| author | haftmann | 
| Wed, 30 May 2007 21:09:17 +0200 | |
| changeset 23135 | 9f01af828a10 | 
| parent 17182 | ae84287f44e3 | 
| child 25258 | 22d16596c306 | 
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
| 11419 | 1 | \chapter{Functional Programming in HOL}
 | 
| 2 | ||
| 11450 | 3 | This chapter describes how to write | 
| 4 | functional programs in HOL and how to verify them. However, | |
| 5 | most of the constructs and | |
| 6 | proof procedures introduced are general and recur in any specification | |
| 7 | or verification task. We really should speak of functional | |
| 8 | \emph{modelling} rather than functional \emph{programming}: 
 | |
| 9 | our primary aim is not | |
| 11419 | 10 | to write programs but to design abstract models of systems. HOL is | 
| 11 | a specification language that goes well beyond what can be expressed as a | |
| 12 | program. However, for the time being we concentrate on the computable. | |
| 13 | ||
| 11450 | 14 | If you are a purist functional programmer, please note that all functions | 
| 15 | in HOL must be total: | |
| 16 | they must terminate for all inputs. Lazy data structures are not | |
| 11419 | 17 | directly available. | 
| 18 | ||
| 19 | \section{An Introductory Theory}
 | |
| 20 | \label{sec:intro-theory}
 | |
| 21 | ||
| 22 | Functional programming needs datatypes and functions. Both of them can be | |
| 23 | defined in a theory with a syntax reminiscent of languages like ML or | |
| 24 | Haskell. As an example consider the theory in figure~\ref{fig:ToyList}.
 | |
| 25 | We will now examine it line by line. | |
| 26 | ||
| 27 | \begin{figure}[htbp]
 | |
| 28 | \begin{ttbox}\makeatother
 | |
| 29 | \input{ToyList2/ToyList1}\end{ttbox}
 | |
| 11450 | 30 | \caption{A Theory of Lists}
 | 
| 11419 | 31 | \label{fig:ToyList}
 | 
| 32 | \end{figure}
 | |
| 33 | ||
| 11457 | 34 | \index{*ToyList example|(}
 | 
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changeset | 35 | {\makeatother\medskip\input{ToyList/document/ToyList.tex}}
 | 
| 11419 | 36 | |
| 37 | The complete proof script is shown in Fig.\ts\ref{fig:ToyList-proofs}. The
 | |
| 38 | concatenation of Figs.\ts\ref{fig:ToyList} and~\ref{fig:ToyList-proofs}
 | |
| 39 | constitutes the complete theory \texttt{ToyList} and should reside in file
 | |
| 12327 | 40 | \texttt{ToyList.thy}.
 | 
| 41 | % It is good practice to present all declarations and | |
| 42 | %definitions at the beginning of a theory to facilitate browsing.% | |
| 11457 | 43 | \index{*ToyList example|)}
 | 
| 11419 | 44 | |
| 45 | \begin{figure}[htbp]
 | |
| 46 | \begin{ttbox}\makeatother
 | |
| 47 | \input{ToyList2/ToyList2}\end{ttbox}
 | |
| 11450 | 48 | \caption{Proofs about Lists}
 | 
| 11419 | 49 | \label{fig:ToyList-proofs}
 | 
| 50 | \end{figure}
 | |
| 51 | ||
| 52 | \subsubsection*{Review}
 | |
| 53 | ||
| 54 | This is the end of our toy proof. It should have familiarized you with | |
| 55 | \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 56 | \item the standard theorem proving procedure: | |
| 8743 | 57 | state a goal (lemma or theorem); proceed with proof until a separate lemma is | 
| 58 | required; prove that lemma; come back to the original goal. | |
| 59 | \item a specific procedure that works well for functional programs: | |
| 60 | induction followed by all-out simplification via \isa{auto}.
