tupled infix operators are a historical accident in Standard ML. |
|
1362 |
The curried @{ML cons} amends this, but it should be only used when |
|
1363 |
partial application is required. |
|
1364 |
||
39874 | 1365 |
\item @{ML member}, @{ML insert}, @{ML remove}, @{ML update} treat |
1366 |
lists as a set-like container that maintains the order of elements. |
|
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1367 |
See @{file "~~/src/Pure/library.ML"} for the full specifications |
39874 | 1368 |
(written in ML). There are some further derived operations like |
1369 |
@{ML union} or @{ML inter}. |
|
1370 |
||
1371 |
Note that @{ML insert} is conservative about elements that are |
|
1372 |
already a @{ML member} of the list, while @{ML update} ensures that |
|
40126 | 1373 |
the latest entry is always put in front. The latter discipline is |
39874 | 1374 |
often more appropriate in declarations of context data |
1375 |
(\secref{sec:context-data}) that are issued by the user in Isar |
|
1376 |
source: more recent declarations normally take precedence over |
|
1377 |
earlier ones. |
|
1378 |
||
39863 | 1379 |
\end{description} |
1380 |
*} |
|
1381 |
||
40126 | 1382 |
text %mlex {* Using canonical @{ML fold} together with @{ML cons}, or |
1383 |
similar standard operations, alternates the orientation of data. |
|
1384 |
The is quite natural and should not be altered forcible by inserting |
|
1385 |
extra applications of @{ML rev}. The alternative @{ML fold_rev} can |
|
1386 |
be used in the few situations, where alternation should be |
|
1387 |
prevented. |
|
39863 | 1388 |
*} |
1389 |
||
1390 |
ML {* |
|
1391 |
val items = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]; |
|
1392 |
||
1393 |
val list1 = fold cons items []; |
|
39866
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1394 |
@{assert} (list1 = rev items); |
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1395 |
|
39863 | 1396 |
val list2 = fold_rev cons items []; |
39866
5ec01d5acd0c
more robust examples: explicit @{assert} instead of unchecked output;
wenzelm
parents:
39864
diff
changeset
|
1397 |
@{assert} (list2 = items); |
39863 | 1398 |
*} |
1399 |
||
39883 | 1400 |
text {* The subsequent example demonstrates how to \emph{merge} two |
1401 |
lists in a natural way. *} |
|
1402 |
||
1403 |
ML {* |
|
1404 |
fun merge_lists eq (xs, ys) = fold_rev (insert eq) ys xs; |
|
1405 |
*} |
|
1406 |
||
1407 |
text {* Here the first list is treated conservatively: only the new |
|
1408 |
elements from the second list are inserted. The inside-out order of |
|
1409 |
insertion via @{ML fold_rev} attempts to preserve the order of |
|
1410 |
elements in the result. |
|
1411 |
||
1412 |
This way of merging lists is typical for context data |
|
1413 |
(\secref{sec:context-data}). See also @{ML merge} as defined in |
|
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1414 |
@{file "~~/src/Pure/library.ML"}. |
39883 | 1415 |
*} |
1416 |
||
39863 | 1417 |
|
39875
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1418 |
subsection {* Association lists *} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1419 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1420 |
text {* The operations for association lists interpret a concrete list |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1421 |
of pairs as a finite function from keys to values. Redundant |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1422 |
representations with multiple occurrences of the same key are |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1423 |
implicitly normalized: lookup and update only take the first |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1424 |
occurrence into account. |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1425 |
*} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1426 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1427 |
text {* |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1428 |
\begin{mldecls} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1429 |
@{index_ML AList.lookup: "('a * 'b -> bool) -> ('b * 'c) list -> 'a -> 'c option"} \\ |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1430 |
@{index_ML AList.defined: "('a * 'b -> bool) -> ('b * 'c) list -> 'a -> bool"} \\ |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1431 |
@{index_ML AList.update: "('a * 'a -> bool) -> 'a * 'b -> ('a * 'b) list -> ('a * 'b) list"} \\ |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1432 |
\end{mldecls} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1433 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1434 |
\begin{description} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1435 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1436 |
\item @{ML AList.lookup}, @{ML AList.defined}, @{ML AList.update} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1437 |
implement the main ``framework operations'' for mappings in |
40126 | 1438 |
Isabelle/ML, following standard conventions for their names and |
1439 |
types. |
|
39875
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1440 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1441 |
Note that a function called @{text lookup} is obliged to express its |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1442 |
partiality via an explicit option element. There is no choice to |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1443 |
raise an exception, without changing the name to something like |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1444 |
