| author | blanchet | 
| Tue, 15 Nov 2011 22:13:39 +0100 | |
| changeset 45510 | 96696c360b3e | 
| parent 40800 | 330eb65c9469 | 
| child 46258 | 89ee3bc580a8 | 
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
| 29755 | 1 | theory Tactic | 
| 2 | imports Base | |
| 3 | begin | |
| 18537 | 4 | |
| 20452 | 5 | chapter {* Tactical reasoning *}
 | 
| 18537 | 6 | |
| 34930 | 7 | text {* Tactical reasoning works by refining an initial claim in a
 | 
| 20474 | 8 |   backwards fashion, until a solved form is reached.  A @{text "goal"}
 | 
| 9 | consists of several subgoals that need to be solved in order to | |
| 10 | achieve the main statement; zero subgoals means that the proof may | |
| 11 |   be finished.  A @{text "tactic"} is a refinement operation that maps
 | |
| 12 |   a goal to a lazy sequence of potential successors.  A @{text
 | |
| 34930 | 13 | "tactical"} is a combinator for composing tactics. *} | 
| 18537 | 14 | |
| 15 | ||
| 16 | section {* Goals \label{sec:tactical-goals} *}
 | |
| 17 | ||
| 20451 | 18 | text {*
 | 
| 29758 | 19 | Isabelle/Pure represents a goal as a theorem stating that the | 
| 20 |   subgoals imply the main goal: @{text "A\<^sub>1 \<Longrightarrow> \<dots> \<Longrightarrow> A\<^sub>n \<Longrightarrow>
 | |
| 21 | C"}. The outermost goal structure is that of a Horn Clause: i.e.\ | |
| 22 |   an iterated implication without any quantifiers\footnote{Recall that
 | |
| 23 |   outermost @{text "\<And>x. \<phi>[x]"} is always represented via schematic
 | |
| 24 |   variables in the body: @{text "\<phi>[?x]"}.  These variables may get
 | |
| 25 |   instantiated during the course of reasoning.}.  For @{text "n = 0"}
 | |
| 26 | a goal is called ``solved''. | |
| 18537 | 27 | |
| 29761 | 28 |   The structure of each subgoal @{text "A\<^sub>i"} is that of a
 | 
| 29 |   general Hereditary Harrop Formula @{text "\<And>x\<^sub>1 \<dots>
 | |
| 30 |   \<And>x\<^sub>k. H\<^sub>1 \<Longrightarrow> \<dots> \<Longrightarrow> H\<^sub>m \<Longrightarrow> B"}.  Here @{text
 | |
| 31 | "x\<^sub>1, \<dots>, x\<^sub>k"} are goal parameters, i.e.\ | |
| 32 |   arbitrary-but-fixed entities of certain types, and @{text
 | |
| 33 | "H\<^sub>1, \<dots>, H\<^sub>m"} are goal hypotheses, i.e.\ facts that may | |
| 34 | be assumed locally. Together, this forms the goal context of the | |
| 35 |   conclusion @{text B} to be established.  The goal hypotheses may be
 | |
| 36 | again arbitrary Hereditary Harrop Formulas, although the level of | |
| 37 | nesting rarely exceeds 1--2 in practice. | |
| 18537 | 38 | |
| 20451 | 39 |   The main conclusion @{text C} is internally marked as a protected
 | 
| 29758 | 40 |   proposition, which is represented explicitly by the notation @{text
 | 
| 34930 | 41 | "#C"} here. This ensures that the decomposition into subgoals and | 
| 42 | main conclusion is well-defined for arbitrarily structured claims. | |
| 18537 | 43 | |
| 20451 | 44 | \medskip Basic goal management is performed via the following | 
| 45 | Isabelle/Pure rules: | |
| 18537 | 46 | |
| 47 | \[ | |
| 48 |   \infer[@{text "(init)"}]{@{text "C \<Longrightarrow> #C"}}{} \qquad
 | |
| 20547 | 49 |   \infer[@{text "(finish)"}]{@{text "C"}}{@{text "#C"}}
 | 
| 18537 | 50 | \] | 
| 51 | ||
| 52 | \medskip The following low-level variants admit general reasoning | |
| 53 | with protected propositions: | |
| 54 | ||
| 55 | \[ | |
| 56 |   \infer[@{text "(protect)"}]{@{text "#C"}}{@{text "C"}} \qquad
 | |
| 57 |   \infer[@{text "(conclude)"}]{@{text "A\<^sub>1 \<Longrightarrow> \<dots> \<Longrightarrow> A\<^sub>n \<Longrightarrow> C"}}{@{text "A\<^sub>1 \<Longrightarrow> \<dots> \<Longrightarrow> A\<^sub>n \<Longrightarrow> #C"}}
 | |
| 58 | \] | |
| 59 | *} | |
| 60 | ||
| 61 | text %mlref {*
 | |
| 62 |   \begin{mldecls}
 | |
| 63 |   @{index_ML Goal.init: "cterm -> thm"} \\
 | |
| 32201 
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changeset | 64 |   @{index_ML Goal.finish: "Proof.context -> thm -> thm"} \\
 | 
| 18537 | 65 |   @{index_ML Goal.protect: "thm -> thm"} \\
 | 
| 66 |   @{index_ML Goal.conclude: "thm -> thm"} \\
 | |
| 67 |   \end{mldecls}
 | |
| 68 | ||
| 69 |   \begin{description}
 | |
| 70 | ||
| 20474 | 71 |   \item @{ML "Goal.init"}~@{text C} initializes a tactical goal from
 | 
| 72 |   the well-formed proposition @{text C}.
