Commit graph

38683 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kim Morrison
e8d35a1d77
fix: make library suggestions available in module files (#11373)
This PR makes the library suggestions extension state available when
importing from `module` files.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-26 05:39:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5ac0931c8f
feat: cleanup denominators in grind linarith (#11375)
This PR adds support for cleaning up denominators in `grind linarith`
when the type is a `Field`.

Examples:
```lean
open Std Lean.Grind
section
variable {α : Type} [Field α] [LE α] [LT α] [LawfulOrderLT α] [IsLinearOrder α] [OrderedRing α]

example (a b : α) (h : a < b / 2) : 2 * a < b := by grind
example (a b : α) (_ : 0 ≤ a) (h : a ≤ b) : a / 7 ≤ b / 2 := by grind
example (a b : α) (_ : b < 0) (h : a < b) : (3/2) * a < (5/4) * b := by grind
example (a b : α) (h : a = b * (3⁻¹)^2) : 9 * a ≤ b := by grind
example (a b : α) (h : a / 2 ≠ b / 9) : 9 * a < 2 * b ∨ 9 * a > 2 * b := by grind
example (a b : α) (h : a < b / (2^2 - 3/2 + -1 + 1/2)) : 2 * a < b := by grind

end

example (a b : Rat) (h : a < b / 2) : a + a < b := by grind
example (a b : Rat) (h : a < b / 2) : a + a ≤ b := by grind
example (a b : Rat) (h : a ≠ b * (3⁻¹)^2) : 9 * a < b ∨ 9 * a > b := by grind
example (a b : Rat) (h : a / 2 ≠ b / 9) : 9 * a < 2 * b ∨ 9 * a > 2 * b := by grind
```
2025-11-26 05:21:55 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6f4bee8421
perf: avoid re-exporting Std.Time from grind_annotated (#11372)
This PR makes the `Std.Time.Format` import in
`Lean.Elab.Tactic.Grind.Annotated` private rather than public,
preventing the entire `Std.Time` infrastructure (including timezone
databases) from being re-exported through `import Lean`.

The `grindAnnotatedExt` extension is kept private, with a new public
accessor function `isGrindAnnotatedModule` exposed for use by
`LibrarySuggestions.Basic`.

This should address the +2.5% instruction increase on `import Lean`
observed after merging #11332.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-26 04:05:08 +00:00
Kim Morrison
387833be70
chore: update Claude prompting (#11370)
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-26 02:53:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b68ac99d26
feat: try? uses parallelism (#11365)
This PR enables parallelism in `try?`. Currently, we replace the
`attempt_all` stages (there are two, one for builtin tactics including
`grind` and `simp_all`, and a second one for all user extensions) with
parallel versions. We do not (yet?) change the behaviour of `first`
based stages.
2025-11-26 01:42:06 +00:00
Mac Malone
e1f8c147e7
refactor: port shell option processing to Lean (#11345)
This PR moves the processing of options passed to the CLI from
`shell.cpp` to `Shell.lean`.

As with previous ports, this attempts to mirror as much of the original
behavior as possible, Benefits to be gained from the ported code can
come in later PRs. There should be no significant behavioral changes
from this port. Nonetheless, error reporting has changed some, hopefully
for the better. For instance, errors for improper argument
configurations has been made more consistent (e.g., Lean will now error
if numeric arguments fall outside the expected range for an option).
2025-11-25 23:39:31 +00:00
Henrik Böving
cef200fda6
perf: speed up termination of ElimDeadBranches compiler pass (#11362)
This PR accelerates termination of the ElimDeadBranches compiler pass.