 | |
| 61 | \item a basic repertoire of proof commands. | |
| 62 | \end{itemize}
 | |
| 63 | ||
| 12332 | 64 | \begin{warn}
 | 
| 65 | It is tempting to think that all lemmas should have the \isa{simp} attribute
 | |
| 66 | just because this was the case in the example above. However, in that example | |
| 67 | all lemmas were equations, and the right-hand side was simpler than the | |
| 68 | left-hand side --- an ideal situation for simplification purposes. Unless | |
| 69 | this is clearly the case, novices should refrain from awarding a lemma the | |
| 70 | \isa{simp} attribute, which has a global effect. Instead, lemmas can be
 | |
| 71 | applied locally where they are needed, which is discussed in the following | |
| 72 | chapter. | |
| 73 | \end{warn}
 | |
| 8743 | 74 | |
| 10885 | 75 | \section{Some Helpful Commands}
 | 
| 8743 | 76 | \label{sec:commands-and-hints}
 | 
| 77 | ||
| 78 | This section discusses a few basic commands for manipulating the proof state | |
| 79 | and can be skipped by casual readers. | |
| 80 | ||
| 81 | There are two kinds of commands used during a proof: the actual proof | |
| 82 | commands and auxiliary commands for examining the proof state and controlling | |
| 83 | the display. Simple proof commands are of the form | |
| 12327 | 84 | \commdx{apply}(\textit{method}), where \textit{method} is typically 
 | 
| 11419 | 85 | \isa{induct_tac} or \isa{auto}.  All such theorem proving operations
 | 
| 86 | are referred to as \bfindex{methods}, and further ones are
 | |
| 87 | introduced throughout the tutorial. Unless stated otherwise, you may | |
| 88 | assume that a method attacks merely the first subgoal. An exception is | |
| 89 | \isa{auto}, which tries to solve all subgoals.
 | |
| 8743 | 90 | |
| 11419 | 91 | The most useful auxiliary commands are as follows: | 
| 8743 | 92 | \begin{description}
 | 
| 93 | \item[Modifying the order of subgoals:] | |
| 11419 | 94 | \commdx{defer} moves the first subgoal to the end and
 | 
| 95 | \commdx{prefer}~$n$ moves subgoal $n$ to the front.
 | |
| 8743 | 96 | \item[Printing theorems:] | 
| 11419 | 97 |   \commdx{thm}~\textit{name}$@1$~\dots~\textit{name}$@n$
 | 
| 8743 | 98 | prints the named theorems. | 
| 11419 | 99 | \item[Reading terms and types:] \commdx{term}
 | 
| 8743 | 100 |   \textit{string} reads, type-checks and prints the given string as a term in
 | 
| 101 | the current context; the inferred type is output as well. | |
| 11419 | 102 |   \commdx{typ} \textit{string} reads and prints the given
 | 
| 8743 | 103 | string as a type in the current context. | 
| 104 | \end{description}
 | |
| 12327 | 105 | Further commands are found in the Isabelle/Isar Reference | 
| 106 | Manual~\cite{isabelle-isar-ref}.
 | |
| 8743 | 107 | |
| 16412 | 108 | \begin{pgnote}
 | 
| 16523 | 109 | Clicking on the \pgmenu{State} button redisplays the current proof state.
 | 
| 16412 | 110 | This is helpful in case commands like \isacommand{thm} have overwritten it.
 | 
| 111 | \end{pgnote}
 | |
| 112 | ||
| 8771 | 113 | We now examine Isabelle's functional programming constructs systematically, | 
| 114 | starting with inductive datatypes. | |
| 115 | ||
| 8743 | 116 | |
| 117 | \section{Datatypes}
 | |
| 118 | \label{sec:datatype}
 | |
| 119 | ||
| 11456 | 120 | \index{datatypes|(}%
 | 
| 8743 | 121 | Inductive datatypes are part of almost every non-trivial application of HOL. | 
| 11458 | 122 | First we take another look at an important example, the datatype of | 
| 8743 | 123 | lists, before we turn to datatypes in general. The section closes with a | 
| 124 | case study. | |
| 125 | ||
| 126 | ||
| 127 | \subsection{Lists}
 | |
| 128 | ||
| 11428 | 129 | \index{*list (type)}%
 | 
| 11457 | 130 | Lists are one of the essential datatypes in computing. We expect that you | 
| 131 | are already familiar with their basic operations. | |
| 8771 | 132 | Theory \isa{ToyList} is only a small fragment of HOL's predefined theory
 | 
| 11428 | 133 | \thydx{List}\footnote{\url{http://isabelle.in.tum.de/library/HOL/List.html}}.
