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I wonder if that's all?

\chapter{Functional Programming in HOL}

Although on the surface this chapter is mainly concerned with how to write
functional programs in HOL and how to verify them, most of the
constructs and proof procedures introduced are general purpose and recur in
any specification or verification task.

The dedicated functional programmer should be warned: HOL offers only {\em
  total functional programming} --- all functions in HOL must be total; lazy
data structures are not directly available. On the positive side, functions
in HOL need not be computable: HOL is a specification language that goes well
beyond what can be expressed as a program. However, for the time being we
concentrate on the computable.

\section{An introductory theory}
\label{sec:intro-theory}

Functional programming needs datatypes and functions. Both of them can be
defined in a theory with a syntax reminiscent of languages like ML or
Haskell. As an example consider the theory in figure~\ref{fig:ToyList}.
We will now examine it line by line.

\begin{figure}[htbp]
\begin{ttbox}\makeatother
\input{ToyList2/ToyList1}\end{ttbox}
\caption{A theory of lists}
\label{fig:ToyList}
\end{figure}

{\makeatother\input{ToyList/document/ToyList.tex}}

The complete proof script is shown in figure~\ref{fig:ToyList-proofs}. The
concatenation of figures \ref{fig:ToyList} and \ref{fig:ToyList-proofs}
constitutes the complete theory \texttt{ToyList} and should reside in file
\texttt{ToyList.thy}. It is good practice to present all declarations and
definitions at the beginning of a theory to facilitate browsing.

\begin{figure}[htbp]
\begin{ttbox}\makeatother
\input{ToyList2/ToyList2}\end{ttbox}
\caption{Proofs about lists}
\label{fig:ToyList-proofs}
\end{figure}

\subsubsection*{Review}

This is the end of our toy proof. It should have familiarized you with
\begin{itemize}
\item the standard theorem proving procedure:
state a goal (lemma or theorem); proceed with proof until a separate lemma is
required; prove that lemma; come back to the original goal.
\item a specific procedure that works well for functional programs:
induction followed by all-out simplification via \isa{auto}.
\item a basic repertoire of proof commands.
\end{itemize}


\section{Some helpful commands}
\label{sec:commands-and-hints}

This section discusses a few basic commands for manipulating the proof state
and can be skipped by casual readers.

There are two kinds of commands used during a proof: the actual proof
commands and auxiliary commands for examining the proof state and controlling
the display. Simple proof commands are of the form
\isacommand{apply}\isa{(method)}\indexbold{apply} where \bfindex{method} is a
synonym for ``theorem proving function''. Typical examples are
\isa{induct_tac} and \isa{auto}. Further methods are introduced throughout
the tutorial.  Unless stated otherwise you may assume that a method attacks
merely the first subgoal. An exception is \isa{auto} which tries to solve all
subgoals.

The most useful auxiliary commands are:
\begin{description}
\item[Undoing:] \isacommand{undo}\indexbold{*undo} undoes the effect of the
  last command; \isacommand{undo} can be undone by
  \isacommand{redo}\indexbold{*redo}.  Both are only needed at the shell
  level and should not occur in the final theory.
\item[Printing the current state:] \isacommand{pr}\indexbold{*pr} redisplays
  the current proof state, for example when it has disappeared off the
  screen.
\item[Limiting the number of subgoals:] \isacommand{pr}~$n$ tells Isabelle to
  print only the first $n$ subgoals from now on and redisplays the current
  proof state. This is helpful when there are many subgoals.
\item[Modifying the order of subgoals:]
\isacommand{defer}\indexbold{*defer} moves the first subgoal to the end and
\isacommand{prefer}\indexbold{*prefer}~$n$ moves subgoal $n$ to the front.
\item[Printing theorems:]
  \isacommand{thm}\indexbold{*thm}~\textit{name}$@1$~\dots~\textit{name}$@n$
  prints the named theorems.
\item[Displaying types:] We have already mentioned the flag
  \ttindex{show_types} above. It can also be useful for detecting typos in
  formulae early on. For example, if \texttt{show_types} is set and the goal
  \isa{rev(rev xs) = xs} is started, Isabelle prints the additional output
\par\noindent
\begin{isabelle}%
Variables:\isanewline
~~xs~::~'a~list
\end{isabelle}%
\par\noindent
which tells us that Isabelle has correctly inferred that
\isa{xs} is a variable of list type. On the other hand, had we
made a typo as in \isa{rev(re xs) = xs}, the response
\par\noindent
\begin{isabelle}%
Variables:\isanewline
~~re~::~'a~list~{\isasymRightarrow}~'a~list\isanewline
~~xs~::~'a~list%
\end{isabelle}%
\par\noindent
would have alerted us because of the unexpected variable \isa{re}.
\item[Reading terms and types:] \isacommand{term}\indexbold{*term}
  \textit{string} reads, type-checks and prints the given string as a term in
  the current context; the inferred type is output as well.
  \isacommand{typ}\indexbold{*typ} \textit{string} reads and prints the given
  string as a type in the current context.
\item[(Re)loading theories:] When you start your interaction you must open a
  named theory with the line
  \isacommand{theory}\texttt{~T~=}~\dots~\texttt{:}. Isabelle automatically
  loads all the required parent theories from their respective files (which
  may take a moment, unless the theories are already loaded and the files
  have not been modified). The only time when you need to load a theory by
  hand is when you simply want to check if it loads successfully without
  wanting to make use of the theory itself. This you can do by typing
  \isacommand{use\_thy}\indexbold{*use_thy}~\texttt{"T"}.
  