The implementation addresses situations such as `choice [none, some
top]` which can be summarized to
`top` because `Option` has only two constructors and all constructor
arguments are `top`.
2025-11-25 22:52:43 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8ace95f99f
feat: Field norm num (#11350)
This PR implements a helper simproc for `grind`. It is part of the
infrastructure used to cleanup denominators in `grind linarith`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2025-11-25 19:47:31 +00:00
Robert J. Simmons
2e6769dcb3
chore: keep error explanations in sync (#11360)
This PR modifies some error explanations to remove warnings when
building the manual.
2025-11-25 19:03:07 +00:00
Robert J. Simmons
75d79819c3
feat: catch and provide context for misuse of NNG-style induction pattern (#11347)
This PR adds a focused error explanation aimed at the case where someone
tries to use Natural-Numbers-Game-style `induction` proofs directly in
Lean, where such proofs are not syntactically valid.

## Discussion

The natural numbers game uses a syntax that overlaps with Lean's
`induction` syntax despite having more structural similarity to
`induction'`. This means that fully correct proofs in the natural
numbers game, like this...

```lean4
import Mathlib
theorem zero_mul (m : ℕ) : 0 * m = 0 := by
  induction m with n n_ih
  rw [mul_zero]
  rfl
  rw [mul_succ]
  rw [add_zero]
  rw [n_ih]
  rfl
```

...have completely baffling error messages from a newcomers'
perspective:

```
notNaturalNumbersGame.lean:3:20: error: unknown tactic
notNaturalNumbersGame.lean:3:2: error: Alternative `zero` has not been provided
notNaturalNumbersGame.lean:3:2: error: Alternative `succ` has not been provided
```

(the Mathlib import here only provides the `ℕ` syntax here; equivalently
`ℕ` could be renamed to `Nat` and the import could be removed, [like
this](https://live.lean-lang.org/#codez=C4Cwpg9gTmC2AEAvMUIH1YFcA28AUCAXPAHICGwAlPMQAzwBU8CAvPPYWwEYCeAUPHgBLAHYATTAGNgQiCObwA7kNDx5ItEJAD4URfADaWbGmSoAujqgAzbFf1GcaAM5TJlwXsNkxY0yggPXQcNLSCbbCA))

There are many problems with this proof from the perspective of "stock"
Lean, but the error messages in the `induction` case are particularly
unfriendly and provide no guidance from a NNG learner's perspective.

This PR provides more information about what is wrong:

```
notNaturalNumbersGame.lean:3:20: error: unknown tactic
notNaturalNumbersGame.lean:3:14: error(lean.inductionWithNoAlts): Invalid syntax for induction tactic: The `with` keyword must followed by a tactic or by an alternative (e.g. `| zero =>`), but here it is followed by the identifier `n`.
```

The error explanation it links to explicitly flags the transition of
NNG-style proofs to Lean as the likely culprit, and gives an example of
an effective translation.
2025-11-25 18:44:40 +00:00
Markus Himmel
85d7f3321c
feat: String.Slice.toInt? (#11358)
This PR adds `String.Slice.toInt?` and variants.

Closes #11275.
2025-11-25 15:48:41 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d99c515b16
refactor: String functions foldr, all, any, contains to go trough String.Slice (#11357)
This PR updates the `foldr`, `all`, `any` and `contains` functions on
`String` to be defined in terms of their `String.Slice` counterparts.

This is the last one in a long series of PRs. After this, all `String`
operations are polymorphic in the pattern, and no `String` operation
falls back to `String.Pos.Raw` internally (except those in the
`String.Pos.Raw` and `String.Substring.Raw` namespaces of course, which
still play a role in metaprogramming and will stay for the foreseeable
future).
2025-11-25 15:42:43 +00:00
Bhavik Mehta
aeddc0d22e
feat: add lemmas for a / c < b / c on Int (#11327)
This PR adds two lemmas to prove `a / c < b / c`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@himmel-villmar.de>
2025-11-25 15:04:39 +00:00
Garmelon
debafca7e1
chore: add radar-based bench suite for stdlib (#11264)
This PR adds a new [radar]-based [temci]-less bench suite that replaces
the `stdlib` benchmarks from the old suite and also measures per-module
instruction counts. All other benchmarks from the old suite are
unaffected.

The readme at `tests/bench-radar/README.md` explains in more detail how
the bench suite is structured and how it works. The readmes in the
benchmark subdirectories explain what each benchmark does and which
metrics it collects.