 | 
| 8743 | 134 | The latter contains many further operations. For example, the functions | 
| 11419 | 135 | \cdx{hd} (``head'') and \cdx{tl} (``tail'') return the first
 | 
| 8743 | 136 | element and the remainder of a list. (However, pattern-matching is usually | 
| 10795 | 137 | preferable to \isa{hd} and \isa{tl}.)  
 | 
| 10800 | 138 | Also available are higher-order functions like \isa{map} and \isa{filter}.
 | 
| 10795 | 139 | Theory \isa{List} also contains
 | 
| 8743 | 140 | more syntactic sugar: \isa{[}$x@1$\isa{,}\dots\isa{,}$x@n$\isa{]} abbreviates
 | 
| 141 | $x@1$\isa{\#}\dots\isa{\#}$x@n$\isa{\#[]}.  In the rest of the tutorial we
 | |
| 12327 | 142 | always use HOL's predefined lists by building on theory \isa{Main}.
 | 
| 8743 | 143 | |
| 144 | ||
| 10885 | 145 | \subsection{The General Format}
 | 
| 8743 | 146 | \label{sec:general-datatype}
 | 
| 147 | ||
| 148 | The general HOL \isacommand{datatype} definition is of the form
 | |
| 149 | \[ | |
| 150 | \isacommand{datatype}~(\alpha@1, \dots, \alpha@n) \, t ~=~
 | |
| 151 | C@1~\tau@{11}~\dots~\tau@{1k@1} ~\mid~ \dots ~\mid~
 | |
| 152 | C@m~\tau@{m1}~\dots~\tau@{mk@m}
 | |
| 153 | \] | |
| 8771 | 154 | where $\alpha@i$ are distinct type variables (the parameters), $C@i$ are distinct | 
| 8743 | 155 | constructor names and $\tau@{ij}$ are types; it is customary to capitalize
 | 
| 156 | the first letter in constructor names. There are a number of | |
| 157 | restrictions (such as that the type should not be empty) detailed | |
| 158 | elsewhere~\cite{isabelle-HOL}. Isabelle notifies you if you violate them.
 | |
| 159 | ||
| 160 | Laws about datatypes, such as \isa{[] \isasymnoteq~x\#xs} and
 | |
| 161 | \isa{(x\#xs = y\#ys) = (x=y \isasymand~xs=ys)}, are used automatically
 | |
| 162 | during proofs by simplification. The same is true for the equations in | |
| 163 | primitive recursive function definitions. | |
| 164 | ||
| 12327 | 165 | Every\footnote{Except for advanced datatypes where the recursion involves
 | 
| 166 | ``\isasymRightarrow'' as in {\S}\ref{sec:nested-fun-datatype}.} datatype $t$
 | |
| 167 | comes equipped with a \isa{size} function from $t$ into the natural numbers
 | |
| 168 | (see~{\S}\ref{sec:nat} below). For lists, \isa{size} is just the length, i.e.\
 | |
| 169 | \isa{size [] = 0} and \isa{size(x \# xs) = size xs + 1}.  In general,
 | |
| 170 | \cdx{size} returns
 | |
| 11456 | 171 | \begin{itemize}
 | 
| 11457 | 172 | \item zero for all constructors | 
| 11456 | 173 | that do not have an argument of type $t$\\ | 
| 11457 | 174 | \item one plus the sum of the sizes of all arguments of type~$t$, | 
| 175 | for all other constructors | |
| 11456 | 176 | \end{itemize}
 | 
| 177 | Note that because | |
| 9644 | 178 | \isa{size} is defined on every datatype, it is overloaded; on lists
 | 
| 11419 | 179 | \isa{size} is also called \sdx{length}, which is not overloaded.