  If you suddenly discover that you need to modify a parent theory of your
  current theory you must first abandon your current theory (at the shell
  level type \isacommand{kill}\indexbold{*kill}). After the parent theory has
  been modified you go back to your original theory. When its first line
  \isacommand{theory}\texttt{~T~=}~\dots~\texttt{:} is processed, the
  modified parent is reloaded automatically.
\end{description}
Further commands are found in the Isabelle/Isar Reference Manual.


\section{Datatypes}
\label{sec:datatype}

Inductive datatypes are part of almost every non-trivial application of HOL.
First we take another look at a very important example, the datatype of
lists, before we turn to datatypes in general. The section closes with a
case study.


\subsection{Lists}
\indexbold{*list}

Lists are one of the essential datatypes in computing. Readers of this
tutorial and users of HOL need to be familiar with their basic operations.
Theory \texttt{ToyList} is only a small fragment of HOL's predefined theory
\texttt{List}\footnote{\url{http://isabelle.in.tum.de/library/HOL/List.html}}.
The latter contains many further operations. For example, the functions
\isaindexbold{hd} (`head') and \isaindexbold{tl} (`tail') return the first
element and the remainder of a list. (However, pattern-matching is usually
preferable to \isa{hd} and \isa{tl}.)  Theory \texttt{List} also contains
more syntactic sugar: \isa{[}$x@1$\isa{,}\dots\isa{,}$x@n$\isa{]} abbreviates
$x@1$\isa{\#}\dots\isa{\#}$x@n$\isa{\#[]}.  In the rest of the tutorial we
always use HOL's predefined lists.


\subsection{The general format}
\label{sec:general-datatype}

The general HOL \isacommand{datatype} definition is of the form
\[
\isacommand{datatype}~(\alpha@1, \dots, \alpha@n) \, t ~=~
C@1~\tau@{11}~\dots~\tau@{1k@1} ~\mid~ \dots ~\mid~
C@m~\tau@{m1}~\dots~\tau@{mk@m}
\]
where $\alpha@i$ are type variables (the parameters), $C@i$ are distinct
constructor names and $\tau@{ij}$ are types; it is customary to capitalize
the first letter in constructor names. There are a number of
restrictions (such as that the type should not be empty) detailed
elsewhere~\cite{isabelle-HOL}. Isabelle notifies you if you violate them.

Laws about datatypes, such as \isa{[] \isasymnoteq~x\#xs} and
\isa{(x\#xs = y\#ys) = (x=y \isasymand~xs=ys)}, are used automatically
during proofs by simplification.  The same is true for the equations in
primitive recursive function definitions.

