author | wenzelm |
Thu, 12 Oct 2006 22:57:42 +0200 | |
changeset 21006 | ac2732072403 |
parent 16019 | 0e1405402d53 |
child 30184 | 37969710e61f |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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%% $Id$ |
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\chapter{Simplification} |
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\label{chap:simplification} |
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\index{simplification|(} |
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This chapter describes Isabelle's generic simplification package. It performs |
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conditional and unconditional rewriting and uses contextual information |
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(`local assumptions'). It provides several general hooks, which can provide |
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automatic case splits during rewriting, for example. The simplifier is |
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already set up for many of Isabelle's logics: FOL, ZF, HOL, HOLCF. |
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The first section is a quick introduction to the simplifier that |
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should be sufficient to get started. The later sections explain more |
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advanced features. |
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\section{Simplification for dummies} |
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\label{sec:simp-for-dummies} |
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Basic use of the simplifier is particularly easy because each theory |
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is equipped with sensible default information controlling the rewrite |
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process --- namely the implicit {\em current |
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simpset}\index{simpset!current}. A suite of simple commands is |
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provided that refer to the implicit simpset of the current theory |
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context. |
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\begin{warn} |
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Make sure that you are working within the correct theory context. |
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Executing proofs interactively, or loading them from ML files |
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without associated theories may require setting the current theory |
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manually via the \ttindex{context} command. |
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\end{warn} |
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\subsection{Simplification tactics} \label{sec:simp-for-dummies-tacs} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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Simp_tac : int -> tactic |
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Asm_simp_tac : int -> tactic |
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Full_simp_tac : int -> tactic |
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Asm_full_simp_tac : int -> tactic |
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trace_simp : bool ref \hfill{\bf initially false} |
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debug_simp : bool ref \hfill{\bf initially false} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Simp_tac} $i$] simplifies subgoal~$i$ using the |
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current simpset. It may solve the subgoal completely if it has |
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become trivial, using the simpset's solver tactic. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Asm_simp_tac}]\index{assumptions!in simplification} |
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is like \verb$Simp_tac$, but extracts additional rewrite rules from |
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the local assumptions. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Full_simp_tac}] is like \verb$Simp_tac$, but also |
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simplifies the assumptions (without using the assumptions to |
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simplify each other or the actual goal). |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Asm_full_simp_tac}] is like \verb$Asm_simp_tac$, |
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but also simplifies the assumptions. In particular, assumptions can |
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simplify each other. |
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\footnote{\texttt{Asm_full_simp_tac} used to process the assumptions from |
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left to right. For backwards compatibilty reasons only there is now |
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\texttt{Asm_lr_simp_tac} that behaves like the old \texttt{Asm_full_simp_tac}.} |
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\item[set \ttindexbold{trace_simp};] makes the simplifier output internal |
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operations. This includes rewrite steps, but also bookkeeping like |
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modifications of the simpset. |
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\item[set \ttindexbold{debug_simp};] makes the simplifier output some extra |
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information about internal operations. This includes any attempted |
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invocation of simplification procedures. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\medskip |
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As an example, consider the theory of arithmetic in HOL. The (rather trivial) |
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goal $0 + (x + 0) = x + 0 + 0$ can be solved by a single call of |
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\texttt{Simp_tac} as follows: |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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context Arith.thy; |
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Goal "0 + (x + 0) = x + 0 + 0"; |
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{\out 1. 0 + (x + 0) = x + 0 + 0} |
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by (Simp_tac 1); |
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{\out Level 1} |
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{\out 0 + (x + 0) = x + 0 + 0} |
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{\out No subgoals!} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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The simplifier uses the current simpset of \texttt{Arith.thy}, which |
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contains suitable theorems like $\Var{n}+0 = \Var{n}$ and $0+\Var{n} = |
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\Var{n}$. |
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\medskip In many cases, assumptions of a subgoal are also needed in |
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the simplification process. For example, \texttt{x = 0 ==> x + x = 0} |
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is solved by \texttt{Asm_simp_tac} as follows: |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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{\out 1. x = 0 ==> x + x = 0} |
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by (Asm_simp_tac 1); |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\medskip \texttt{Asm_full_simp_tac} is the most powerful of this quartet |
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of tactics but may also loop where some of the others terminate. For |
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example, |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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{\out 1. ALL x. f x = g (f (g x)) ==> f 0 = f 0 + 0} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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is solved by \texttt{Simp_tac}, but \texttt{Asm_simp_tac} and {\tt |
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Asm_full_simp_tac} loop because the rewrite rule $f\,\Var{x} = |
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g\,(f\,(g\,\Var{x}))$ extracted from the assumption does not |
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terminate. Isabelle notices certain simple forms of nontermination, |
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but not this one. Because assumptions may simplify each other, there can be |
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very subtle cases of nontermination. For example, invoking |
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{\tt Asm_full_simp_tac} on |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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{\out 1. [| P (f x); y = x; f x = f y |] ==> Q} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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gives rise to the infinite reduction sequence |
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\[ |
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P\,(f\,x) \stackrel{f\,x = f\,y}{\longmapsto} P\,(f\,y) \stackrel{y = x}{\longmapsto} |
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P\,(f\,x) \stackrel{f\,x = f\,y}{\longmapsto} \cdots |
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\] |
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whereas applying the same tactic to |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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{\out 1. [| y = x; f x = f y; P (f x) |] ==> Q} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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terminates. |
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\medskip |
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Using the simplifier effectively may take a bit of experimentation. |
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Set the \verb$trace_simp$\index{tracing!of simplification} flag to get |
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a better idea of what is going on. The resulting output can be |
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enormous, especially since invocations of the simplifier are often |
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nested (e.g.\ when solving conditions of rewrite rules). |
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\subsection{Modifying the current simpset} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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Addsimps : thm list -> unit |
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Delsimps : thm list -> unit |
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Addsimprocs : simproc list -> unit |
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Delsimprocs : simproc list -> unit |
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Addcongs : thm list -> unit |
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Delcongs : thm list -> unit |
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Addsplits : thm list -> unit |
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Delsplits : thm list -> unit |
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\end{ttbox} |
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Depending on the theory context, the \texttt{Add} and \texttt{Del} |
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functions manipulate basic components of the associated current |
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simpset. Internally, all rewrite rules have to be expressed as |
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(conditional) meta-equalities. This form is derived automatically |
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from object-level equations that are supplied by the user. Another |
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source of rewrite rules are \emph{simplification procedures}, that is |
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\ML\ functions that produce suitable theorems on demand, depending on |
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the current redex. Congruences are a more advanced feature; see |
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{\S}\ref{sec:simp-congs}. |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Addsimps} $thms$;] adds rewrite rules derived from |
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$thms$ to the current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Delsimps} $thms$;] deletes rewrite rules derived |
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from $thms$ from the current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Addsimprocs} $procs$;] adds simplification |
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procedures $procs$ to the current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Delsimprocs} $procs$;] deletes simplification |
