This PR adds the `+generalize` option to the `let` and `have` syntaxes.
For example, `have +generalize n := a + b; body` replaces all instances
of `a + b` in the expected type with `n` when elaborating `body`. This
can be likened to a term version of the `generalize` tactic. One can
combine this with `eq` in `have +generalize (eq := h) n := a + b; body`
as an analogue of `generalize h : n = a + b`.
This PR implements first-class support for nondependent let expressions
in the elaborator; recall that a let expression `let x : t := v; b` is
called *nondependent* if `fun x : t => b` typechecks, and the notation
for a nondependent let expression is `have x := v; b`. Previously we
encoded `have` using the `letFun` function, but now we make use of the
`nondep` flag in the `Expr.letE` constructor for the encoding. This has
been given full support throughout the metaprogramming interface and the
elaborator. Key changes to the metaprogramming interface:
- Local context `ldecl`s with `nondep := true` are generally treated as
`cdecl`s. This is because in the body of a `have` expression the
variable is opaque. Functions like `LocalDecl.isLet` by default return
`false` for nondependent `ldecl`s. In the rare case where it is needed,
they take an additional optional `allowNondep : Bool` flag (defaults to
`false`) if the variable is being processed in a context where the value
is relevant.
- Functions such as `mkLetFVars` by default generalize nondependent let
variables and create lambda expressions for them. The
`generalizeNondepLet` flag (default true) can be set to false if `have`
expressions should be produced instead. **Breaking change:** Uses of
`letLambdaTelescope`/`mkLetFVars` need to use `generalizeNondepLet :=
false`. See the next item.
- There are now some mapping functions to make telescoping operations
more convenient. See `mapLetTelescope` and `mapLambdaLetTelescope`.
There is also `mapLetDecl` as a counterpart to `withLetDecl` for
creating `let`/`have` expressions.
- Important note about the `generalizeNondepLet` flag: it should only be
used for variables in a local context that the metaprogram "owns". Since
nondependent let variables are treated as constants in most cases, the
`value` field might refer to variables that do not exist, if for example
those variables were cleared or reverted. Using `mapLetDecl` is always
fine.
- The simplifier will cache its let dependence calculations in the
nondep field of let expressions.
- The `intro` tactic still produces *dependent* local variables. Given
that the simplifier will transform lets into haves, it would be
surprising if that would prevent `intro` from creating a local variable
whose value cannot be used.
Note that nondependence of lets is not checked by the kernel. To
external checker authors: If the elaborator gets the nondep flag wrong,
we consider this to be an elaborator error. Feel free to typecheck `letE
n t v b true` as if it were `app (lam n t b default) v` and please
report issues.
This PR follows up from #8751, which made sure the nondep flag was
preserved in the C++ interface.
This PR adds a linter (`linter.unusedSimpArgs`) that complains when a
simp argument (`simp [foo]`) is unused. It should do the right thing if
the `simp` invocation is run multiple times, e.g. inside `all_goals`. It
does not trigger when the `simp` call is inside a macro. The linter
message contains a clickable hint to remove the simp argument.
I chose to display a separate warning for each unused argument. This
means that the user has to click multiple times to remove all of them
(and wait for re-elaboration in between). But this just means multiple
endorphine kicks, and the main benefit over a single warning that would
have to span the whole argument list is that already the squigglies tell
the users about unused arguments.
This closes#4483.
Making Init and Std clean wrt to this linter revealed close to 1000
unused simp args, a pleasant experience for anyone enjoying tidying
things: #8905
This PR modifies `let` and `have` term syntaxes to be consistent with
each other. Adds configuration options; for example, `have` is
equivalent to `let +nondep`, for *nondependent* lets. Other options
include `+usedOnly` (for `let_tmp`), `+zeta` (for `letI`/`haveI`), and
`+postponeValue` (for `let_delayed)`. There is also `let (eq := h) x :=
v; b` for introducing `h : x = v` when elaborating `b`. The `eq` option
works for pattern matching as well, for example `let (eq := h) (x, y) :=
p; b`.