\subsection{Primitive recursion}

Functions on datatypes are usually defined by recursion. In fact, most of the
time they are defined by what is called \bfindex{primitive recursion}.
The keyword \isacommand{primrec}\indexbold{*primrec} is followed by a list of
equations
\[ f \, x@1 \, \dots \, (C \, y@1 \, \dots \, y@k)\, \dots \, x@n = r \]
such that $C$ is a constructor of the datatype $t$ and all recursive calls of
$f$ in $r$ are of the form $f \, \dots \, y@i \, \dots$ for some $i$. Thus
Isabelle immediately sees that $f$ terminates because one (fixed!) argument
becomes smaller with every recursive call. There must be exactly one equation
for each constructor.  Their order is immaterial.
A more general method for defining total recursive functions is explained in
\S\ref{sec:recdef}.

\begin{exercise}
\input{Misc/document/Tree.tex}%
\end{exercise}

\subsection{Case expressions}
\label{sec:case-expressions}

HOL also features \isaindexbold{case}-expressions for analyzing
elements of a datatype. For example,
% case xs of [] => 0 | y#ys => y
\begin{isabellepar}%
~~~case~xs~of~[]~{\isasymRightarrow}~0~|~y~\#~ys~{\isasymRightarrow}~y
\end{isabellepar}%
evaluates to \isa{0} if \isa{xs} is \isa{[]} and to \isa{y} if 
\isa{xs} is \isa{y\#ys}. (Since the result in both branches must be of
the same type, it follows that \isa{y::nat} and hence
\isa{xs::(nat)list}.)

In general, if $e$ is a term of the datatype $t$ defined in
\S\ref{sec:general-datatype} above, the corresponding
\isa{case}-expression analyzing $e$ is
\[
\begin{array}{rrcl}
\isa{case}~e~\isa{of} & C@1~x@{11}~\dots~x@{1k@1} & \To & e@1 \\
                           \vdots \\
                           \mid & C@m~x@{m1}~\dots~x@{mk@m} & \To & e@m
\end{array}
\]

\begin{warn}
{\em All} constructors must be present, their order is fixed, and nested
patterns are not supported.  Violating these restrictions results in strange
error messages.
\end{warn}
\noindent
Nested patterns can be simulated by nested \isa{case}-expressions: instead
of
% case xs of [] => 0 | [x] => x | x#(y#zs) => y
\begin{isabellepar}%
~~~case~xs~of~[]~{\isasymRightarrow}~0~|~[x]~{\isasymRightarrow}~x~|~x~\#~y~\#~zs~{\isasymRightarrow}~y
\end{isabellepar}%
write
% term(latex xsymbols symbols)"case xs of [] => 0 | x#ys => (case ys of [] => x | y#zs => y)";
\begin{isabellepar}%
~~~case~xs~of~[]~{\isasymRightarrow}~0~|~x~\#~ys~{\isasymRightarrow}~(case~ys~of~[]~{\isasymRightarrow}~x~|~y~\#~zs~{\isasymRightarrow}~y)%
\end{isabellepar}%
Note that \isa{case}-expressions should be enclosed in parentheses to
indicate their scope.

\subsection{Structural induction and case distinction}
\indexbold{structural induction}
\indexbold{induction!structural}
\indexbold{case distinction}

Almost all the basic laws about a datatype are applied automatically during
simplification. Only induction is invoked by hand via \isaindex{induct_tac},
which works for any datatype. In some cases, induction is overkill and a case
distinction over all constructors of the datatype suffices. This is performed
by \isaindexbold{case_tac}. A trivial example:

\input{Misc/document/cases.tex}%

Note that we do not need to give a lemma a name if we do not intend to refer
to it explicitly in the future.

\begin{warn}
  Induction is only allowed on free (or \isasymAnd-bound) variables that
  should not occur among the assumptions of the subgoal.  Case distinction
  (\isa{case_tac}) works for arbitrary terms, which need to be
  quoted if they are non-atomic.
\end{warn}


\subsection{Case study: boolean expressions}
\label{sec:boolex}

The aim of this case study is twofold: it shows how to model boolean
expressions and some algorithms for manipulating them, and it demonstrates
the constructs introduced above.

\input{Ifexpr/document/Ifexpr.tex}

How does one come up with the required lemmas? Try to prove the main theorems
without them and study carefully what \isa{auto} leaves unproved. This has
to provide the clue.  The necessity of universal quantification
(\isa{\isasymforall{}t e}) in the two lemmas is explained in
\S\ref{sec:InductionHeuristics}

\begin{exercise}
  We strengthen the definition of a \isa{normal} If-expression as follows:
  the first argument of all \isa{IF}s must be a variable. Adapt the above
