This PR migrates usages of `Std.Range` to the new polymorphic ranges.
This PR unfortunately increases the transitive imports for
frequently-used parts of `Init` because the ranges now rely on iterators
in order to provide their functionality for types other than `Nat`.
However, iteration over ranges in compiled code is as efficient as
before in the examples I checked. This is because of a special
`IteratorLoop` implementation provided in the PR for this purpose.
There were two issues that were uncovered during migration:
* In `IndPredBelow.lean`, migrating the last remaining range causes
`compilerTest1.lean` to break. I have minimized the issue and came to
the conclusion it's a compiler bug. Therefore, I have not replaced said
old range usage yet (see #9186).
* In `BRecOn.lean`, we are publicly importing the ranges. Making this
import private should theoretically work, but there seems to be a
problem with the module system, causing the build to panic later in
`Init.Data.Grind.Poly` (see #9185).
* In `FuzzyMatching.lean`, inlining fails with the new ranges, which
would have led to significant slowdown. Therefore, I have not migrated
this file either.
This PR adds the ability to define possibly non-terminating functions
and still be able to reason about them equationally, as long as they are
tail-recursive or monadic.
Typical uses of this feature are
```lean4
def ack : (n m : Nat) → Option Nat
| 0, y => some (y+1)
| x+1, 0 => ack x 1
| x+1, y+1 => do ack x (← ack (x+1) y)
partial_fixpiont
def whileSome (f : α → Option α) (x : α) : α :=
match f x with
| none => x
| some x' => whileSome f x'
partial_fixpiont
def computeLfp {α : Type u} [DecidableEq α] (f : α → α) (x : α) : α :=
let next := f x
if x ≠ next then
computeLfp f next
else
x
partial_fixpiont
noncomputable def geom : Distr Nat := do
let head ← coin
if head then
return 0
else
let n ← geom
return (n + 1)
partial_fixpiont
```
This PR contains
* The necessary fragment of domain theory, up to (a variant of)
Knaster–Tarski theorem (merged as
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/6477)
* A tactic to solve monotonicity goals compositionally (a bit like
mathlib’s `fun_prop`) (merged as
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/6506)
* An attribute to extend that tactic (merged as
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/6506)
* A “derecursifier” that uses that machinery to define recursive
function, including support for dependent functions and mutual
recursion.
* Fixed-point induction principles (technical, tedious to use)
* For `Option`-valued functions: Partial correctness induction theorems
that hide all the domain theory
This is heavily inspired by [Isabelle’s `partial_function`
command](https://isabelle.in.tum.de/doc/codegen.pdf).
code to create nested `PProd`s, and project out, and related functions
were scattered in variuos places. This unifies them in
`Lean.Meta.PProdN`.
It also consistently avoids the terminal `True` or `PUnit`, for slightly
easier to read constructions.