author | haftmann |
Wed, 14 Feb 2007 10:07:17 +0100 | |
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parent 19627 | b07c46e67e2d |
child 30184 | 37969710e61f |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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%% $Id$ |
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\chapter{Theories, Terms and Types} \label{theories} |
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\index{theories|(}\index{signatures|bold} |
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\index{reading!axioms|see{\texttt{assume_ax}}} Theories organize the syntax, |
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declarations and axioms of a mathematical development. They are built, |
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starting from the Pure or CPure theory, by extending and merging existing |
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theories. They have the \ML\ type \mltydx{theory}. Theory operations signal |
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errors by raising exception \xdx{THEORY}, returning a message and a list of |
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theories. |
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Signatures, which contain information about sorts, types, constants and |
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syntax, have the \ML\ type~\mltydx{Sign.sg}. For identification, each |
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signature carries a unique list of \bfindex{stamps}, which are \ML\ |
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references to strings. The strings serve as human-readable names; the |
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references serve as unique identifiers. Each primitive signature has a |
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single stamp. When two signatures are merged, their lists of stamps are |
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also merged. Every theory carries a unique signature. |
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Terms and types are the underlying representation of logical syntax. Their |
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\ML\ definitions are irrelevant to naive Isabelle users. Programmers who |
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wish to extend Isabelle may need to know such details, say to code a tactic |
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that looks for subgoals of a particular form. Terms and types may be |
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`certified' to be well-formed with respect to a given signature. |
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\section{Defining theories}\label{sec:ref-defining-theories} |
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Theories are defined via theory files $name$\texttt{.thy} (there are also |
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\ML-level interfaces which are only intended for people building advanced |
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theory definition packages). Appendix~\ref{app:TheorySyntax} presents the |
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concrete syntax for theory files; here follows an explanation of the |
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constituent parts. |
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\begin{description} |
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\item[{\it theoryDef}] is the full definition. The new theory is called $id$. |
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It is the union of the named \textbf{parent |
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theories}\indexbold{theories!parent}, possibly extended with new |
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components. \thydx{Pure} and \thydx{CPure} are the basic theories, which |
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contain only the meta-logic. They differ just in their concrete syntax for |
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function applications. |
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The new theory begins as a merge of its parents. |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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Attempt to merge different versions of theories: "\(T@1\)", \(\ldots\), "\(T@n\)" |
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\end{ttbox} |
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This error may especially occur when a theory is redeclared --- say to |
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change an inappropriate definition --- and bindings to old versions persist. |
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Isabelle ensures that old and new theories of the same name are not involved |
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in a proof. |
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\item[$classes$] |
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is a series of class declarations. Declaring {\tt$id$ < $id@1$ \dots\ |
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$id@n$} makes $id$ a subclass of the existing classes $id@1\dots |
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id@n$. This rules out cyclic class structures. Isabelle automatically |
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computes the transitive closure of subclass hierarchies; it is not |
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necessary to declare \texttt{c < e} in addition to \texttt{c < d} and \texttt{d < |
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e}. |
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\item[$default$] |
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introduces $sort$ as the new default sort for type variables. This applies |
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to unconstrained type variables in an input string but not to type |
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variables created internally. If omitted, the default sort is the listwise |
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union of the default sorts of the parent theories (i.e.\ their logical |
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intersection). |
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\item[$sort$] is a finite set of classes. A single class $id$ abbreviates the |
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sort $\{id\}$. |
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\item[$types$] |
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is a series of type declarations. Each declares a new type constructor |
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or type synonym. An $n$-place type constructor is specified by |
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$(\alpha@1,\dots,\alpha@n)name$, where the type variables serve only to |
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indicate the number~$n$. |
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A \textbf{type synonym}\indexbold{type synonyms} is an abbreviation |
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$(\alpha@1,\dots,\alpha@n)name = \tau$, where $name$ and $\tau$ can |
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be strings. |
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\item[$infix$] |
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declares a type or constant to be an infix operator having priority $nat$ |
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and associating to the left (\texttt{infixl}) or right (\texttt{infixr}). |
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Only 2-place type constructors can have infix status; an example is {\tt |
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('a,'b)~"*"~(infixr~20)}, which may express binary product types. |
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\item[$arities$] is a series of type arity declarations. Each assigns |
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arities to type constructors. The $name$ must be an existing type |
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constructor, which is given the additional arity $arity$. |
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\item[$nonterminals$]\index{*nonterminal symbols} declares purely |
