author | haftmann |
Sun, 16 Oct 2016 09:31:03 +0200 | |
changeset 64238 | b60a9752b6d0 |
parent 63680 | 6e1e8b5abbfa |
child 69597 | ff784d5a5bfb |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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theory Eq |
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imports Base |
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begin |
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chapter \<open>Equational reasoning\<close> |
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text \<open> |
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Equality is one of the most fundamental concepts of mathematics. The |
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Isabelle/Pure logic (\chref{ch:logic}) provides a builtin relation \<open>\<equiv> :: \<alpha> \<Rightarrow> |
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\<alpha> \<Rightarrow> prop\<close> that expresses equality of arbitrary terms (or propositions) at |
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the framework level, as expressed by certain basic inference rules |
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(\secref{sec:eq-rules}). |
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Equational reasoning means to replace equals by equals, using reflexivity |
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and transitivity to form chains of replacement steps, and congruence rules |
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to access sub-structures. Conversions (\secref{sec:conv}) provide a |
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convenient framework to compose basic equational steps to build specific |
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equational reasoning tools. |
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Higher-order matching is able to provide suitable instantiations for giving |
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equality rules, which leads to the versatile concept of \<open>\<lambda>\<close>-term rewriting |
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(\secref{sec:rewriting}). Internally this is based on the general-purpose |
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Simplifier engine of Isabelle, which is more specific and more efficient |
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than plain conversions. |
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Object-logics usually introduce specific notions of equality or equivalence, |
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and relate it with the Pure equality. This enables to re-use the Pure tools |
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for equational reasoning for particular object-logic connectives as well. |
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\<close> |
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section \<open>Basic equality rules \label{sec:eq-rules}\<close> |
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text \<open> |
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Isabelle/Pure uses \<open>\<equiv>\<close> for equality of arbitrary terms, which includes |
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equivalence of propositions of the logical framework. The conceptual |
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axiomatization of the constant \<open>\<equiv> :: \<alpha> \<Rightarrow> \<alpha> \<Rightarrow> prop\<close> is given in |
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\figref{fig:pure-equality}. The inference kernel presents slightly different |
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equality rules, which may be understood as derived rules from this minimal |
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axiomatization. The Pure theory also provides some theorems that express the |
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same reasoning schemes as theorems that can be composed like object-level |
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rules as explained in \secref{sec:obj-rules}. |
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For example, @{ML Thm.symmetric} as Pure inference is an ML function that |
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maps a theorem \<open>th\<close> stating \<open>t \<equiv> u\<close> to one stating \<open>u \<equiv> t\<close>. In contrast, |
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@{thm [source] Pure.symmetric} as Pure theorem expresses the same reasoning |
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in declarative form. If used like \<open>th [THEN Pure.symmetric]\<close> in Isar source |
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notation, it achieves a similar effect as the ML inference function, |
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although the rule attribute @{attribute THEN} or ML operator @{ML "op RS"} |
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involve the full machinery of higher-order unification (modulo |
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\<open>\<beta>\<eta>\<close>-conversion) and lifting of \<open>\<And>/\<Longrightarrow>\<close> contexts. |
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\<close> |
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text %mlref \<open> |
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\begin{mldecls} |
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@{index_ML Thm.reflexive: "cterm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML Thm.symmetric: "thm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML Thm.transitive: "thm -> thm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML Thm.abstract_rule: "string -> cterm -> thm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML Thm.combination: "thm -> thm -> thm"} \\[0.5ex] |
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@{index_ML Thm.equal_intr: "thm -> thm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML Thm.equal_elim: "thm -> thm -> thm"} \\ |
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\end{mldecls} |
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See also \<^file>\<open>~~/src/Pure/thm.ML\<close> for further description of these inference |
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rules, and a few more for primitive \<open>\<beta>\<close> and \<open>\<eta>\<close> conversions. Note that \<open>\<alpha>\<close> |
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conversion is implicit due to the representation of terms with de-Bruijn |
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indices (\secref{sec:terms}). |
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\<close> |
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section \<open>Conversions \label{sec:conv}\<close> |
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text \<open> |
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%FIXME |
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The classic article that introduces the concept of conversion (for Cambridge |
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LCF) is @{cite "paulson:1983"}. |
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\<close> |
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section \<open>Rewriting \label{sec:rewriting}\<close> |
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text \<open> |
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Rewriting normalizes a given term (theorem or goal) by replacing instances |
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of given equalities \<open>t \<equiv> u\<close> in subterms. Rewriting continues until no |
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rewrites are applicable to any subterm. This may be used to unfold simple |
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definitions of the form \<open>f x\<^sub>1 \<dots> x\<^sub>n \<equiv> u\<close>, but is slightly more general than |
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that. \<close> |
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text %mlref \<open> |
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\begin{mldecls} |
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@{index_ML rewrite_rule: "Proof.context -> thm list -> thm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML rewrite_goals_rule: "Proof.context -> thm list -> thm -> thm"} \\ |
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@{index_ML rewrite_goal_tac: "Proof.context -> thm list -> int -> tactic"} \\ |
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@{index_ML rewrite_goals_tac: "Proof.context -> thm list -> tactic"} \\ |
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@{index_ML fold_goals_tac: "Proof.context -> thm list -> tactic"} \\ |
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\end{mldecls} |
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\<^descr> @{ML rewrite_rule}~\<open>ctxt rules thm\<close> rewrites the whole theorem by the |
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given rules. |
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\<^descr> @{ML rewrite_goals_rule}~\<open>ctxt rules thm\<close> rewrites the outer premises of |
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the given theorem. Interpreting the same as a goal state |
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(\secref{sec:tactical-goals}) it means to rewrite all subgoals (in the same |
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manner as @{ML rewrite_goals_tac}). |
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\<^descr> @{ML rewrite_goal_tac}~\<open>ctxt rules i\<close> rewrites subgoal \<open>i\<close> by the given |
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rewrite rules. |
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\<^descr> @{ML rewrite_goals_tac}~\<open>ctxt rules\<close> rewrites all subgoals by the given |
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rewrite rules. |
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\<^descr> @{ML fold_goals_tac}~\<open>ctxt rules\<close> essentially uses @{ML rewrite_goals_tac} |
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with the symmetric form of each member of \<open>rules\<close>, re-ordered to fold longer |
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expression first. This supports to idea to fold primitive definitions that |
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appear in expended form in the proof state. |
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\<close> |
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end |