All metrics except `stdlib//max dynamic symbols` were ported to the new
suite, though most have been renamed.

[radar]: https://github.com/leanprover/radar
[temci]: https://github.com/parttimenerd/temci
2025-11-25 12:59:30 +00:00
Eric Wieser
9338aabed9
fix: move the monad argument for ForIn, ForIn', and ForM (#10204)
This PR changes the interface of the `ForIn`, `ForIn'`, and `ForM`
typeclasses to not take a `Monad m` parameter. This is a breaking change
for most downstream `instance`s, which will will now need to assume
`[Monad m]`.

The rationale is that if the provider of an instance requires `m` to be
a Monad, they should assume this up front. This makes it possible for
the instanve to assume `LawfulMonad m` or some other stronger
requirement, and also to provided a concrete instance for a particular
`m` without assuming a non-canonical `Monad` structure on it.

Zulip: [#lean4 > Monad assumptions in fields of other typeclasses @
💬](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Monad.20assumptions.20in.20fields.20of.20other.20typeclasses/near/537102158)
2025-11-25 12:20:37 +00:00
Henrik Böving
b6e6094f85
chore: beta reduce in specialization keys (#11353)
This PR applies beta reduction to specialization keys, allowing us to
reuse specializations in more situations.
2025-11-25 12:14:36 +00:00
Markus Himmel
29ac158fcf
feat: String.Pos.le_find (#11354)
This PR adds simple lemmas that show that searching from a position in a
string returns something that is at least that position.
2025-11-25 11:05:58 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
9b204f7a07 chore: update stage0 2025-11-25 09:53:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b0e6db3224
chore: activate grind_annotated in Init.Data.List.Lemmas (#11348)
This PR activates the `grind_annotated` command in
`Init.Data.List.Lemmas` by removing the TODO comment and uncommenting
the command.

This PR depends on #11346 (implement `grind_annotated` command) and
should be merged after that PR (and after CI has done an
`update-stage0`.
2025-11-25 04:23:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8a4fb762f3
feat: grind use/instantiate only can activate all scoped theorems in a namespace (#11335)
This PR enables the syntax `use [ns Foo]` and `instantiate only [ns
Foo]` inside a `grind` tactic block, and has the effect of activating
all grind patterns scoped to that namespace. We can use this to
implement specialized tactics using `grind`, but only controlled subsets
of theorems.

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-25 02:41:08 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b46fd3e92d
feat: with_weak_namespace command (#11338)
This PR upstreams the `with_weak_namespace` command from Mathlib:
`with_weak_namespace <id> <cmd>` changes the current namespace to `<id>`
for the duration of executing command `<cmd>`, without causing scoped
things to go out of scope. This is in preparation for upstreaming the
`scoped[Foo.Bar]` syntax from Mathlib, which will be useful now that we
are adding `grind` annotations in scopes.
2025-11-25 02:37:40 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
5bf6229626 chore: update stage0 2025-11-25 02:50:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2afca2df43
feat: implement grind_annotated command (#11332)
This PR adds a `grind_annotated "YYYY-MM-DD"` command that marks files
as manually annotated for grind.

When LibrarySuggestions is called with `caller := "grind"` (as happens
with `grind +suggestions`), theorems from grind-annotated files are
filtered out from premise selection. The date argument validates using
Std.Time and is informational only for now, but could be used later to
detect files that need re-review.

There's no need for the library suggestions tools to suggest `grind`
theorems from files that have already been carefully annotated by hand.
2025-11-25 02:12:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ae7c6b59bc
feat: parallelism utilities for MetaM/TacticM (#11333)
This PR adds infrastructure for parallel execution across Lean's tactic
monads.