 | 
| 10795 | 180 | Isabelle will always show \isa{size} on lists as \isa{length}.
 | 
| 9644 | 181 | |
| 182 | ||
| 10885 | 183 | \subsection{Primitive Recursion}
 | 
| 8743 | 184 | |
| 11456 | 185 | \index{recursion!primitive}%
 | 
| 8743 | 186 | Functions on datatypes are usually defined by recursion. In fact, most of the | 
| 11428 | 187 | time they are defined by what is called \textbf{primitive recursion}.
 | 
| 188 | The keyword \commdx{primrec} is followed by a list of
 | |
| 8743 | 189 | equations | 
| 190 | \[ f \, x@1 \, \dots \, (C \, y@1 \, \dots \, y@k)\, \dots \, x@n = r \] | |
| 191 | such that $C$ is a constructor of the datatype $t$ and all recursive calls of | |
| 192 | $f$ in $r$ are of the form $f \, \dots \, y@i \, \dots$ for some $i$. Thus | |
| 193 | Isabelle immediately sees that $f$ terminates because one (fixed!) argument | |
| 10654 | 194 | becomes smaller with every recursive call. There must be at most one equation | 
| 8743 | 195 | for each constructor. Their order is immaterial. | 
| 8771 | 196 | A more general method for defining total recursive functions is introduced in | 
| 10538 | 197 | {\S}\ref{sec:recdef}.
 | 
| 8743 | 198 | |
| 9493 | 199 | \begin{exercise}\label{ex:Tree}
 | 
| 8743 | 200 | \input{Misc/document/Tree.tex}%
 | 
| 201 | \end{exercise}
 | |
| 202 | ||
| 9721 | 203 | \input{Misc/document/case_exprs.tex}
 | 
| 8743 | 204 | |
| 205 | \input{Ifexpr/document/Ifexpr.tex}
 | |
| 11456 | 206 | \index{datatypes|)}
 | 
| 207 | ||
| 8743 | 208 | |
| 10885 | 209 | \section{Some Basic Types}
 | 
| 8743 | 210 | |
| 11457 | 211 | This section introduces the types of natural numbers and ordered pairs. Also | 
| 212 | described is type \isa{option}, which is useful for modelling exceptional
 | |
| 213 | cases. | |
| 8743 | 214 | |
| 10885 | 215 | \subsection{Natural Numbers}
 | 
| 11456 | 216 | \label{sec:nat}\index{natural numbers}%
 | 
| 11428 | 217 | \index{linear arithmetic|(}
 | 
| 8743 | 218 | |
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changeset | 219 | \input{Misc/document/fakenat.tex}\medskip
 | 
| 8743 | 220 | \input{Misc/document/natsum.tex}
 | 
| 221 | ||
| 11428 | 222 | \index{linear arithmetic|)}
 | 
| 8743 | 223 | |
| 224 | ||
| 10396 | 225 | \subsection{Pairs}
 | 
| 9541 | 226 | \input{Misc/document/pairs.tex}
 | 
| 8743 | 227 | |
| 10608 | 228 | \subsection{Datatype {\tt\slshape option}}
 | 
| 10543 | 229 | \label{sec:option}
 | 
| 230 | \input{Misc/document/Option2.tex}
 | |
| 231 | ||
| 8743 | 232 | \section{Definitions}
 | 
| 233 | \label{sec:Definitions}
 | |
| 234 | ||
| 235 | A definition is simply an abbreviation, i.e.\ a new name for an existing | |
| 236 | construction. In particular, definitions cannot be recursive. Isabelle offers | |
| 237 | definitions on the level of types and terms. Those on the type level are | |
| 11456 | 238 | called \textbf{type synonyms}; those on the term level are simply called 
 | 
| 8743 | 239 | definitions. | 
| 240 | ||
| 241 | ||
| 10885 | 242 | \subsection{Type Synonyms}
 | 
| 8743 | 243 | |
| 12327 | 244 | \index{type synonyms}%
 | 
| 11456 | 245 | Type synonyms are similar to those found in ML\@. They are created by a | 
| 11428 | 246 | \commdx{types} command:
 | 
| 8743 | 247 | |
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changeset | 248 | \medskip | 