  development to this changed requirement. (Hint: you may need to formulate
  some of the goals as implications (\isasymimp) rather than equalities
  (\isa{=}).)
\end{exercise}

\section{Some basic types}


\subsection{Natural numbers}
\index{arithmetic|(}

\input{Misc/document/fakenat.tex}
\input{Misc/document/natsum.tex}

The usual arithmetic operations \ttindexboldpos{+}{$HOL2arithfun},
\ttindexboldpos{-}{$HOL2arithfun}, \ttindexboldpos{*}{$HOL2arithfun},
\isaindexbold{div}, \isaindexbold{mod}, \isaindexbold{min} and
\isaindexbold{max} are predefined, as are the relations
\indexboldpos{\isasymle}{$HOL2arithrel} and
\ttindexboldpos{<}{$HOL2arithrel}. There is even a least number operation
\isaindexbold{LEAST}. For example, \isa{(LEAST n.$\,$1 < n) = 2}, although
Isabelle does not prove this completely automatically. Note that \isa{1} and
\isa{2} are available as abbreviations for the corresponding
\isa{Suc}-expressions. If you need the full set of numerals,
see~\S\ref{nat-numerals}.

\begin{warn}
  The operations \ttindexboldpos{+}{$HOL2arithfun},
  \ttindexboldpos{-}{$HOL2arithfun}, \ttindexboldpos{*}{$HOL2arithfun},
  \isaindexbold{min}, \isaindexbold{max},
  \indexboldpos{\isasymle}{$HOL2arithrel} and
  \ttindexboldpos{<}{$HOL2arithrel} are overloaded, i.e.\ they are available
  not just for natural numbers but at other types as well (see
  \S\ref{sec:TypeClasses}). For example, given the goal \isa{x+y = y+x},
  there is nothing to indicate that you are talking about natural numbers.
  Hence Isabelle can only infer that \isa{x} and \isa{y} are of some
  arbitrary type where \isa{+} is declared. As a consequence, you will be
  unable to prove the goal (although it may take you some time to realize
  what has happened if \texttt{show_types} is not set).  In this particular
  example, you need to include an explicit type constraint, for example
  \isa{x+y = y+(x::nat)}.  If there is enough contextual information this may
  not be necessary: \isa{x+0 = x} automatically implies \isa{x::nat}.
\end{warn}

Simple arithmetic goals are proved automatically by both \isa{auto}
and the simplification methods introduced in \S\ref{sec:Simplification}.  For
example,

\input{Misc/document/arith1.tex}%
is proved automatically. The main restriction is that only addition is taken
into account; other arithmetic operations and quantified formulae are ignored.

For more complex goals, there is the special method
\isaindexbold{arith} (which attacks the first subgoal). It proves
arithmetic goals involving the usual logical connectives (\isasymnot,
\isasymand, \isasymor, \isasymimp), the relations \isasymle\ and \isa{<}, and
the operations \isa{+}, \isa{-}, \isa{min} and \isa{max}. For example,

\input{Misc/document/arith2.tex}%
succeeds because \isa{k*k} can be treated as atomic.
In contrast,

\input{Misc/document/arith3.tex}%
is not even proved by \isa{arith} because the proof relies essentially
on properties of multiplication.

\begin{warn}
  The running time of \isa{arith} is exponential in the number of occurrences
  of \ttindexboldpos{-}{$HOL2arithfun}, \isaindexbold{min} and
  \isaindexbold{max} because they are first eliminated by case distinctions.

  \isa{arith} is incomplete even for the restricted class of formulae
  described above (known as ``linear arithmetic''). If divisibility plays a
  role, it may fail to prove a valid formula, for example $m+m \neq n+n+1$.
  Fortunately, such examples are rare in practice.
\end{warn}

\index{arithmetic|)}


\subsection{Products}

HOL also has pairs: \isa{($a@1$,$a@2$)} is of type \texttt{$\tau@1$ *
  $\tau@2$} provided each $a@i$ is of type $\tau@i$. The components of a pair
are extracted by \isa{fst} and \isa{snd}: \isa{fst($x$,$y$) = $x$} and
\isa{snd($x$,$y$) = $y$}. Tuples are simulated by pairs nested to the right:
\isa{($a@1$,$a@2$,$a@3$)} stands for \isa{($a@1$,($a@2$,$a@3$))} and
\isa{$\tau@1$ * $\tau@2$ * $\tau@3$} for \isa{$\tau@1$ * ($\tau@2$ *
  $\tau@3$)}. Therefore we have \isa{fst(snd($a@1$,$a@2$,$a@3$)) = $a@2$}.

It is possible to use (nested) tuples as patterns in abstractions, for
example \isa{\isasymlambda(x,y,z).x+y+z} and
\isa{\isasymlambda((x,y),z).x+y+z}.
In addition to explicit $\lambda$-abstractions, tuple patterns can be used in
most variable binding constructs. Typical examples are

