teeinput
author nipkow
Sat, 22 Apr 1995 13:25:31 +0200
changeset 1068 e0f2dffab506
parent 0 a5a9c433f639
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
HOL.thy: "@" is no longer introduced as a "binder" but has its own explicit translation rule "@x.b" == "Eps(%x.b)". If x is a proper pattern, further translation rules for abstractions with patterns take care of the rest. This is very modular and avoids problems with "binders" such as "!" mentioned below. let now allows pttrn (let (x,y) = t in u) instead of just idt (let x = t in u) Set.thy: UN, INT, ALL, EX, etc all use "pttrn" instead of idt. Same change as for "@" above, except that "@" was a "binder" originally. Prod.thy: Added new syntax for pttrn which allows arbitrarily nested tuples. Two translation rules take care of %pttrn. Unfortunately they cannot be reversed. Hence a little ML-code is used as well. Note that now "! (x,y). ..." is syntactically valid but leads to a translation error. This is because "!" is introduced as a "binder" which means that its translation into lambda-terms is not done by a rewrite rule (aka macro) but by some fixed ML-code which comes after the rewriting stage and does not know how to handle patterns. This looks like a minor blemish since patterns in unbounded quantifiers are not that useful (well, except maybe in unique existence ...). Ideally, there should be two syntactic categories: idts, as we know and love it, which does not admit patterns. patterns, which is what idts has become now. There is one more point where patterns are now allowed but don't make sense: {e | idts . P} where idts is the list of local variables. Univ.thy: converted the defs for <++> and <**> into pattern form. It worked perfectly.

#! /bin/sh
#  teeinput -- start a program and log all inputs to a file
#     environment variable $LISTEN specifies the file name
tee -a -i $LISTEN | $*