Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Leonardo de Moura
f917f811c8
chore: cleanup #5167 workarounds after update stage0 (#5175)
PR #5167 implemented RFC #5046, but it required several workarounds due
to staging issues. This PR cleans up these workarounds.
2024-08-26 17:53:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
45475d6434
feat: allow users to disable simpCtorEq simproc (#5167)
`simp only` will not apply this simproc anymore. Users must now write
`simp only [reduceCtorEq]`. See RFC #5046 for motivation.
This PR also renames simproc to `reduceCtorEq`. 

close #5046 


@semorrison A few `simp only ...` tactics will probably break in
Mathlib. Fix: include `reduceCtorEq`.
2024-08-26 13:51:21 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d1174e10e6
feat: always run clean_wf, even before decreasing_by (#5016)
Previously, the tactic state shown at `decreasing_by` would leak lots of
details about the translation, and mention `invImage`, `PSigma` etc.
This is not nice.
  
So this introduces `clean_wf`, which is like `simp_wf` but using
`simp`'s `only` mode, and runs this unconditionally. This should clean
up the goal to a reasonable extent.
  
Previously `simp_wf` was an unrestricted `simp […]` call, but we
probably don’t want arbitrary simplification to happen at this point, so
this now became `simp only` call. For backwards compatibility,
`decreasing_with` begins with `try simp`. The `simp_wf` tactic
is still available to not break too much existing code; it’s docstring
suggests to no longer use it.

With `set_option cleanDecreasingByGoal false` one can disable the use of
`clean_wf`. I hope this is only needed for debugging and understanding.
  
Migration advise: If your `decreasing_by` proof begins with `simp_wf`,
either remove that (if the proof still goes through), or replace with
`simp`.
  
I am a bit anxious about running even `simp only` unconditionally here,
as it may do more than some user might want, e.g. because of options
like `zetaDelta := true`. We'll see if we need to reign in this tactic
some more.

I wonder if in corner cases the `simp_wf` tactic might be able to close
the goal, and if that is a problem. If so, we may have to promote simp’s
internal `mayCloseGoal` parameter to a simp configuration option and use
that here.
  
fixes #4928
2024-08-15 14:42:15 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b5122b6a7b feat: per-function termination hints
This change

 * moves `termination_by` and `decreasing_by` next to the function they
   apply to
 * simplify the syntax of `termination_by`
 * apply the `decreasing_by` goal to all goals at once, for better
   interactive use.

See the section in `RELEASES.md` for more details and migration advise.

This is a hard breaking change, requiring developers to touch every
`termination_by` in their code base. We decided to still do it as a
hard-breaking change, because supporting both old and new syntax at the
same time would be non-trivial, and not save that much. Moreover, this
requires changes to some metaprograms that developers might have
written, and supporting both syntaxes at the same time would make
_their_ migration harder.
2024-01-10 17:27:35 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
5cd90f5826
feat: drop support for termination_by' (#3033)
until around 7fe6881 the way to define well-founded recursions was to
specify a `WellFoundedRelation` on the argument explicitly. This was
rather low-level, for example one had to predict the packing of multiple
arguments into `PProd`s, the packing of mutual functions into `PSum`s,
and the cliques that were calculated.

Then the current `termination_by` syntax was introduced, where you
specify the termination argument at a higher level (one clause per
functions, unpacked arguments), and the `WellFoundedRelation` is found
using type class resolution.

The old syntax was kept around as `termination_by'`. This is not used
anywhere in the lean, std, mathlib or the theorem-proving-in-lean
repositories,
and three occurrences I found in the wild can do without

In particular, it should be possible to express anything that the old
syntax
supported also with the new one, possibly requiring a helper type with a
suitable instance, or the following generic wrapper that now lives in
std
```
def wrap {α : Sort u} {r : α → α → Prop} (h : WellFounded r) (x : α) : {x : α // Acc r x}
```

Since the old syntax is unused, has an unhelpful name and relies on
internals, this removes the support. Now is a good time before the
refactoring that's planned in #2921.

The test suite was updated without particular surprises.

The parametric `terminationHint` parser is gone, which means we can
match on syntax more easily now, in `expandDecreasingBy?`.
2023-12-11 17:33:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e53952f167 chore: fix tests 2023-11-09 04:06:30 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
9ee529e5ce fix: use PSum instead of Sum when using well-founded recursion
See new test for example that did not work with `Sum` because type
alpha was `Sort u`.
2022-02-17 16:14:34 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
8c45c844aa test: add wellfounded test 2022-01-12 17:16:43 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
45bd328d5e fix: tests and add WellFoundedRelation.rel to list of definitions to unfold at decreasing_tactic 2022-01-12 08:28:03 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
4e5a51aa24 chore: fix test 2022-01-11 16:23:26 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
697e0ce2db feat: apply cleanup tactic before applying decreasing tactic
Alternative design: apply it only before reporting a failure.
2021-10-06 19:56:57 -07:00