This PR replaces all usages of `[:]` slice notation in `src` with the
new `[...]` notation in production code, tests and comments. The
underlying implementation of the `Subarray` functions stays the same.
Notation cheat sheet:
* `*...*` is the doubly-unbounded range.
* `*...a` or `*...<a` contains all elements that are less than `a`.
* `*...=a` contains all elements that are less than or equal to `a`.
* `a...*` contains all elements that are greater than or equal to `a`.
* `a...b` or `a...<b` contains all elements that are greater than or
equal to `a` and less than `b`.
* `a...=b` contains all elements that are greater than or equal to `a`
and less than or equal to `b`.
* `a<...*` contains all elements that are greater than `a`.
* `a<...b` or `a<...<b` contains all elements that are greater than `a`
and less than `b`.
* `a<...=b` contains all elements that are greater than `a` and less
than or equal to `b`.
Benchmarks have shown that importing the iterator-backed parts of the
polymorphic slice library in `Init` impacts build performance. This PR
avoids this problem by separating those parts of the library that do not
rely on iterators from those those that do. Whereever the new slice
notation is used, only the iterator-independent files are imported.
This PR adds the following features to `simp`:
- A routine for simplifying `have` telescopes in a way that avoids
quadratic complexity arising from locally nameless expression
representations, like what #6220 did for `letFun` telescopes.
Furthermore, simp converts `letFun`s into `have`s (nondependent lets),
and we remove the #6220 routine since we are moving away from `letFun`
encodings of nondependent lets.
- A `+letToHave` configuration option (enabled by default) that converts
lets into haves when possible, when `-zeta` is set. Previously Lean
would need to do a full typecheck of the bodies of `let`s, but the
`letToHave` procedure can skip checking some subexpressions, and it
modifies the `let`s in an entire expression at once rather than one at a
time.
- A `+zetaHave` configuration option, to turn off zeta reduction of
`have`s specifically. The motivation is that dependent `let`s can only
be dsimped by let, so zeta reducing just the dependent lets is a
reasonable way to make progress. The `+zetaHave` option is also added to
the meta configuration.
- When `simp` is zeta reducing, it now uses an algorithm that avoids
complexity quadratic in the depth of the let telescope.
- Additionally, the zeta reduction routines in `simp`, `whnf`, and
`isDefEq` now all are consistent with how they apply the `zeta`,
`zetaHave`, and `zetaUnused` configurations.
The `letToFun` option is addressing a TODO in `getSimpLetCase` ("handle
a block of nested let decls in a single pass if this becomes a
performance problem").
Performance should be compared to before #8804, which temporarily
disabled the #6220 optimizations for `letFun` telescopes.
Good kernel performance depends on carefully handling the `have`
encoding. Due to the way the kernel instantiates bvars (it does *not*
beta reduce when instantiating), we cannot use congruence theorems of
the form `(have x := v; f x) = (have x ;= v'; f' x)`, since the bodies
of the `have`s will not be syntactically equal, which triggers zeta
reduction in the kernel in `is_def_eq`. Instead, we work with `f v = f'
v'`, where `f` and `f'` are lambda expressions. There is still zeta
reduction, but only when converting between these two forms at the
outset of the generated proof.
This PR implements first-class support for nondependent let expressions
in the elaborator; recall that a let expression `let x : t := v; b` is
called *nondependent* if `fun x : t => b` typechecks, and the notation
for a nondependent let expression is `have x := v; b`. Previously we
encoded `have` using the `letFun` function, but now we make use of the
`nondep` flag in the `Expr.letE` constructor for the encoding. This has
been given full support throughout the metaprogramming interface and the
elaborator. Key changes to the metaprogramming interface:
- Local context `ldecl`s with `nondep := true` are generally treated as
`cdecl`s. This is because in the body of a `have` expression the
variable is opaque. Functions like `LocalDecl.isLet` by default return
`false` for nondependent `ldecl`s. In the rare case where it is needed,
they take an additional optional `allowNondep : Bool` flag (defaults to
`false`) if the variable is being processed in a context where the value
is relevant.
- Functions such as `mkLetFVars` by default generalize nondependent let
variables and create lambda expressions for them. The
`generalizeNondepLet` flag (default true) can be set to false if `have`
expressions should be produced instead. **Breaking change:** Uses of
`letLambdaTelescope`/`mkLetFVars` need to use `generalizeNondepLet :=
false`. See the next item.
- There are now some mapping functions to make telescoping operations
more convenient. See `mapLetTelescope` and `mapLambdaLetTelescope`.
There is also `mapLetDecl` as a counterpart to `withLetDecl` for
creating `let`/`have` expressions.
- Important note about the `generalizeNondepLet` flag: it should only be
used for variables in a local context that the metaprogram "owns". Since
nondependent let variables are treated as constants in most cases, the
`value` field might refer to variables that do not exist, if for example
those variables were cleared or reverted. Using `mapLetDecl` is always
fine.
- The simplifier will cache its let dependence calculations in the
nondep field of let expressions.
- The `intro` tactic still produces *dependent* local variables. Given
that the simplifier will transform lets into haves, it would be
surprising if that would prevent `intro` from creating a local variable
whose value cannot be used.
Note that nondependence of lets is not checked by the kernel. To
external checker authors: If the elaborator gets the nondep flag wrong,
we consider this to be an elaborator error. Feel free to typecheck `letE
n t v b true` as if it were `app (lam n t b default) v` and please
report issues.
This PR follows up from #8751, which made sure the nondep flag was
preserved in the C++ interface.
This PR adds the `nondep` field of `Expr.letE` to the C++ data model.