Future PRs will add these options to tactic syntax, once a stage0 update
has been done.
This PR implements support for (commutative) semirings in `grind`. It
uses the Grothendieck completion to construct a (commutative) ring
`Lean.Grind.Ring.OfSemiring.Q α` from a (commutative) semiring `α`. This
construction is mostly useful for semirings that implement
`AddRightCancel α`. Otherwise, the function `toQ` is not injective.
Examples:
```lean
example (x y : Nat) : x^2*y = 1 → x*y^2 = y → y*x = 1 := by
grind
example [CommSemiring α] [AddRightCancel α] (x y : α) : x^2*y = 1 → x*y^2 = y → y*x = 1 := by
grind
example (a b : Nat) : 3 * a * b = a * b * 3 := by grind
example (k z : Nat) : k * (z * 2 * (z * 2 + 1)) = z * (k * (2 * (z * 2 + 1))) := by grind
example [CommSemiring α] [AddRightCancel α] [IsCharP α 0] (x y : α)
: x^2*y = 1 → x*y^2 = y → x + y = 1 → False := by
grind
```
This PR makes `simp` consult its own cache more often, to avoid
replicating work.
Before, the simp cache was checked upon entry of `simpImpl` only, which
then calls `simpLoop`, which recursively iterates the `pre`-lemmas,
without checking the cache again.
Now, `simpLoop` itself checks the cache. This seems more principled,
given that `simpLoop` is actually putting entries into the cache for
each of its calls, so it’s more uniform if it checks the cache itself.
This avoids repeated rewrites. For example given
```
theorem ab : a = b := testSorry
theorem bc : b = c := testSorry
example (h : P c) : P b ∧ P a := by simp [ab, bc, h]
```
simp would rewrite `b ==> c` twice (once as part of `b ==> c` and then
again as part of `a ==> b ==> c`). And it’d be order dependent: With
```
example (h : P c) : P a ∧ P b := by simp [ab, bc, h]
```
the `a ==> b ==> c` chain would insert `b ==> c` into the cache, and
picked up by `simpImpl` when rewriting `P b`.
With this change, `b ==> c` is performed only once in both examples.
Instruction counts on stdlib and mathlib both show a mild improvement
across the board (0.5%), with individual modules improving by up to 4%
in stdlib and even more in mathlib.
(This does not check the cache before applying `post`, which explains
where there are still some repeated rewrites in the trace logs. But I’m
less sure about inserting a cache check here and so I am treading
carefully here. It’s also going to be at most one `post` application
that’s duplicated, because if `post` returns `.visit`, we go back to
`pre` and thus a cache check.)
This PR refactors the way simp arguments are elaborated: Instead of
changing the `SimpTheorems` structure as we go, this elaborates each
argument to a more declarative description of what it does, and then
apply those. This enables more interesting checks of simp arguments that
need to happen in the context of the eventually constructed simp context
(the checks in #8688), or after simp has run (unused argument linter
#8901).
The new data structure describing an elaborated simp argument isn’t the
most elegant, but follows from the code.
While I am at it, move handling of `[*]` into `elabSimpArgs`. Downstream
adaption branches exist (but may not be fully up to date because of the
permission changes).
While I am at it, I cleaned up `SimpTheorems.lean` file a bit (sorting
declarations, mild renaming) and added documentation.
This PR make sure that the local instance cache calculation applies more
reductions. In #2199 there was an issue where metavariables could
prevent local variables from being considered as local instances. We use
a slightly different approach that ensures that, for example, `let`s at
the ends of telescopes do not cause similar problems. These reductions
were already being calculated, so this does not require any additional
work to be done.
Metaprogramming interface addition: the various forall telescope
functions that do reduction now have a `whnfType` flag (default false).
If it's true, then the callback `k` is given the WHNF of the type. This
is a free operation, since the telescope function already computes it.
This PR refactors `Lean.Grind.NatModule/IntModule/Ring.IsOrdered`.
We ensure the the diamond from `Ring` to `NatModule` via either
`Semiring` or `IntModule` is defeq, which was not previously the case.
