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9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Leonardo de Moura
7ebf16ca26 fix(library/equations_compiler): performance issues at structural_rec module and equational lemma generator
There were two performance bottlenecks in the recursive equation
compiler. Both bottlenecks were due to conversion checking.

1- We allow patterns such as (x+1) in the left-hand-side of a
   recursive equation. This is kind of pattern has to be reduced
   since it is not a constructor. Moreover, when we are trying to
   compile using structural recursion, we need to find an element
   that is structurally smaller in recursive applications.
   Again, we need to use reduction since the pattern may be (x+2),
   and in the recursive application we have (x+1). Now, consider
   the following equation

         f (x+1) (y+1) := f complex_term y

   It will first check whether complex_term is structurally smaller
   than (x+1), and the compiler will timeout trying to reduce
   complex_term.

   This commit adds the following workaround. The structural
   recursion module from now on will only unfold reducible constants
   and constants marked as patterns. This is not a complete
   solution. It will timeout in the following equation:

         f (x+1) (y+1) := f (x+1000000000000) y

   For this one, we need to add a whnf "fuel" option to type_context

2- Equational lemma generation was producing lemmas that are too
   expensive to check. Suppose we the following two definitions

       | f x 0     := 1
       | f x (y+1) := f complex_term y

    and

       | g 0     y    := 1
       | g (x+1) y    := g x complex_term

    Before this commit, we would generate the following proofs for
    the second equation of each definition:

         eq.refl (f complex_term y)
         eq.refl (g x complex_term)

    This proof triggers the following definitionally equality test:

             f x     (y+1)  =?= f complex_term y
             g (x+1) y      =?= g x complex_term

    Since, we have f/g on both sides, the type checker will try
    first to unify the arguments, and may timeout trying to solve

               x  =?= complex_term
               y  =?= complex_term

    since it may take a long time to reduce `complex_term`.

    We workaround this problem by creating a slightly different
    proof.

          eq.refl (unfold_of(f x (y+1)))
          eq.refl (unfold_of(g (x+1) y))

    where unfold_of(t) is the result of applying one delta reduction
    step.
2017-02-15 21:31:28 -08:00
Gabriel Ebner
b5ac381a5e chore(frontends/lean/print_cmd): update print command to keyword changes 2017-01-12 12:04:37 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
85486ad82e refactor(library/init/core): define nat.add using equations
Several tests had to be patched. The new ouput is bad in several cases.
Future commits will fix that.
2016-10-11 14:10:49 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
cd6acb5d1d chore(library/pp_options): pp.binder_types true by default 2016-09-14 09:02:42 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
aa2f9fadee feat(frontends/lean/elaborator): add support for nondependent eliminators in the new elaborator 2016-09-12 15:26:13 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
4b022fea01 chore(tests/lean): fix/disable tests 2016-06-10 18:29:41 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
4e78e35f77 fix(tests/lean): adjust remaining tests to changes in the standard library 2015-11-08 14:04:56 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
44c6e92a64 fix(tests/lean): notation ℕ is now defined in the top-level 2015-09-01 14:58:14 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
591fb91f34 fix(frontends/lean/builtin_cmds): fixes #671 2015-06-13 11:35:03 -07:00