@{text "the_element"} or @{text "get"}. |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1445 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1446 |
The @{text "defined"} operation is essentially a contraction of @{ML |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1447 |
is_some} and @{text "lookup"}, but this is sufficiently frequent to |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1448 |
justify its independent existence. This also gives the |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1449 |
implementation some opportunity for peep-hole optimization. |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1450 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1451 |
\end{description} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1452 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1453 |
Association lists are adequate as simple and light-weight |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1454 |
implementation of finite mappings in many practical situations. A |
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1455 |
more heavy-duty table structure is defined in @{file |
39875
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1456 |
"~~/src/Pure/General/table.ML"}; that version scales easily to |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1457 |
thousands or millions of elements. |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1458 |
*} |
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1459 |
|
648c930125f6
more on "Association lists", based on more succinct version of older material;
wenzelm
parents:
39874
diff
changeset
|
1460 |
|
39859 | 1461 |
subsection {* Unsynchronized references *} |
1462 |
||
1463 |
text %mlref {* |
|
1464 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
39870 | 1465 |
@{index_ML_type "'a Unsynchronized.ref"} \\ |
39859 | 1466 |
@{index_ML Unsynchronized.ref: "'a -> 'a Unsynchronized.ref"} \\ |
1467 |
@{index_ML "!": "'a Unsynchronized.ref -> 'a"} \\ |
|
46262 | 1468 |
@{index_ML_op ":=": "'a Unsynchronized.ref * 'a -> unit"} \\ |
39859 | 1469 |
\end{mldecls} |
1470 |
*} |
|
1471 |
||
1472 |
text {* Due to ubiquitous parallelism in Isabelle/ML (see also |
|
1473 |
\secref{sec:multi-threading}), the mutable reference cells of |
|
1474 |
Standard ML are notorious for causing problems. In a highly |
|
1475 |
parallel system, both correctness \emph{and} performance are easily |
|
1476 |
degraded when using mutable data. |
|
1477 |
||
1478 |
The unwieldy name of @{ML Unsynchronized.ref} for the constructor |
|
1479 |
for references in Isabelle/ML emphasizes the inconveniences caused by |
|
46262 | 1480 |
mutability. Existing operations @{ML "!"} and @{ML_op ":="} are |
39859 | 1481 |
unchanged, but should be used with special precautions, say in a |
1482 |
strictly local situation that is guaranteed to be restricted to |
|
40508 | 1483 |
sequential evaluation --- now and in the future. |
1484 |
||
1485 |
\begin{warn} |
|
1486 |
Never @{ML_text "open Unsynchronized"}, not even in a local scope! |
|
1487 |
Pretending that mutable state is no problem is a very bad idea. |
|
1488 |
\end{warn} |
|
1489 |
*} |
|
39859 | 1490 |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1491 |
|
39870 | 1492 |
section {* Thread-safe programming \label{sec:multi-threading} *} |
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1493 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1494 |
text {* Multi-threaded execution has become an everyday reality in |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1495 |
Isabelle since Poly/ML 5.2.1 and Isabelle2008. Isabelle/ML provides |
39868 | 1496 |
implicit and explicit parallelism by default, and there is no way |
1497 |
for user-space tools to ``opt out''. ML programs that are purely |
|
1498 |
functional, output messages only via the official channels |
|
1499 |
(\secref{sec:message-channels}), and do not intercept interrupts |
|
1500 |
(\secref{sec:exceptions}) can participate in the multi-threaded |
|
1501 |
environment immediately without further ado. |
|
1502 |
||
1503 |
More ambitious tools with more fine-grained interaction with the |
|
1504 |
environment need to observe the principles explained below. |
|
1505 |
*} |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1506 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1507 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1508 |
subsection {* Multi-threading with shared memory *} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1509 |
|
39868 | 1510 |
text {* Multiple threads help to organize advanced operations of the |
1511 |
system, such as real-time conditions on command transactions, |
|
1512 |
sub-components with explicit communication, general asynchronous |
|
1513 |
interaction etc. Moreover, parallel evaluation is a prerequisite to |
|
1514 |
make adequate use of the CPU resources that are available on |
|
1515 |
multi-core systems.\footnote{Multi-core computing does not mean that |
|
1516 |
there are ``spare cycles'' to be wasted. It means that the |
|
1517 |
continued exponential speedup of CPU performance due to ``Moore's |
|
1518 |
Law'' follows different rules: clock frequency has reached its peak |
|
1519 |
around 2005, and applications need to be parallelized in order to |
|
1520 |
avoid a perceived loss of performance. See also |
|
1521 |
\cite{Sutter:2005}.} |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1522 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1523 |
Isabelle/Isar exploits the inherent structure of theories and proofs |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1524 |
to support \emph{implicit parallelism} to a large extent. LCF-style |