- Add IO.waitAny' to Init/System/IO.lean for waiting on task completion
- Add `Lean.Elab.Task` with `asTask` utilities for `CoreM`, `MetaM`,
`TermElabM`, `TacticM`
- Add `Lean.Elab.Parallel` with parallel execution strategies:
  * `par`/`par'` - collect results in original order
* `parIter`/`parIterGreedy` - iterate over results (original or
completion order) (also variants with a cancellation token)
  * `parFirst` - return first successful result

This does *not* attempt to be a monad-polymorphic framework for
parallelism. It's intentionally hard-coded to the Lean tactic monads
which I need to work with. If there's desire to make this polymorphic,
hopefully that can be done separately.
2025-11-24 23:42:30 +00:00
Wrenna Robson
c574a85845
feat: add getElem_swapIfInBounds* lemmas and deprecate getElem_swap' (#8406)
This PR adds lemmas of the form `getElem_swapIfInBounds*` and deprecates
`getElem_swap'`.
2025-11-24 23:41:12 +00:00
Henrik Böving
57afb23c5c
fix: compilation of projections on non trivial structures (#11340)
This PR fixes a miscompilation when encountering projections of non
trivial structure types.

Closes: #11322
2025-11-24 19:25:03 +00:00
Markus Himmel
151c034f4f
refactor: rename String.bytes to String.toByteArray (#11343)
This PR renames `String.bytes` to `String.toByteArray`.

This is for two reasons: first, `toByteArray` is a better name, and
second, we have something else that wants to use the name `bytes`,
namely the function that returns in iterator over the string's bytes.
2025-11-24 18:59:49 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
2308e3a0a5 chore: update stage0 2025-11-24 18:43:44 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
096d3ce83f
feat: document that backward options may disappear (#11304)
This PR documents that `backward.*` options are only temporary
migration aids and may disappear without further notice after 6 months
after their introduction. Users are kindly asked to report if they rely
on these options.
2025-11-24 17:49:46 +00:00
Markus Himmel
96c4b9ee4d
feat: coercion from String to String.Slice (#11341)
This PR adds a coercion from `String` to `String.Slice`.

In our envisioned future, most functions operating on strings will
accept `String.Slice` parameters by default (like `str` in Rust), and
this enables calling such functions with arguments of type `String`.

Closes #11298.
2025-11-24 16:50:08 +00:00
Markus Himmel
fa67f300f6
chore: rename String.ValidPos to String.Pos (#11240)
This PR renames `String.ValidPos` to `String.Pos`, `String.endValidPos`
to `String.endPos` and `String.startValidPos` to `String.startPos`.

Accordingly, the deprecations of `String.Pos` to `String.Pos.Raw` and
`String.endPos` to `String.rawEndPos` are removed early, after an
abbreviated deprecation cycle of two releases.
2025-11-24 16:40:21 +00:00
Paul Reichert
6da35eeccb
refactor: increase runtime of "sigma iterator" benchmark (#11336)
This PR makes the "sigma iterator" benchmark more compute-intensive
because it was too fast and therefore flaky.
2025-11-24 12:21:27 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
54a10f0790
feat: remove the group field of an option description (#11305)
This PR removes the `group` field from option descriptions. It is
unused, does not have a clear meaning and often matches the first
component of the option name.
2025-11-24 11:40:58 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
72573928b1
chore: CI: re-enable fsanitize job (#11258)
Given its run time of >2hrs, the job is added as a secondary job for
nightly releases and a primary job for full releases. A new check level
for differentiating between nightlies and full releases is added for
this.

(Trying to) reactivate lsan will happen in a follow-up PR.
2025-11-24 11:12:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
bfbad53540
fix: avoid storing reference to environment in realization result to prevent promise cycle (#11328)
This PR fixes freeing memory accidentally retained for each document
version in the language server on certain elaboration workloads. The
issue must have existed since 4.18.0.
2025-11-24 10:16:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f2e191d0af
refactor: grind linarith ring normalization (#11334)
This PR adds an explicit normalization layer for ring constraints in the
`grind linarith` module. For example, it will be used to clean up
denominators when the ring is a field.
2025-11-24 03:11:13 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0b173923f4
feat: LawfulOfScientific in grind (#11331)
This PR adds support for the `LawfulOfScientific` class in `grind`.
Examples:
```lean
open Lean Grind Std
variable [LE α] [LT α] [LawfulOrderLT α] [Field α] [OfScientific α]
         [LawfulOfScientific α] [IsLinearOrder α] [OrderedRing α]
example : (2 / 3 : α) ≤ (0.67 : α) := by  grind
example : (1.2 : α) ≤ (1.21 : α) := by grind
example : (2 / 3 : α) ≤ (67 / 100 : α) := by grind
example : (1.2345 : α) ≤ (1.2346 : α) := by grind
example : (2.3 : α) ≤ (4.5 : α) := by grind
example : (2.3 : α) ≤ (5/2 : α) := by grind
```
2025-11-24 00:14:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
bd711e3a7a
feat: rename cutsat to lia with deprecation warning (#11330)
This PR renames the `cutsat` tactic to `lia` for better alignment with
standard terminology in the theorem proving community.