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procedures $procs$ from the current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Addcongs} $thms$;] adds congruence rules to the |
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current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Delcongs} $thms$;] deletes congruence rules from the |
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current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Addsplits} $thms$;] adds splitting rules to the |
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current simpset. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{Delsplits} $thms$;] deletes splitting rules from the |
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current simpset. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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When a new theory is built, its implicit simpset is initialized by the union |
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of the respective simpsets of its parent theories. In addition, certain |
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theory definition constructs (e.g.\ \ttindex{datatype} and \ttindex{primrec} |
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in HOL) implicitly augment the current simpset. Ordinary definitions are not |
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added automatically! |
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It is up the user to manipulate the current simpset further by |
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explicitly adding or deleting theorems and simplification procedures. |
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\medskip |
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Good simpsets are hard to design. Rules that obviously simplify, |
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like $\Var{n}+0 = \Var{n}$, should be added to the current simpset right after |
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they have been proved. More specific ones (such as distributive laws, which |
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duplicate subterms) should be added only for specific proofs and deleted |
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afterwards. Conversely, sometimes a rule needs |
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to be removed for a certain proof and restored afterwards. The need of |
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frequent additions or deletions may indicate a badly designed |
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simpset. |
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\begin{warn} |
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The union of the parent simpsets (as described above) is not always |
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a good starting point for the new theory. If some ancestors have |
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deleted simplification rules because they are no longer wanted, |
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while others have left those rules in, then the union will contain |
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the unwanted rules. After this union is formed, changes to |
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a parent simpset have no effect on the child simpset. |
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\end{warn} |
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\section{Simplification sets}\index{simplification sets} |
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The simplifier is controlled by information contained in {\bf |
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simpsets}. These consist of several components, including rewrite |
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rules, simplification procedures, congruence rules, and the subgoaler, |
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solver and looper tactics. The simplifier should be set up with |
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sensible defaults so that most simplifier calls specify only rewrite |
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rules or simplification procedures. Experienced users can exploit the |
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other components to streamline proofs in more sophisticated manners. |
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\subsection{Inspecting simpsets} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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print_ss : simpset -> unit |
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rep_ss : simpset -> \{mss : meta_simpset, |
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subgoal_tac: simpset -> int -> tactic, |
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loop_tacs : (string * (int -> tactic))list, |
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finish_tac : solver list, |
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unsafe_finish_tac : solver list\} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{print_ss} $ss$;] displays the printable contents of |
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simpset $ss$. This includes the rewrite rules and congruences in |
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their internal form expressed as meta-equalities. The names of the |
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simplification procedures and the patterns they are invoked on are |
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also shown. The other parts, functions and tactics, are |
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non-printable. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{rep_ss} $ss$;] decomposes $ss$ as a record of its internal |
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components, namely the meta_simpset, the subgoaler, the loop, and the safe |
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and unsafe solvers. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Building simpsets} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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empty_ss : simpset |
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merge_ss : simpset * simpset -> simpset |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{empty_ss}] is the empty simpset. This is not very useful |
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under normal circumstances because it doesn't contain suitable tactics |
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(subgoaler etc.). When setting up the simplifier for a particular |
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object-logic, one will typically define a more appropriate ``almost empty'' |
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simpset. For example, in HOL this is called \ttindexbold{HOL_basic_ss}. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{merge_ss} ($ss@1$, $ss@2$)] merges simpsets $ss@1$ |
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and $ss@2$ by building the union of their respective rewrite rules, |
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simplification procedures and congruences. The other components |
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(tactics etc.) cannot be merged, though; they are taken from either |
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simpset\footnote{Actually from $ss@1$, but it would unwise to count |
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on that.}. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\subsection{Accessing the current simpset} |
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\label{sec:access-current-simpset} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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simpset : unit -> simpset |
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simpset_ref : unit -> simpset ref |
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simpset_of : theory -> simpset |
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simpset_ref_of : theory -> simpset ref |
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print_simpset : theory -> unit |
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SIMPSET :(simpset -> tactic) -> tactic |
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SIMPSET' :(simpset -> 'a -> tactic) -> 'a -> tactic |
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\end{ttbox} |
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Each theory contains a current simpset\index{simpset!current} stored |
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within a private ML reference variable. This can be retrieved and |
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modified as follows. |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{simpset}();] retrieves the simpset value from the |
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current theory context. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{simpset_ref}();] retrieves the simpset reference |
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variable from the current theory context. This can be assigned to |
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by using \texttt{:=} in ML. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{simpset_of} $thy$;] retrieves the simpset value |
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from theory $thy$. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{simpset_ref_of} $thy$;] retrieves the simpset |
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reference variable from theory $thy$. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{print_simpset} $thy$;] prints the current simpset |
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of theory $thy$ in the same way as \texttt{print_ss}. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{SIMPSET} $tacf$, \ttindexbold{SIMPSET'} $tacf'$] |
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are tacticals that make a tactic depend on the implicit current |
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simpset of the theory associated with the proof state they are |
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applied on. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\begin{warn} |
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There is a small difference between \texttt{(SIMPSET'~$tacf$)} and |
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\texttt{($tacf\,$(simpset()))}. For example \texttt{(SIMPSET' |
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simp_tac)} would depend on the theory of the proof state it is |
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applied to, while \texttt{(simp_tac (simpset()))} implicitly refers |
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to the current theory context. Both are usually the same in proof |
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scripts, provided that goals are only stated within the current |
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theory. Robust programs would not count on that, of course. |
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\end{warn} |
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\subsection{Rewrite rules} |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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addsimps : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
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delsimps : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\index{rewrite rules|(} Rewrite rules are theorems expressing some |
|
332 |
form of equality, for example: |
|
323 | 333 |
\begin{eqnarray*} |
334 |
Suc(\Var{m}) + \Var{n} &=& \Var{m} + Suc(\Var{n}) \\ |
|
335 |
\Var{P}\conj\Var{P} &\bimp& \Var{P} \\ |
|
714 | 336 |
\Var{A} \un \Var{B} &\equiv& \{x.x\in \Var{A} \disj x\in \Var{B}\} |
323 | 337 |
\end{eqnarray*} |
1860
71bfeecfa96c
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diff
changeset
|
338 |
Conditional rewrites such as $\Var{m}<\Var{n} \Imp \Var{m}/\Var{n} = |
4395 | 339 |
0$ are also permitted; the conditions can be arbitrary formulas. |
104 | 340 |
|
4395 | 341 |
Internally, all rewrite rules are translated into meta-equalities, |
342 |
theorems with conclusion $lhs \equiv rhs$. Each simpset contains a |
|
343 |
function for extracting equalities from arbitrary theorems. For |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
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diff
changeset
|
344 |
example, $\neg(\Var{x}\in \{\})$ could be turned into $\Var{x}\in \{\} |
4395 | 345 |
\equiv False$. This function can be installed using |
346 |
\ttindex{setmksimps} but only the definer of a logic should need to do |
|
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diff
changeset
|
347 |
this; see {\S}\ref{sec:setmksimps}. The function processes theorems |
4395 | 348 |
added by \texttt{addsimps} as well as local assumptions. |
104 | 349 |
|
4395 | 350 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
351 |
||
352 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addsimps} $thms$] adds rewrite rules derived |
|
353 |
from $thms$ to the simpset $ss$. |
|
354 |
||
355 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{delsimps} $thms$] deletes rewrite rules |
|
356 |
