This PR renames `String.Iterator` to `String.Legacy.Iterator`.
From the docstring of `String.Legacy.Iterator`:
> This is a no-longer-supported legacy API that will be removed in a
future release. You should use
> `String.ValidPos` instead, which is similar, but safer. To iterate
over a string `s`, start with
> `p : s.startValidPos`, advance it using `p.next`, access the current
character using `p.get` and
> check if the position is at the end using `p = s.endValidPos` or
`p.IsAtEnd`.
This PR makes functions defined by well-founded recursion use an
`opaque` well-founded proof by default. This reliably prevents kernel
reduction of such definitions and proofs, which tends to be
prohibitively slow (fixes#2171), and which regularly causes
hard-to-debug kernel type-checking failures. This changes renders
`unseal` ineffective for such definitions. To avoid the opaque proof,
annotate the function definition with `@[semireducible]`.
Many of our tests in `tests/lean/run/` produce output from `#eval` (or
`#check`) statements, that is then ignored.
This PR tries to capture all the useful output using `#guard_msgs`. I've
only done a cursory check that the output is still sane --- there is a
chance that some "unchecked" tests have already accumulated regressions
and this just cements them!
In the other direction, I did identify two rotten tests:
* a minor one in `setStructInstNotation.lean`, where a comment says `Set
Nat`, but `#check` actually prints `?_`. Weird?
* `CompilerProbe.lean` is generating empty output, apparently indicating
that something is broken, but I don't know the signficance of this file.
In any case, I'll ask about these elsewhere.
(This started by noticing that a recent `grind` test file had an
untested `trace_state`, and then got carried away.)