| 12327 | 249 | \input{Misc/document/types.tex}
 | 
| 8743 | 250 | |
| 9844 | 251 | \input{Misc/document/prime_def.tex}
 | 
| 8743 | 252 | |
| 253 | ||
| 11201 | 254 | \section{The Definitional Approach}
 | 
| 255 | \label{sec:definitional}
 | |
| 256 | ||
| 11457 | 257 | \index{Definitional Approach}%
 | 
| 11201 | 258 | As we pointed out at the beginning of the chapter, asserting arbitrary | 
| 11456 | 259 | axioms such as $f(n) = f(n) + 1$ can easily lead to contradictions. In order | 
| 11457 | 260 | to avoid this danger, we advocate the definitional rather than | 
| 11456 | 261 | the axiomatic approach: introduce new concepts by definitions. However, Isabelle/HOL seems to | 
| 262 | support many richer definitional constructs, such as | |
| 263 | \isacommand{primrec}. The point is that Isabelle reduces such constructs to first principles. For example, each
 | |
| 264 | \isacommand{primrec} function definition is turned into a proper
 | |
| 265 | (nonrecursive!) definition from which the user-supplied recursion equations are | |
| 11457 | 266 | automatically proved. This process is | 
| 11456 | 267 | hidden from the user, who does not have to understand the details. Other commands described | 
| 11457 | 268 | later, like \isacommand{recdef} and \isacommand{inductive}, work similarly.  
 | 
| 269 | This strict adherence to the definitional approach reduces the risk of | |
| 270 | soundness errors. | |
| 11201 | 271 | |
| 8743 | 272 | \chapter{More Functional Programming}
 | 
| 273 | ||
| 11458 | 274 | The purpose of this chapter is to deepen your understanding of the | 
| 8771 | 275 | concepts encountered so far and to introduce advanced forms of datatypes and | 
| 276 | recursive functions. The first two sections give a structured presentation of | |
| 10538 | 277 | theorem proving by simplification ({\S}\ref{sec:Simplification}) and discuss
 | 
| 11458 | 278 | important heuristics for induction ({\S}\ref{sec:InductionHeuristics}).  You can
 | 
| 279 | skip them if you are not planning to perform proofs yourself. | |
| 280 | We then present a case | |
| 281 | study: a compiler for expressions ({\S}\ref{sec:ExprCompiler}). Advanced
 | |
| 8771 | 282 | datatypes, including those involving function spaces, are covered in | 
| 11458 | 283 | {\S}\ref{sec:advanced-datatypes}; it closes with another case study, search
 | 
| 284 | trees (``tries'').  Finally we introduce \isacommand{recdef}, a general
 | |
| 285 | form of recursive function definition that goes well beyond | |
| 286 | \isacommand{primrec} ({\S}\ref{sec:recdef}).
 | |
| 8743 | 287 | |
| 288 | ||
| 289 | \section{Simplification}
 | |
| 290 | \label{sec:Simplification}
 | |
| 291 | \index{simplification|(}
 | |
| 292 | ||
| 10795 | 293 | So far we have proved our theorems by \isa{auto}, which simplifies
 | 
| 11458 | 294 | all subgoals. In fact, \isa{auto} can do much more than that. 
 | 
| 295 | To go beyond toy examples, you | |
| 9541 | 296 | need to understand the ingredients of \isa{auto}.  This section covers the
 | 
| 10971 | 297 | method that \isa{auto} always applies first, simplification.
 | 
| 8743 | 298 | |
| 299 | Simplification is one of the central theorem proving tools in Isabelle and | |
| 11458 | 300 | many other systems. The tool itself is called the \textbf{simplifier}. 