derived from $thms$ from the simpset $ss$. |
|
357 |
||
358 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
104 | 359 |
|
332 | 360 |
\begin{warn} |
4395 | 361 |
The simplifier will accept all standard rewrite rules: those where |
362 |
all unknowns are of base type. Hence ${\Var{i}+(\Var{j}+\Var{k})} = |
|
363 |
{(\Var{i}+\Var{j})+\Var{k}}$ is OK. |
|
364 |
||
365 |
It will also deal gracefully with all rules whose left-hand sides |
|
366 |
are so-called {\em higher-order patterns}~\cite{nipkow-patterns}. |
|
367 |
\indexbold{higher-order pattern}\indexbold{pattern, higher-order} |
|
368 |
These are terms in $\beta$-normal form (this will always be the case |
|
369 |
unless you have done something strange) where each occurrence of an |
|
370 |
unknown is of the form $\Var{F}(x@1,\dots,x@n)$, where the $x@i$ are |
|
371 |
distinct bound variables. Hence $(\forall x.\Var{P}(x) \land |
|
372 |
\Var{Q}(x)) \bimp (\forall x.\Var{P}(x)) \land (\forall |
|
373 |
x.\Var{Q}(x))$ is also OK, in both directions. |
|
374 |
||
375 |
In some rare cases the rewriter will even deal with quite general |
|
376 |
rules: for example ${\Var{f}(\Var{x})\in range(\Var{f})} = True$ |
|
377 |
rewrites $g(a) \in range(g)$ to $True$, but will fail to match |
|
378 |
$g(h(b)) \in range(\lambda x.g(h(x)))$. However, you can replace |
|
379 |
the offending subterms (in our case $\Var{f}(\Var{x})$, which is not |
|
380 |
a pattern) by adding new variables and conditions: $\Var{y} = |
|
381 |
\Var{f}(\Var{x}) \Imp \Var{y}\in range(\Var{f}) = True$ is |
|
382 |
acceptable as a conditional rewrite rule since conditions can be |
|
383 |
arbitrary terms. |
|
384 |
||
385 |
There is basically no restriction on the form of the right-hand |
|
386 |
sides. They may not contain extraneous term or type variables, |
|
387 |
though. |
|
104 | 388 |
\end{warn} |
332 | 389 |
\index{rewrite rules|)} |
390 |
||
4395 | 391 |
|
4947 | 392 |
\subsection{*Simplification procedures} |
4395 | 393 |
\begin{ttbox} |
394 |
addsimprocs : simpset * simproc list -> simpset |
|
395 |
delsimprocs : simpset * simproc list -> simpset |
|
396 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
397 |
||
4557 | 398 |
Simplification procedures are {\ML} objects of abstract type |
399 |
\texttt{simproc}. Basically they are just functions that may produce |
|
4395 | 400 |
\emph{proven} rewrite rules on demand. They are associated with |
401 |
certain patterns that conceptually represent left-hand sides of |
|
402 |
equations; these are shown by \texttt{print_ss}. During its |
|
403 |
operation, the simplifier may offer a simplification procedure the |
|
404 |
current redex and ask for a suitable rewrite rule. Thus rules may be |
|
405 |
specifically fashioned for particular situations, resulting in a more |
|
406 |
powerful mechanism than term rewriting by a fixed set of rules. |
|
407 |
||
408 |
||
409 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
410 |
||
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|
411 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addsimprocs} $procs$] adds the simplification |
4395 | 412 |
procedures $procs$ to the current simpset. |
413 |
||
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parents:
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changeset
|
414 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{delsimprocs} $procs$] deletes the simplification |
4395 | 415 |
procedures $procs$ from the current simpset. |
416 |
||
417 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
418 |
||
4557 | 419 |
For example, simplification procedures \ttindexbold{nat_cancel} of |
420 |
\texttt{HOL/Arith} cancel common summands and constant factors out of |
|
421 |
several relations of sums over natural numbers. |
|
422 |
||
423 |
Consider the following goal, which after cancelling $a$ on both sides |
|
424 |
contains a factor of $2$. Simplifying with the simpset of |
|
425 |
\texttt{Arith.thy} will do the cancellation automatically: |
|
426 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
427 |
{\out 1. x + a + x < y + y + 2 + a + a + a + a + a} |
|
428 |
by (Simp_tac 1); |
|
429 |
{\out 1. x < Suc (a + (a + y))} |
|
430 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
431 |
||
4395 | 432 |
|
433 |
\subsection{*Congruence rules}\index{congruence rules}\label{sec:simp-congs} |
|
434 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
435 |
addcongs : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
436 |
delcongs : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
437 |
addeqcongs : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
438 |
deleqcongs : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
439 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
440 |
||
104 | 441 |
Congruence rules are meta-equalities of the form |
3108 | 442 |
\[ \dots \Imp |
104 | 443 |
f(\Var{x@1},\ldots,\Var{x@n}) \equiv f(\Var{y@1},\ldots,\Var{y@n}). |
444 |
\] |
|
323 | 445 |
This governs the simplification of the arguments of~$f$. For |
104 | 446 |
example, some arguments can be simplified under additional assumptions: |
447 |
\[ \List{\Var{P@1} \bimp \Var{Q@1};\; \Var{Q@1} \Imp \Var{P@2} \bimp \Var{Q@2}} |
|
448 |
\Imp (\Var{P@1} \imp \Var{P@2}) \equiv (\Var{Q@1} \imp \Var{Q@2}) |
|
449 |
\] |
|
4395 | 450 |
Given this rule, the simplifier assumes $Q@1$ and extracts rewrite |
451 |
rules from it when simplifying~$P@2$. Such local assumptions are |
|
452 |
effective for rewriting formulae such as $x=0\imp y+x=y$. The local |
|
453 |
assumptions are also provided as theorems to the solver; see |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
454 |
{\S}~\ref{sec:simp-solver} below. |
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diff
changeset
|
455 |
|
4395 | 456 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
457 |
||
458 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addcongs} $thms$] adds congruence rules to the |
|
459 |
simpset $ss$. These are derived from $thms$ in an appropriate way, |
|
460 |
depending on the underlying object-logic. |
|
461 |
||
462 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{delcongs} $thms$] deletes congruence rules |
|
463 |
derived from $thms$. |
|
464 |
||
465 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addeqcongs} $thms$] adds congruence rules in |
|
466 |
their internal form (conclusions using meta-equality) to simpset |
|
467 |
$ss$. This is the basic mechanism that \texttt{addcongs} is built |
|
468 |
on. It should be rarely used directly. |
|
469 |
||
470 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{deleqcongs} $thms$] deletes congruence rules |
|
471 |
in internal form from simpset $ss$. |
|
472 |
||
473 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
474 |
||
475 |
\medskip |
|
476 |
||
477 |
Here are some more examples. The congruence rule for bounded |
|
478 |
quantifiers also supplies contextual information, this time about the |
|
479 |
bound variable: |
|
286 | 480 |
\begin{eqnarray*} |
481 |
&&\List{\Var{A}=\Var{B};\; |
|
482 |
\Forall x. x\in \Var{B} \Imp \Var{P}(x) = \Var{Q}(x)} \Imp{} \\ |
|
483 |
&&\qquad\qquad |
|
484 |
(\forall x\in \Var{A}.\Var{P}(x)) = (\forall x\in \Var{B}.\Var{Q}(x)) |
|
485 |
\end{eqnarray*} |
|
323 | 486 |
The congruence rule for conditional expressions can supply contextual |
487 |
information for simplifying the arms: |
|
104 | 488 |
\[ \List{\Var{p}=\Var{q};~ \Var{q} \Imp \Var{a}=\Var{c};~ |
11181
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renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
489 |
\neg\Var{q} \Imp \Var{b}=\Var{d}} \Imp |
104 | 490 |
if(\Var{p},\Var{a},\Var{b}) \equiv if(\Var{q},\Var{c},\Var{d}) |
491 |
\] |
|
698
23734672dc12
updated discussion of congruence rules in first section
lcp
parents:
332
diff
changeset
|
492 |
A congruence rule can also {\em prevent\/} simplification of some arguments. |
104 | 493 |
Here is an alternative congruence rule for conditional expressions: |
494 |
\[ \Var{p}=\Var{q} \Imp |
|
495 |
if(\Var{p},\Var{a},\Var{b}) \equiv if(\Var{q},\Var{a},\Var{b}) |
|
496 |
\] |
|
497 |
Only the first argument is simplified; the others remain unchanged. |
|
498 |
This can make simplification much faster, but may require an extra case split |
|
499 |
to prove the goal. |
|
500 |
||
501 |
||
4395 | 502 |
\subsection{*The subgoaler}\label{sec:simp-subgoaler} |
503 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
7990 | 504 |
setsubgoaler : |
505 |
simpset * (simpset -> int -> tactic) -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
4395 | 506 |
prems_of_ss : simpset -> thm list |
507 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
508 |
||
104 | 509 |
The subgoaler is the tactic used to solve subgoals arising out of |
510 |
conditional rewrite rules or congruence rules. The default should be |
|
4395 | 511 |
simplification itself. Occasionally this strategy needs to be |
512 |
changed. For example, if the premise of a conditional rule is an |
|
513 |
instance of its conclusion, as in $Suc(\Var{m}) < \Var{n} \Imp \Var{m} |
|
514 |
< \Var{n}$, the default strategy could loop. |
|
104 | 515 |
|
4395 | 516 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
517 |
||
518 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{setsubgoaler} $tacf$] sets the subgoaler of |
|
519 |
$ss$ to $tacf$. The function $tacf$ will be applied to the current |
|
520 |
simplifier context expressed as a simpset. |
|
521 |
||
522 |
\item[\ttindexbold{prems_of_ss} $ss$] retrieves the current set of |
|
523 |
premises from simplifier context $ss$. This may be non-empty only |
|
524 |
if the simplifier has been told to utilize local assumptions in the |
|
525 |
first place, e.g.\ if invoked via \texttt{asm_simp_tac}. |
|
526 |
||
527 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
528 |
||
529 |
As an example, consider the following subgoaler: |
|
104 | 530 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4395 | 531 |
fun subgoaler ss = |
532 |
assume_tac ORELSE' |
|
533 |
resolve_tac (prems_of_ss ss) ORELSE' |
|
534 |
asm_simp_tac ss; |
|
104 | 535 |
\end{ttbox} |
4395 | 536 |
This tactic first tries to solve the subgoal by assumption or by |
537 |
resolving with with one of the premises, calling simplification only |
|
538 |
if that fails. |
|
539 |
||
104 | 540 |
|
698
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updated discussion of congruence rules in first section
lcp
parents:
332
diff
changeset
|
541 |
\subsection{*The solver}\label{sec:simp-solver} |
4395 | 542 |
\begin{ttbox} |
7620 | 543 |
mk_solver : string -> (thm list -> int -> tactic) -> solver |
544 |
setSolver : simpset * solver -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
545 |
addSolver : simpset * solver -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
546 |
setSSolver : simpset * solver -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
547 |
addSSolver : simpset * solver -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
4395 | 548 |
\end{ttbox} |
549 |
||
7620 | 550 |
A solver is a tactic that attempts to solve a subgoal after |
4395 | 551 |
simplification. Typically it just proves trivial subgoals such as |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
552 |
\texttt{True} and $t=t$. It could use sophisticated means such as {\tt |
4395 | 553 |
blast_tac}, though that could make simplification expensive. |
7620 | 554 |
To keep things more abstract, solvers are packaged up in type |
555 |
\texttt{solver}. The only way to create a solver is via \texttt{mk_solver}. |
|
286 | 556 |
|
3108 | 557 |
Rewriting does not instantiate unknowns. For example, rewriting |
558 |
cannot prove $a\in \Var{A}$ since this requires |
|
559 |
instantiating~$\Var{A}$. The solver, however, is an arbitrary tactic |
|
560 |
and may instantiate unknowns as it pleases. This is the only way the |
|
561 |
simplifier can handle a conditional rewrite rule whose condition |
|
3485
f27a30a18a17
Now there are TWO spaces after each full stop, so that the Emacs sentence
paulson
parents:
3134
diff
changeset
|
562 |
contains extra variables. When a simplification tactic is to be |
3108 | 563 |
combined with other provers, especially with the classical reasoner, |
4395 | 564 |
it is important whether it can be considered safe or not. For this |
7620 | 565 |
reason a simpset contains two solvers, a safe and an unsafe one. |
2628
1fe7c9f599c2
description of del(eq)congs, safe and unsafe solver
oheimb
parents:
2613
diff
changeset
|
566 |
|
3108 | 567 |
The standard simplification strategy solely uses the unsafe solver, |
4395 | 568 |
which is appropriate in most cases. For special applications where |
3108 | 569 |
the simplification process is not allowed to instantiate unknowns |
4395 | 570 |
within the goal, simplification starts with the safe solver, but may |
571 |
still apply the ordinary unsafe one in nested simplifications for |
|
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
572 |
conditional rules or congruences. Note that in this way the overall |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
573 |
tactic is not totally safe: it may instantiate unknowns that appear also |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
574 |
in other subgoals. |
4395 | 575 |
|
576 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
7620 | 577 |
\item[\ttindexbold{mk_solver} $s$ $tacf$] converts $tacf$ into a new solver; |
578 |
the string $s$ is only attached as a comment and has no other significance. |
|
579 |