40126 | 1525 |
theorem provides almost ideal conditions for that, see also |
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1526 |
\cite{Wenzel:2009}. This means, significant parts of theory and |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1527 |
proof checking is parallelized by default. A maximum speedup-factor |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1528 |
of 3.0 on 4 cores and 5.0 on 8 cores can be |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1529 |
expected.\footnote{Further scalability is limited due to garbage |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1530 |
collection, which is still sequential in Poly/ML 5.2/5.3/5.4. It |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1531 |
helps to provide initial heap space generously, using the |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1532 |
\texttt{-H} option. Initial heap size needs to be scaled-up |
39868 | 1533 |
together with the number of CPU cores: approximately 1--2\,GB per |
1534 |
core..} |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1535 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1536 |
\medskip ML threads lack the memory protection of separate |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1537 |
processes, and operate concurrently on shared heap memory. This has |
40126 | 1538 |
the advantage that results of independent computations are directly |
1539 |
available to other threads: abstract values can be passed without |
|
1540 |
copying or awkward serialization that is typically required for |
|
1541 |
separate processes. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1542 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1543 |
To make shared-memory multi-threading work robustly and efficiently, |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1544 |
some programming guidelines need to be observed. While the ML |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1545 |
system is responsible to maintain basic integrity of the |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1546 |
representation of ML values in memory, the application programmer |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1547 |
needs to ensure that multi-threaded execution does not break the |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1548 |
intended semantics. |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1549 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1550 |
\begin{warn} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1551 |
To participate in implicit parallelism, tools need to be |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1552 |
thread-safe. A single ill-behaved tool can affect the stability and |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1553 |
performance of the whole system. |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1554 |
\end{warn} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1555 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1556 |
Apart from observing the principles of thread-safeness passively, |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1557 |
advanced tools may also exploit parallelism actively, e.g.\ by using |
39868 | 1558 |
``future values'' (\secref{sec:futures}) or the more basic library |
1559 |
functions for parallel list operations (\secref{sec:parlist}). |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1560 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1561 |
\begin{warn} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1562 |
Parallel computing resources are managed centrally by the |
39868 | 1563 |
Isabelle/ML infrastructure. User programs must not fork their own |
1564 |
ML threads to perform computations. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1565 |
\end{warn} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1566 |
*} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1567 |
|
39868 | 1568 |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1569 |
subsection {* Critical shared resources *} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1570 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1571 |
text {* Thread-safeness is mainly concerned about concurrent |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1572 |
read/write access to shared resources, which are outside the purely |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1573 |
functional world of ML. This covers the following in particular. |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1574 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1575 |
\begin{itemize} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1576 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1577 |
\item Global references (or arrays), i.e.\ mutable memory cells that |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1578 |
persist over several invocations of associated |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1579 |
operations.\footnote{This is independent of the visibility of such |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1580 |
mutable values in the toplevel scope.} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1581 |
|
39868 | 1582 |
\item Global state of the running Isabelle/ML process, i.e.\ raw I/O |
1583 |
channels, environment variables, current working directory. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1584 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1585 |
\item Writable resources in the file-system that are shared among |
40126 | 1586 |
different threads or external processes. |