 | 
| 301 | This section introduces the many features of the simplifier | |
| 302 | and is required reading if you intend to perform proofs. Later on, | |
| 303 | {\S}\ref{sec:simplification-II} explains some more advanced features and a
 | |
| 9754 | 304 | little bit of how the simplifier works. The serious student should read that | 
| 11458 | 305 | section as well, in particular to understand why the simplifier did | 
| 306 | something unexpected. | |
| 8743 | 307 | |
| 11458 | 308 | \subsection{What is Simplification?}
 | 
| 9458 | 309 | |
| 8743 | 310 | In its most basic form, simplification means repeated application of | 
| 311 | equations from left to right. For example, taking the rules for \isa{\at}
 | |
| 312 | and applying them to the term \isa{[0,1] \at\ []} results in a sequence of
 | |
| 313 | simplification steps: | |
| 314 | \begin{ttbox}\makeatother
 | |
| 315 | (0#1#[]) @ [] \(\leadsto\) 0#((1#[]) @ []) \(\leadsto\) 0#(1#([] @ [])) \(\leadsto\) 0#1#[] | |
| 316 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 9933 | 317 | This is also known as \bfindex{term rewriting}\indexbold{rewriting} and the
 | 
| 11458 | 318 | equations are referred to as \bfindex{rewrite rules}.
 | 
| 9933 | 319 | ``Rewriting'' is more honest than ``simplification'' because the terms do not | 
| 320 | necessarily become simpler in the process. | |
| 8743 | 321 | |
| 11458 | 322 | The simplifier proves arithmetic goals as described in | 
| 323 | {\S}\ref{sec:nat} above.  Arithmetic expressions are simplified using built-in
 | |
| 324 | procedures that go beyond mere rewrite rules. New simplification procedures | |
| 325 | can be coded and installed, but they are definitely not a matter for this | |
| 326 | tutorial. | |
| 327 | ||
| 9844 | 328 | \input{Misc/document/simp.tex}
 | 
| 8743 | 329 | |
| 330 | \index{simplification|)}
 | |
| 331 | ||
| 9844 | 332 | \input{Misc/document/Itrev.tex}
 | 
| 13305 | 333 | \begin{exercise}
 | 
| 334 | \input{Misc/document/Plus.tex}%
 | |
| 335 | \end{exercise}
 | |
| 9493 | 336 | \begin{exercise}
 | 
| 337 | \input{Misc/document/Tree2.tex}%
 | |
| 338 | \end{exercise}
 | |
| 8743 | 339 | |
| 9844 | 340 | \input{CodeGen/document/CodeGen.tex}
 | 
| 8743 | 341 | |
| 342 | ||
| 10885 | 343 | \section{Advanced Datatypes}
 | 
| 8743 | 344 | \label{sec:advanced-datatypes}
 | 
| 11428 | 345 | \index{datatype@\isacommand {datatype} (command)|(}
 | 
| 346 | \index{primrec@\isacommand {primrec} (command)|(}
 | |
| 8743 | 347 | %|) | 
| 348 | ||
| 11428 | 349 | This section presents advanced forms of datatypes: mutual and nested | 
| 350 | recursion. A series of examples will culminate in a treatment of the trie | |
| 351 | data structure. | |
| 352 | ||
| 8743 | 353 | |
| 10885 | 354 | \subsection{Mutual Recursion}
 | 
| 8743 | 355 | \label{sec:datatype-mut-rec}
 | 
| 356 | ||
| 357 | \input{Datatype/document/ABexpr.tex}
 | |
| 358 | ||
| 10885 | 359 | \subsection{Nested Recursion}
 | 
| 9644 | 360 | \label{sec:nested-datatype}
 | 
| 8743 | 361 | |
| 9644 | 362 | {\makeatother\input{Datatype/document/Nested.tex}}
 | 
| 8743 | 363 | |
| 364 | ||
| 11419 | 365 | \subsection{The Limits of Nested Recursion}
 | 
| 12327 | 366 | \label{sec:nested-fun-datatype}
 | 
| 11419 | 367 | |
| 368 | How far can we push nested recursion? By the unfolding argument above, we can | |
| 369 | reduce nested to mutual recursion provided the nested recursion only involves | |
| 370 | previously defined datatypes. This does not include functions: | |
| 371 | \begin{isabelle}
 | |
| 372 | \isacommand{datatype} t = C "t \isasymRightarrow\ bool"
 | |
| 373 | \end{isabelle}
 | |
| 374 | This declaration is a real can of worms. | |
| 375 | In HOL it must be ruled out because it requires a type | |
| 376 | \isa{t} such that \isa{t} and its power set \isa{t \isasymFun\ bool} have the
 | |
| 377 | same cardinality --- an impossibility. For the same reason it is not possible | |
| 12328 | 378 | to allow recursion involving the type \isa{t set}, which is isomorphic to
 | 
| 11419 | 379 | \isa{t \isasymFun\ bool}.