||
4395 | 580 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{setSSolver} $tacf$] installs $tacf$ as the |
581 |
\emph{safe} solver of $ss$. |
|
582 |
||
583 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addSSolver} $tacf$] adds $tacf$ as an |
|
584 |
additional \emph{safe} solver; it will be tried after the solvers |
|
585 |
which had already been present in $ss$. |
|
586 |
||
587 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{setSolver} $tacf$] installs $tacf$ as the |
|
588 |
unsafe solver of $ss$. |
|
589 |
||
590 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addSolver} $tacf$] adds $tacf$ as an |
|
591 |
additional unsafe solver; it will be tried after the solvers which |
|
592 |
had already been present in $ss$. |
|
323 | 593 |
|
4395 | 594 |
\end{ttdescription} |
595 |
||
596 |
\medskip |
|
104 | 597 |
|
4395 | 598 |
\index{assumptions!in simplification} The solver tactic is invoked |
599 |
with a list of theorems, namely assumptions that hold in the local |
|
600 |
context. This may be non-empty only if the simplifier has been told |
|
601 |
to utilize local assumptions in the first place, e.g.\ if invoked via |
|
602 |
\texttt{asm_simp_tac}. The solver is also presented the full goal |
|
603 |
including its assumptions in any case. Thus it can use these (e.g.\ |
|
604 |
by calling \texttt{assume_tac}), even if the list of premises is not |
|
605 |
passed. |
|
606 |
||
607 |
\medskip |
|
608 |
||
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
609 |
As explained in {\S}\ref{sec:simp-subgoaler}, the subgoaler is also used |
4395 | 610 |
to solve the premises of congruence rules. These are usually of the |
611 |
form $s = \Var{x}$, where $s$ needs to be simplified and $\Var{x}$ |
|
612 |
needs to be instantiated with the result. Typically, the subgoaler |
|
613 |
will invoke the simplifier at some point, which will eventually call |
|
614 |
the solver. For this reason, solver tactics must be prepared to solve |
|
615 |
goals of the form $t = \Var{x}$, usually by reflexivity. In |
|
616 |
particular, reflexivity should be tried before any of the fancy |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
617 |
tactics like \texttt{blast_tac}. |
323 | 618 |
|
3108 | 619 |
It may even happen that due to simplification the subgoal is no longer |
620 |
an equality. For example $False \bimp \Var{Q}$ could be rewritten to |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
621 |
$\neg\Var{Q}$. To cover this case, the solver could try resolving |
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
622 |
with the theorem $\neg False$. |
104 | 623 |
|
4395 | 624 |
\medskip |
625 |
||
104 | 626 |
\begin{warn} |
13938 | 627 |
If a premise of a congruence rule cannot be proved, then the |
628 |
congruence is ignored. This should only happen if the rule is |
|
629 |
\emph{conditional} --- that is, contains premises not of the form $t |
|
630 |
= \Var{x}$; otherwise it indicates that some congruence rule, or |
|
631 |
possibly the subgoaler or solver, is faulty. |
|
104 | 632 |
\end{warn} |
633 |
||
323 | 634 |
|
4395 | 635 |
\subsection{*The looper}\label{sec:simp-looper} |
636 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
5549 | 637 |
setloop : simpset * (int -> tactic) -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
638 |
addloop : simpset * (string * (int -> tactic)) -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
639 |
delloop : simpset * string -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
4395 | 640 |
addsplits : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
5549 | 641 |
delsplits : simpset * thm list -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
4395 | 642 |
\end{ttbox} |
643 |
||
5549 | 644 |
The looper is a list of tactics that are applied after simplification, in case |
4395 | 645 |
the solver failed to solve the simplified goal. If the looper |
646 |
succeeds, the simplification process is started all over again. Each |
|
647 |
of the subgoals generated by the looper is attacked in turn, in |
|
648 |
reverse order. |
|
649 |
||
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
650 |
A typical looper is \index{case splitting}: the expansion of a conditional. |
4395 | 651 |
Another possibility is to apply an elimination rule on the |
652 |
assumptions. More adventurous loopers could start an induction. |
|
653 |
||
654 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
655 |
||
5549 | 656 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{setloop} $tacf$] installs $tacf$ as the only looper |
657 |
tactic of $ss$. |
|
4395 | 658 |
|
5549 | 659 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addloop} $(name,tacf)$] adds $tacf$ as an additional |
660 |
looper tactic with name $name$; it will be tried after the looper tactics |
|
661 |
that had already been present in $ss$. |
|
662 |
||
663 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{delloop} $name$] deletes the looper tactic $name$ |
|
664 |
from $ss$. |
|
4395 | 665 |
|
666 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addsplits} $thms$] adds |
|
5549 | 667 |
split tactics for $thms$ as additional looper tactics of $ss$. |
668 |
||
669 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{addsplits} $thms$] deletes the |
|
670 |
split tactics for $thms$ from the looper tactics of $ss$. |
|
4395 | 671 |
|
672 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
673 |
||
5549 | 674 |
The splitter replaces applications of a given function; the right-hand side |
675 |
of the replacement can be anything. For example, here is a splitting rule |
|
676 |
for conditional expressions: |
|
677 |
\[ \Var{P}(if(\Var{Q},\Var{x},\Var{y})) \bimp (\Var{Q} \imp \Var{P}(\Var{x})) |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
678 |
\conj (\neg\Var{Q} \imp \Var{P}(\Var{y})) |
5549 | 679 |
\] |
8136 | 680 |
Another example is the elimination operator for Cartesian products (which |
681 |
happens to be called~$split$): |
|
5549 | 682 |
\[ \Var{P}(split(\Var{f},\Var{p})) \bimp (\forall a~b. \Var{p} = |
683 |
\langle a,b\rangle \imp \Var{P}(\Var{f}(a,b))) |
|
684 |
\] |
|
685 |
||
686 |
For technical reasons, there is a distinction between case splitting in the |
|
687 |
conclusion and in the premises of a subgoal. The former is done by |
|
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
688 |
\texttt{split_tac} with rules like \texttt{split_if} or \texttt{option.split}, |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
689 |
which do not split the subgoal, while the latter is done by |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
690 |
\texttt{split_asm_tac} with rules like \texttt{split_if_asm} or |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
691 |
\texttt{option.split_asm}, which split the subgoal. |
5549 | 692 |
The operator \texttt{addsplits} automatically takes care of which tactic to |
693 |
call, analyzing the form of the rules given as argument. |
|
694 |
\begin{warn} |
|
695 |
Due to \texttt{split_asm_tac}, the simplifier may split subgoals! |
|
696 |
\end{warn} |
|
697 |
||
698 |
Case splits should be allowed only when necessary; they are expensive |
|
699 |
and hard to control. Here is an example of use, where \texttt{split_if} |
|
700 |
is the first rule above: |
|
701 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
8136 | 702 |
by (simp_tac (simpset() |
703 |
addloop ("split if", split_tac [split_if])) 1); |
|
5549 | 704 |
\end{ttbox} |
5776 | 705 |
Users would usually prefer the following shortcut using \texttt{addsplits}: |
5549 | 706 |
\begin{ttbox} |
707 |
by (simp_tac (simpset() addsplits [split_if]) 1); |
|
708 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
8136 | 709 |
Case-splitting on conditional expressions is usually beneficial, so it is |
710 |
enabled by default in the object-logics \texttt{HOL} and \texttt{FOL}. |
|
104 | 711 |
|
712 |
||
4395 | 713 |
\section{The simplification tactics}\label{simp-tactics} |
714 |
\index{simplification!tactics}\index{tactics!simplification} |
|
715 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
716 |
generic_simp_tac : bool -> bool * bool * bool -> |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
717 |
simpset -> int -> tactic |
4395 | 718 |
simp_tac : simpset -> int -> tactic |
719 |
asm_simp_tac : simpset -> int -> tactic |
|
720 |
full_simp_tac : simpset -> int -> tactic |
|
721 |
asm_full_simp_tac : simpset -> int -> tactic |
|
722 |
safe_asm_full_simp_tac : simpset -> int -> tactic |
|
723 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
2567 | 724 |
|
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
725 |
\texttt{generic_simp_tac} is the basic tactic that is underlying any actual |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
726 |
simplification work. The others are just instantiations of it. The rewriting |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
727 |
strategy is always strictly bottom up, except for congruence rules, |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
728 |
which are applied while descending into a term. Conditions in conditional |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
729 |
rewrite rules are solved recursively before the rewrite rule is applied. |
104 | 730 |
|
4395 | 731 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
732 |
||
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
733 |
\item[\ttindexbold{generic_simp_tac} $safe$ ($simp\_asm$, $use\_asm$, $mutual$)] |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
734 |
gives direct access to the various simplification modes: |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
735 |
\begin{itemize} |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
736 |
\item if $safe$ is {\tt true}, the safe solver is used as explained in |
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
737 |
{\S}\ref{sec:simp-solver}, |
9398
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
738 |
\item $simp\_asm$ determines whether the local assumptions are simplified, |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
739 |
\item $use\_asm$ determines whether the assumptions are used as local rewrite |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
740 |
rules, and |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
741 |
\item $mutual$ determines whether assumptions can simplify each other rather |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
742 |
than being processed from left to right. |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
743 |
\end{itemize} |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
744 |
This generic interface is intended |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
745 |
for building special tools, e.g.\ for combining the simplifier with the |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
746 |
classical reasoner. It is rarely used directly. |
0ee9b2819155
removed safe_asm_full_simp_tac, added generic_simp_tac
oheimb
parents:
8136
diff
changeset
|
747 |
|
4395 | 748 |
\item[\ttindexbold{simp_tac}, \ttindexbold{asm_simp_tac}, |
749 |
\ttindexbold{full_simp_tac}, \ttindexbold{asm_full_simp_tac}] are |
|
750 |
the basic simplification tactics that work exactly like their |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
751 |
namesakes in {\S}\ref{sec:simp-for-dummies}, except that they are |
4395 | 752 |
explicitly supplied with a simpset. |
753 |
||
754 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
104 | 755 |
|
4395 | 756 |
\medskip |
104 | 757 |
|
4395 | 758 |
Local modifications of simpsets within a proof are often much cleaner |
759 |
by using above tactics in conjunction with explicit simpsets, rather |
|
760 |
than their capitalized counterparts. For example |
|
1213 | 761 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1860
71bfeecfa96c
Documented simplification tactics which make use of the implicit simpset.
nipkow
parents:
1387
diff
changeset
|
762 |
Addsimps \(thms\); |
2479 | 763 |
by (Simp_tac \(i\)); |
1860
71bfeecfa96c
Documented simplification tactics which make use of the implicit simpset.
nipkow
parents:
1387
diff
changeset
|
764 |
Delsimps \(thms\); |
71bfeecfa96c
Documented simplification tactics which make use of the implicit simpset.
nipkow
parents:
1387
diff
changeset
|
765 |
\end{ttbox} |
4395 | 766 |
can be expressed more appropriately as |
1860
71bfeecfa96c
Documented simplification tactics which make use of the implicit simpset.
nipkow
parents:
1387
diff
changeset
|
767 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4395 | 768 |
by (simp_tac (simpset() addsimps \(thms\)) \(i\)); |
1213 | 769 |
\end{ttbox} |
1860
71bfeecfa96c
Documented simplification tactics which make use of the implicit simpset.
nipkow
parents:
1387
diff
changeset
|
770 |
|
4395 | 771 |
\medskip |
772 |
||
773 |
Also note that functions depending implicitly on the current theory |
|
774 |
context (like capital \texttt{Simp_tac} and the other commands of |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
775 |
{\S}\ref{sec:simp-for-dummies}) should be considered harmful outside of |
4395 | 776 |
actual proof scripts. In particular, ML programs like theory |
777 |
definition packages or special tactics should refer to simpsets only |
|
778 |
explicitly, via the above tactics used in conjunction with |
|
779 |
\texttt{simpset_of} or the \texttt{SIMPSET} tacticals. |
|
780 |
||
1860
71bfeecfa96c
Documented simplification tactics which make use of the implicit simpset.