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1587 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1588 |
\end{itemize} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1589 |
|
39868 | 1590 |
Isabelle/ML provides various mechanisms to avoid critical shared |
40126 | 1591 |
resources in most situations. As last resort there are some |
1592 |
mechanisms for explicit synchronization. The following guidelines |
|
1593 |
help to make Isabelle/ML programs work smoothly in a concurrent |
|
1594 |
environment. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1595 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1596 |
\begin{itemize} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1597 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1598 |
\item Avoid global references altogether. Isabelle/Isar maintains a |
39868 | 1599 |
uniform context that incorporates arbitrary data declared by user |
1600 |
programs (\secref{sec:context-data}). This context is passed as |
|
1601 |
plain value and user tools can get/map their own data in a purely |
|
1602 |
functional manner. Configuration options within the context |
|
1603 |
(\secref{sec:config-options}) provide simple drop-in replacements |
|
40126 | 1604 |
for historic reference variables. |
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1605 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1606 |
\item Keep components with local state information re-entrant. |
39868 | 1607 |
Instead of poking initial values into (private) global references, a |
1608 |
new state record can be created on each invocation, and passed |
|
1609 |
through any auxiliary functions of the component. The state record |
|
1610 |
may well contain mutable references, without requiring any special |
|
1611 |
synchronizations, as long as each invocation gets its own copy. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1612 |
|
39868 | 1613 |
\item Avoid raw output on @{text "stdout"} or @{text "stderr"}. The |
1614 |
Poly/ML library is thread-safe for each individual output operation, |
|
1615 |
but the ordering of parallel invocations is arbitrary. This means |
|
1616 |
raw output will appear on some system console with unpredictable |
|
1617 |
interleaving of atomic chunks. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1618 |
|
39868 | 1619 |
Note that this does not affect regular message output channels |
1620 |
(\secref{sec:message-channels}). An official message is associated |
|
1621 |
with the command transaction from where it originates, independently |
|
1622 |
of other transactions. This means each running Isar command has |
|
1623 |
effectively its own set of message channels, and interleaving can |
|
1624 |
only happen when commands use parallelism internally (and only at |
|
1625 |
message boundaries). |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1626 |
|
39868 | 1627 |
\item Treat environment variables and the current working directory |
1628 |
of the running process as strictly read-only. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1629 |
|
39868 | 1630 |
\item Restrict writing to the file-system to unique temporary files. |
1631 |
Isabelle already provides a temporary directory that is unique for |
|
1632 |
the running process, and there is a centralized source of unique |
|
1633 |
serial numbers in Isabelle/ML. Thus temporary files that are passed |
|
1634 |
to to some external process will be always disjoint, and thus |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1635 |
thread-safe. |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1636 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1637 |
\end{itemize} |
39868 | 1638 |
*} |
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1639 |
|
39868 | 1640 |
text %mlref {* |
1641 |
\begin{mldecls} |
|
1642 |
@{index_ML File.tmp_path: "Path.T -> Path.T"} \\ |
|
1643 |
@{index_ML serial_string: "unit -> string"} \\ |
|
1644 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
1645 |
||
1646 |
\begin{description} |
|
1647 |
||
1648 |
\item @{ML File.tmp_path}~@{text "path"} relocates the base |
|
1649 |
component of @{text "path"} into the unique temporary directory of |
|
1650 |
the running Isabelle/ML process. |
|
1651 |
||
1652 |
\item @{ML serial_string}~@{text "()"} creates a new serial number |
|
1653 |
that is unique over the runtime of the Isabelle/ML process. |
|
1654 |
||
1655 |
\end{description} |
|
1656 |
*} |
|
1657 |
||
1658 |
text %mlex {* The following example shows how to create unique |
|
1659 |
temporary file names. |
|
1660 |
*} |
|
1661 |
||
1662 |
ML {* |
|
1663 |
val tmp1 = File.tmp_path (Path.basic ("foo" ^ serial_string ())); |
|
1664 |
val tmp2 = File.tmp_path (Path.basic ("foo" ^ serial_string ())); |
|
1665 |
@{assert} (tmp1 <> tmp2); |
|
1666 |
*} |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1667 |
|
39868 | 1668 |
|
1669 |
subsection {* Explicit synchronization *} |
|
1670 |
||
1671 |
text {* Isabelle/ML also provides some explicit synchronization |
|
1672 |
mechanisms, for the rare situations where mutable shared resources |
|
1673 |
are really required. These are based on the synchronizations |
|
1674 |
primitives of Poly/ML, which have been adapted to the specific |
|
1675 |
assumptions of the concurrent Isabelle/ML environment. User code |
|
1676 |
must not use the Poly/ML primitives directly! |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1677 |
|
39868 | 1678 |
\medskip The most basic synchronization concept is a single |
1679 |
\emph{critical section} (also called ``monitor'' in the literature). |
|
1680 |
