This PR unifies various ways of naming auxiliary declarations in a
conflict-free way and ensures the method is compatible with diverging
branches of elaboration such as parallelism or Aesop-like
backtracking+replaying search.
This PR ensures that using `mapError` to expand an error message uses
`addMessageContext` to include the current context, so that expressions
are rendered correctly. Also adds a `preprendError` variant with a more
convenient argument order for the common cases of
prepending-and-indenting.
This PR improves the functional cases principles, by making a more
educated guess which function parameters should be targets and which
should remain parameters (or be dropped). This simplifies the
principles, and increases the chance that `fun_cases` can unfold the
function call.
Fixes#8296 (at least for the common cases, I hope.)
This PR fixes a type error at `instantiateTheorem` function used in
`grind`. It was failing to instantiate theorems such as
```lean
theorem getElem_reverse {xs : Array α} {i : Nat} (hi : i < xs.reverse.size)
: (xs.reverse)[i] = xs[xs.size - 1 - i]'(by simp at hi; omega)
```
in examples such as
```lean
example (xs : Array Nat) (w : xs.reverse = xs) (j : Nat) (hj : 0 ≤ j) (hj' : j < xs.size / 2)
: xs[j] = xs[xs.size - 1 - j]
```
generating the issue
```lean
[issue] type error constructing proof for Array.getElem_reverse
when assigning metavariable ?hi with
‹j < xs.toList.length›
has type
j < xs.toList.length : Prop
but is expected to have type
j < xs.reverse.size : Prop
```
This PR adds a new `structProjCases` pass to the new compiler, analogous
to the `struct_cases_on` pass in the old compiler, which converts all
projections from structs into `cases` expressions. When lowered to IR,
this causes all of the projections from a single structure to be grouped
together, which is an invariant relied upon by the IR RC passes (at
least for linearity, if not general correctness).
This PR adds the `expose` attribute to `Ordering.then`. This is required
for building with the new compiler, but works fine with the old compiler
because it silently ignores the missing definition.
This PR fixes the transparency mode for ground patterns. This is
important for implicit instances. Here is a mwe for an issue detected
while testing `grind` in Mathlib.
```lean
example (a : Nat) : max a a = a := by
grind
instance : Max Nat where
max := Nat.max
example (a : Nat) : max a a = a := by
grind -- Should work
```
This PR adds basic support for eta-reduction to `grind`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
This PR fixes a bug in the `cases` tacic introduced in #3188 that arises
when cases (not induction) is used with a non-atomic expression in using
and the argument indexing gets confused.
This fixes#8360.
This PR tries harder to clean internals of the argument packing of n-ary
functions from the functional induction theorem, in particular the
unfolding variant
This PR adjusts the experimental module system to not export the bodies
of `def`s unless opted out by the new attribute `@[expose]` on the `def`
or on a surrounding `section`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
This PR splits `Lean.Grind.CommRing` into 4 typeclasses, for semirings
and noncommutative rings. This does not yet change the behaviour of
`grind`, which expects to find all 4 typeclasses. Later we will make
some generalizations.
This PR adds a `register_linter_set` command for declaring linter sets.
The `getLinterValue` function now checks if the present linter is
contained in a set that has been enabled (using the `set_option` command
or on the command line).
The implementation stores linter set membership in an environment
extension. As a consequence, we need to pass more data to
`getLinterValue`: the argument of ype `Options` has been replaced with a
`LinterOptions`, which you can access by writing `getLinterOptions`
instead of `getOptions`. (The alternative I considered is to modify the
`Options` structure. The current approach seems a bit higher-level and
lower-impact.)
The logic for checking whether a linter should be enabled now goes in
four steps:
1. If the linter has been explicitly en/disabled, return that.
2. If `linter.all` has been explicitly set, return that.
3. If the linter is in any set that has been enabled, return true.
4. Return the default setting for the linter.
Reasoning:
* The linter's explicit setting should take precedence.
* We want to be able to disable all but the explicitly enabled linters
with `linter.all`, so it should take precedence over linter sets.
* We want to progressively enable more linters as they become available,
so the check over sets should be *any*.
* Falling back to the default value last, ensures compatibility with the
current way we define linters.
The public-facing API currently does not allow modifying sets: all
linters have to be added when the set is declared. This way, there is
one place where all the contents of the set are listed.
Linter sets can be declared to contain linters that have not been
declared (yet): this allows declaring linter sets low down in the import
hierarchy when not all the requested linters are defined yet.
---------
Co-authored-by: grunweg <rothgami@math.hu-berlin.de>
This PR stops `dsimp` from visiting proof terms, which should make
`simp` and `dsimp` more efficient.
In this attempt I have `dsimp` leave the proofs in place as-is, instead
of simplifying the proof type.
Closes#6960
This PR changes the types `AltCore`, `FunDeclCore` and `CasesCore` used
in the IRs of the new compiler into the mutual inductives `Alt`,
`FunDecl` and `Cases`.
This PR refines the new wording of the "application type mismatch" error
message to avoid ambiguity in references to the "final" argument in a
subexpression that may be followed by additional arguments.
It does so by replacing "final" with "last," rephrasing the message so
that this adjective modifies the argument itself rather than the word
"argument," and only displaying this wording when two arguments could be
confused (determined by expression equality).
These changes were motivated by a report that in cases where a function
application `f a b c` fails to elaborate because `b` is incorrectly
typed, the existing error message's reference to `b` being the "final"
argument in the application `f a b` may create confusion because it is
not the final argument in the full application expression.