\input{Misc/document/pairs.tex}%
Further important examples are quantifiers and sets (see~\S\ref{quant-pats}).

%FIXME move stuff below into section on proofs about products?
\begin{warn}
  Abstraction over pairs and tuples is merely a convenient shorthand for a
  more complex internal representation.  Thus the internal and external form
  of a term may differ, which can affect proofs. If you want to avoid this
  complication, use \isa{fst} and \isa{snd}, i.e.\ write
  \isa{\isasymlambda{}p.~fst p + snd p} instead of
  \isa{\isasymlambda(x,y).~x + y}.  See~\S\ref{proofs-about-products} for
  theorem proving with tuple patterns.
\end{warn}

Finally note that products, like natural numbers, are datatypes, which means
in particular that \isa{induct_tac} and \isa{case_tac} are applicable to
products (see \S\ref{proofs-about-products}).

\section{Definitions}
\label{sec:Definitions}

A definition is simply an abbreviation, i.e.\ a new name for an existing
construction. In particular, definitions cannot be recursive. Isabelle offers
definitions on the level of types and terms. Those on the type level are
called type synonyms, those on the term level are called (constant)
definitions.


\subsection{Type synonyms}
\indexbold{type synonyms}

Type synonyms are similar to those found in ML. Their syntax is fairly self
explanatory:

\input{Misc/document/types.tex}%

Note that pattern-matching is not allowed, i.e.\ each definition must be of
the form $f\,x@1\,\dots\,x@n~\isasymequiv~t$.

Section~\S\ref{sec:Simplification} explains how definitions are used
in proofs.

\begin{warn}%
A common mistake when writing definitions is to introduce extra free
variables on the right-hand side as in the following fictitious definition:
\input{Misc/document/prime_def.tex}%
\end{warn}


\chapter{More Functional Programming}

The purpose of this chapter is to deepen the reader's understanding of the
concepts encountered so far and to introduce an advanced forms of datatypes
and recursive functions. The first two sections give a structured
presentation of theorem proving by simplification
(\S\ref{sec:Simplification}) and discuss important heuristics for induction
(\S\ref{sec:InductionHeuristics}). They can be skipped by readers less
interested in proofs. They are followed by a case study, a compiler for
expressions (\S\ref{sec:ExprCompiler}). Advanced datatypes, including those
involving function spaces, are covered in \S\ref{sec:advanced-datatypes},
which closes with another case study, search trees (``tries'').  Finally we
introduce a very general form of recursive function definition which goes
well beyond what \isacommand{primrec} allows (\S\ref{sec:recdef}).


\section{Simplification}
\label{sec:Simplification}
\index{simplification|(}

So far we have proved our theorems by \isa{auto}, which ``simplifies'' all
subgoals. In fact, \isa{auto} can do much more than that, except that it
did not need to so far. However, when you go beyond toy examples, you need to
understand the ingredients of \isa{auto}.  This section covers the method
that \isa{auto} always applies first, namely simplification.

Simplification is one of the central theorem proving tools in Isabelle and
many other systems. The tool itself is called the \bfindex{simplifier}. The
purpose of this section is twofold: to introduce the many features of the
simplifier (\S\ref{sec:SimpFeatures}) and to explain a little bit how the
simplifier works (\S\ref{sec:SimpHow}).  Anybody intending to use HOL should
read \S\ref{sec:SimpFeatures}, and the serious student should read
\S\ref{sec:SimpHow} as well in order to understand what happened in case
things do not simplify as expected.


\subsection{Using the simplifier}
\label{sec:SimpFeatures}

In its most basic form, simplification means repeated application of
equations from left to right. For example, taking the rules for \isa{\at}
and applying them to the term \isa{[0,1] \at\ []} results in a sequence of
simplification steps:
\begin{ttbox}\makeatother
(0#1#[]) @ []  \(\leadsto\)  0#((1#[]) @ [])  \(\leadsto\)  0#(1#([] @ []))  \(\leadsto\)  0#1#[]
\end{ttbox}
This is also known as \bfindex{term rewriting} and the equations are referred
to as \bfindex{rewrite rules}. This is more honest than ``simplification''
because the terms do not necessarily become simpler in the process.