nipkow
parents:
1387
diff
changeset
|
781 |
|
5370 | 782 |
\section{Forward rules and conversions} |
783 |
\index{simplification!forward rules}\index{simplification!conversions} |
|
784 |
\begin{ttbox}\index{*simplify}\index{*asm_simplify}\index{*full_simplify}\index{*asm_full_simplify}\index{*Simplifier.rewrite}\index{*Simplifier.asm_rewrite}\index{*Simplifier.full_rewrite}\index{*Simplifier.asm_full_rewrite} |
|
4395 | 785 |
simplify : simpset -> thm -> thm |
786 |
asm_simplify : simpset -> thm -> thm |
|
787 |
full_simplify : simpset -> thm -> thm |
|
5370 | 788 |
asm_full_simplify : simpset -> thm -> thm\medskip |
789 |
Simplifier.rewrite : simpset -> cterm -> thm |
|
790 |
Simplifier.asm_rewrite : simpset -> cterm -> thm |
|
791 |
Simplifier.full_rewrite : simpset -> cterm -> thm |
|
792 |
Simplifier.asm_full_rewrite : simpset -> cterm -> thm |
|
4395 | 793 |
\end{ttbox} |
794 |
||
5370 | 795 |
The first four of these functions provide \emph{forward} rules for |
796 |
simplification. Their effect is analogous to the corresponding |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
797 |
tactics described in {\S}\ref{simp-tactics}, but affect the whole |
5370 | 798 |
theorem instead of just a certain subgoal. Also note that the |
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
799 |
looper~/ solver process as described in {\S}\ref{sec:simp-looper} and |
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
800 |
{\S}\ref{sec:simp-solver} is omitted in forward simplification. |
5370 | 801 |
|
802 |
The latter four are \emph{conversions}, establishing proven equations |
|
803 |
of the form $t \equiv u$ where the l.h.s.\ $t$ has been given as |
|
804 |
argument. |
|
4395 | 805 |
|
806 |
\begin{warn} |
|
5370 | 807 |
Forward simplification rules and conversions should be used rarely |
808 |
in ordinary proof scripts. The main intention is to provide an |
|
809 |
internal interface to the simplifier for special utilities. |
|
4395 | 810 |
\end{warn} |
811 |
||
812 |
||
7990 | 813 |
\section{Examples of using the Simplifier} |
3112 | 814 |
\index{examples!of simplification} Assume we are working within {\tt |
5205 | 815 |
FOL} (see the file \texttt{FOL/ex/Nat}) and that |
323 | 816 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
817 |
\item[Nat.thy] |
|
818 |
is a theory including the constants $0$, $Suc$ and $+$, |
|
819 |
\item[add_0] |
|
820 |
is the rewrite rule $0+\Var{n} = \Var{n}$, |
|
821 |
\item[add_Suc] |
|
822 |
is the rewrite rule $Suc(\Var{m})+\Var{n} = Suc(\Var{m}+\Var{n})$, |
|
823 |
\item[induct] |
|
824 |
is the induction rule $\List{\Var{P}(0);\; \Forall x. \Var{P}(x)\Imp |
|
825 |
\Var{P}(Suc(x))} \Imp \Var{P}(\Var{n})$. |
|
826 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
4395 | 827 |
We augment the implicit simpset inherited from \texttt{Nat} with the |
4557 | 828 |
basic rewrite rules for addition of natural numbers: |
104 | 829 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3112 | 830 |
Addsimps [add_0, add_Suc]; |
104 | 831 |
\end{ttbox} |
323 | 832 |
|
833 |
\subsection{A trivial example} |
|
286 | 834 |
Proofs by induction typically involve simplification. Here is a proof |
835 |
that~0 is a right identity: |
|
104 | 836 |
\begin{ttbox} |
5205 | 837 |
Goal "m+0 = m"; |
104 | 838 |
{\out Level 0} |
839 |
{\out m + 0 = m} |
|
840 |
{\out 1. m + 0 = m} |
|
286 | 841 |
\end{ttbox} |
842 |
The first step is to perform induction on the variable~$m$. This returns a |
|
843 |
base case and inductive step as two subgoals: |
|
844 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
104 | 845 |
by (res_inst_tac [("n","m")] induct 1); |
846 |
{\out Level 1} |
|
847 |
{\out m + 0 = m} |
|
848 |
{\out 1. 0 + 0 = 0} |
|
849 |
{\out 2. !!x. x + 0 = x ==> Suc(x) + 0 = Suc(x)} |
|
850 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
286 | 851 |
Simplification solves the first subgoal trivially: |
104 | 852 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3112 | 853 |
by (Simp_tac 1); |
104 | 854 |
{\out Level 2} |
855 |
{\out m + 0 = m} |
|
856 |
{\out 1. !!x. x + 0 = x ==> Suc(x) + 0 = Suc(x)} |
|
857 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
3112 | 858 |
The remaining subgoal requires \ttindex{Asm_simp_tac} in order to use the |
104 | 859 |
induction hypothesis as a rewrite rule: |
860 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
3112 | 861 |
by (Asm_simp_tac 1); |
104 | 862 |
{\out Level 3} |
863 |
{\out m + 0 = m} |
|
864 |
{\out No subgoals!} |
|
865 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
866 |
||
323 | 867 |
\subsection{An example of tracing} |
3108 | 868 |
\index{tracing!of simplification|(}\index{*trace_simp} |
4557 | 869 |
|
870 |
Let us prove a similar result involving more complex terms. We prove |
|
871 |
that addition is commutative. |
|
104 | 872 |
\begin{ttbox} |
5205 | 873 |
Goal "m+Suc(n) = Suc(m+n)"; |
104 | 874 |
{\out Level 0} |
875 |
{\out m + Suc(n) = Suc(m + n)} |
|
876 |
{\out 1. m + Suc(n) = Suc(m + n)} |
|
286 | 877 |
\end{ttbox} |
4557 | 878 |
Performing induction on~$m$ yields two subgoals: |
286 | 879 |
\begin{ttbox} |
104 | 880 |
by (res_inst_tac [("n","m")] induct 1); |
881 |
{\out Level 1} |
|
882 |
{\out m + Suc(n) = Suc(m + n)} |
|
883 |
{\out 1. 0 + Suc(n) = Suc(0 + n)} |
|
286 | 884 |
{\out 2. !!x. x + Suc(n) = Suc(x + n) ==>} |
885 |
{\out Suc(x) + Suc(n) = Suc(Suc(x) + n)} |
|
886 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
887 |
Simplification solves the first subgoal, this time rewriting two |
|
888 |
occurrences of~0: |
|
889 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
3112 | 890 |
by (Simp_tac 1); |
104 | 891 |
{\out Level 2} |
892 |
{\out m + Suc(n) = Suc(m + n)} |
|
286 | 893 |
{\out 1. !!x. x + Suc(n) = Suc(x + n) ==>} |
894 |
{\out Suc(x) + Suc(n) = Suc(Suc(x) + n)} |
|
104 | 895 |
\end{ttbox} |
896 |
Switching tracing on illustrates how the simplifier solves the remaining |
|
897 |
subgoal: |
|
898 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
4395 | 899 |
set trace_simp; |
3112 | 900 |
by (Asm_simp_tac 1); |
323 | 901 |
\ttbreak |
3112 | 902 |
{\out Adding rewrite rule:} |
5370 | 903 |
{\out .x + Suc n == Suc (.x + n)} |
323 | 904 |
\ttbreak |
5370 | 905 |
{\out Applying instance of rewrite rule:} |
906 |
{\out ?m + Suc ?n == Suc (?m + ?n)} |
|
104 | 907 |
{\out Rewriting:} |
5370 | 908 |
{\out Suc .x + Suc n == Suc (Suc .x + n)} |
323 | 909 |
\ttbreak |
5370 | 910 |
{\out Applying instance of rewrite rule:} |
911 |
{\out Suc ?m + ?n == Suc (?m + ?n)} |
|
104 | 912 |
{\out Rewriting:} |
5370 | 913 |
{\out Suc .x + n == Suc (.x + n)} |
323 | 914 |
\ttbreak |
5370 | 915 |
{\out Applying instance of rewrite rule:} |
916 |
{\out Suc ?m + ?n == Suc (?m + ?n)} |
|
104 | 917 |
{\out Rewriting:} |
5370 | 918 |
{\out Suc .x + n == Suc (.x + n)} |
3112 | 919 |
\ttbreak |
5370 | 920 |
{\out Applying instance of rewrite rule:} |
921 |
{\out ?x = ?x == True} |
|
3112 | 922 |
{\out Rewriting:} |
5370 | 923 |
{\out Suc (Suc (.x + n)) = Suc (Suc (.x + n)) == True} |
323 | 924 |
\ttbreak |
104 | 925 |
{\out Level 3} |
926 |
{\out m + Suc(n) = Suc(m + n)} |
|
927 |
{\out No subgoals!} |
|
928 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
286 | 929 |
Many variations are possible. At Level~1 (in either example) we could have |
930 |
solved both subgoals at once using the tactical \ttindex{ALLGOALS}: |
|
104 | 931 |
\begin{ttbox} |
3112 | 932 |
by (ALLGOALS Asm_simp_tac); |
104 | 933 |
{\out Level 2} |
934 |
{\out m + Suc(n) = Suc(m + n)} |
|
935 |
{\out No subgoals!} |
|
936 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
3108 | 937 |
\index{tracing!of simplification|)} |
104 | 938 |
|
4557 | 939 |
|
323 | 940 |
\subsection{Free variables and simplification} |
4557 | 941 |
|
942 |
Here is a conjecture to be proved for an arbitrary function~$f$ |
|
943 |
satisfying the law $f(Suc(\Var{n})) = Suc(f(\Var{n}))$: |
|
104 | 944 |
\begin{ttbox} |
8136 | 945 |
val [prem] = Goal |
946 |
"(!!n. f(Suc(n)) = Suc(f(n))) ==> f(i+j) = i+f(j)"; |
|
104 | 947 |
{\out Level 0} |
948 |
{\out f(i + j) = i + f(j)} |
|
949 |
{\out 1. f(i + j) = i + f(j)} |
|
323 | 950 |
\ttbreak |
286 | 951 |
{\out val prem = "f(Suc(?n)) = Suc(f(?n))} |
952 |
{\out [!!n. f(Suc(n)) = Suc(f(n))]" : thm} |
|
323 | 953 |
\end{ttbox} |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
954 |
In the theorem~\texttt{prem}, note that $f$ is a free variable while |
323 | 955 |
$\Var{n}$ is a schematic variable. |
956 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
104 | 957 |
by (res_inst_tac [("n","i")] induct 1); |
958 |
{\out Level 1} |
|
959 |
{\out f(i + j) = i + f(j)} |
|
960 |
{\out 1. f(0 + j) = 0 + f(j)} |
|
961 |
{\out 2. !!x. f(x + j) = x + f(j) ==> f(Suc(x) + j) = Suc(x) + f(j)} |
|
962 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
963 |
We simplify each subgoal in turn. The first one is trivial: |
|
964 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
3112 | 965 |
by (Simp_tac 1); |
104 | 966 |
{\out Level 2} |
967 |
{\out f(i + j) = i + f(j)} |
|
968 |
{\out 1. !!x. f(x + j) = x + f(j) ==> f(Suc(x) + j) = Suc(x) + f(j)} |
|
969 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
3112 | 970 |
The remaining subgoal requires rewriting by the premise, so we add it |
4395 | 971 |
to the current simpset: |
104 | 972 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4395 | 973 |
by (asm_simp_tac (simpset() addsimps [prem]) 1); |
104 | 974 |
{\out Level 3} |
975 |
{\out f(i + j) = i + f(j)} |
|
976 |
{\out No subgoals!} |
|
977 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
978 |
||
286 | 979 |
|
332 | 980 |
\section{Permutative rewrite rules} |
323 | 981 |
\index{rewrite rules!permutative|(} |
982 |
||
983 |
A rewrite rule is {\bf permutative} if the left-hand side and right-hand |
|
984 |