`cutsat` still works but now emits a deprecation warning and suggests
using `lia` instead via "Try this:". Both tactics have identical
behavior.

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-23 23:26:00 +00:00
Markus Himmel
e6a07ca6b1
refactor: deprecate String.posOf and variants in favor of unified String.find (#11276)
This PR cleans up the API around `String.find` and moves it uniformly to
the new position types `String.ValidPos` and `String.Slice.Pos`

Overview:

- To search for a character, character predicate, string or slice in a
string or slice `s`, use `s.find?` or `s.find`.
- To do the same, but starting at a position `p` of a string or slice,
use `p.find?` or `p.find`.
- To do the same but between two positions `p` and `q`, construct the
slice from `p` to `q` and then use `find?` or `find` on that.
- To search backwards, all of the above applies, except that the
function is called `revFind?`, there is no non-question-mark version
(use `getD` if there is a sane default return value in your specific
application), and that you can only search for characters and character
predicates, not strings or slices.
2025-11-23 18:39:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
216f7e8753
feat: grind proof parameters whose type is not a forall (#11326)
This PR ensures that users can provide `grind` proof parameters whose
types are not `forall`-quantified. Examples:

```lean
opaque f : Nat → Nat
axiom le_f (a : Nat) : a ≤ f a

example (a : Nat) : a ≤ f a := by
  grind [le_f a]

example (a b : α) (h : ∀ x y : α, x = y) : a = b := by
  grind [h a b]
```
2025-11-23 18:36:04 +00:00
Markus Himmel
fba166eea0
chore: expose more String.Slice functions on String (#11308)
This PR redefines `front` and `back` on `String` to go through
`String.Slice` and adds the new `String` functions `front?`, `back?`,
`positions`, `chars`, `revPositions`, `revChars`, `byteIterator`,
`revBytes`, `lines`.
2025-11-23 15:33:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4311237321
chore: add CoreM.toIO' (#11325)
This PR adds `CoreM.toIO'`, the analogue of `CoreM.toIO` dropping the
state from the return type, and similarly for `TermElabM.toIO'` and
`MetaM.toIO'`.
2025-11-23 10:59:15 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4135674021
feat: add funCC (function-valued congruence closure) to grind (#11323)
This PR introduces a new `grind` option, `funCC` (enabled by default),
which extends congruence closure to *function-valued* equalities. When
`funCC` is enabled, `grind` tracks equalities of **partially applied
functions**, allowing reasoning steps such as:
```lean
a : Nat → Nat 
f : (Nat → Nat) → (Nat → Nat)
h : f a = a
⊢ (f a) m = a m

g : Nat → Nat
f : Nat → Nat → Nat
h : f a = g
⊢ f a b = g b
```

Given an application `f a₁ a₂ … aₙ`, when `funCC := true` and function
equality is enabled for `f`, `grind` generates and tracks equalities for
all partial applications:

* `f a₁`
* `f a₁ a₂`
* …
* `f a₁ a₂ … aₙ`

This allows equalities such as `f a₁ = g` to propagate through further
applications.