 | |
| 18537 | 73 | |
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changeset | 74 |   \item @{ML "Goal.finish"}~@{text "ctxt thm"} checks whether theorem
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| 20474 | 75 |   @{text "thm"} is a solved goal (no subgoals), and concludes the
 | 
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changeset | 76 | result by removing the goal protection. The context is only | 
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changeset | 77 | required for printing error messages. | 
| 18537 | 78 | |
| 20474 | 79 |   \item @{ML "Goal.protect"}~@{text "thm"} protects the full statement
 | 
| 80 |   of theorem @{text "thm"}.
 | |
| 18537 | 81 | |
| 20474 | 82 |   \item @{ML "Goal.conclude"}~@{text "thm"} removes the goal
 | 
| 83 | protection, even if there are pending subgoals. | |
| 18537 | 84 | |
| 85 |   \end{description}
 | |
| 86 | *} | |
| 87 | ||
| 88 | ||
| 39847 | 89 | section {* Tactics\label{sec:tactics} *}
 | 
| 18537 | 90 | |
| 28781 | 91 | text {* A @{text "tactic"} is a function @{text "goal \<rightarrow> goal\<^sup>*\<^sup>*"} that
 | 
| 92 | maps a given goal state (represented as a theorem, cf.\ | |
| 93 |   \secref{sec:tactical-goals}) to a lazy sequence of potential
 | |
| 94 | successor states. The underlying sequence implementation is lazy | |
| 95 |   both in head and tail, and is purely functional in \emph{not}
 | |
| 96 |   supporting memoing.\footnote{The lack of memoing and the strict
 | |
| 97 | nature of SML requires some care when working with low-level | |
| 98 | sequence operations, to avoid duplicate or premature evaluation of | |
| 34930 | 99 | results. It also means that modified runtime behavior, such as | 
| 100 | timeout, is very hard to achieve for general tactics.} | |
| 18537 | 101 | |
| 28781 | 102 |   An \emph{empty result sequence} means that the tactic has failed: in
 | 
| 34930 | 103 | a compound tactic expression other tactics might be tried instead, | 
| 28781 | 104 | or the whole refinement step might fail outright, producing a | 
| 34930 | 105 | toplevel error message in the end. When implementing tactics from | 
| 106 | scratch, one should take care to observe the basic protocol of | |
| 107 | mapping regular error conditions to an empty result; only serious | |
| 108 | faults should emerge as exceptions. | |
| 28781 | 109 | |
| 110 |   By enumerating \emph{multiple results}, a tactic can easily express
 | |
| 111 | the potential outcome of an internal search process. There are also | |
| 112 | combinators for building proof tools that involve search | |
| 113 |   systematically, see also \secref{sec:tacticals}.
