This PR adds a new helper parser for implementing parsers that contain
hexadecimal numbers. We are going to use it to implement anchors in the
`grind` interactive mode.
This PR refines and clarifies the `meta` phase distinction in the module
system.
* `meta import A` without `public` now has the clarified meaning of
"enable compile-time evaluation of declarations in or above `A` in the
current module, but not downstream". This is now checked statically by
enforcing that public meta defs, which therefore may be referenced from
outside, can only use public meta imports, and that global evaluating
attributes such as `@[term_parser]` can only be applied to public meta
defs.
* `meta def`s may no longer reference non-meta defs even when in the
same module. This clarifies the meta distinction as well as improves
locality of (new) error messages.
* parser references in `syntax` are now also properly tracked as meta
references.
* A `meta import` of an `import` now properly loads only the `.ir` of
the nested module for the purposes of execution instead of also making
its declarations available for general elaboration.
* `initialize` is now no longer being run on import under the module
system, which is now covered by `meta initialize`.
This PR removes the old documentation overview site, as its content has
moved to the main Lean website infrastructure.
This should be merged when the new website section is deployed, after
installing appropriate redirects.
Developer documentation is remaining in Markdown form, but it will no
longer be part of the documentation hosted on the Lean website. Example
code stays here for CI, but it is now rendered via a Verso plugin.
This PR simplifies the signature of `Array.mapIdx`, to take a function
`f : Nat \to \a \to \b` rather than a function `f : Fin as.size \to \a
\to \b`.
Lean doesn't actually use the extra generality anywhere (so in fact this
change *simplifies* all the call sites of `Array.mapIdx`, since we no
longer need to throw away the proof).
This change would make the function signature equivalent to
`List.mapIdx`, hence making it easier to write verification lemmas.
We keep the original behaviour as `Array.mapFinIdx`.
This solves the issue where certain subexpressions are lacking syntax
hovers because the hover text is not "builtin" - it only shows up if the
`Parser` constant is imported in the environment. For top level syntaxes
this is not a problem because `builtin_term_parser` will automatically
add this doc information, but nested syntaxes don't get the same
treatment.
We could walk the expression and add builtin docs recursively, but this
is somewhat expensive and unnecessary given that it's a fixed list of
declarations in lean core. Moreover, there are reasons to want to
control which syntax nodes actually get hovers, and while a better
system for that is forthcoming, for now it can be achieved by
strategically not applying the `@[builtin_doc]` attribute.
Fixes#3842
This fixes an issue where the completion would use info nodes before the
cursor for computing completions.
Fixes https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues/3462.
ToDo:
- [x] Fix test failures for completions that previously worked by
accident (cc: @Kha)
- [x] stage0 update
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
This coercion caused difficult-to-diagnose bugs sometimes. Because there
are some situations where converting a string to a name should be done
by parsing the string, and others where it should not, an explicit
choice seems better here.
---------
Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
We use `nullKind` for the `group` parser combinator.
When pattern matching `nullKind` nodes, we check their arities.
So, error recovery often fails for parsers that use the `group`
combinator.
For example, we have the parser
```
def whereDecls := leading_parser "where " >> many1Indent (group (letRecDecl >> optional ";"))
```
If there is syntax error at `letRecDecl`, the node corresponding to
```
group (letRecDecl >> optional ";")
```
will contain only one child, and the pattern matching at
```
def expandWhereDecls (whereDecls : Syntax) (body : Syntax) : MacroM Syntax :=
match whereDecls with
| `(whereDecls|where $[$decls:letRecDecl $[;]?]*) => `(let rec $decls:letRecDecl,*; $body)
| _ => Macro.throwUnsupported
```
fails, and we can't elaborate the partial syntax tree for
`letRecDecl`, and auto-completion will not work there.
We address this issue by using a new kind for the `group` combinator.
The idea is to pattern match `group` as we pattern match `node`s with
proper syntax node kinds. This change is consistent with the way we
use `group` where it mainly a convenience for saving us the trouble of
defining a new parser definition that is used only once.