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syntactic types to be used as nonterminal symbols of the context |
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free grammar. |
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\item[$consts$] is a series of constant declarations. Each new |
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constant $name$ is given the specified type. The optional $mixfix$ |
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annotations may attach concrete syntax to the constant. |
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\item[$syntax$] \index{*syntax section}\index{print mode} is a variant |
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of $consts$ which adds just syntax without actually declaring |
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logical constants. This gives full control over a theory's context |
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free grammar. The optional $mode$ specifies the print mode where the |
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mixfix productions should be added. If there is no \texttt{output} |
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option given, all productions are also added to the input syntax |
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(regardless of the print mode). |
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\item[$mixfix$] \index{mixfix declarations} |
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annotations can take three forms: |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item A mixfix template given as a $string$ of the form |
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{\tt"}\dots{\tt\_}\dots{\tt\_}\dots{\tt"} where the $i$-th underscore |
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indicates the position where the $i$-th argument should go. The list |
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of numbers gives the priority of each argument. The final number gives |
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the priority of the whole construct. |
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\item A constant $f$ of type $\tau@1\To(\tau@2\To\tau)$ can be given {\bf |
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infix} status. |
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\item A constant $f$ of type $(\tau@1\To\tau@2)\To\tau$ can be given {\bf |
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binder} status. The declaration \texttt{binder} $\cal Q$ $p$ causes |
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${\cal Q}\,x.F(x)$ to be treated |
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like $f(F)$, where $p$ is the priority. |
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\end{itemize} |
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\item[$trans$] |
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specifies syntactic translation rules (macros). There are three forms: |
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parse rules (\texttt{=>}), print rules (\texttt{<=}), and parse/print rules ({\tt |
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==}). |
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\item[$rules$] |
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is a series of rule declarations. Each has a name $id$ and the formula is |
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given by the $string$. Rule names must be distinct within any single |
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theory. |
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\item[$defs$] is a series of definitions. They are just like $rules$, except |
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that every $string$ must be a definition (see below for details). |
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\item[$constdefs$] combines the declaration of constants and their |
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definition. The first $string$ is the type, the second the definition. |
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\item[$axclass$] \index{*axclass section} defines an \rmindex{axiomatic type |
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class} \cite{Wenzel:1997:TPHOL} as the intersection of existing classes, |
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with additional axioms holding. Class axioms may not contain more than one |
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type variable. The class axioms (with implicit sort constraints added) are |
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bound to the given names. Furthermore a class introduction rule is |
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generated, which is automatically employed by $instance$ to prove |
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instantiations of this class. |
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\item[$instance$] \index{*instance section} proves class inclusions or |
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type arities at the logical level and then transfers these to the |
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type signature. The instantiation is proven and checked properly. |
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The user has to supply sufficient witness information: theorems |
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($longident$), axioms ($string$), or even arbitrary \ML{} tactic |
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code $verbatim$. |
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\item[$oracle$] links the theory to a trusted external reasoner. It is |
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allowed to create theorems, but each theorem carries a proof object |
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describing the oracle invocation. See \S\ref{sec:oracles} for details. |
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\item[$local$, $global$] change the current name declaration mode. |
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Initially, theories start in $local$ mode, causing all names of |
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types, constants, axioms etc.\ to be automatically qualified by the |
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theory name. Changing this to $global$ causes all names to be |
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declared as short base names only. |
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The $local$ and $global$ declarations act like switches, affecting |
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all following theory sections until changed again explicitly. Also |
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note that the final state at the end of the theory will persist. In |
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particular, this determines how the names of theorems stored later |
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on are handled. |
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\item[$setup$]\index{*setup!theory} applies a list of ML functions to |
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the theory. The argument should denote a value of type |
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\texttt{(theory -> theory) list}. Typically, ML packages are |
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initialized in this way. |
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\item[$ml$] \index{*ML section} |
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consists of \ML\ code, typically for parse and print translation functions. |
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\end{description} |
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Chapters~\ref{Defining-Logics} and \ref{chap:syntax} explain mixfix |
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declarations, translation rules and the \texttt{ML} section in more detail. |
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\subsection{*Classes and arities} |
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\index{classes!context conditions}\index{arities!context conditions} |
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In order to guarantee principal types~\cite{nipkow-prehofer}, |
