Typos in `Init/` and `Std/`.
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Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
This PR makes the `FinitenessRelation` structure, which is helpful when
proving the finiteness of iterators, part of the public API. Previously,
it was marked internal and experimental.
This PR moves many constants of the iterator API from `Std.Iterators` to
the `Std` namespace in order to make them more convenient to use. These
constants include, but are not limited to, `Iter`, `IterM` and
`IteratorLoop`. This is a breaking change. If something breaks, try
adding `open Std` in order to make these constants available again. If
some constants in the `Std.Iterators` namespace cannot be found, they
can be found directly in `Std` now.
This PR adds `Std.Slice.Pattern` instances for `p : Char -> Prop` as
long as `DecidablePred p`, to allow things like `"hello".dropWhile (· =
'h')`.
To achieve this, we refactor `ForwardPattern` and friends to be
"non-uniform", i.e., the class is now `ForwardPattern pat`, not
`ForwardPattern ρ` (where `pat : ρ`).
This PR fixes the KMP implementation, which did incorrect bookkeeping of
the backtracking process, leading to incorrect starting ranges of
matches.
The new implementation does not require `partial` anywhere.
This PR ensures that searching for an empty string returns the expected
pattern of alternating size-zero matches and size-one rejects.
In particular, splitting by an empty string returns an array formed of
the empty string, all of the string's characters as singleton strings,
followed by another empty string. This matches the [Rust
behavior](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.str.html#method.split),
for example.
This PR fixes a bug in `String.Slice.takeWhile` which caused it to get
its bookkeeping wrong and panic. The new version only uses safe
operations on `String.Slice.Pos`.
This PR moves many operations involving `String.Pos.Raw` to a the
`String.Pos.Raw` namespace with the eventual aim of freeing up the
`String` namespace to contain operations using `String.ValidPos` (to be
renamed to `String.Pos`) instead.
This PR adds the `String.ValidPos.set` and `String.ValidPos.modify`
functions.
After this PR, `String.pos_lt_eq` is no longer a `simp` lemma. Add
`String.Pos.Raw.lt_iff` as a `simp` lemma if your proofs break.
This PR introduces a no-op version of `Shrink`, a type that should allow
shrinking small types into smaller universes given a proof that the type
is small enough, and uses it in the iterator library. Because this type
would require special compiler support, the current version is just a
wrapper around the inner type so that the wrapper is equivalent, but not
definitionally equivalent.
While `Shrink` is unable to shrink universes right now, but introducing
it now will allow us to generalize the universes in the iterator library
with fewer breaking changes as soon as an actual `Shrink` is possible.
This PR enforces rules around arithmetic of `String.Pos.Raw`.
Specifically, it adopts the following conventions:
- Byte indices ("ordinals") in strings should be represented using
`String.Pos.Raw`
- Amounts of bytes ("cardinals") in strings should be represented using
`Nat`.
For example, `String.Slice.utf8ByteSize` now returns `Nat` instead of
`String.Pos.Raw`, and there is a new function `String.Slice.rawEndPos`.
Finally, the `HAdd` and `HSub` instances for `String.Pos.Raw` are
reorganized. This is a **breaking change**.
The `HAdd/HSub String.Pos.Raw String.Pos.Raw String.Pos.Raw` instances
have been removed. For the use case of tracking positions relative to
some other position, we instead provide `offsetBy` and `unoffsetBy`
functions. For the use case of advancing/unadvancing a position by an
arbitrary number of bytes, we instead provide `increaseBy` and
`decreaseBy` functions. For
offsetting/unoffsetting/advancing/unadvancing a position `p` by the size
of a string `s` (resp. character `c`), use `s + p`/`p - s`/`p + s`/`p -
s` (resp. `c + p`/`p - c`/`p + c`/`p - c`).