 | 
| 380 | ||
| 381 | Fortunately, a limited form of recursion | |
| 382 | involving function spaces is permitted: the recursive type may occur on the | |
| 383 | right of a function arrow, but never on the left. Hence the above can of worms | |
| 11458 | 384 | is ruled out but the following example of a potentially | 
| 385 | \index{infinitely branching trees}%
 | |
| 386 | infinitely branching tree is accepted: | |
| 11419 | 387 | \smallskip | 
| 388 | ||
| 389 | \input{Datatype/document/Fundata.tex}
 | |
| 390 | ||
| 391 | If you need nested recursion on the left of a function arrow, there are | |
| 392 | alternatives to pure HOL\@. In the Logic for Computable Functions | |
| 11458 | 393 | (\rmindex{LCF}), types like
 | 
| 11419 | 394 | \begin{isabelle}
 | 
| 395 | \isacommand{datatype} lam = C "lam \isasymrightarrow\ lam"
 | |
| 396 | \end{isabelle}
 | |
| 397 | do indeed make sense~\cite{paulson87}.  Note the different arrow,
 | |
| 398 | \isa{\isasymrightarrow} instead of \isa{\isasymRightarrow},
 | |
| 399 | expressing the type of \emph{continuous} functions. 
 | |
| 400 | There is even a version of LCF on top of HOL, | |
| 11458 | 401 | called \rmindex{HOLCF}~\cite{MuellerNvOS99}.
 | 
| 11428 | 402 | \index{datatype@\isacommand {datatype} (command)|)}
 | 
| 403 | \index{primrec@\isacommand {primrec} (command)|)}
 | |
| 11419 | 404 | |
| 405 | ||
| 406 | \subsection{Case Study: Tries}
 | |
| 407 | \label{sec:Trie}
 | |
| 408 | ||
| 11458 | 409 | \index{tries|(}%
 | 
| 11419 | 410 | Tries are a classic search tree data structure~\cite{Knuth3-75} for fast
 | 
| 411 | indexing with strings. Figure~\ref{fig:trie} gives a graphical example of a
 | |
| 412 | trie containing the words ``all'', ``an'', ``ape'', ``can'', ``car'' and | |
| 413 | ``cat''. When searching a string in a trie, the letters of the string are | |
| 414 | examined sequentially. Each letter determines which subtrie to search next. | |
| 415 | In this case study we model tries as a datatype, define a lookup and an | |
| 416 | update function, and prove that they behave as expected. | |
| 417 | ||
| 418 | \begin{figure}[htbp]
 | |
| 419 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 8743 | 420 | \unitlength1mm | 
| 421 | \begin{picture}(60,30)
 | |
| 422 | \put( 5, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{l}}
 | |
| 423 | \put(25, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{e}}
 | |
| 424 | \put(35, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{n}}
 | |
| 425 | \put(45, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{r}}
 | |
| 426 | \put(55, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{t}}
 | |
| 427 | % | |
| 428 | \put( 5, 9){\line(0,-1){5}}
 | |
| 429 | \put(25, 9){\line(0,-1){5}}
 | |
| 430 | \put(44, 9){\line(-3,-2){9}}
 | |
| 431 | \put(45, 9){\line(0,-1){5}}
 | |
| 432 | \put(46, 9){\line(3,-2){9}}
 | |
| 433 | % | |
| 434 | \put( 5,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{l}}
 | |