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arity declarations must obey two conditions: |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item There must not be any two declarations $ty :: (\vec{r})c$ and |
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$ty :: (\vec{s})c$ with $\vec{r} \neq \vec{s}$. For example, this |
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excludes the following: |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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arities |
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foo :: (\{logic{\}}) logic |
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foo :: (\{{\}})logic |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\item If there are two declarations $ty :: (s@1,\dots,s@n)c$ and $ty :: |
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(s@1',\dots,s@n')c'$ such that $c' < c$ then $s@i' \preceq s@i$ must hold |
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for $i=1,\dots,n$. The relationship $\preceq$, defined as |
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\[ s' \preceq s \iff \forall c\in s. \exists c'\in s'.~ c'\le c, \] |
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expresses that the set of types represented by $s'$ is a subset of the |
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set of types represented by $s$. Assuming $term \preceq logic$, the |
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following is forbidden: |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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arities |
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foo :: (\{logic{\}})logic |
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foo :: (\{{\}})term |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\end{itemize} |
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\section{The theory loader}\label{sec:more-theories} |
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\index{theories!reading}\index{files!reading} |
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Isabelle's theory loader manages dependencies of the internal graph of theory |
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nodes (the \emph{theory database}) and the external view of the file system. |
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See \S\ref{sec:intro-theories} for its most basic commands, such as |
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\texttt{use_thy}. There are a few more operations available. |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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use_thy_only : string -> unit |
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update_thy_only : string -> unit |
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touch_thy : string -> unit |
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remove_thy : string -> unit |
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delete_tmpfiles : bool ref \hfill\textbf{initially true} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{use_thy_only} "$name$";] is similar to \texttt{use_thy}, |
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but processes the actual theory file $name$\texttt{.thy} only, ignoring |
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$name$\texttt{.ML}. This might be useful in replaying proof scripts by hand |
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from the very beginning, starting with the fresh theory. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{update_thy_only} "$name$";] is similar to |
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\texttt{update_thy}, but processes the actual theory file |
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$name$\texttt{.thy} only, ignoring $name$\texttt{.ML}. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{touch_thy} "$name$";] marks theory node $name$ of the |
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internal graph as outdated. While the theory remains usable, subsequent |
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operations such as \texttt{use_thy} may cause a reload. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{remove_thy} "$name$";] deletes theory node $name$, |
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including \emph{all} of its descendants. Beware! This is a quick way to |
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dispose a large number of theories at once. Note that {\ML} bindings to |
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theorems etc.\ of removed theories may still persist. |
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\item[reset \ttindexbold{delete_tmpfiles};] processing theory files usually |
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involves temporary {\ML} files to be created. By default, these are deleted |
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afterwards. Resetting the \texttt{delete_tmpfiles} flag inhibits this, |
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leaving the generated code for debugging purposes. The basic location for |
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temporary files is determined by the \texttt{ISABELLE_TMP} environment |
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variable (which is private to the running Isabelle process and may be |
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retrieved by \ttindex{getenv} from {\ML}). |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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\medskip Theory and {\ML} files are located by skimming through the |
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directories listed in Isabelle's internal load path, which merely contains the |
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current directory ``\texttt{.}'' by default. The load path may be accessed by |
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the following operations. |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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show_path: unit -> string list |
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add_path: string -> unit |
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del_path: string -> unit |
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reset_path: unit -> unit |
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with_path: string -> ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b |
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no_document: ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b |
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\end{ttbox} |
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\begin{ttdescription} |
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\item[\ttindexbold{show_path}();] displays the load path components in |
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canonical string representation (which is always according to Unix rules). |
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\item[\ttindexbold{add_path} "$dir$";] adds component $dir$ to the beginning |
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of the load path. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{del_path} "$dir$";] removes any occurrences of component |
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$dir$ from the load path. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{reset_path}();] resets the load path to ``\texttt{.}'' |
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(current directory) only. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{with_path} "$dir$" $f$ $x$;] temporarily adds component |
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$dir$ to the beginning of the load path while executing $(f~x)$. |
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\item[\ttindexbold{no_document} $f$ $x$;] temporarily disables {\LaTeX} |
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document generation while executing $(f~x)$. |
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\end{ttdescription} |
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Furthermore, in operations referring indirectly to some file (e.g.\ |
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\texttt{use_dir}) the argument may be prefixed by a directory that will be |
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temporarily appended to the load path, too. |