\subsubsection{Simplification rules}
\indexbold{simplification rules}

To facilitate simplification, theorems can be declared to be simplification
rules (with the help of the attribute \isa{[simp]}\index{*simp
  (attribute)}), in which case proofs by simplification make use of these
rules by default. In addition the constructs \isacommand{datatype} and
\isacommand{primrec} (and a few others) invisibly declare useful
simplification rules. Explicit definitions are \emph{not} declared
simplification rules automatically!

Not merely equations but pretty much any theorem can become a simplification
rule. The simplifier will try to make sense of it.  For example, a theorem
\isasymnot$P$ is automatically turned into \isa{$P$ = False}. The details
are explained in \S\ref{sec:SimpHow}.

The simplification attribute of theorems can be turned on and off as follows:
\begin{ttbox}
theorems [simp] = \(list of theorem names\);
theorems [simp del] = \(list of theorem names\);
\end{ttbox}
As a rule of thumb, rules that really simplify (like \isa{rev(rev xs) =
  xs} and \mbox{\isa{xs \at\ [] = xs}}) should be made simplification
rules.  Those of a more specific nature (e.g.\ distributivity laws, which
alter the structure of terms considerably) should only be used selectively,
i.e.\ they should not be default simplification rules.  Conversely, it may
also happen that a simplification rule needs to be disabled in certain
proofs.  Frequent changes in the simplification status of a theorem may
indicates a badly designed theory.
\begin{warn}
  Simplification may not terminate, for example if both $f(x) = g(x)$ and
  $g(x) = f(x)$ are simplification rules. It is the user's responsibility not
  to include simplification rules that can lead to nontermination, either on
  their own or in combination with other simplification rules.
\end{warn}

\subsubsection{The simplification method}
\index{*simp (method)|bold}

The general format of the simplification method is
\begin{ttbox}
simp \(list of modifiers\)
\end{ttbox}
where the list of \emph{modifiers} helps to fine tune the behaviour and may
be empty. Most if not all of the proofs seen so far could have been performed
with \isa{simp} instead of \isa{auto}, except that \isa{simp} attacks
only the first subgoal and may thus need to be repeated.
Note that \isa{simp} fails if nothing changes.

\subsubsection{Adding and deleting simplification rules}

If a certain theorem is merely needed in a few proofs by simplification,
we do not need to make it a global simplification rule. Instead we can modify
the set of simplification rules used in a simplification step by adding rules
to it and/or deleting rules from it. The two modifiers for this are
\begin{ttbox}
add: \(list of theorem names\)
del: \(list of theorem names\)
\end{ttbox}
In case you want to use only a specific list of theorems and ignore all
others:
\begin{ttbox}
only: \(list of theorem names\)
\end{ttbox}


\subsubsection{Assumptions}
\index{simplification!with/of assumptions}

{\makeatother\input{Misc/document/asm_simp.tex}}

\subsubsection{Rewriting with definitions}
\index{simplification!with definitions}

\input{Misc/document/def_rewr.tex}

\begin{warn}
  If you have defined $f\,x\,y~\isasymequiv~t$ then you can only expand
  occurrences of $f$ with at least two arguments. Thus it is safer to define
  $f$~\isasymequiv~\isasymlambda$x\,y.\;t$.
\end{warn}

\subsubsection{Simplifying let-expressions}
\index{simplification!of let-expressions}

Proving a goal containing \isaindex{let}-expressions almost invariably
requires the \isa{let}-con\-structs to be expanded at some point. Since
\isa{let}-\isa{in} is just syntactic sugar for a defined constant (called
\isa{Let}), expanding \isa{let}-constructs means rewriting with
\isa{Let_def}:

{\makeatother\input{Misc/document/let_rewr.tex}}

\subsubsection{Conditional equations}

\input{Misc/document/cond_rewr.tex}


\subsubsection{Automatic case splits}
\indexbold{case splits}
\index{*split|(}

{\makeatother\input{Misc/document/case_splits.tex}}

\index{*split|)}

\begin{warn}
  The simplifier merely simplifies the condition of an \isa{if} but not the
  \isa{then} or \isa{else} parts. The latter are simplified only after the
  condition reduces to \isa{True} or \isa{False}, or after splitting. The