| 435 | \put(15,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{n}}
 | |
| 11419 | 436 | \put(25,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{p}}
 | 
| 437 | \put(45,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{a}}
 | |
| 438 | % | |
| 439 | \put(14,19){\line(-3,-2){9}}
 | |
| 440 | \put(15,19){\line(0,-1){5}}
 | |
| 441 | \put(16,19){\line(3,-2){9}}
 | |
| 442 | \put(45,19){\line(0,-1){5}}
 | |
| 443 | % | |
| 444 | \put(15,20){\makebox(0,0)[b]{a}}
 | |
| 445 | \put(45,20){\makebox(0,0)[b]{c}}
 | |
| 446 | % | |
| 447 | \put(30,30){\line(-3,-2){13}}
 | |
| 448 | \put(30,30){\line(3,-2){13}}
 | |
| 449 | \end{picture}
 | |
| 450 | \end{center}
 | |
| 11450 | 451 | \caption{A Sample Trie}
 | 
| 11419 | 452 | \label{fig:trie}
 | 
| 453 | \end{figure}
 | |
| 454 | ||
| 455 | Proper tries associate some value with each string. Since the | |
| 456 | information is stored only in the final node associated with the string, many | |
| 457 | nodes do not carry any value. This distinction is modeled with the help | |
| 458 | of the predefined datatype \isa{option} (see {\S}\ref{sec:option}).
 | |
| 459 | \input{Trie/document/Trie.tex}
 | |
| 11458 | 460 | \index{tries|)}
 | 
| 11419 | 461 | |
| 462 | \section{Total Recursive Functions}
 | |
| 463 | \label{sec:recdef}
 | |
| 11428 | 464 | \index{recdef@\isacommand {recdef} (command)|(}\index{functions!total|(}
 | 
| 11419 | 465 | |
| 466 | Although many total functions have a natural primitive recursive definition, | |
| 467 | this is not always the case. Arbitrary total recursive functions can be | |
| 468 | defined by means of \isacommand{recdef}: you can use full pattern-matching,
 | |
| 469 | recursion need not involve datatypes, and termination is proved by showing | |
| 470 | that the arguments of all recursive calls are smaller in a suitable (user | |
| 471 | supplied) sense. In this section we restrict ourselves to measure functions; | |
| 472 | more advanced termination proofs are discussed in {\S}\ref{sec:beyond-measure}.
 | |
| 473 | ||
| 474 | \subsection{Defining Recursive Functions}
 | |
| 475 | \label{sec:recdef-examples}
 | |
| 476 | \input{Recdef/document/examples.tex}
 | |
| 477 | ||
| 478 | \subsection{Proving Termination}
 | |
| 479 | \input{Recdef/document/termination.tex}
 | |
| 480 | ||
| 11458 | 481 | \subsection{Simplification and Recursive Functions}
 | 
| 11419 | 482 | \label{sec:recdef-simplification}
 | 
| 483 | \input{Recdef/document/simplification.tex}
 | |
| 484 | ||
| 11458 | 485 | \subsection{Induction and Recursive Functions}
 | 
| 11419 | 486 | \index{induction!recursion|(}
 | 
| 8743 | 487 | \index{recursion induction|(}
 | 
| 488 | ||
| 489 | \input{Recdef/document/Induction.tex}
 | |
| 9644 | 490 | \label{sec:recdef-induction}
 | 
| 8743 | 491 | |
| 492 | \index{induction!recursion|)}
 | |
| 493 | \index{recursion induction|)}
 | |
| 11428 | 494 | \index{recdef@\isacommand {recdef} (command)|)}\index{functions!total|)}
 |