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\section{Locales} |
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\label{Locales} |
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Locales \cite{kammueller-locales} are a concept of local proof contexts. They |
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are introduced as named syntactic objects within theories and can be |
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opened in any descendant theory. |
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\subsection{Declaring Locales} |
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A locale is declared in a theory section that starts with the |
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keyword \texttt{locale}. It consists typically of three parts, the |
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\texttt{fixes} part, the \texttt{assumes} part, and the \texttt{defines} part. |
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Appendix \ref{app:TheorySyntax} presents the full syntax. |
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\subsubsection{Parts of Locales} |
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The subsection introduced by the keyword \texttt{fixes} declares the locale |
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constants in a way that closely resembles a global \texttt{consts} |
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declaration. In particular, there may be an optional pretty printing syntax |
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for the locale constants. |
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The subsequent \texttt{assumes} part specifies the locale rules. They are |
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defined like \texttt{rules}: by an identifier followed by the rule |
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given as a string. Locale rules admit the statement of local assumptions |
|
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about the locale constants. The \texttt{assumes} part is optional. Non-fixed |
|
324 |
variables in locale rules are automatically bound by the universal quantifier |
|
325 |
\texttt{!!} of the meta-logic. |
|
326 |
||
327 |
Finally, the \texttt{defines} part introduces the definitions that are |
|
328 |
available in the locale. Locale constants declared in the \texttt{fixes} |
|
329 |
section are defined using the meta-equality \texttt{==}. If the |
|
330 |
locale constant is a functiond then its definition can (as usual) have |
|
331 |
variables on the left-hand side acting as formal parameters; they are |
|
332 |
considered as schematic variables and are automatically generalized by |
|
333 |
universal quantification of the meta-logic. The right hand side of a |
|
334 |
definition must not contain variables that are not already on the left hand |
|
335 |
side. In so far locale definitions behave like theory level definitions. |
|
336 |
However, the locale concept realizes \emph{dependent definitions}: any variable |
|
337 |
that is fixed as a locale constant can occur on the right hand side of |
|
338 |
definitions. For an illustration of these dependent definitions see the |
|
339 |
occurrence of the locale constant \texttt{G} on the right hand side of the |
|
340 |
definitions of the locale \texttt{group} below. Naturally, definitions can |
|
341 |
already use the syntax of the locale constants in the \texttt{fixes} |
|
342 |
subsection. The \texttt{defines} part is, as the \texttt{assumes} part, |
|
343 |
optional. |
|
344 |
||
345 |
\subsubsection{Example for Definition} |
|
346 |
The concrete syntax of locale definitions is demonstrated by example below. |
|
347 |
||
348 |
Locale \texttt{group} assumes the definition of groups in a theory |
|
349 |
file\footnote{This and other examples are from \texttt{HOL/ex}.}. A locale |
|
350 |
defining a convenient proof environment for group related proofs may be |
|
351 |
added to the theory as follows: |
|
352 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
353 |
locale group = |
|
354 |
fixes |
|
355 |
G :: "'a grouptype" |
|
356 |
e :: "'a" |
|
357 |
binop :: "'a => 'a => 'a" (infixr "#" 80) |
|
358 |
inv :: "'a => 'a" ("i(_)" [90] 91) |
|
359 |
assumes |
|
360 |
Group_G "G: Group" |
|
361 |
defines |
|
362 |
e_def "e == unit G" |
|
363 |
binop_def "x # y == bin_op G x y" |
|
364 |
inv_def "i(x) == inverse G x" |
|
365 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
366 |
||
367 |
\subsubsection{Polymorphism} |
|
368 |
||
369 |
In contrast to polymorphic definitions in theories, the use of the |
|
370 |
same type variable for the declaration of different locale constants in the |
|
371 |
fixes part means \emph{the same} type. In other words, the scope of the |
|
372 |
polymorphic variables is extended over all constant declarations of a locale. |
|
373 |
In the above example \texttt{'a} refers to the same type which is fixed inside |
|
374 |
the locale. In an exported theorem (see \S\ref{sec:locale-export}) the |
|
375 |
constructors of locale \texttt{group} are polymorphic, yet only simultaneously |
|
376 |
instantiatable. |
|
377 |
||
378 |
\subsubsection{Nested Locales} |
|
379 |
||
380 |
A locale can be defined as the extension of a previously defined |
|
381 |
locale. This operation of extension is optional and is syntactically |
|
382 |
expressed as |
|
383 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
384 |
locale foo = bar + ... |
|
385 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
386 |
The locale \texttt{foo} builds on the constants and syntax of the locale {\tt |
|
387 |
bar}. That is, all contents of the locale \texttt{bar} can be used in |
|
388 |
definitions and rules of the corresponding parts of the locale {\tt |
|
389 |
foo}. Although locale \texttt{foo} assumes the \texttt{fixes} part of \texttt{bar} it |
|
390 |
does not automatically subsume its rules and definitions. Normally, one |
|
391 |
expects to use locale \texttt{foo} only if locale \texttt{bar} is already |
|
392 |
active. These aspects of use and activation of locales are considered in the |
|
393 |
subsequent section. |
|
394 |
||
395 |
||
396 |
\subsection{Locale Scope} |
|
397 |
||
398 |
Locales are by default inactive, but they can be invoked. The list of |
|
399 |
currently active locales is called \emph{scope}. The process of activating |
|
400 |
them is called \emph{opening}; the reverse is \emph{closing}. |
|
401 |
||
402 |
\subsubsection{Scope} |
|
403 |
The locale scope is part of each theory. It is a dynamic stack containing |
|
404 |
all active locales at a certain point in an interactive session. |
|
405 |
The scope lives until all locales are explicitly closed. At one time there |
|
406 |
can be more than one locale open. The contents of these various active |
|
407 |
locales are all visible in the scope. In case of nested locales for example, |
|
408 |
the nesting is actually reflected to the scope, which contains the nested |
|
409 |
locales as layers. To check the state of the scope during a development the |
|
410 |
function \texttt{Print\_scope} may be used. It displays the names of all open |
|
411 |
locales on the scope. The function \texttt{print\_locales} applied to a theory |
|
412 |
displays all locales contained in that theory and in addition also the |
|
413 |
current scope. |
|
414 |
||
415 |
The scope is manipulated by the commands for opening and closing of locales. |
|
416 |
||
417 |
\subsubsection{Opening} |
|
418 |
Locales can be \emph{opened} at any point during a session where |
|
419 |
we want to prove theorems concerning the locale. Opening a locale means |
|
420 |
making its contents visible by pushing it onto the scope of the current |
|
421 |
theory. Inside a scope of opened locales, theorems can use all definitions and |
|
422 |
rules contained in the locales on the scope. The rules and definitions may |
|
423 |
be accessed individually using the function \ttindex{thm}. This function is |
|
424 |
applied to the names assigned to locale rules and definitions as |
|
425 |
strings. The opening command is called \texttt{Open\_locale} and takes the |
|
426 |
name of the locale to be opened as its argument. |
|
427 |
||
428 |
If one opens a locale \texttt{foo} that is defined by extension from locale |
|
429 |
\texttt{bar}, the function \texttt{Open\_locale} checks if locale \texttt{bar} |
|
430 |