 | |
| 114 | ||
| 34930 | 115 | \medskip As explained before, a goal state essentially consists of a | 
| 116 | list of subgoals that imply the main goal (conclusion). Tactics may | |
| 117 | operate on all subgoals or on a particularly specified subgoal, but | |
| 118 | must not change the main conclusion (apart from instantiating | |
| 119 | schematic goal variables). | |
| 18537 | 120 | |
| 28781 | 121 |   Tactics with explicit \emph{subgoal addressing} are of the form
 | 
| 122 |   @{text "int \<rightarrow> tactic"} and may be applied to a particular subgoal
 | |
| 123 | (counting from 1). If the subgoal number is out of range, the | |
| 124 | tactic should fail with an empty result sequence, but must not raise | |
| 125 | an exception! | |
| 126 | ||
| 127 | Operating on a particular subgoal means to replace it by an interval | |
| 128 | of zero or more subgoals in the same place; other subgoals must not | |
| 129 | be affected, apart from instantiating schematic variables ranging | |
| 130 | over the whole goal state. | |
| 131 | ||
| 132 | A common pattern of composing tactics with subgoal addressing is to | |
| 133 | try the first one, and then the second one only if the subgoal has | |
| 134 | not been solved yet. Special care is required here to avoid bumping | |
| 28782 | 135 | into unrelated subgoals that happen to come after the original | 
| 136 | subgoal. Assuming that there is only a single initial subgoal is a | |
| 137 | very common error when implementing tactics! | |
| 138 | ||
| 139 | Tactics with internal subgoal addressing should expose the subgoal | |
| 140 |   index as @{text "int"} argument in full generality; a hardwired
 | |
| 34930 | 141 | subgoal 1 is not acceptable. | 
| 28781 | 142 | |
| 143 | \medskip The main well-formedness conditions for proper tactics are | |
| 144 | summarized as follows. | |
| 145 | ||
| 146 |   \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 147 | ||
| 148 | \item General tactic failure is indicated by an empty result, only | |
| 149 | serious faults may produce an exception. | |
| 150 | ||
| 151 | \item The main conclusion must not be changed, apart from | |
| 152 | instantiating schematic variables. | |
| 153 | ||
| 154 | \item A tactic operates either uniformly on all subgoals, or | |
| 155 | specifically on a selected subgoal (without bumping into unrelated | |
| 156 | subgoals). | |
| 157 | ||
| 158 | \item Range errors in subgoal addressing produce an empty result. | |
| 159 | ||
| 160 |   \end{itemize}
 | |
| 28782 | 161 | |
| 162 | Some of these conditions are checked by higher-level goal | |
| 34930 | 163 |   infrastructure (\secref{sec:struct-goals}); others are not checked
 | 
| 28782 | 164 | explicitly, and violating them merely results in ill-behaved tactics | 
| 165 | experienced by the user (e.g.\ tactics that insist in being | |
| 34930 | 166 | applicable only to singleton goals, or prevent composition via | 
| 167 | standard tacticals). | |
| 28782 | 168 | *} | 
| 169 | ||
| 170 | text %mlref {*
 | |
| 171 |   \begin{mldecls}
 | |
| 172 |   @{index_ML_type tactic: "thm -> thm Seq.seq"} \\
 | |
| 28783 | 173 |   @{index_ML no_tac: tactic} \\
 | 
| 174 |   @{index_ML all_tac: tactic} \\
 | |
| 175 |   @{index_ML print_tac: "string -> tactic"} \\[1ex]
 | |
| 176 |   @{index_ML PRIMITIVE: "(thm -> thm) -> tactic"} \\[1ex]
 | |
| 28782 | 177 |   @{index_ML SUBGOAL: "(term * int -> tactic) -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | 
| 178 |   @{index_ML CSUBGOAL: "(cterm * int -> tactic) -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 179 |   \end{mldecls}
 | |
| 180 | ||
| 181 |   \begin{description}
 | |
| 182 | ||
| 39864 | 183 |   \item Type @{ML_type tactic} represents tactics.  The
 | 
| 184 | well-formedness conditions described above need to be observed. See | |
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changeset | 185 |   also @{file "~~/src/Pure/General/seq.ML"} for the underlying
 | 
| 39864 | 186 | implementation of lazy sequences. | 
| 28782 | 187 | |
| 39864 | 188 |   \item Type @{ML_type "int -> tactic"} represents tactics with
 | 
| 189 | explicit subgoal addressing, with well-formedness conditions as | |
| 190 | described above. | |
| 28782 | 191 | |
| 28783 | 192 |   \item @{ML no_tac} is a tactic that always fails, returning the
 | 
| 193 | empty sequence. | |
| 194 | ||
| 195 |   \item @{ML all_tac} is a tactic that always succeeds, returning a
 | |
| 196 | singleton sequence with unchanged goal state. | |
| 197 | ||
| 198 |   \item @{ML print_tac}~@{text "message"} is like @{ML all_tac}, but
 | |
| 199 | prints a message together with the goal state on the tracing | |
| 200 | channel. | |
| 201 | ||
| 28782 | 202 |   \item @{ML PRIMITIVE}~@{text rule} turns a primitive inference rule
 | 
| 203 |   into a tactic with unique result.  Exception @{ML THM} is considered
 | |