  same is true for \isaindex{case}-expressions: only the selector is
  simplified at first, until either the expression reduces to one of the
  cases or it is split.
\end{warn}

\subsubsection{Arithmetic}
\index{arithmetic}

The simplifier routinely solves a small class of linear arithmetic formulae
(over types \isa{nat} and \isa{int}): it only takes into account
assumptions and conclusions that are (possibly negated) (in)equalities
(\isa{=}, \isasymle, \isa{<}) and it only knows about addition. Thus

\input{Misc/document/arith1.tex}%
is proved by simplification, whereas the only slightly more complex

\input{Misc/document/arith4.tex}%
is not proved by simplification and requires \isa{arith}.

\subsubsection{Permutative rewrite rules}

A rewrite rule is {\bf permutative} if the left-hand side and right-hand side
are the same up to renaming of variables.  The most common permutative rule
is commutativity: $x+y = y+x$.  Another example is $(x-y)-z = (x-z)-y$.  Such
rules are problematic because once they apply, they can be used forever.
The simplifier is aware of this danger and treats permutative rules
separately. For details see~\cite{isabelle-ref}.

\subsubsection{Tracing}
\indexbold{tracing the simplifier}

{\makeatother\input{Misc/document/trace_simp.tex}}

\subsection{How it works}
\label{sec:SimpHow}

\subsubsection{Higher-order patterns}

\subsubsection{Local assumptions}

\subsubsection{The preprocessor}

\index{simplification|)}

\section{Induction heuristics}
\label{sec:InductionHeuristics}

The purpose of this section is to illustrate some simple heuristics for
inductive proofs. The first one we have already mentioned in our initial
example:
\begin{quote}
{\em 1. Theorems about recursive functions are proved by induction.}
\end{quote}
In case the function has more than one argument
\begin{quote}
{\em 2. Do induction on argument number $i$ if the function is defined by
recursion in argument number $i$.}
\end{quote}
When we look at the proof of {\makeatother\isa{(xs @ ys) @ zs = xs @ (ys @
  zs)}} in \S\ref{sec:intro-proof} we find (a) \isa{\at} is recursive in
the first argument, (b) \isa{xs} occurs only as the first argument of
\isa{\at}, and (c) both \isa{ys} and \isa{zs} occur at least once as
the second argument of \isa{\at}. Hence it is natural to perform induction
on \isa{xs}.

The key heuristic, and the main point of this section, is to
generalize the goal before induction. The reason is simple: if the goal is
too specific, the induction hypothesis is too weak to allow the induction
step to go through. Let us now illustrate the idea with an example.

{\makeatother\input{Misc/document/Itrev.tex}}

A final point worth mentioning is the orientation of the equation we just
proved: the more complex notion (\isa{itrev}) is on the left-hand
side, the simpler \isa{rev} on the right-hand side. This constitutes
another, albeit weak heuristic that is not restricted to induction:
\begin{quote}
  {\em 5. The right-hand side of an equation should (in some sense) be
    simpler than the left-hand side.}
\end{quote}
The heuristic is tricky to apply because it is not obvious that
\isa{rev xs \at\ ys} is simpler than \isa{itrev xs ys}. But see what
happens if you try to prove the symmetric equation!


\section{Case study: compiling expressions}
\label{sec:ExprCompiler}

{\makeatother\input{CodeGen/document/CodeGen.tex}}


\section{Advanced datatypes}
\label{sec:advanced-datatypes}
\index{*datatype|(}
\index{*primrec|(}
%|)

This section presents advanced forms of \isacommand{datatype}s.

\subsection{Mutual recursion}
\label{sec:datatype-mut-rec}

\input{Datatype/document/ABexpr.tex}

\subsection{Nested recursion}

\input{Datatype/document/Nested.tex}


\subsection{The limits of nested recursion}

How far can we push nested recursion? By the unfolding argument above, we can
reduce nested to mutual recursion provided the nested recursion only involves
previously defined datatypes. This does not include functions:
\begin{ttbox}
datatype t = C (t => bool)
\end{ttbox}
is a real can of worms: in HOL it must be ruled out because it requires a type
\isa{t} such that \isa{t} and its power set \isa{t \isasymFun\ bool} have the
same cardinality---an impossibility. For the same reason it is not possible