is open. If so, then it just opens \texttt{foo}, if not, then it prints a |
|
431 |
message and opens \texttt{bar} before opening \texttt{foo}. Naturally, this |
|
432 |
carries on, if \texttt{bar} is again an extension. |
|
433 |
||
434 |
\subsubsection{Closing} |
|
435 |
||
436 |
\emph{Closing} means to cancel the last opened locale, pushing it out of the |
|
437 |
scope. Theorems proved during the life cycle of this locale will be disabled, |
|
438 |
unless they have been explicitly exported, as described below. However, when |
|
439 |
the same locale is opened again these theorems may be used again as well, |
|
440 |
provided that they were saved as theorems in the first place, using |
|
441 |
\texttt{qed} or ML assignment. The command \texttt{Close\_locale} takes a |
|
442 |
locale name as a string and checks if this locale is actually the topmost |
|
443 |
locale on the scope. If this is the case, it removes this locale, otherwise |
|
444 |
it prints a warning message and does not change the scope. |
|
445 |
||
446 |
\subsubsection{Export of Theorems} |
|
447 |
\label{sec:locale-export} |
|
448 |
||
449 |
Export of theorems transports theorems out of the scope of locales. Locale |
|
450 |
rules that have been used in the proof of an exported theorem inside the |
|
451 |
locale are carried by the exported form of the theorem as its individual |
|
452 |
meta-assumptions. The locale constants are universally quantified variables |
|
453 |
in these theorems, hence such theorems can be instantiated individually. |
|
454 |
Definitions become unfolded; locale constants that were merely used for |
|
455 |
definitions vanish. Logically, exporting corresponds to a combined |
|
456 |
application of introduction rules for implication and universal |
|
457 |
quantification. Exporting forms a kind of normalization of theorems in a |
|
458 |
locale scope. |
|
459 |
||
460 |
According to the possibility of nested locales there are two different forms |
|
461 |
of export. The first one is realized by the function \texttt{export} that |
|
462 |
exports theorems through all layers of opened locales of the scope. Hence, |
|
463 |
the application of export to a theorem yields a theorem of the global level, |
|
464 |
that is, the current theory context without any local assumptions or |
|
465 |
definitions. |
|
466 |
||
467 |
When locales are nested we might want to export a theorem, not to the global |
|
468 |
level of the current theory but just to the previous level. The other export |
|
469 |
function, \texttt{Export}, transports theorems one level up in the scope; the |
|
470 |
theorem still uses locale constants, definitions and rules of the locales |
|
471 |
underneath. |
|
472 |
||
473 |
\subsection{Functions for Locales} |
|
474 |
\label{Syntax} |
|
475 |
\index{locales!functions} |
|
476 |
||
477 |
Here is a quick reference list of locale functions. |
|
478 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
479 |
Open_locale : xstring -> unit |
|
480 |
Close_locale : xstring -> unit |
|
481 |
export : thm -> thm |
|
482 |
Export : thm -> thm |
|
483 |
thm : xstring -> thm |
|
484 |
Print_scope : unit -> unit |
|
485 |
print_locales: theory -> unit |
|
486 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
487 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
488 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Open_locale} $xstring$] |
|
489 |
opens the locale {\it xstring}, adding it to the scope of the theory of the |
|
490 |
current context. If the opened locale is built by extension, the ancestors |
|
491 |
are opened automatically. |
|
492 |
||
493 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Close_locale} $xstring$] eliminates the locale {\it |
|
494 |
xstring} from the scope if it is the topmost item on it, otherwise it does |
|
495 |
not change the scope and produces a warning. |
|
496 |
||
497 |
\item[\ttindexbold{export} $thm$] locale definitions become expanded in {\it |
|
498 |
thm} and locale rules that were used in the proof of {\it thm} become part |
|
499 |
of its individual assumptions. This normalization happens with respect to |
|
500 |
\emph{all open locales} on the scope. |
|
501 |
||
502 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Export} $thm$] works like \texttt{export} but normalizes |
|
503 |
theorems only up to the previous level of locales on the scope. |
|
504 |
||
505 |
\item[\ttindexbold{thm} $xstring$] applied to the name of a locale definition |
|
506 |
or rule it returns the definition as a theorem. |
|
507 |
||
508 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Print_scope}()] prints the names of the locales in the |
|
509 |
current scope of the current theory context. |
|
510 |
||
511 |
\item[\ttindexbold{print_locale} $theory$] prints all locales that are |
|
512 |
contained in {\it theory} directly or indirectly. It also displays the |
|
513 |
current scope similar to \texttt{Print\_scope}. |
|
514 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
515 |
||
516 |
||
866
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|
517 |
\section{Basic operations on theories}\label{BasicOperationsOnTheories} |
4384 | 518 |
|
519 |
\subsection{*Theory inclusion} |
|
520 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
521 |
subthy : theory * theory -> bool |
|
522 |
eq_thy : theory * theory -> bool |
|
523 |
transfer : theory -> thm -> thm |
|
524 |
transfer_sg : Sign.sg -> thm -> thm |
|
525 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
526 |
||
527 |
Inclusion and equality of theories is determined by unique |
|
528 |
identification stamps that are created when declaring new components. |
|
529 |
Theorems contain a reference to the theory (actually to its signature) |
|
530 |
they have been derived in. Transferring theorems to super theories |
|
531 |
has no logical significance, but may affect some operations in subtle |
|
532 |
ways (e.g.\ implicit merges of signatures when applying rules, or |
|
533 |
pretty printing of theorems). |
|
534 |
||
535 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
536 |
||
537 |
\item[\ttindexbold{subthy} ($thy@1$, $thy@2$)] determines if $thy@1$ |
|
538 |
is included in $thy@2$ wrt.\ identification stamps. |
|
539 |
||
540 |
\item[\ttindexbold{eq_thy} ($thy@1$, $thy@2$)] determines if $thy@1$ |
|
541 |
is exactly the same as $thy@2$. |
|
542 |
||
543 |
\item[\ttindexbold{transfer} $thy$ $thm$] transfers theorem $thm$ to |
|
544 |
theory $thy$, provided the latter includes the theory of $thm$. |
|
545 |
||
546 |
\item[\ttindexbold{transfer_sg} $sign$ $thm$] is similar to |
|
547 |
\texttt{transfer}, but identifies the super theory via its |
|
548 |
signature. |
|
549 |
||
550 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
551 |
||
552 |
||
6571 | 553 |
\subsection{*Primitive theories} |
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|
554 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4317 | 555 |
ProtoPure.thy : theory |
3108 | 556 |
Pure.thy : theory |
557 |
CPure.thy : theory |
|
286 | 558 |
\end{ttbox} |
3108 | 559 |
\begin{description} |
4317 | 560 |
\item[\ttindexbold{ProtoPure.thy}, \ttindexbold{Pure.thy}, |
561 |
\ttindexbold{CPure.thy}] contain the syntax and signature of the |
|
562 |
meta-logic. There are basically no axioms: meta-level inferences |
|
563 |
are carried out by \ML\ functions. \texttt{Pure} and \texttt{CPure} |
|
564 |
just differ in their concrete syntax of prefix function application: |
|
565 |
$t(u@1, \ldots, u@n)$ in \texttt{Pure} vs.\ $t\,u@1,\ldots\,u@n$ in |
|
566 |
\texttt{CPure}. \texttt{ProtoPure} is their common parent, |
|
567 |
containing no syntax for printing prefix applications at all! |
|
6571 | 568 |
|
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569 |
%% FIXME |
478 | 570 |
%\item [\ttindexbold{extend_theory} $thy$ {\tt"}$T${\tt"} $\cdots$] extends |
571 |
% the theory $thy$ with new types, constants, etc. $T$ identifies the theory |
|
572 |
% internally. When a theory is redeclared, say to change an incorrect axiom, |
|
573 |
% bindings to the old axiom may persist. Isabelle ensures that the old and |
|
574 |
% new theories are not involved in the same proof. Attempting to combine |
|
575 |
% different theories having the same name $T$ yields the fatal error |
|
576 |
%extend_theory : theory -> string -> \(\cdots\) -> theory |
|
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|
577 |
%\begin{ttbox} |
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|