Previously this field has been unused, and in followup PRs the
elaborator will use it to encode `have` expressions (non-dependent
`let`s). The kernel does not verify that `nondep` is correctly applied
during typechecking. The `letE` delaborator now prints `have`s when
`nondep` is true, though `have` still elaborates as `letFun` for now.
Breaking change: `Expr.updateLet!` is renamed to `Expr.updateLetE!`.
This PR also fixes a bug in `Expr.letFun?` and `Expr.letFunAppArgs?`
when the body is not a lambda. In any case, these functions will be
removed once the `Expr.letE (nondep := true)` encoding of `have`
expressions is complete.
This PR implements the `zetaUnused` simp and reduction option (added in
#6754).
True by default, and implied by `zeta`, this can be turned off to make
simp even more careful about preserving the expression structure,
including unused let and have expressions.
Breaking change: The `split` tactic no longer removes unused let and
have expressions as a side-effect, in rare cases this may break proofs.
`dsimp only` can be used to remove unused have and let expressions.
Continuation from #5429: eliminates uses of these two functions that
care about something other than reducible defs/theorems, then restricts
the function definition to these cases to be more true to its name.
This PR ensures that the configuration in `Simp.Config` is used when
reducing terms and checking definitional equality in `simp`.
closes#5455
---------
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
This PR avoids runtime array bounds checks in places where it can
trivially be done at compile time.
None of these changes are of particular consequence: I mostly wanted to
learn how much we do this, and what the obstacles are to doing it less.
This PR does the same fix as #6104, but such that it doesn't break the
test/the file in `Plausible`. This is done by not creating unused let
binders in metavariable types that are made by `elimMVar`. (This is also
a positive thing for users looking at metavariable types, for example in
error messages)
We get rid of `skipAtMostNumBinders`. This function was originally
defined for the purpose of making this test work, but it is a hack
because it allows cycles in the metavariable context.
It would make sense to split these changes into 2 PRs, but I combined
them here to show that the combination of them closes#6013 without
breaking anything
Closes#6013
This PR fixes a bug at the definitional equality test (`isDefEq`). At
unification constraints of the form `c.{u} =?= c.{v}`, it was not trying
to unfold `c`. This bug did not affect the kernel.
closes#6117
This PR fixes the caching infrastructure for `whnf` and `isDefEq`,
ensuring the cache accounts for all relevant configuration flags. It
also cleans up the `WHNF.lean` module and improves the configuration of
`whnf`.
This PR changes the signature of `Array.get` to take a Nat and a proof,
rather than a `Fin`, for consistency with the rest of the (planned)
Array API. Note that because of bootstrapping issues we can't provide
`get_elem_tactic` as an autoparameter for the proof. As users will
mostly use the `xs[i]` notation provided by `GetElem`, this hopefully
isn't a problem.
We may restore `Fin` based versions, either here or downstream, as
needed, but they won't be the "main" functions.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
This PR changes the signature of `Array.set` to take a `Nat`, and a
tactic-provided bound, rather than a `Fin`.
Corresponding changes (but without the auto-param) for `Array.get` will
arrive shortly, after which I'll go more pervasively through the Array
API.
The kernel supports primitive projections for all inductive types with
one construtor. The elaborator was assuming primitive projections only
work for "structure-likes", non-recursive inductive types with no
indices.
Enables numeric projection notation for general one-constructor
inductives.
Extracted from #5783.
Closes#2736
See comment at `ExprDefEq.lean` for explanation.
Side effects:
- Improved error messages in two tests.
- Had to improve `getSuccesses` procedure at `App.lean`. It now
discards candidates that contain postponed elaboration problems.
If it is too disruptive for Mathlib, we should try to discard the
ones that have postponed metavariables.
I removed a redundant `if tFn.isMVar || sFn.isMVar then ... else return
LBool.undef` in the `else` clause of
```
if !tFn.isMVar && !sFn.isMVar then
return LBool.undef
else
```
I made a modification to the `mkLambdaFVars` function, adding a
`etaReduce : Bool` parameter that determines whether a new lambda of the
form `fun x => f x` should be replaced by `f`. I then set this option to
true at `isDefEq` when processing metavariable assignments.
This means that many unnecessary eta unreduced expression are now
reduced. This is beneficial for users, so that they do not have to deal
with such unreduced expressions. It is also beneficial for performance,
leading to a 0.6% improvement in build instructions. Most notably,
`Mathlib.Algebra.DirectLimit`, previously a top 50 slowest file, has
sped up by 40%.
Quite a number of proof in mathlib broke. Many of these involve removing
a now unnecessary `simp only`. In other cases, a simp or rewrite doesn't
work anymore, such as a `simp_rw [mul_comm]` that was used to rewrite
`fun x => 2*x`, but now this term has turned into `HMul.hMul 2`.
Closes#4386
It currently only reports how many times each declaration has been
unfolded, and how often the `isDefEq` heuristic for `f a =?= f b` has
been used. Only counters above the threshold are reported.
Currently this will fail in two tests, because of changes in #3965.
* Sometimes we need to add an additional universe annotation, or we get
a `stuck at solving universe constraint max u ?u =?= u`.
* Sometimes we need to specify arguments that could previously be found
by unification.
---------
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
This is intended to fail at present: it just adds a test case containing
a minimization of a Mathlib slowdown from #3807.
Prior to #3807, the declaration `exists_algHom_adjoin_of_splits'''` at
the end of the file would take around 16,000 heartbeats. Now it takes
around 210,000 heartbeats.
---------
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
Switches from encoding `let_fun` using an annotated `(fun x : t => b) v`
expression to a function application `letFun v (fun x : t => b)`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>