| 204 | a regular tactic failure and produces an empty result; other | |
| 205 | exceptions are passed through. | |
| 206 | ||
| 207 |   \item @{ML SUBGOAL}~@{text "(fn (subgoal, i) => tactic)"} is the
 | |
| 28783 | 208 | most basic form to produce a tactic with subgoal addressing. The | 
| 28782 | 209 | given abstraction over the subgoal term and subgoal number allows to | 
| 210 | peek at the relevant information of the full goal state. The | |
| 211 | subgoal range is checked as required above. | |
| 212 | ||
| 213 |   \item @{ML CSUBGOAL} is similar to @{ML SUBGOAL}, but passes the
 | |
| 28783 | 214 |   subgoal as @{ML_type cterm} instead of raw @{ML_type term}.  This
 | 
| 28782 | 215 | avoids expensive re-certification in situations where the subgoal is | 
| 216 | used directly for primitive inferences. | |
| 217 | ||
| 218 |   \end{description}
 | |
| 28781 | 219 | *} | 
| 18537 | 220 | |
| 221 | ||
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changeset | 222 | subsection {* Resolution and assumption tactics \label{sec:resolve-assume-tac} *}
 | 
| 28783 | 223 | |
| 224 | text {* \emph{Resolution} is the most basic mechanism for refining a
 | |
| 225 | subgoal using a theorem as object-level rule. | |
| 226 |   \emph{Elim-resolution} is particularly suited for elimination rules:
 | |
| 227 | it resolves with a rule, proves its first premise by assumption, and | |
| 228 | finally deletes that assumption from any new subgoals. | |
| 229 |   \emph{Destruct-resolution} is like elim-resolution, but the given
 | |
| 230 | destruction rules are first turned into canonical elimination | |
| 231 |   format.  \emph{Forward-resolution} is like destruct-resolution, but
 | |
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changeset | 232 |   without deleting the selected assumption.  The @{text "r/e/d/f"}
 | 
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changeset | 233 | naming convention is maintained for several different kinds of | 
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changeset | 234 | resolution rules and tactics. | 
| 28783 | 235 | |
| 236 | Assumption tactics close a subgoal by unifying some of its premises | |
| 237 | against its conclusion. | |
| 238 | ||
| 239 | \medskip All the tactics in this section operate on a subgoal | |
| 240 | designated by a positive integer. Other subgoals might be affected | |
| 241 | indirectly, due to instantiation of schematic variables. | |
| 242 | ||
| 243 | There are various sources of non-determinism, the tactic result | |
| 244 | sequence enumerates all possibilities of the following choices (if | |
| 245 | applicable): | |
| 246 | ||
| 247 |   \begin{enumerate}
 | |
| 248 | ||
| 249 | \item selecting one of the rules given as argument to the tactic; | |
| 250 | ||
| 251 | \item selecting a subgoal premise to eliminate, unifying it against | |
| 252 | the first premise of the rule; | |
| 253 | ||
| 254 | \item unifying the conclusion of the subgoal to the conclusion of | |
| 255 | the rule. | |
| 256 | ||
| 257 |   \end{enumerate}
 | |
| 258 | ||
| 259 | Recall that higher-order unification may produce multiple results | |
| 260 | that are enumerated here. | |
| 261 | *} | |
| 262 | ||
| 263 | text %mlref {*
 | |
| 264 |   \begin{mldecls}
 | |
| 265 |   @{index_ML resolve_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 266 |   @{index_ML eresolve_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 267 |   @{index_ML dresolve_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 268 |   @{index_ML forward_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\[1ex]
 | |
| 269 |   @{index_ML assume_tac: "int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 270 |   @{index_ML eq_assume_tac: "int -> tactic"} \\[1ex]
 | |
| 271 |   @{index_ML match_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 272 |   @{index_ML ematch_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 273 |   @{index_ML dmatch_tac: "thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | |
| 274 |   \end{mldecls}
 | |
| 275 | ||
| 276 |   \begin{description}
 | |
| 277 | ||
| 278 |   \item @{ML resolve_tac}~@{text "thms i"} refines the goal state
 | |
| 279 | using the given theorems, which should normally be introduction | |
| 280 |   rules.  The tactic resolves a rule's conclusion with subgoal @{text
 | |
| 281 | i}, replacing it by the corresponding versions of the rule's | |
| 282 | premises. | |
| 283 | ||
| 284 |   \item @{ML eresolve_tac}~@{text "thms i"} performs elim-resolution
 | |
| 285 | with the given theorems, which should normally be elimination rules. | |
| 286 | ||
| 287 |   \item @{ML dresolve_tac}~@{text "thms i"} performs
 | |
| 288 | destruct-resolution with the given theorems, which should normally | |
| 289 | be destruction rules. This replaces an assumption by the result of | |
| 290 | applying one of the rules. | |
| 291 | ||
| 292 |   \item @{ML forward_tac} is like @{ML dresolve_tac} except that the