578 |
%Attempt to merge different versions of theory: \(T\) |
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579 |
%\end{ttbox} |
3108 | 580 |
\end{description} |
286 | 581 |
|
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582 |
%% FIXME |
275 | 583 |
%\item [\ttindexbold{extend_theory} $thy$ {\tt"}$T${\tt"} |
584 |
% ($classes$, $default$, $types$, $arities$, $consts$, $sextopt$) $rules$] |
|
585 |
%\hfill\break %%% include if line is just too short |
|
286 | 586 |
%is the \ML{} equivalent of the following theory definition: |
275 | 587 |
%\begin{ttbox} |
588 |
%\(T\) = \(thy\) + |
|
589 |
%classes \(c\) < \(c@1\),\(\dots\),\(c@m\) |
|
590 |
% \dots |
|
591 |
%default {\(d@1,\dots,d@r\)} |
|
592 |
%types \(tycon@1\),\dots,\(tycon@i\) \(n\) |
|
593 |
% \dots |
|
594 |
%arities \(tycon@1'\),\dots,\(tycon@j'\) :: (\(s@1\),\dots,\(s@n\))\(c\) |
|
595 |
% \dots |
|
596 |
%consts \(b@1\),\dots,\(b@k\) :: \(\tau\) |
|
597 |
% \dots |
|
598 |
%rules \(name\) \(rule\) |
|
599 |
% \dots |
|
600 |
%end |
|
601 |
%\end{ttbox} |
|
602 |
%where |
|
603 |
%\begin{tabular}[t]{l@{~=~}l} |
|
604 |
%$classes$ & \tt[("$c$",["$c@1$",\dots,"$c@m$"]),\dots] \\ |
|
605 |
%$default$ & \tt["$d@1$",\dots,"$d@r$"]\\ |
|
606 |
%$types$ & \tt[([$tycon@1$,\dots,$tycon@i$], $n$),\dots] \\ |
|
607 |
%$arities$ & \tt[([$tycon'@1$,\dots,$tycon'@j$], ([$s@1$,\dots,$s@n$],$c$)),\dots] |
|
608 |
%\\ |
|
609 |
%$consts$ & \tt[([$b@1$,\dots,$b@k$],$\tau$),\dots] \\ |
|
610 |
%$rules$ & \tt[("$name$",$rule$),\dots] |
|
611 |
%\end{tabular} |
|
104 | 612 |
|
613 |
||
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|
614 |
\subsection{Inspecting a theory}\label{sec:inspct-thy} |
104 | 615 |
\index{theories!inspecting|bold} |
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|
616 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4317 | 617 |
print_syntax : theory -> unit |
618 |
print_theory : theory -> unit |
|
619 |
parents_of : theory -> theory list |
|
620 |
ancestors_of : theory -> theory list |
|
621 |
sign_of : theory -> Sign.sg |
|
622 |
Sign.stamp_names_of : Sign.sg -> string list |
|
104 | 623 |
\end{ttbox} |
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|
624 |
These provide means of viewing a theory's components. |
324 | 625 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
3108 | 626 |
\item[\ttindexbold{print_syntax} $thy$] prints the syntax of $thy$ |
627 |
(grammar, macros, translation functions etc., see |
|
628 |
page~\pageref{pg:print_syn} for more details). |
|
629 |
||
630 |
\item[\ttindexbold{print_theory} $thy$] prints the logical parts of |
|
631 |
$thy$, excluding the syntax. |
|
4317 | 632 |
|
633 |
\item[\ttindexbold{parents_of} $thy$] returns the direct ancestors |
|
634 |
of~$thy$. |
|
635 |
||
636 |
\item[\ttindexbold{ancestors_of} $thy$] returns all ancestors of~$thy$ |
|
637 |
(not including $thy$ itself). |
|
638 |
||
639 |
\item[\ttindexbold{sign_of} $thy$] returns the signature associated |
|
640 |
with~$thy$. It is useful with functions like {\tt |
|
641 |
read_instantiate_sg}, which take a signature as an argument. |
|
642 |
||
643 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Sign.stamp_names_of} $sg$]\index{signatures} |
|
644 |
returns the names of the identification \rmindex{stamps} of ax |
|
645 |
signature. These coincide with the names of its full ancestry |
|
646 |
including that of $sg$ itself. |
|
104 | 647 |
|
324 | 648 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 649 |
|
1369 | 650 |
|
11623 | 651 |
\section{Terms}\label{sec:terms} |
104 | 652 |
\index{terms|bold} |
324 | 653 |
Terms belong to the \ML\ type \mltydx{term}, which is a concrete datatype |
3108 | 654 |
with six constructors: |
104 | 655 |
\begin{ttbox} |
656 |
type indexname = string * int; |
|
657 |
infix 9 $; |
|
658 |
datatype term = Const of string * typ |
|
659 |
| Free of string * typ |
|
660 |
| Var of indexname * typ |
|
661 |
| Bound of int |
|
662 |
| Abs of string * typ * term |
|
663 |
| op $ of term * term; |
|
664 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
324 | 665 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
4317 | 666 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Const} ($a$, $T$)] \index{constants|bold} |
8136 | 667 |
is the \textbf{constant} with name~$a$ and type~$T$. Constants include |
286 | 668 |
connectives like $\land$ and $\forall$ as well as constants like~0 |
669 |
and~$Suc$. Other constants may be required to define a logic's concrete |
|
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|
670 |
syntax. |
104 | 671 |
|
4317 | 672 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Free} ($a$, $T$)] \index{variables!free|bold} |
8136 | 673 |
is the \textbf{free variable} with name~$a$ and type~$T$. |
104 | 674 |
|
4317 | 675 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Var} ($v$, $T$)] \index{unknowns|bold} |
8136 | 676 |
is the \textbf{scheme variable} with indexname~$v$ and type~$T$. An |
324 | 677 |
\mltydx{indexname} is a string paired with a non-negative index, or |
678 |
subscript; a term's scheme variables can be systematically renamed by |
|
679 |
incrementing their subscripts. Scheme variables are essentially free |
|
680 |
variables, but may be instantiated during unification. |
|
104 | 681 |
|
324 | 682 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Bound} $i$] \index{variables!bound|bold} |
8136 | 683 |
is the \textbf{bound variable} with de Bruijn index~$i$, which counts the |
324 | 684 |
number of lambdas, starting from zero, between a variable's occurrence |
685 |
and its binding. The representation prevents capture of variables. For |
|
686 |
more information see de Bruijn \cite{debruijn72} or |
|
6592 | 687 |
Paulson~\cite[page~376]{paulson-ml2}. |
104 | 688 |
|
4317 | 689 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Abs} ($a$, $T$, $u$)] |
324 | 690 |
\index{lambda abs@$\lambda$-abstractions|bold} |
8136 | 691 |
is the $\lambda$-\textbf{abstraction} with body~$u$, and whose bound |
324 | 692 |
variable has name~$a$ and type~$T$. The name is used only for parsing |
693 |
and printing; it has no logical significance. |
|
104 | 694 |
|
324 | 695 |
\item[$t$ \$ $u$] \index{$@{\tt\$}|bold} \index{function applications|bold} |
8136 | 696 |
is the \textbf{application} of~$t$ to~$u$. |
324 | 697 |
\end{ttdescription} |
9695 | 698 |
Application is written as an infix operator to aid readability. Here is an |
699 |
\ML\ pattern to recognize FOL formulae of the form~$A\imp B$, binding the |
|
700 |
subformulae to~$A$ and~$B$: |
|
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701 |
\begin{ttbox} |
104 | 702 |
Const("Trueprop",_) $ (Const("op -->",_) $ A $ B) |
703 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
704 |
||
705 |
||
4317 | 706 |
\section{*Variable binding} |
286 | 707 |
\begin{ttbox} |
708 |
loose_bnos : term -> int list |
|
709 |
incr_boundvars : int -> term -> term |
|
710 |
abstract_over : term*term -> term |
|
711 |
variant_abs : string * typ * term -> string * term |
|
8136 | 712 |
aconv : term * term -> bool\hfill\textbf{infix} |
286 | 713 |
\end{ttbox} |
714 |
These functions are all concerned with the de Bruijn representation of |
|
715 |
bound variables. |
|
324 | 716 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
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717 |
\item[\ttindexbold{loose_bnos} $t$] |
286 | 718 |
returns the list of all dangling bound variable references. In |
6669 | 719 |
particular, \texttt{Bound~0} is loose unless it is enclosed in an |
720 |
abstraction. Similarly \texttt{Bound~1} is loose unless it is enclosed in |
|
286 | 721 |
at least two abstractions; if enclosed in just one, the list will contain |
722 |
the number 0. A well-formed term does not contain any loose variables. |
|
723 |
||
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724 |
\item[\ttindexbold{incr_boundvars} $j$] |
332 | 725 |
increases a term's dangling bound variables by the offset~$j$. This is |
286 | 726 |
required when moving a subterm into a context where it is enclosed by a |
727 |
different number of abstractions. Bound variables with a matching |
|
728 |
abstraction are unaffected. |
|
729 |
||
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730 |
\item[\ttindexbold{abstract_over} $(v,t)$] |
286 | 731 |
forms the abstraction of~$t$ over~$v$, which may be any well-formed term. |
6669 | 732 |
It replaces every occurrence of \(v\) by a \texttt{Bound} variable with the |