side are the same up to renaming of variables. The most common permutative |
|
985 |
rule is commutativity: $x+y = y+x$. Other examples include $(x-y)-z = |
|
986 |
(x-z)-y$ in arithmetic and $insert(x,insert(y,A)) = insert(y,insert(x,A))$ |
|
987 |
for sets. Such rules are common enough to merit special attention. |
|
988 |
||
4395 | 989 |
Because ordinary rewriting loops given such rules, the simplifier |
990 |
employs a special strategy, called {\bf ordered |
|
991 |
rewriting}\index{rewriting!ordered}. There is a standard |
|
992 |
lexicographic ordering on terms. This should be perfectly OK in most |
|
993 |
cases, but can be changed for special applications. |
|
994 |
||
4947 | 995 |
\begin{ttbox} |
996 |
settermless : simpset * (term * term -> bool) -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
997 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
4395 | 998 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
999 |
||
1000 |
\item[$ss$ \ttindexbold{settermless} $rel$] installs relation $rel$ as |
|
1001 |
term order in simpset $ss$. |
|
1002 |
||
1003 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
1004 |
||
1005 |
\medskip |
|
323 | 1006 |
|
4395 | 1007 |
A permutative rewrite rule is applied only if it decreases the given |
1008 |
term with respect to this ordering. For example, commutativity |
|
1009 |
rewrites~$b+a$ to $a+b$, but then stops because $a+b$ is strictly less |
|
1010 |
than $b+a$. The Boyer-Moore theorem prover~\cite{bm88book} also |
|
1011 |
employs ordered rewriting. |
|
1012 |
||
1013 |
Permutative rewrite rules are added to simpsets just like other |
|
1014 |
rewrite rules; the simplifier recognizes their special status |
|
1015 |
automatically. They are most effective in the case of |
|
1016 |
associative-commutative operators. (Associativity by itself is not |
|
1017 |
permutative.) When dealing with an AC-operator~$f$, keep the |
|
1018 |
following points in mind: |
|
323 | 1019 |
\begin{itemize}\index{associative-commutative operators} |
4395 | 1020 |
|
1021 |
\item The associative law must always be oriented from left to right, |
|
1022 |
namely $f(f(x,y),z) = f(x,f(y,z))$. The opposite orientation, if |
|
1023 |
used with commutativity, leads to looping in conjunction with the |
|
1024 |
standard term order. |
|
323 | 1025 |
|
1026 |
\item To complete your set of rewrite rules, you must add not just |
|
1027 |
associativity~(A) and commutativity~(C) but also a derived rule, {\bf |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1028 |
left-com\-mut\-ativ\-ity} (LC): $f(x,f(y,z)) = f(y,f(x,z))$. |
323 | 1029 |
\end{itemize} |
1030 |
Ordered rewriting with the combination of A, C, and~LC sorts a term |
|
1031 |
lexicographically: |
|
1032 |
\[\def\maps#1{\stackrel{#1}{\longmapsto}} |
|
1033 |
(b+c)+a \maps{A} b+(c+a) \maps{C} b+(a+c) \maps{LC} a+(b+c) \] |
|
1034 |
Martin and Nipkow~\cite{martin-nipkow} discuss the theory and give many |
|
1035 |
examples; other algebraic structures are amenable to ordered rewriting, |
|
1036 |
such as boolean rings. |
|
1037 |
||
3108 | 1038 |
\subsection{Example: sums of natural numbers} |
4395 | 1039 |
|
9695 | 1040 |
This example is again set in HOL (see \texttt{HOL/ex/NatSum}). Theory |
1041 |
\thydx{Arith} contains natural numbers arithmetic. Its associated simpset |
|
1042 |
contains many arithmetic laws including distributivity of~$\times$ over~$+$, |
|
1043 |
while \texttt{add_ac} is a list consisting of the A, C and LC laws for~$+$ on |
|
1044 |
type \texttt{nat}. Let us prove the theorem |
|
323 | 1045 |
\[ \sum@{i=1}^n i = n\times(n+1)/2. \] |
1046 |
% |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1047 |
A functional~\texttt{sum} represents the summation operator under the |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1048 |
interpretation $\texttt{sum} \, f \, (n + 1) = \sum@{i=0}^n f\,i$. We |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1049 |
extend \texttt{Arith} as follows: |
323 | 1050 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1051 |
NatSum = Arith + |
|
1387 | 1052 |
consts sum :: [nat=>nat, nat] => nat |
9445
6c93b1eb11f8
Corrected example which still used old primrec syntax.
berghofe
parents:
9398
diff
changeset
|
1053 |
primrec |
4245 | 1054 |
"sum f 0 = 0" |
1055 |
"sum f (Suc n) = f(n) + sum f n" |
|
323 | 1056 |
end |
1057 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
4245 | 1058 |
The \texttt{primrec} declaration automatically adds rewrite rules for |
4557 | 1059 |
\texttt{sum} to the default simpset. We now remove the |
1060 |
\texttt{nat_cancel} simplification procedures (in order not to spoil |
|
1061 |
the example) and insert the AC-rules for~$+$: |
|
323 | 1062 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4557 | 1063 |
Delsimprocs nat_cancel; |
4245 | 1064 |
Addsimps add_ac; |
323 | 1065 |
\end{ttbox} |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1066 |
Our desired theorem now reads $\texttt{sum} \, (\lambda i.i) \, (n+1) = |
323 | 1067 |
n\times(n+1)/2$. The Isabelle goal has both sides multiplied by~$2$: |
1068 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
5205 | 1069 |
Goal "2 * sum (\%i.i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n"; |
323 | 1070 |
{\out Level 0} |
3108 | 1071 |
{\out 2 * sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n} |
1072 |
{\out 1. 2 * sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n} |
|
323 | 1073 |
\end{ttbox} |
3108 | 1074 |
Induction should not be applied until the goal is in the simplest |
1075 |
form: |
|
323 | 1076 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4245 | 1077 |
by (Simp_tac 1); |
323 | 1078 |
{\out Level 1} |
3108 | 1079 |
{\out 2 * sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n} |
1080 |
{\out 1. n + (sum (\%i. i) n + sum (\%i. i) n) = n * n} |
|
323 | 1081 |
\end{ttbox} |
3108 | 1082 |
Ordered rewriting has sorted the terms in the left-hand side. The |
1083 |
subgoal is now ready for induction: |
|
323 | 1084 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4245 | 1085 |
by (induct_tac "n" 1); |
323 | 1086 |
{\out Level 2} |
3108 | 1087 |
{\out 2 * sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n} |
1088 |
{\out 1. 0 + (sum (\%i. i) 0 + sum (\%i. i) 0) = 0 * 0} |
|
323 | 1089 |
\ttbreak |
4245 | 1090 |
{\out 2. !!n. n + (sum (\%i. i) n + sum (\%i. i) n) = n * n} |
8136 | 1091 |
{\out ==> Suc n + (sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) + sum (\%i.\,i) (Suc n)) =} |
4245 | 1092 |
{\out Suc n * Suc n} |
323 | 1093 |
\end{ttbox} |
1094 |
Simplification proves both subgoals immediately:\index{*ALLGOALS} |
|
1095 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
4245 | 1096 |
by (ALLGOALS Asm_simp_tac); |
323 | 1097 |
{\out Level 3} |
3108 | 1098 |
{\out 2 * sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n} |
323 | 1099 |
{\out No subgoals!} |
1100 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1101 |
Simplification cannot prove the induction step if we omit \texttt{add_ac} from |
4245 | 1102 |
the simpset. Observe that like terms have not been collected: |
323 | 1103 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4245 | 1104 |
{\out Level 3} |
1105 |
{\out 2 * sum (\%i. i) (Suc n) = n * Suc n} |
|
1106 |
{\out 1. !!n. n + sum (\%i. i) n + (n + sum (\%i. i) n) = n + n * n} |
|
8136 | 1107 |
{\out ==> n + (n + sum (\%i. i) n) + (n + (n + sum (\%i.\,i) n)) =} |
4245 | 1108 |
{\out n + (n + (n + n * n))} |
323 | 1109 |
\end{ttbox} |
1110 |
Ordered rewriting proves this by sorting the left-hand side. Proving |
|
1111 |
arithmetic theorems without ordered rewriting requires explicit use of |
|
1112 |
commutativity. This is tedious; try it and see! |
|
1113 |
||
1114 |
Ordered rewriting is equally successful in proving |
|
1115 |
$\sum@{i=1}^n i^3 = n^2\times(n+1)^2/4$. |
|
1116 |
||
1117 |
||
1118 |
\subsection{Re-orienting equalities} |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1119 |
Ordered rewriting with the derived rule \texttt{symmetry} can reverse |
4557 | 1120 |
equations: |
323 | 1121 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1122 |
val symmetry = prove_goal HOL.thy "(x=y) = (y=x)" |
|
3128
d01d4c0c4b44
New acknowledgements; fixed overfull lines and tables
paulson
parents:
3112
diff
changeset
|
1123 |
(fn _ => [Blast_tac 1]); |
323 | 1124 |
\end{ttbox} |
1125 |
This is frequently useful. Assumptions of the form $s=t$, where $t$ occurs |
|
1126 |
in the conclusion but not~$s$, can often be brought into the right form. |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1127 |
For example, ordered rewriting with \texttt{symmetry} can prove the goal |
323 | 1128 |
\[ f(a)=b \conj f(a)=c \imp b=c. \] |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1129 |
Here \texttt{symmetry} reverses both $f(a)=b$ and $f(a)=c$ |
323 | 1130 |
because $f(a)$ is lexicographically greater than $b$ and~$c$. These |
1131 |
re-oriented equations, as rewrite rules, replace $b$ and~$c$ in the |
|
1132 |
conclusion by~$f(a)$. |
|
1133 |
||
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
1134 |
Another example is the goal $\neg(t=u) \imp \neg(u=t)$. |
323 | 1135 |
The differing orientations make this appear difficult to prove. Ordered |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1136 |
rewriting with \texttt{symmetry} makes the equalities agree. (Without |
323 | 1137 |
knowing more about~$t$ and~$u$ we cannot say whether they both go to $t=u$ |
1138 |
or~$u=t$.) Then the simplifier can prove the goal outright. |
|
1139 |
||
1140 |
\index{rewrite rules!permutative|)} |
|
1141 |
||
1142 |
||
4395 | 1143 |
\section{*Coding simplification procedures} |
1144 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
13474 | 1145 |
val Simplifier.simproc: Sign.sg -> string -> string list |
15027 | 1146 |
-> (Sign.sg -> simpset -> term -> thm option) -> simproc |
13474 | 1147 |