A thread that enters the critical section prevents all other threads |
|
1681 |
from doing the same. A thread that is already within the critical |
|
1682 |
section may re-enter it in an idempotent manner. |
|
1683 |
||
1684 |
Such centralized locking is convenient, because it prevents |
|
1685 |
deadlocks by construction. |
|
1686 |
||
1687 |
\medskip More fine-grained locking works via \emph{synchronized |
|
1688 |
variables}. An explicit state component is associated with |
|
1689 |
mechanisms for locking and signaling. There are operations to |
|
1690 |
await a condition, change the state, and signal the change to all |
|
1691 |
other waiting threads. |
|
1692 |
||
1693 |
Here the synchronized access to the state variable is \emph{not} |
|
1694 |
re-entrant: direct or indirect nesting within the same thread will |
|
1695 |
cause a deadlock! |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1696 |
*} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1697 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1698 |
text %mlref {* |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1699 |
\begin{mldecls} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1700 |
@{index_ML NAMED_CRITICAL: "string -> (unit -> 'a) -> 'a"} \\ |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1701 |
@{index_ML CRITICAL: "(unit -> 'a) -> 'a"} \\ |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1702 |
\end{mldecls} |
39871 | 1703 |
\begin{mldecls} |
1704 |
@{index_ML_type "'a Synchronized.var"} \\ |
|
1705 |
@{index_ML Synchronized.var: "string -> 'a -> 'a Synchronized.var"} \\ |
|
1706 |
@{index_ML Synchronized.guarded_access: "'a Synchronized.var -> |
|
1707 |
('a -> ('b * 'a) option) -> 'b"} \\ |
|
1708 |
\end{mldecls} |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1709 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1710 |
\begin{description} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1711 |
|
39868 | 1712 |
\item @{ML NAMED_CRITICAL}~@{text "name e"} evaluates @{text "e ()"} |
1713 |
within the central critical section of Isabelle/ML. No other thread |
|
1714 |
may do so at the same time, but non-critical parallel execution will |
|
39871 | 1715 |
continue. The @{text "name"} argument is used for tracing and might |
39868 | 1716 |
help to spot sources of congestion. |
1717 |
||
1718 |
Entering the critical section without contention is very fast, and |
|
1719 |
several basic system operations do so frequently. Each thread |
|
40126 | 1720 |
should stay within the critical section quickly only very briefly, |
1721 |
otherwise parallel performance may degrade. |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1722 |
|
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1723 |
\item @{ML CRITICAL} is the same as @{ML NAMED_CRITICAL} with empty |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1724 |
name argument. |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1725 |
|
39871 | 1726 |
\item Type @{ML_type "'a Synchronized.var"} represents synchronized |
1727 |
variables with state of type @{ML_type 'a}. |
|
1728 |
||
1729 |
\item @{ML Synchronized.var}~@{text "name x"} creates a synchronized |
|
1730 |
variable that is initialized with value @{text "x"}. The @{text |
|
1731 |
"name"} is used for tracing. |
|
1732 |
||
1733 |
\item @{ML Synchronized.guarded_access}~@{text "var f"} lets the |
|
1734 |
function @{text "f"} operate within a critical section on the state |
|
40126 | 1735 |
@{text "x"} as follows: if @{text "f x"} produces @{ML NONE}, it |
1736 |
continues to wait on the internal condition variable, expecting that |
|
39871 | 1737 |
some other thread will eventually change the content in a suitable |
40126 | 1738 |
manner; if @{text "f x"} produces @{ML SOME}~@{text "(y, x')"} it is |
1739 |
satisfied and assigns the new state value @{text "x'"}, broadcasts a |
|
1740 |
signal to all waiting threads on the associated condition variable, |
|
1741 |
and returns the result @{text "y"}. |
|
39871 | 1742 |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1743 |
\end{description} |
39871 | 1744 |
|
40126 | 1745 |
There are some further variants of the @{ML |
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1746 |
Synchronized.guarded_access} combinator, see @{file |
39871 | 1747 |
"~~/src/Pure/Concurrent/synchronized.ML"} for details. |
1748 |
*} |
|
1749 |
||
40126 | 1750 |
text %mlex {* The following example implements a counter that produces |
39871 | 1751 |
positive integers that are unique over the runtime of the Isabelle |
1752 |
process: |
|
1753 |
*} |
|
1754 |
||
1755 |
ML {* |
|
1756 |
local |
|
1757 |
val counter = Synchronized.var "counter" 0; |
|
1758 |
in |
|
1759 |
fun next () = |
|
1760 |
Synchronized.guarded_access counter |
|
1761 |
(fn i => |
|
1762 |
let val j = i + 1 |
|
1763 |
in SOME (j, j) end); |
|
1764 |
end; |
|
1765 |
*} |
|
1766 |
||
1767 |
ML {* |
|
1768 |
val a = next (); |
|
1769 |
val b = next (); |
|
1770 |
@{assert} (a <> b); |
|
39867
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1771 |
*} |
a8363532cd4d
somewhat modernized version of "Thread-safe programming";
wenzelm
parents:
39866
diff
changeset
|
1772 |
|
40800
330eb65c9469
Parse.liberal_name for document antiquotations and attributes;
wenzelm
parents:
40508
diff
changeset
|
1773 |
text {* \medskip See @{file "~~/src/Pure/Concurrent/mailbox.ML"} how |
40126 | 1774 |
to implement a mailbox as synchronized variable over a purely |
1775 |
functional queue. *} |
|
1776 |
||
30270
61811c9224a6
dummy changes to produce a new changeset of these files;
wenzelm
parents:
29755
diff
changeset
|
1777 |
end |