286 | 733 |
correct index. |
734 |
||
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735 |
\item[\ttindexbold{variant_abs} $(a,T,u)$] |
286 | 736 |
substitutes into $u$, which should be the body of an abstraction. |
737 |
It replaces each occurrence of the outermost bound variable by a free |
|
738 |
variable. The free variable has type~$T$ and its name is a variant |
|
332 | 739 |
of~$a$ chosen to be distinct from all constants and from all variables |
286 | 740 |
free in~$u$. |
741 |
||
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|
742 |
\item[$t$ \ttindexbold{aconv} $u$] |
286 | 743 |
tests whether terms~$t$ and~$u$ are \(\alpha\)-convertible: identical up |
744 |
to renaming of bound variables. |
|
745 |
\begin{itemize} |
|
746 |
\item |
|
6669 | 747 |
Two constants, \texttt{Free}s, or \texttt{Var}s are \(\alpha\)-convertible |
286 | 748 |
if their names and types are equal. |
749 |
(Variables having the same name but different types are thus distinct. |
|
750 |
This confusing situation should be avoided!) |
|
751 |
\item |
|
752 |
Two bound variables are \(\alpha\)-convertible |
|
753 |
if they have the same number. |
|
754 |
\item |
|
755 |
Two abstractions are \(\alpha\)-convertible |
|
756 |
if their bodies are, and their bound variables have the same type. |
|
757 |
\item |
|
758 |
Two applications are \(\alpha\)-convertible |
|
759 |
if the corresponding subterms are. |
|
760 |
\end{itemize} |
|
761 |
||
324 | 762 |
\end{ttdescription} |
286 | 763 |
|
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|
764 |
\section{Certified terms}\index{terms!certified|bold}\index{signatures} |
8136 | 765 |
A term $t$ can be \textbf{certified} under a signature to ensure that every type |
864
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|
766 |
in~$t$ is well-formed and every constant in~$t$ is a type instance of a |
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|
767 |
constant declared in the signature. The term must be well-typed and its use |
6669 | 768 |
of bound variables must be well-formed. Meta-rules such as \texttt{forall_elim} |
864
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|
769 |
take certified terms as arguments. |
104 | 770 |
|
324 | 771 |
Certified terms belong to the abstract type \mltydx{cterm}. |
104 | 772 |
Elements of the type can only be created through the certification process. |
773 |
In case of error, Isabelle raises exception~\ttindex{TERM}\@. |
|
774 |
||
775 |
\subsection{Printing terms} |
|
324 | 776 |
\index{terms!printing of} |
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777 |
\begin{ttbox} |
275 | 778 |
string_of_cterm : cterm -> string |
104 | 779 |
Sign.string_of_term : Sign.sg -> term -> string |
780 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
324 | 781 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
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782 |
\item[\ttindexbold{string_of_cterm} $ct$] |
104 | 783 |
displays $ct$ as a string. |
784 |
||
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785 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Sign.string_of_term} $sign$ $t$] |
104 | 786 |
displays $t$ as a string, using the syntax of~$sign$. |
324 | 787 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 788 |
|
789 |
\subsection{Making and inspecting certified terms} |
|
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790 |
\begin{ttbox} |
8136 | 791 |
cterm_of : Sign.sg -> term -> cterm |
792 |
read_cterm : Sign.sg -> string * typ -> cterm |
|
793 |
cert_axm : Sign.sg -> string * term -> string * term |
|
794 |
read_axm : Sign.sg -> string * string -> string * term |
|
795 |
rep_cterm : cterm -> \{T:typ, t:term, sign:Sign.sg, maxidx:int\} |
|
4543 | 796 |
Sign.certify_term : Sign.sg -> term -> term * typ * int |
104 | 797 |
\end{ttbox} |
324 | 798 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
4543 | 799 |
|
800 |
\item[\ttindexbold{cterm_of} $sign$ $t$] \index{signatures} certifies |
|
801 |
$t$ with respect to signature~$sign$. |
|
802 |
||
803 |
\item[\ttindexbold{read_cterm} $sign$ ($s$, $T$)] reads the string~$s$ |
|
804 |
using the syntax of~$sign$, creating a certified term. The term is |
|
805 |
checked to have type~$T$; this type also tells the parser what kind |
|
806 |
of phrase to parse. |
|
807 |
||
808 |
\item[\ttindexbold{cert_axm} $sign$ ($name$, $t$)] certifies $t$ with |
|
809 |
respect to $sign$ as a meta-proposition and converts all exceptions |
|
810 |
to an error, including the final message |
|
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|
811 |
\begin{ttbox} |
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|
812 |
The error(s) above occurred in axiom "\(name\)" |
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|
813 |
\end{ttbox} |
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814 |
|
4543 | 815 |
\item[\ttindexbold{read_axm} $sign$ ($name$, $s$)] similar to {\tt |
816 |
cert_axm}, but first reads the string $s$ using the syntax of |
|
817 |
$sign$. |
|
818 |
||
819 |
\item[\ttindexbold{rep_cterm} $ct$] decomposes $ct$ as a record |
|
820 |
containing its type, the term itself, its signature, and the maximum |
|
821 |
subscript of its unknowns. The type and maximum subscript are |
|
822 |
computed during certification. |
|
823 |
||
824 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Sign.certify_term}] is a more primitive version of |
|
825 |
\texttt{cterm_of}, returning the internal representation instead of |
|
826 |
an abstract \texttt{cterm}. |
|
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|
827 |
|
324 | 828 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 829 |
|
830 |
||
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|
831 |
\section{Types}\index{types|bold} |
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|
832 |
Types belong to the \ML\ type \mltydx{typ}, which is a concrete datatype with |
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|
833 |
three constructor functions. These correspond to type constructors, free |
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|
834 |
type variables and schematic type variables. Types are classified by sorts, |
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|
835 |
which are lists of classes (representing an intersection). A class is |
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|
836 |
represented by a string. |
104 | 837 |
\begin{ttbox} |
838 |
type class = string; |
|
839 |
type sort = class list; |
|
840 |
||
841 |
datatype typ = Type of string * typ list |
|
842 |
| TFree of string * sort |
|
843 |
| TVar of indexname * sort; |
|
844 |
||
845 |
infixr 5 -->; |
|
864
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846 |
fun S --> T = Type ("fun", [S, T]); |
104 | 847 |
\end{ttbox} |
324 | 848 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
4317 | 849 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Type} ($a$, $Ts$)] \index{type constructors|bold} |
8136 | 850 |
applies the \textbf{type constructor} named~$a$ to the type operand list~$Ts$. |
324 | 851 |
Type constructors include~\tydx{fun}, the binary function space |
852 |
constructor, as well as nullary type constructors such as~\tydx{prop}. |
|
853 |
Other type constructors may be introduced. In expressions, but not in |
|
854 |
patterns, \hbox{\tt$S$-->$T$} is a convenient shorthand for function |
|
855 |
types. |
|
104 | 856 |
|
4317 | 857 |
\item[\ttindexbold{TFree} ($a$, $s$)] \index{type variables|bold} |
8136 | 858 |
is the \textbf{type variable} with name~$a$ and sort~$s$. |
104 | 859 |
|
4317 | 860 |
\item[\ttindexbold{TVar} ($v$, $s$)] \index{type unknowns|bold} |
8136 | 861 |
is the \textbf{type unknown} with indexname~$v$ and sort~$s$. |
324 | 862 |
Type unknowns are essentially free type variables, but may be |
863 |
instantiated during unification. |
|
864 |
\end{ttdescription} |
|
104 | 865 |
|
866 |
||
867 |
\section{Certified types} |
|
868 |
\index{types!certified|bold} |
|
864
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|
869 |
Certified types, which are analogous to certified terms, have type |
275 | 870 |
\ttindexbold{ctyp}. |
104 | 871 |
|
872 |
\subsection{Printing types} |
|
324 | 873 |
\index{types!printing of} |
864
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|
874 |
\begin{ttbox} |
275 | 875 |
string_of_ctyp : ctyp -> string |
104 | 876 |
Sign.string_of_typ : Sign.sg -> typ -> string |