---------
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
This PR corrects the pretty printing of `grind` modifiers. Previously
`@[grind →]` was being pretty printed as `@[grind→ ]` (Space on the
right of the symbol, rather than left.) This fixes the pretty printing
of attributes, and preserves the presence of spaces after the symbol in
the output of `grind?`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
This PR implements a `finally` section following a (potentially empty)
`where` block. `where ... finally` opens a tactic sequence block in
which the goals are the unassigned metavariables from the definition
body and its auxiliary definitions that arise from use of `let rec` and
`where`.
This can be useful for discharging multiple proof obligations in the
definition body by a single invocation of a tactic such as `all_goals`:
```lean
example (i j : Nat) (xs : Array Nat) (hi : i < xs.size) (hj: j < xs.size) :=
match i with
| 0 => x
| _ => xs[i]'?_ + xs[j]'?_
where x := 13
finally all_goals assumption
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Graf <sg@lean-fro.org>
This PR adds a logic of stateful predicates `SPred` to `Std.Do` in order
to support reasoning about monadic programs. It comes with a dedicated
proof mode the tactics of which are accessible by importing
`Std.Tactic.Do`.
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Graf <sg@lean-fro.org>
Although `HEq` was abbreviated as `≍` in #8503, many instances of the
form `HEq x y` still remain.
Therefore, I searched for occurrences of `HEq x y` using the regular
expression `(?<![A-Za-z/@]|``)HEq(?![A-Za-z.])` and replaced as many as
possible with the form `x ≍ y`.
This PR improves the error messages produced by `end` and prevents
invalid `end` commands from closing scopes on failure.
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob23oba <152706811+Rob23oba@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
This PR adds support for throwing named errors with associated error
explanations. In particular, it adds elaborators for the syntax defined
in #8649, which use the error-explanation infrastructure added in #8651.
This includes completions, hovers, and jump-to-definition for error
names.
Note that another stage0 rebuild will be required to define explanations
using `register_error_explanation`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
Co-authored-by: Marc Huisinga <mhuisi@protonmail.com>
This PR adds a new `BitVec.clz` operation and a corresponding `clz`
circuit to `bv_decide`, allowing to bitblast the count leading zeroes
operation. The AIG circuit is linear in the number of bits of the
original expression, making the bitblasting convenient wrt. rewriting.
`clz` is common in numerous compiler intrinsics (see
[here](https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html#intrinsics-support-within-constant-expressions))
and architectures (see
[here](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Find_first_set)).
Co-authored by @bollu.
---------
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
This PR makes the `clear_value` tactic preserve the order of variables
in the local context. This is done by adding
`Lean.MVarId.withRevertedFrom`, which reverts all local variables
starting from a given variable, rather than only the ones that depend on
it.
Note: an alternative implementation might convert the ldecl to a cdecl
and then reset the meta cache. This assumes that there are no other
caches that might still remember the value of the ldecl.
This PR allow structures to have non-bracketed binders, making it
consistent with `inductive`.
The change allows the following to be written instead of having to write
`S (n)`:
```lean
structure S n where
field : Fin n
```
This PR removes the auto-generated `binductionOn` and `ibelow`
implementations for inductive types in favor of the improved `brecOn`
implementation from #7639.
This test is essentially disabled on `master`, because it prints
nothing. With the new compiler enabled, it prints names of functions
throughout the Lean codebase satisfying certain conditions. Even just
maintaining this on the new compiler branch got old pretty quickly, so I
can't imagine we'd ever want to deal with this on `master`.
This PR implements equality elimination in `grind linarith`. The current
implementation supports only `IntModule` and `IntModule` +
`NoNatZeroDivisors`
This PR adds the following instance
```
instance [Field α] [LinearOrder α] [Ring.IsOrdered α] : IsCharP α 0
```
The goal is to ensure we do not perform unnecessary case-splits in our
test suite.
This PR adds a module `Lean.Util.CollectLooseBVars` with a function
`Expr.collectLooseBVars` that collects the set of loose bound variables
in an expression. That is, it computes the set of all `i` such that
`e.hasLooseBVar i` is true.