 | |
| 293 | selected assumption is not deleted. It applies a rule to an | |
| 294 | assumption, adding the result as a new assumption. | |
| 295 | ||
| 296 |   \item @{ML assume_tac}~@{text i} attempts to solve subgoal @{text i}
 | |
| 297 | by assumption (modulo higher-order unification). | |
| 298 | ||
| 299 |   \item @{ML eq_assume_tac} is similar to @{ML assume_tac}, but checks
 | |
| 300 |   only for immediate @{text "\<alpha>"}-convertibility instead of using
 | |
| 301 | unification. It succeeds (with a unique next state) if one of the | |
| 302 | assumptions is equal to the subgoal's conclusion. Since it does not | |
| 303 | instantiate variables, it cannot make other subgoals unprovable. | |
| 304 | ||
| 305 |   \item @{ML match_tac}, @{ML ematch_tac}, and @{ML dmatch_tac} are
 | |
| 306 |   similar to @{ML resolve_tac}, @{ML eresolve_tac}, and @{ML
 | |
| 307 | dresolve_tac}, respectively, but do not instantiate schematic | |
| 308 | variables in the goal state. | |
| 309 | ||
| 310 | Flexible subgoals are not updated at will, but are left alone. | |
| 311 | Strictly speaking, matching means to treat the unknowns in the goal | |
| 312 | state as constants; these tactics merely discard unifiers that would | |
| 313 | update the goal state. | |
| 314 | ||
| 315 |   \end{description}
 | |
| 316 | *} | |
| 317 | ||
| 318 | ||
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changeset | 319 | subsection {* Explicit instantiation within a subgoal context *}
 | 
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changeset | 320 | |
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changeset | 321 | text {* The main resolution tactics (\secref{sec:resolve-assume-tac})
 | 
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changeset | 322 | use higher-order unification, which works well in many practical | 
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changeset | 323 | situations despite its daunting theoretical properties. | 
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changeset | 324 | Nonetheless, there are important problem classes where unguided | 
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changeset | 325 | higher-order unification is not so useful. This typically involves | 
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changeset | 326 | rules like universal elimination, existential introduction, or | 
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changeset | 327 | equational substitution. Here the unification problem involves | 
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changeset | 328 |   fully flexible @{text "?P ?x"} schemes, which are hard to manage
 | 
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changeset | 329 | without further hints. | 
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changeset | 330 | |
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changeset | 331 |   By providing a (small) rigid term for @{text "?x"} explicitly, the
 | 
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changeset | 332 |   remaining unification problem is to assign a (large) term to @{text
 | 
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changeset | 333 | "?P"}, according to the shape of the given subgoal. This is | 
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changeset | 334 | sufficiently well-behaved in most practical situations. | 
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changeset | 335 | |
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changeset | 336 |   \medskip Isabelle provides separate versions of the standard @{text
 | 
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changeset | 337 | "r/e/d/f"} resolution tactics that allow to provide explicit | 
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changeset | 338 | instantiations of unknowns of the given rule, wrt.\ terms that refer | 
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changeset | 339 | to the implicit context of the selected subgoal. | 
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changeset | 340 | |
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changeset | 341 |   An instantiation consists of a list of pairs of the form @{text
 | 
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changeset | 342 |   "(?x, t)"}, where @{text ?x} is a schematic variable occurring in
 | 
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changeset | 343 |   the given rule, and @{text t} is a term from the current proof
 | 
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changeset | 344 | context, augmented by the local goal parameters of the selected | 
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changeset | 345 |   subgoal; cf.\ the @{text "focus"} operation described in
 | 
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changeset | 346 |   \secref{sec:variables}.