val Simplifier.simproc_i: Sign.sg -> string -> term list |
15027 | 1148 |
-> (Sign.sg -> simpset -> term -> thm option) -> simproc |
4395 | 1149 |
\end{ttbox} |
1150 |
||
1151 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
13477 | 1152 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Simplifier.simproc}~$sign$~$name$~$lhss$~$proc$] makes |
1153 |
$proc$ a simplification procedure for left-hand side patterns $lhss$. The |
|
1154 |
name just serves as a comment. The function $proc$ may be invoked by the |
|
1155 |
simplifier for redex positions matched by one of $lhss$ as described below |
|
1156 |
(which are be specified as strings to be read as terms). |
|
1157 |
||
1158 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Simplifier.simproc_i}] is similar to |
|
1159 |
\verb,Simplifier.simproc,, but takes well-typed terms as pattern argument. |
|
4395 | 1160 |
\end{ttdescription} |
1161 |
||
1162 |
Simplification procedures are applied in a two-stage process as |
|
1163 |
follows: The simplifier tries to match the current redex position |
|
1164 |
against any one of the $lhs$ patterns of any simplification procedure. |
|
1165 |
If this succeeds, it invokes the corresponding {\ML} function, passing |
|
1166 |
with the current signature, local assumptions and the (potential) |
|
1167 |
redex. The result may be either \texttt{None} (indicating failure) or |
|
1168 |
\texttt{Some~$thm$}. |
|
1169 |
||
1170 |
Any successful result is supposed to be a (possibly conditional) |
|
1171 |
rewrite rule $t \equiv u$ that is applicable to the current redex. |
|
1172 |
The rule will be applied just as any ordinary rewrite rule. It is |
|
1173 |
expected to be already in \emph{internal form}, though, bypassing the |
|
1174 |
automatic preprocessing of object-level equivalences. |
|
1175 |
||
1176 |
\medskip |
|
1177 |
||
1178 |
As an example of how to write your own simplification procedures, |
|
1179 |
consider eta-expansion of pair abstraction (see also |
|
1180 |
\texttt{HOL/Modelcheck/MCSyn} where this is used to provide external |
|
1181 |
model checker syntax). |
|
1182 |
||
9695 | 1183 |
The HOL theory of tuples (see \texttt{HOL/Prod}) provides an operator |
1184 |
\texttt{split} together with some concrete syntax supporting |
|
1185 |
$\lambda\,(x,y).b$ abstractions. Assume that we would like to offer a tactic |
|
1186 |
that rewrites any function $\lambda\,p.f\,p$ (where $p$ is of some pair type) |
|
1187 |
to $\lambda\,(x,y).f\,(x,y)$. The corresponding rule is: |
|
4395 | 1188 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1189 |
pair_eta_expand: (f::'a*'b=>'c) = (\%(x, y). f (x, y)) |
|
1190 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1191 |
Unfortunately, term rewriting using this rule directly would not |
|
1192 |
terminate! We now use the simplification procedure mechanism in order |
|
1193 |
to stop the simplifier from applying this rule over and over again, |
|
1194 |
making it rewrite only actual abstractions. The simplification |
|
1195 |
procedure \texttt{pair_eta_expand_proc} is defined as follows: |
|
1196 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
13474 | 1197 |
val pair_eta_expand_proc = |
13477 | 1198 |
Simplifier.simproc (Theory.sign_of (the_context ())) |
1199 |
"pair_eta_expand" ["f::'a*'b=>'c"] |
|
1200 |
(fn _ => fn _ => fn t => |
|
1201 |
case t of Abs _ => Some (mk_meta_eq pair_eta_expand) |
|
1202 |
| _ => None); |
|
4395 | 1203 |
\end{ttbox} |
1204 |
This is an example of using \texttt{pair_eta_expand_proc}: |
|
1205 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
1206 |
{\out 1. P (\%p::'a * 'a. fst p + snd p + z)} |
|
1207 |
by (simp_tac (simpset() addsimprocs [pair_eta_expand_proc]) 1); |
|
1208 |
{\out 1. P (\%(x::'a,y::'a). x + y + z)} |
|
1209 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1210 |
||
1211 |
\medskip |
|
1212 |
||
1213 |
In the above example the simplification procedure just did fine |
|
1214 |
grained control over rule application, beyond higher-order pattern |
|
1215 |
matching. Usually, procedures would do some more work, in particular |
|
1216 |
prove particular theorems depending on the current redex. |
|
1217 |
||
1218 |
||
7990 | 1219 |
\section{*Setting up the Simplifier}\label{sec:setting-up-simp} |
323 | 1220 |
\index{simplification!setting up} |
286 | 1221 |
|
9712 | 1222 |
Setting up the simplifier for new logics is complicated in the general case. |
1223 |
This section describes how the simplifier is installed for intuitionistic |
|
1224 |
first-order logic; the code is largely taken from {\tt FOL/simpdata.ML} of the |
|
1225 |
Isabelle sources. |
|
286 | 1226 |
|
16019 | 1227 |
The case splitting tactic, which resides on a separate files, is not part of |
1228 |
Pure Isabelle. It needs to be loaded explicitly by the object-logic as |
|
1229 |
follows (below \texttt{\~\relax\~\relax} refers to \texttt{\$ISABELLE_HOME}): |
|
286 | 1230 |
\begin{ttbox} |
6569 | 1231 |
use "\~\relax\~\relax/src/Provers/splitter.ML"; |
286 | 1232 |
\end{ttbox} |
1233 |
||
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1234 |
Simplification requires converting object-equalities to meta-level rewrite |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1235 |
rules. This demands rules stating that equal terms and equivalent formulae |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1236 |
are also equal at the meta-level. The rule declaration part of the file |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1237 |
\texttt{FOL/IFOL.thy} contains the two lines |
323 | 1238 |
\begin{ttbox}\index{*eq_reflection theorem}\index{*iff_reflection theorem} |
286 | 1239 |
eq_reflection "(x=y) ==> (x==y)" |
1240 |
iff_reflection "(P<->Q) ==> (P==Q)" |
|
1241 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
323 | 1242 |
Of course, you should only assert such rules if they are true for your |
286 | 1243 |
particular logic. In Constructive Type Theory, equality is a ternary |
4395 | 1244 |
relation of the form $a=b\in A$; the type~$A$ determines the meaning |
1245 |
of the equality essentially as a partial equivalence relation. The |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1246 |
present simplifier cannot be used. Rewriting in \texttt{CTT} uses |
4395 | 1247 |
another simplifier, which resides in the file {\tt |
1248 |
Provers/typedsimp.ML} and is not documented. Even this does not |
|
1249 |
work for later variants of Constructive Type Theory that use |
|
323 | 1250 |
intensional equality~\cite{nordstrom90}. |
286 | 1251 |
|
1252 |
||
1253 |
\subsection{A collection of standard rewrite rules} |
|
4557 | 1254 |
|
1255 |
We first prove lots of standard rewrite rules about the logical |
|
1256 |
connectives. These include cancellation and associative laws. We |
|
1257 |
define a function that echoes the desired law and then supplies it the |
|
9695 | 1258 |
prover for intuitionistic FOL: |
286 | 1259 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1260 |
fun int_prove_fun s = |
|
1261 |
(writeln s; |
|
1262 |
prove_goal IFOL.thy s |
|
1263 |
(fn prems => [ (cut_facts_tac prems 1), |
|
4395 | 1264 |
(IntPr.fast_tac 1) ])); |
286 | 1265 |
\end{ttbox} |
1266 |
The following rewrite rules about conjunction are a selection of those |
|
4597
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Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1267 |
proved on \texttt{FOL/simpdata.ML}. Later, these will be supplied to the |
286 | 1268 |
standard simpset. |
1269 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
4395 | 1270 |
val conj_simps = map int_prove_fun |
286 | 1271 |
["P & True <-> P", "True & P <-> P", |
1272 |
"P & False <-> False", "False & P <-> False", |
|
1273 |
"P & P <-> P", |
|
1274 |
"P & ~P <-> False", "~P & P <-> False", |
|
1275 |
"(P & Q) & R <-> P & (Q & R)"]; |
|
1276 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1277 |
The file also proves some distributive laws. As they can cause exponential |
|
1278 |
blowup, they will not be included in the standard simpset. Instead they |
|
323 | 1279 |
are merely bound to an \ML{} identifier, for user reference. |
286 | 1280 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4395 | 1281 |
val distrib_simps = map int_prove_fun |
286 | 1282 |
["P & (Q | R) <-> P&Q | P&R", |
1283 |
"(Q | R) & P <-> Q&P | R&P", |
|
1284 |
"(P | Q --> R) <-> (P --> R) & (Q --> R)"]; |
|
1285 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1286 |
||
1287 |
||
1288 |
\subsection{Functions for preprocessing the rewrite rules} |
|
323 | 1289 |
\label{sec:setmksimps} |
4395 | 1290 |
\begin{ttbox}\indexbold{*setmksimps} |
1291 |
setmksimps : simpset * (thm -> thm list) -> simpset \hfill{\bf infix 4} |
|
1292 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
286 | 1293 |
The next step is to define the function for preprocessing rewrite rules. |
4597
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Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1294 |
This will be installed by calling \texttt{setmksimps} below. Preprocessing |
286 | 1295 |
occurs whenever rewrite rules are added, whether by user command or |
1296 |
automatically. Preprocessing involves extracting atomic rewrites at the |
|
1297 |
object-level, then reflecting them to the meta-level. |
|
1298 |
||
12725 | 1299 |
To start, the function \texttt{gen_all} strips any meta-level |
12717 | 1300 |
quantifiers from the front of the given theorem. |
5549 | 1301 |
|
4597
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Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1302 |
The function \texttt{atomize} analyses a theorem in order to extract |
286 | 1303 |
atomic rewrite rules. The head of all the patterns, matched by the |
4597
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1304 |
wildcard~\texttt{_}, is the coercion function \texttt{Trueprop}. |