to allow recursion involving the type \isa{set}, which is isomorphic to
\isa{t \isasymFun\ bool}.

Fortunately, a limited form of recursion
involving function spaces is permitted: the recursive type may occur on the
right of a function arrow, but never on the left. Hence the above can of worms
is ruled out but the following example of a potentially infinitely branching tree is
accepted:

\input{Datatype/document/Fundata.tex}
\bigskip

If you need nested recursion on the left of a function arrow,
there are alternatives to pure HOL: LCF~\cite{paulson87} is a logic where types like
\begin{ttbox}
datatype lam = C (lam -> lam)
\end{ttbox}
do indeed make sense (note the intentionally different arrow \isa{->}!).
There is even a version of LCF on top of HOL, called
HOLCF~\cite{MuellerNvOS99}.

\index{*primrec|)}
\index{*datatype|)}

\subsection{Case study: Tries}

Tries are a classic search tree data structure~\cite{Knuth3-75} for fast
indexing with strings. Figure~\ref{fig:trie} gives a graphical example of a
trie containing the words ``all'', ``an'', ``ape'', ``can'', ``car'' and
``cat''.  When searching a string in a trie, the letters of the string are
examined sequentially. Each letter determines which subtrie to search next.
In this case study we model tries as a datatype, define a lookup and an
update function, and prove that they behave as expected.

\begin{figure}[htbp]
\begin{center}
\unitlength1mm
\begin{picture}(60,30)
\put( 5, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{l}}
\put(25, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{e}}
\put(35, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{n}}
\put(45, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{r}}
\put(55, 0){\makebox(0,0)[b]{t}}
%
\put( 5, 9){\line(0,-1){5}}
\put(25, 9){\line(0,-1){5}}
\put(44, 9){\line(-3,-2){9}}
\put(45, 9){\line(0,-1){5}}
\put(46, 9){\line(3,-2){9}}
%
\put( 5,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{l}}
\put(15,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{n}}
\put(25,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{p}}
\put(45,10){\makebox(0,0)[b]{a}}
%
\put(14,19){\line(-3,-2){9}}
\put(15,19){\line(0,-1){5}}
\put(16,19){\line(3,-2){9}}
\put(45,19){\line(0,-1){5}}
%
\put(15,20){\makebox(0,0)[b]{a}}
\put(45,20){\makebox(0,0)[b]{c}}
%
\put(30,30){\line(-3,-2){13}}
\put(30,30){\line(3,-2){13}}
\end{picture}
\end{center}
\caption{A sample trie}
\label{fig:trie}
\end{figure}

Proper tries associate some value with each string. Since the
information is stored only in the final node associated with the string, many
nodes do not carry any value. This distinction is captured by the
following predefined datatype (from theory \texttt{Option}, which is a parent
of \texttt{Main}):
\input{Trie/document/Option2.tex}
\indexbold{*option}\indexbold{*None}\indexbold{*Some}

\input{Trie/document/Trie.tex}

\begin{exercise}
  Write an improved version of \isa{update} that does not suffer from the
  space leak in the version above. Prove the main theorem for your improved
  \isa{update}.
\end{exercise}

\begin{exercise}
  Write a function to \emph{delete} entries from a trie. An easy solution is
  a clever modification of \isa{update} which allows both insertion and
  deletion with a single function.  Prove (a modified version of) the main
  theorem above. Optimize you function such that it shrinks tries after
  deletion, if possible.
\end{exercise}

\section{Total recursive functions}
\label{sec:recdef}
\index{*recdef|(}

Although many total functions have a natural primitive recursive definition,
this is not always the case. Arbitrary total recursive functions can be
defined by means of \isacommand{recdef}: you can use full pattern-matching,
recursion need not involve datatypes, and termination is proved by showing
that the arguments of all recursive calls are smaller in a suitable (user
supplied) sense.

\subsection{Defining recursive functions}

\input{Recdef/document/examples.tex}

\subsection{Proving termination}

\input{Recdef/document/termination.tex}

\subsection{Simplification with recdef}

\input{Recdef/document/simplification.tex}


\subsection{Induction}
\index{induction!recursion|(}
\index{recursion induction|(}

\input{Recdef/document/Induction.tex}

\index{induction!recursion|)}
\index{recursion induction|)}
\index{*recdef|)}