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 marks `Char -> Bool` patterns as default instances for string
search. This means that things like `" ".find (·.isWhitespace)` can now
be elaborated without error.
Previously, it was necessary to write `" ".find Char.isWhitespace`.
Thank you to David Christiansen for the idea of using a default
instance.
This PR aims to improve the performance of `String.contains`,
`String.find`, etc. when using patterns of type `Char` or `Char -> Bool`
by moving the needle out of the iterator state and thus working around
missing unboxing in the compiler.
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 adds the basic infrastructure to perform termination proofs
about `String.ValidPos` and `String.Slice.Pos`.
We choose approach where the intended way to do termination arguments is
to argue about the position itself rather than some projection of it
like `remainingBytes`.
The types `String.ValidPos` and `String.Slice.Pos` are equipped with a
`WellFoundedRelation` instance given by the greater-than relation. This
means that if a function takes a position `p` and performs a recursive
call on `q`, then the decreasing obligation will be `p < q`. This works
well in the common case where `q` is `p.next h`, in which case the goal
`p < p.next h` is solved by the simplifier.
For stepping through a string backwards, we introduce a type synonym
with a `WellFoundedRelation` instance given by the less-than relation.
This means that if a function takes a position `p` and performs a
recursive call on `q` and specifies `termination_by p.down`, then the
decreasing obligation will be `q < p`. This works well in the case where
`q` is `p.prev h`, in which case the goal `p.prev h < p` is solved by
the simplifier.
For termination arguments invoving multiple strings, the lower-level
primitive `p.remainingBytes` (landing in `Nat`) is also available.
In a future PR, we will additionally provide the necessary typeclasses
instances to register `String.ValidPos` and `String.Slice.Pos` with
`grind` to make complex termination arguments more convenient in user
code.
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`).