286 | 1305 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1306 |
fun atomize th = case concl_of th of |
|
1307 |
_ $ (Const("op &",_) $ _ $ _) => atomize(th RS conjunct1) \at |
|
1308 |
atomize(th RS conjunct2) |
|
1309 |
| _ $ (Const("op -->",_) $ _ $ _) => atomize(th RS mp) |
|
1310 |
| _ $ (Const("All",_) $ _) => atomize(th RS spec) |
|
1311 |
| _ $ (Const("True",_)) => [] |
|
1312 |
| _ $ (Const("False",_)) => [] |
|
1313 |
| _ => [th]; |
|
1314 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
1315 |
There are several cases, depending upon the form of the conclusion: |
|
1316 |
\begin{itemize} |
|
1317 |
\item Conjunction: extract rewrites from both conjuncts. |
|
1318 |
\item Implication: convert $P\imp Q$ to the meta-implication $P\Imp Q$ and |
|
1319 |
extract rewrites from~$Q$; these will be conditional rewrites with the |
|
1320 |
condition~$P$. |
|
1321 |
\item Universal quantification: remove the quantifier, replacing the bound |
|
1322 |
variable by a schematic variable, and extract rewrites from the body. |
|
4597
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Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1323 |
\item \texttt{True} and \texttt{False} contain no useful rewrites. |
286 | 1324 |
\item Anything else: return the theorem in a singleton list. |
1325 |
\end{itemize} |
|
1326 |
The resulting theorems are not literally atomic --- they could be |
|
5549 | 1327 |
disjunctive, for example --- but are broken down as much as possible. |
1328 |
See the file \texttt{ZF/simpdata.ML} for a sophisticated translation of |
|
1329 |
set-theoretic formulae into rewrite rules. |
|
1330 |
||
1331 |
For standard situations like the above, |
|
1332 |
there is a generic auxiliary function \ttindexbold{mk_atomize} that takes a |
|
1333 |
list of pairs $(name, thms)$, where $name$ is an operator name and |
|
1334 |
$thms$ is a list of theorems to resolve with in case the pattern matches, |
|
1335 |
and returns a suitable \texttt{atomize} function. |
|
1336 |
||
104 | 1337 |
|
286 | 1338 |
The simplified rewrites must now be converted into meta-equalities. The |
4597
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Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1339 |
rule \texttt{eq_reflection} converts equality rewrites, while {\tt |
286 | 1340 |
iff_reflection} converts if-and-only-if rewrites. The latter possibility |
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
1341 |
can arise in two other ways: the negative theorem~$\neg P$ is converted to |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1342 |
$P\equiv\texttt{False}$, and any other theorem~$P$ is converted to |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1343 |
$P\equiv\texttt{True}$. The rules \texttt{iff_reflection_F} and {\tt |
286 | 1344 |
iff_reflection_T} accomplish this conversion. |
1345 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
1346 |
val P_iff_F = int_prove_fun "~P ==> (P <-> False)"; |
|
1347 |
val iff_reflection_F = P_iff_F RS iff_reflection; |
|
1348 |
\ttbreak |
|
1349 |
val P_iff_T = int_prove_fun "P ==> (P <-> True)"; |
|
1350 |
val iff_reflection_T = P_iff_T RS iff_reflection; |
|
1351 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
5549 | 1352 |
The function \texttt{mk_eq} converts a theorem to a meta-equality |
286 | 1353 |
using the case analysis described above. |
1354 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
5549 | 1355 |
fun mk_eq th = case concl_of th of |
286 | 1356 |
_ $ (Const("op =",_)$_$_) => th RS eq_reflection |
1357 |
| _ $ (Const("op <->",_)$_$_) => th RS iff_reflection |
|
1358 |
| _ $ (Const("Not",_)$_) => th RS iff_reflection_F |
|
1359 |
| _ => th RS iff_reflection_T; |
|
1360 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
11162
9e2ec5f02217
debugging: replaced gen_all by forall_elim_vars_safe
oheimb
parents:
9712
diff
changeset
|
1361 |
The |
12725 | 1362 |
three functions \texttt{gen_all}, \texttt{atomize} and \texttt{mk_eq} |
5549 | 1363 |
will be composed together and supplied below to \texttt{setmksimps}. |
286 | 1364 |
|
1365 |
||
1366 |
\subsection{Making the initial simpset} |
|
4395 | 1367 |
|
9712 | 1368 |
It is time to assemble these items. The list \texttt{IFOL_simps} contains the |
1369 |
default rewrite rules for intuitionistic first-order logic. The first of |
|
1370 |
these is the reflexive law expressed as the equivalence |
|
1371 |
$(a=a)\bimp\texttt{True}$; the rewrite rule $a=a$ is clearly useless. |
|
4395 | 1372 |
\begin{ttbox} |
1373 |
val IFOL_simps = |
|
1374 |
[refl RS P_iff_T] \at conj_simps \at disj_simps \at not_simps \at |
|
1375 |
imp_simps \at iff_simps \at quant_simps; |
|
286 | 1376 |
\end{ttbox} |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1377 |
The list \texttt{triv_rls} contains trivial theorems for the solver. Any |
286 | 1378 |
subgoal that is simplified to one of these will be removed. |
1379 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
1380 |
val notFalseI = int_prove_fun "~False"; |
|
1381 |
val triv_rls = [TrueI,refl,iff_refl,notFalseI]; |
|
1382 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
9712 | 1383 |
We also define the function \ttindex{mk_meta_cong} to convert the conclusion |
1384 |
of congruence rules into meta-equalities. |
|
1385 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
1386 |
fun mk_meta_cong rl = standard (mk_meta_eq (mk_meta_prems rl)); |
|
1387 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
323 | 1388 |
% |
9695 | 1389 |
The basic simpset for intuitionistic FOL is \ttindexbold{FOL_basic_ss}. It |
11162
9e2ec5f02217
debugging: replaced gen_all by forall_elim_vars_safe
oheimb
parents:
9712
diff
changeset
|
1390 |
preprocess rewrites using |
12725 | 1391 |
{\tt gen_all}, \texttt{atomize} and \texttt{mk_eq}. |
9695 | 1392 |
It solves simplified subgoals using \texttt{triv_rls} and assumptions, and by |
1393 |
detecting contradictions. It uses \ttindex{asm_simp_tac} to tackle subgoals |
|
1394 |
of conditional rewrites. |
|
4395 | 1395 |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1396 |
Other simpsets built from \texttt{FOL_basic_ss} will inherit these items. |
4395 | 1397 |
In particular, \ttindexbold{IFOL_ss}, which introduces {\tt |
1398 |
IFOL_simps} as rewrite rules. \ttindexbold{FOL_ss} will later |
|
11181
d04f57b91166
renamed addaltern to addafter, addSaltern to addSafter
oheimb
parents:
11162
diff
changeset
|
1399 |
extend \texttt{IFOL_ss} with classical rewrite rules such as $\neg\neg |
4395 | 1400 |
P\bimp P$. |
2628
1fe7c9f599c2
description of del(eq)congs, safe and unsafe solver
oheimb
parents:
2613
diff
changeset
|
1401 |
\index{*setmksimps}\index{*setSSolver}\index{*setSolver}\index{*setsubgoaler} |
286 | 1402 |
\index{*addsimps}\index{*addcongs} |
1403 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
4395 | 1404 |
fun unsafe_solver prems = FIRST'[resolve_tac (triv_rls {\at} prems), |
2628
1fe7c9f599c2
description of del(eq)congs, safe and unsafe solver
oheimb
parents:
2613
diff
changeset
|
1405 |
atac, etac FalseE]; |
4395 | 1406 |
|
8136 | 1407 |
fun safe_solver prems = FIRST'[match_tac (triv_rls {\at} prems), |
1408 |
eq_assume_tac, ematch_tac [FalseE]]; |
|
4395 | 1409 |
|
9712 | 1410 |
val FOL_basic_ss = |
8136 | 1411 |
empty_ss setsubgoaler asm_simp_tac |
1412 |
addsimprocs [defALL_regroup, defEX_regroup] |
|
1413 |
setSSolver safe_solver |
|
1414 |
setSolver unsafe_solver |
|
12725 | 1415 |
setmksimps (map mk_eq o atomize o gen_all) |
9712 | 1416 |
setmkcong mk_meta_cong; |
4395 | 1417 |
|
8136 | 1418 |
val IFOL_ss = |
1419 |
FOL_basic_ss addsimps (IFOL_simps {\at} |
|
1420 |
int_ex_simps {\at} int_all_simps) |
|
1421 |
addcongs [imp_cong]; |
|
286 | 1422 |
\end{ttbox} |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1423 |
This simpset takes \texttt{imp_cong} as a congruence rule in order to use |
286 | 1424 |
contextual information to simplify the conclusions of implications: |
1425 |
\[ \List{\Var{P}\bimp\Var{P'};\; \Var{P'} \Imp \Var{Q}\bimp\Var{Q'}} \Imp |
|
1426 |
(\Var{P}\imp\Var{Q}) \bimp (\Var{P'}\imp\Var{Q'}) |
|
1427 |
\] |
|
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4560
diff
changeset
|
1428 |
By adding the congruence rule \texttt{conj_cong}, we could obtain a similar |
286 | 1429 |
effect for conjunctions. |
1430 |
||
1431 |
||
5549 | 1432 |
\subsection{Splitter setup}\index{simplification!setting up the splitter} |
4557 | 1433 |
|
5549 | 1434 |
To set up case splitting, we have to call the \ML{} functor \ttindex{ |
1435 |
SplitterFun}, which takes the argument signature \texttt{SPLITTER_DATA}. |
|
1436 |
So we prove the theorem \texttt{meta_eq_to_iff} below and store it, together |
|
1437 |
with the \texttt{mk_eq} function described above and several standard |
|
1438 |
theorems, in the structure \texttt{SplitterData}. Calling the functor with |
|
1439 |
this data yields a new instantiation of the splitter for our logic. |
|
286 | 1440 |
\begin{ttbox} |
5549 | 1441 |
val meta_eq_to_iff = prove_goal IFOL.thy "x==y ==> x<->y" |
1442 |
(fn [prem] => [rewtac prem, rtac iffI 1, atac 1, atac 1]); |
|
286 | 1443 |
\ttbreak |
5549 | 1444 |
structure SplitterData = |
1445 |
struct |
|
1446 |
structure Simplifier = Simplifier |
|
1447 |
val mk_eq = mk_eq |
|
1448 |
val meta_eq_to_iff = meta_eq_to_iff |
|
1449 |
val iffD = iffD2 |
|
1450 |
val disjE = disjE |
|
1451 |
val conjE = conjE |
|
1452 |
val exE = exE |
|
1453 |
val contrapos = contrapos |
|
1454 |
val contrapos2 = contrapos2 |
|
1455 |
val notnotD = notnotD |
|
1456 |
end; |
|
1457 |
\ttbreak |
|
1458 |
structure Splitter = SplitterFun(SplitterData); |
|
286 | 1459 |
\end{ttbox} |
1460 |
||
104 | 1461 |
|
1462 |
\index{simplification|)} |
|
5370 | 1463 |
|
1464 |
||
1465 |
%%% Local Variables: |
|
1466 |
%%% mode: latex |
|
1467 |
%%% TeX-master: "ref" |
|
1468 |
%%% End: |