src/Doc/Tutorial/Recdef/Induction.thy
author wenzelm
Tue, 28 Aug 2012 18:57:32 +0200
changeset 48985 5386df44a037
parent 16417 doc-src/TutorialI/Recdef/Induction.thy@9bc16273c2d4
child 58860 fee7cfa69c50
permissions -rw-r--r--
renamed doc-src to src/Doc; renamed TutorialI to Tutorial;

(*<*)
theory Induction imports examples simplification begin;
(*>*)

text{*
Assuming we have defined our function such that Isabelle could prove
termination and that the recursion equations (or some suitable derived
equations) are simplification rules, we might like to prove something about
our function. Since the function is recursive, the natural proof principle is
again induction. But this time the structural form of induction that comes
with datatypes is unlikely to work well --- otherwise we could have defined the
function by \isacommand{primrec}. Therefore \isacommand{recdef} automatically
proves a suitable induction rule $f$@{text".induct"} that follows the
recursion pattern of the particular function $f$. We call this
\textbf{recursion induction}. Roughly speaking, it
requires you to prove for each \isacommand{recdef} equation that the property
you are trying to establish holds for the left-hand side provided it holds
for all recursive calls on the right-hand side. Here is a simple example
involving the predefined @{term"map"} functional on lists:
*}

lemma "map f (sep(x,xs)) = sep(f x, map f xs)";

txt{*\noindent
Note that @{term"map f xs"}
is the result of applying @{term"f"} to all elements of @{term"xs"}. We prove
this lemma by recursion induction over @{term"sep"}:
*}

apply(induct_tac x xs rule: sep.induct);

txt{*\noindent
The resulting proof state has three subgoals corresponding to the three
clauses for @{term"sep"}:
@{subgoals[display,indent=0]}
The rest is pure simplification:
*}

apply simp_all;
done

text{*
Try proving the above lemma by structural induction, and you find that you
need an additional case distinction. What is worse, the names of variables
are invented by Isabelle and have nothing to do with the names in the
definition of @{term"sep"}.

In general, the format of invoking recursion induction is
\begin{quote}
\isacommand{apply}@{text"(induct_tac"} $x@1 \dots x@n$ @{text"rule:"} $f$@{text".induct)"}
\end{quote}\index{*induct_tac (method)}%
where $x@1~\dots~x@n$ is a list of free variables in the subgoal and $f$ the
name of a function that takes an $n$-tuple. Usually the subgoal will
contain the term $f(x@1,\dots,x@n)$ but this need not be the case. The
induction rules do not mention $f$ at all. Here is @{thm[source]sep.induct}:
\begin{isabelle}
{\isasymlbrakk}~{\isasymAnd}a.~P~a~[];\isanewline
~~{\isasymAnd}a~x.~P~a~[x];\isanewline
~~{\isasymAnd}a~x~y~zs.~P~a~(y~\#~zs)~{\isasymLongrightarrow}~P~a~(x~\#~y~\#~zs){\isasymrbrakk}\isanewline
{\isasymLongrightarrow}~P~u~v%
\end{isabelle}
It merely says that in order to prove a property @{term"P"} of @{term"u"} and
@{term"v"} you need to prove it for the three cases where @{term"v"} is the
empty list, the singleton list, and the list with at least two elements.
The final case has an induction hypothesis:  you may assume that @{term"P"}
holds for the tail of that list.
*}

(*<*)
end
(*>*)