doc-src/IsarOverview/Isar/document/root.tex
author kleing
Tue, 20 May 2003 11:52:42 +0200
changeset 14040 8a2c8f762837
parent 13999 454a2ad0c381
child 14385 6b15793a641a
permissions -rw-r--r--
be less verbose about simplification depth

\documentclass[envcountsame]{llncs}
%\documentclass[11pt,a4paper]{article}
\usepackage{isabelle,isabellesym,pdfsetup}

%for best-style documents ...
\urlstyle{rm}
%\isabellestyle{it}

\newcommand{\tweakskip}{\vspace{-\medskipamount}}
\newcommand{\Tweakskip}{\tweakskip\tweakskip}

\pagestyle{plain}

\begin{document}

\title{%A Compact Introduction to
Structured Proofs in Isar/HOL}
\author{Tobias Nipkow}
\institute{Institut f{\"u}r Informatik, TU M{\"u}nchen\\
 {\small\url{http://www.in.tum.de/~nipkow/}}}
\date{}
\maketitle

\begin{abstract}
  Isar is an extension of the theorem prover Isabelle with a language
  for writing human-readable structured proofs. This paper is an
  introduction to the basic constructs of this language.
% It is aimed at potential users of Isar
% but also discusses the design rationals
% behind the language and its constructs.
\end{abstract}

\input{intro.tex}
\input{Logic.tex}
\Tweakskip\Tweakskip
\input{Induction.tex}

%\Tweakskip
\small
\paragraph{Acknowledgement}
I am deeply indebted to Markus Wenzel for conceiving Isar. Clemens Ballarin,
Gertrud Bauer, Stefan Berghofer, Gerwin Klein, Norbert Schirmer,
Markus Wenzel and Freek Wiedijk commented on and improved this paper.

\begingroup
\bibliographystyle{plain} \small\raggedright\frenchspacing
\bibliography{root}
\endgroup

\end{document}