**When is function equality enabled for a symbol?**

Function equality is enabled for `f` in the following cases:

1. `f` is **not a constant** (e.g., a lambda, a local function, or a
function parameter).
2. `f` is a **structure field projection**, provided the structure is
**not a `class`**.
3. `f` is a constant marked with  `@[grind funCC]`

Users can also enable function equality for specific constants in a
single call using:
```lean
grind [funCC f, funCC g]
```

**Examples:**

```lean
example (m : Nat) (a : Nat → Nat) (f : (Nat → Nat) → (Nat → Nat)) (h : f a = a) :
    f a m = a m := by
  grind

example (m : Nat) (a : Nat → Nat) (f : (Nat → Nat) → (Nat → Nat)) (h : f a = a) :
    f a m = a m := by
  fail_if_success grind -funCC -- fails if `funCC` is disabled
  grind
```

```lean
example (a b : Nat) (g : Nat → Nat) (f : Nat → Nat → Nat) (h : f a = g) :
    f a b = g b := by
  grind

example (a b : Nat) (g : Nat → Nat) (f : Nat → Nat → Nat) (h : f a = g) :
    f a b = g b := by
  fail_if_success grind -funCC
  grind
```

**Enabling per-symbol with parameters or attributes**

```lean
opaque f : Nat → Nat → Nat
opaque g : Nat → Nat

example (a b c : Nat) : f a = g → b = c → f a b = g c := by
  grind [funCC f, funCC g]

attribute [grind funCC] f g

example (a b c : Nat) : f a = g → b = c → f a b = g c := by
  grind
```

This feature substantially improves `grind`’s support for higher-order
and partially-applied function equalities, while preserving
compatibility with first-order SMT behavior when `funCC` is disabled.

Closes #11309
2025-11-23 05:06:41 +00:00
Paul Reichert
2980155f5c
refactor: simplify ToIterator (#11242)
This PR significantly changes the signature of the `ToIterator` type
class. The obtained iterators' state is no longer dependently typed and
is an `outParam` instead of being bundled inside the class. Among other
benefits, `simp` can now rewrite inside of `Slice.toList` and
`Slice.toArray`. The downside is that we lose flexibility. For example,
the former combinator-based implementation of `Subarray`'s iterators is
no longer feasible because the states are dependently typed. Therefore,
this PR provides a hand-written iterator for `Subarray`, which does not
require a dependently typed state and is faster than the previous one.

Converting a family of dependently typed iterators into a simply typed
one using a `Sigma`-state iterator generates forbiddingly bad code, so
that we do provide such a combinator. This PR adds a benchmark for this
problem.
2025-11-22 12:37:18 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0818cf6483
feat: improves Fin n support in grind (#11319)
This PR improves the support for `Fin n` in `grind` when `n` is not a
numeral.

- `toInt (0 : Fin n) = 0` in `grind lia`.
- `Fin.mk`-applications are treated as interpreted terms in `grind lia`.
- `Fin.val` applications are suppressed from `grind lia`
counterexamples.
2025-11-22 06:51:25 +00:00
Mac Malone
c1a82c4bd7
chore: lake: update tests/toml (#11314)
This PR fixes a breakage in Lake's TOML test caused by String API
changes. It also removes a JSON parser workaround that has since been
fixed, and it more generally polishes up the code.
2025-11-22 04:41:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
db4206f2a9
fix: instantiate metavariables in hypotheses in grind (#11315)
This PR fixes an issue affecting `grind -revert`. In this mode, assigned
metavariables in hypotheses were not being instantiated. This issue was
affecting two files in Mathlib.
2025-11-22 04:28:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a0772dc82d
fix: grind internalization (#11318)
This PR fixes a local declaration internalization in `grind` that was
exposed when using `grind -revert`. This bug was affecting a `grind`
proof in Mathlib.
2025-11-22 04:24:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
90389a8d90
feat: improvements to grind annotations for Fin (#11299)
This PR add many `@[grind]` annotations for `Fin`, and updates the
tests.
2025-11-22 02:48:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
26b435fa4d
feat: grind_pattern for Subtype.property (#11317)
This PR adds `grind_pattern Subtype.property => self.val`.
2025-11-22 02:23:09 +00:00