| author | wenzelm |
| Mon, 17 Dec 2012 14:07:34 +0100 | |
| changeset 50575 | ae1da46022d1 |
| parent 48985 | 5386df44a037 |
| child 58860 | fee7cfa69c50 |
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
(*<*)theory Star imports Main begin(*>*) section{*The Reflexive Transitive Closure*} text{*\label{sec:rtc} \index{reflexive transitive closure!defining inductively|(}% An inductive definition may accept parameters, so it can express functions that yield sets. Relations too can be defined inductively, since they are just sets of pairs. A perfect example is the function that maps a relation to its reflexive transitive closure. This concept was already introduced in \S\ref{sec:Relations}, where the operator @{text"\<^sup>*"} was defined as a least fixed point because inductive definitions were not yet available. But now they are: *} inductive_set rtc :: "('a \<times> 'a)set \<Rightarrow> ('a \<times> 'a)set" ("_*" [1000] 999) for r :: "('a \<times> 'a)set" where rtc_refl[iff]: "(x,x) \<in> r*" | rtc_step: "\<lbrakk> (x,y) \<in> r; (y,z) \<in> r* \<rbrakk> \<Longrightarrow> (x,z) \<in> r*" text{*\noindent The function @{term rtc} is annotated with concrete syntax: instead of @{text"rtc r"} we can write @{term"r*"}. The actual definition consists of two rules. Reflexivity is obvious and is immediately given the @{text iff} attribute to increase automation. The second rule, @{thm[source]rtc_step}, says that we can always add one more @{term r}-step to the left. Although we could make @{thm[source]rtc_step} an introduction rule, this is dangerous: the recursion in the second premise slows down and may even kill the automatic tactics. The above definition of the concept of reflexive transitive closure may be sufficiently intuitive but it is certainly not the only possible one: for a start, it does not even mention transitivity. The rest of this section is devoted to proving that it is equivalent to the standard definition. We start with a simple lemma: *} lemma [intro]: "(x,y) \<in> r \<Longrightarrow> (x,y) \<in> r*" by(blast intro: rtc_step); text{*\noindent Although the lemma itself is an unremarkable consequence of the basic rules, it has the advantage that it can be declared an introduction rule without the danger of killing the automatic tactics because @{term"r*"} occurs only in the conclusion and not in the premise. Thus some proofs that would otherwise need @{thm[source]rtc_step} can now be found automatically. The proof also shows that @{text blast} is able to handle @{thm[source]rtc_step}. But some of the other automatic tactics are more sensitive, and even @{text blast} can be lead astray in the presence of large numbers of rules. To prove transitivity, we need rule induction, i.e.\ theorem @{thm[source]rtc.induct}: @{thm[display]rtc.induct} It says that @{text"?P"} holds for an arbitrary pair @{thm (prem 1) rtc.induct} if @{text"?P"} is preserved by all rules of the inductive definition, i.e.\ if @{text"?P"} holds for the conclusion provided it holds for the premises. In general, rule induction for an $n$-ary inductive relation $R$ expects a premise of the form $(x@1,\dots,x@n) \in R$. Now we turn to the inductive proof of transitivity: *} lemma rtc_trans: "\<lbrakk> (x,y) \<in> r*; (y,z) \<in> r* \<rbrakk> \<Longrightarrow> (x,z) \<in> r*" apply(erule rtc.induct) txt{*\noindent Unfortunately, even the base case is a problem: @{subgoals[display,indent=0,goals_limit=1]} We have to abandon this proof attempt. To understand what is going on, let us look again at @{thm[source]rtc.induct}. In the above application of @{text erule}, the first premise of @{thm[source]rtc.induct} is unified with the first suitable assumption, which is @{term"(x,y) \<in> r*"} rather than @{term"(y,z) \<in> r*"}. Although that is what we want, it is merely due to the order in which the assumptions occur in the subgoal, which it is not good practice to rely on. As a result, @{text"?xb"} becomes @{term x}, @{text"?xa"} becomes @{term y} and @{text"?P"} becomes @{term"%u v. (u,z) : r*"}, thus yielding the above subgoal. So what went wrong? When looking at the instantiation of @{text"?P"} we see that it does not depend on its second parameter at all. The reason is that in our original goal, of the pair @{term"(x,y)"} only @{term x} appears also in the conclusion, but not @{term y}. Thus our induction statement is too general. Fortunately, it can easily be specialized: transfer the additional premise @{prop"(y,z):r*"} into the conclusion:*} (*<*)oops(*>*) lemma rtc_trans[rule_format]: "(x,y) \<in> r* \<Longrightarrow> (y,z) \<in> r* \<longrightarrow> (x,z) \<in> r*" txt{*\noindent This is not an obscure trick but a generally applicable heuristic: \begin{quote}\em When proving a statement by rule induction on $(x@1,\dots,x@n) \in R$, pull all other premises containing any of the $x@i$ into the conclusion using $\longrightarrow$. \end{quote} A similar heuristic for other kinds of inductions is formulated in \S\ref{sec:ind-var-in-prems}. The @{text rule_format} directive turns @{text"\<longrightarrow>"} back into @{text"\<Longrightarrow>"}: in the end we obtain the original statement of our lemma. *} apply(erule rtc.induct) txt{*\noindent Now induction produces two subgoals which are both proved automatically: @{subgoals[display,indent=0]} *} apply(blast); apply(blast intro: rtc_step); done text{* Let us now prove that @{term"r*"} is really the reflexive transitive closure of @{term r}, i.e.\ the least reflexive and transitive relation containing @{term r}. The latter is easily formalized *} inductive_set rtc2 :: "('a \<times> 'a)set \<Rightarrow> ('a \<times> 'a)set" for r :: "('a \<times> 'a)set" where "(x,y) \<in> r \<Longrightarrow> (x,y) \<in> rtc2 r" | "(x,x) \<in> rtc2 r" | "\<lbrakk> (x,y) \<in> rtc2 r; (y,z) \<in> rtc2 r \<rbrakk> \<Longrightarrow> (x,z) \<in> rtc2 r" text{*\noindent and the equivalence of the two definitions is easily shown by the obvious rule inductions: *} lemma "(x,y) \<in> rtc2 r \<Longrightarrow> (x,y) \<in> r*" apply(erule rtc2.induct); apply(blast); apply(blast); apply(blast intro: rtc_trans); done lemma "(x,y) \<in> r* \<Longrightarrow> (x,y) \<in> rtc2 r" apply(erule rtc.induct); apply(blast intro: rtc2.intros); apply(blast intro: rtc2.intros); done text{* So why did we start with the first definition? Because it is simpler. It contains only two rules, and the single step rule is simpler than transitivity. As a consequence, @{thm[source]rtc.induct} is simpler than @{thm[source]rtc2.induct}. Since inductive proofs are hard enough anyway, we should always pick the simplest induction schema available. Hence @{term rtc} is the definition of choice. \index{reflexive transitive closure!defining inductively|)} \begin{exercise}\label{ex:converse-rtc-step} Show that the converse of @{thm[source]rtc_step} also holds: @{prop[display]"[| (x,y) : r*; (y,z) : r |] ==> (x,z) : r*"} \end{exercise} \begin{exercise} Repeat the development of this section, but starting with a definition of @{term rtc} where @{thm[source]rtc_step} is replaced by its converse as shown in exercise~\ref{ex:converse-rtc-step}. \end{exercise} *} (*<*) lemma rtc_step2[rule_format]: "(x,y) : r* \<Longrightarrow> (y,z) : r --> (x,z) : r*" apply(erule rtc.induct); apply blast; apply(blast intro: rtc_step) done end (*>*)