 | 
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changeset | 347 | |
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changeset | 348 | Entering the syntactic context of a subgoal is a brittle operation, | 
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changeset | 349 | because its exact form is somewhat accidental, and the choice of | 
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changeset | 350 | bound variable names depends on the presence of other local and | 
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changeset | 351 | global names. Explicit renaming of subgoal parameters prior to | 
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changeset | 352 | explicit instantiation might help to achieve a bit more robustness. | 
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changeset | 353 | |
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changeset | 354 |   Type instantiations may be given as well, via pairs like @{text
 | 
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changeset | 355 | "(?'a, \<tau>)"}. Type instantiations are distinguished from term | 
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changeset | 356 | instantiations by the syntactic form of the schematic variable. | 
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changeset | 357 | Types are instantiated before terms are. Since term instantiation | 
| 34930 | 358 | already performs simple type-inference, so explicit type | 
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changeset | 359 | instantiations are seldom necessary. | 
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changeset | 360 | *} | 
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changeset | 361 | |
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changeset | 362 | text %mlref {*
 | 
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changeset | 363 |   \begin{mldecls}
 | 
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changeset | 364 |   @{index_ML res_inst_tac: "Proof.context -> (indexname * string) list -> thm -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | 
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changeset | 365 |   @{index_ML eres_inst_tac: "Proof.context -> (indexname * string) list -> thm -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | 
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changeset | 366 |   @{index_ML dres_inst_tac: "Proof.context -> (indexname * string) list -> thm -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | 
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changeset | 367 |   @{index_ML forw_inst_tac: "Proof.context -> (indexname * string) list -> thm -> int -> tactic"} \\[1ex]
 | 
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changeset | 368 |   @{index_ML rename_tac: "string list -> int -> tactic"} \\
 | 
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changeset | 369 |   \end{mldecls}
 | 
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changeset | 370 | |
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changeset | 371 |   \begin{description}
 | 
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changeset | 372 | |
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changeset | 373 |   \item @{ML res_inst_tac}~@{text "ctxt insts thm i"} instantiates the
 | 
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changeset | 374 |   rule @{text thm} with the instantiations @{text insts}, as described
 | 
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changeset | 375 |   above, and then performs resolution on subgoal @{text i}.
 | 
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changeset | 376 | |
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changeset | 377 |   \item @{ML eres_inst_tac} is like @{ML res_inst_tac}, but performs
 | 
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changeset | 378 | elim-resolution. | 
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changeset | 379 | |
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changeset | 380 |   \item @{ML dres_inst_tac} is like @{ML res_inst_tac}, but performs
 | 
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changeset | 381 | destruct-resolution. | 
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changeset | 382 | |
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changeset | 383 |   \item @{ML forw_inst_tac} is like @{ML dres_inst_tac} except that
 | 
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changeset | 384 | the selected assumption is not deleted. | 
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changeset | 385 | |
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changeset | 386 |   \item @{ML rename_tac}~@{text "names i"} renames the innermost
 | 
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changeset | 387 |   parameters of subgoal @{text i} according to the provided @{text
 | 
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changeset | 388 | names} (which need to be distinct indentifiers). | 
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changeset | 389 | |
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changeset | 390 |   \end{description}
 | 
| 34930 | 391 | |
| 392 | For historical reasons, the above instantiation tactics take | |
| 393 | unparsed string arguments, which makes them hard to use in general | |
| 394 |   ML code.  The slightly more advanced @{ML Subgoal.FOCUS} combinator
 | |
| 395 |   of \secref{sec:struct-goals} allows to refer to internal goal
 | |
| 396 | structure with explicit context management. | |
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changeset | 397 | *} | 
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changeset | 398 | |
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changeset | 399 | |
| 28781 | 400 | section {* Tacticals \label{sec:tacticals} *}
 | 
| 18537 | 401 | |
| 402 | text {*
 | |
| 29758 | 403 |   A \emph{tactical} is a functional combinator for building up complex
 | 
| 404 | tactics from simpler ones. Typical tactical perform sequential | |
| 405 | composition, disjunction (choice), iteration, or goal addressing. | |
| 406 | Various search strategies may be expressed via tacticals. | |
| 18537 | 407 | |
| 29758 | 408 | \medskip FIXME | 
| 39852 | 409 | |
| 410 |   \medskip The chapter on tacticals in \cite{isabelle-ref} is still
 | |
| 411 | applicable, despite a few outdated details. *} | |
| 30272 | 412 | |
| 18537 | 413 | end |