877 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
324 | 878 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
864
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|
879 |
\item[\ttindexbold{string_of_ctyp} $cT$] |
104 | 880 |
displays $cT$ as a string. |
881 |
||
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882 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Sign.string_of_typ} $sign$ $T$] |
104 | 883 |
displays $T$ as a string, using the syntax of~$sign$. |
324 | 884 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 885 |
|
886 |
||
887 |
\subsection{Making and inspecting certified types} |
|
864
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|
888 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4543 | 889 |
ctyp_of : Sign.sg -> typ -> ctyp |
8136 | 890 |
rep_ctyp : ctyp -> \{T: typ, sign: Sign.sg\} |
4543 | 891 |
Sign.certify_typ : Sign.sg -> typ -> typ |
104 | 892 |
\end{ttbox} |
324 | 893 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
4543 | 894 |
|
895 |
\item[\ttindexbold{ctyp_of} $sign$ $T$] \index{signatures} certifies |
|
896 |
$T$ with respect to signature~$sign$. |
|
897 |
||
898 |
\item[\ttindexbold{rep_ctyp} $cT$] decomposes $cT$ as a record |
|
899 |
containing the type itself and its signature. |
|
900 |
||
901 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Sign.certify_typ}] is a more primitive version of |
|
902 |
\texttt{ctyp_of}, returning the internal representation instead of |
|
903 |
an abstract \texttt{ctyp}. |
|
104 | 904 |
|
324 | 905 |
\end{ttdescription} |
104 | 906 |
|
1846 | 907 |
|
4317 | 908 |
\section{Oracles: calling trusted external reasoners} |
1846 | 909 |
\label{sec:oracles} |
910 |
\index{oracles|(} |
|
911 |
||
912 |
Oracles allow Isabelle to take advantage of external reasoners such as |
|
913 |
arithmetic decision procedures, model checkers, fast tautology checkers or |
|
914 |
computer algebra systems. Invoked as an oracle, an external reasoner can |
|
915 |
create arbitrary Isabelle theorems. It is your responsibility to ensure that |
|
916 |
the external reasoner is as trustworthy as your application requires. |
|
917 |
Isabelle's proof objects~(\S\ref{sec:proofObjects}) record how each theorem |
|
918 |
depends upon oracle calls. |
|
919 |
||
920 |
\begin{ttbox} |
|
4317 | 921 |
invoke_oracle : theory -> xstring -> Sign.sg * object -> thm |
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|
922 |
Theory.add_oracle : bstring * (Sign.sg * object -> term) -> theory |
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4543
diff
changeset
|
923 |
-> theory |
1846 | 924 |
\end{ttbox} |
925 |
\begin{ttdescription} |
|
4317 | 926 |
\item[\ttindexbold{invoke_oracle} $thy$ $name$ ($sign$, $data$)] |
927 |
invokes the oracle $name$ of theory $thy$ passing the information |
|
928 |
contained in the exception value $data$ and creating a theorem |
|
929 |
having signature $sign$. Note that type \ttindex{object} is just an |
|
930 |
abbreviation for \texttt{exn}. Errors arise if $thy$ does not have |
|
931 |
an oracle called $name$, if the oracle rejects its arguments or if |
|
932 |
its result is ill-typed. |
|
933 |
||
934 |
\item[\ttindexbold{Theory.add_oracle} $name$ $fun$ $thy$] extends |
|
935 |
$thy$ by oracle $fun$ called $name$. It is seldom called |
|
936 |
explicitly, as there is concrete syntax for oracles in theory files. |
|
1846 | 937 |
\end{ttdescription} |
938 |
||
939 |
A curious feature of {\ML} exceptions is that they are ordinary constructors. |
|
6669 | 940 |
The {\ML} type \texttt{exn} is a datatype that can be extended at any time. (See |
1846 | 941 |
my {\em {ML} for the Working Programmer}~\cite{paulson-ml2}, especially |
942 |
page~136.) The oracle mechanism takes advantage of this to allow an oracle to |
|
943 |
take any information whatever. |
|
944 |
||
945 |
There must be some way of invoking the external reasoner from \ML, either |
|
946 |
because it is coded in {\ML} or via an operating system interface. Isabelle |
|
947 |
expects the {\ML} function to take two arguments: a signature and an |
|
4317 | 948 |
exception object. |
1846 | 949 |
\begin{itemize} |
950 |
\item The signature will typically be that of a desendant of the theory |
|
951 |
declaring the oracle. The oracle will use it to distinguish constants from |
|
952 |
variables, etc., and it will be attached to the generated theorems. |
|
953 |
||
954 |
\item The exception is used to pass arbitrary information to the oracle. This |
|
955 |
information must contain a full description of the problem to be solved by |
|
956 |
the external reasoner, including any additional information that might be |
|
957 |
required. The oracle may raise the exception to indicate that it cannot |
|
958 |
solve the specified problem. |
|
959 |
\end{itemize} |
|
960 |
||
6669 | 961 |
A trivial example is provided in theory \texttt{FOL/ex/IffOracle}. This |
4317 | 962 |
oracle generates tautologies of the form $P\bimp\cdots\bimp P$, with |
963 |
an even number of $P$s. |
|
1846 | 964 |
|
4317 | 965 |
The \texttt{ML} section of \texttt{IffOracle.thy} begins by declaring |
966 |
a few auxiliary functions (suppressed below) for creating the |
|
967 |
tautologies. Then it declares a new exception constructor for the |
|
968 |
information required by the oracle: here, just an integer. It finally |
|
969 |
defines the oracle function itself. |
|
1846 | 970 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4317 | 971 |
exception IffOracleExn of int;\medskip |
972 |
fun mk_iff_oracle (sign, IffOracleExn n) = |
|
973 |
if n > 0 andalso n mod 2 = 0 |
|
6669 | 974 |
then Trueprop \$ mk_iff n |
4317 | 975 |
else raise IffOracleExn n; |
1846 | 976 |
\end{ttbox} |
6669 | 977 |
Observe the function's two arguments, the signature \texttt{sign} and the |
4317 | 978 |
exception given as a pattern. The function checks its argument for |
979 |
validity. If $n$ is positive and even then it creates a tautology |
|
980 |
containing $n$ occurrences of~$P$. Otherwise it signals error by |
|
981 |
raising its own exception (just by happy coincidence). Errors may be |
|
6669 | 982 |
signalled by other means, such as returning the theorem \texttt{True}. |
4317 | 983 |
Please ensure that the oracle's result is correctly typed; Isabelle |
984 |
will reject ill-typed theorems by raising a cryptic exception at top |
|
985 |
level. |
|
1846 | 986 |
|
6669 | 987 |
The \texttt{oracle} section of \texttt{IffOracle.thy} installs above |
4317 | 988 |
\texttt{ML} function as follows: |
1846 | 989 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4317 | 990 |
IffOracle = FOL +\medskip |
991 |
oracle |
|
992 |
iff = mk_iff_oracle\medskip |
|
1846 | 993 |
end |
994 |
\end{ttbox} |
|
995 |
||
4317 | 996 |
Now in \texttt{IffOracle.ML} we first define a wrapper for invoking |
997 |
the oracle: |
|
1846 | 998 |
\begin{ttbox} |
4597
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4543
diff
changeset
|
999 |
fun iff_oracle n = invoke_oracle IffOracle.thy "iff" |
a0bdee64194c
Fixed a lot of overfull and underfull lines (hboxes)
paulson
parents:
4543
diff
changeset
|
1000 |
(sign_of IffOracle.thy, IffOracleExn n); |
4317 | 1001 |
\end{ttbox} |
1002 |
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Here are some example applications of the \texttt{iff} oracle. An |
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1004 |
argument of 10 is allowed, but one of 5 is forbidden: |
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\begin{ttbox} |
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iff_oracle 10; |
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{\out "P <-> P <-> P <-> P <-> P <-> P <-> P <-> P <-> P <-> P" : thm} |
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iff_oracle 5; |
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{\out Exception- IffOracleExn 5 raised} |
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\end{ttbox} |
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1011 |
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\index{oracles|)} |
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104 | 1013 |
\index{theories|)} |
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1015 |
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%%% Local Variables: |
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%%% mode: latex |
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%%% TeX-master: "ref" |
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%%% End: |