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2536 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kim Morrison
cdcb5780b9 fix 2025-01-12 20:57:26 +11:00
Kim Morrison
fa78cf7275 fix 2025-01-12 20:56:48 +11:00
Kim Morrison
f276a7c4db feat: lemma about Array.append 2025-01-12 19:40:22 +11:00
Leonardo de Moura
acad587938 fix: pattern selection for local lemmas (#6606)
This PR fixes a bug in the pattern selection in the `grind`.
2025-01-12 01:29:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8791a9ce06 chore: add lean4-cli to release checklist (#6596)
Users have requested toolchain tags on `lean4-cli`, so let's add it to
the release checklist to make sure these get added regularly.

Previously, `lean4-cli` has used more complicated tags, but going
forward we're going to just use the simple `v4.16.0` style tags, with no
repository-specific versioning.

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
2025-01-11 00:32:43 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
03081a5b6f doc: update FFI description for Int and signed fixed-width ints (#6599)
The FFI description didn't mention Int or signed integers.

This PR adds `Int` and signed integers to the FFI document.
2025-01-11 00:11:20 +00:00
Alex Keizer
918924c16b feat: BitVec.{toFin, toInt, msb}_umod (#6404)
This PR adds a `toFin` and `msb` lemma for unsigned bitvector modulus.
Similar to #6402, we don't provide a general `toInt_umod` lemmas, but
instead choose to provide more specialized rewrites, with extra
side-conditions.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2025-01-10 23:23:58 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
58cd01154b chore: update stage0 2025-01-10 16:42:03 +00:00
Harun Khan
0b5d97725c feat: BitVec.toNat theorems for rotateLeft and rotateRight (#6347)
This PR adds `BitVec.toNat_rotateLeft` and `BitVec.toNat_rotateLeft`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2025-01-10 11:03:58 +00:00
Sofia Rodrigues
ed309dc2a4 feat: add decidable instances for comparison operation of time offset types (#6587)
This PR adds decidable instances for the `LE` and `LT` instances for the
`Offset` types defined in `Std.Time`.
2025-01-10 07:34:46 +00:00
Alex Keizer
d2c4471cfa feat: BitVec.{toInt, toFin, msb}_udiv (#6402)
This PR adds a `toFin` and `msb` lemma for unsigned bitvector division.
We *don't* have `toInt_udiv`, since the only truly general statement we
can make does no better than unfolding the definition, and it's not
uncontroversially clear how to unfold `toInt` (see
`toInt_eq_msb_cond`/`toInt_eq_toNat_cond`/`toInt_eq_toNat_bmod` for a
few options currently provided). Instead, we do have `toInt_udiv_of_msb`
that's able to provide a more meaningful rewrite given an extra
side-condition (that `x.msb = false`).

This PR also upstreams a minor `Nat` theorem (`Nat.div_le_div_left`)
needed for the above from Mathlib.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2025-01-10 02:31:16 +00:00
jrr6
c07948a168 feat: add simp? and dsimp? in conversion mode (#6593)
This PR adds support for the `simp?` and `dsimp?` tactics in conversion
mode.

Closes #6164
2025-01-10 01:42:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d369976474 feat: improve inequality offset support theorems for grind (#6595)
This PR improves the theorems used to justify the steps performed by the
inequality offset module. See new test for examples of how they are
going to be used.
2025-01-09 20:43:30 +00:00
Henrik Böving
a6789a73ff feat: Std.Net.Addr (#6563)
This PR implements `Std.Net.Addr` which contains structures around IP
and socket addresses.

While we could implement our own parser instead of going through the
`addr_in`/`addr_in6` route we will need to implement these conversions
to make proper system calls anyway. Hence this is likely the approach
with the least amount of non trivial code overall. The only thing I am
uncertain about is whether `ofString` should return `Option` or
`Except`, unfortunately `libuv` doesn't hand out error messages on IP
parsing.
2025-01-09 09:33:03 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
1b4272821d feat: add UInt32.{lt, le} (#6591)
This PR adds less-than and less-than-or-equal-to relations to `UInt32`,
consistent with the other `UIntN` types.
2025-01-09 07:01:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
dd6445515d feat: improve grind canonicalizer diagnostics (#6588)
This PR improves the `grind` canonicalizer diagnostics.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2025-01-09 06:21:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
827c6676fd feat: align List/Array lemmas for filter/filterMap (#6589)
This PR continues aligning `List/Array` lemmas, finishing `filter` and
`filterMap`.
2025-01-09 04:15:47 +00:00
Kim Morrison
623dec1047 feat: aligning List/Array/Vector lemmas for map (#6586)
This PR continues aligning `List/Array/Vector` lemmas, finishing up
lemmas about `map`.
2025-01-09 02:27:20 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
cb9f198f01 fix: grind canonicalizer (#6585)
This PR fixes a bug in the `grind` canonicalizer.
2025-01-09 02:23:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c5314da28e feat: add helper theorems for handling offsets in grind (#6584)
This PR adds helper theorems to implement offset constraints in grind.
2025-01-09 01:32:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0afa1d1e5d feat: apply E-matching for local lemmas in grind (#6582)
This PR adds support for creating local E-matching theorems for
universal propositions known to be true. It allows `grind` to
automatically solve examples such as:

```lean
example (b : List α) (p : α → Prop) (h₁ : ∀ a ∈ b, p a) (h₂ : ∃ a ∈ b, ¬p a) : False := by
  grind
```
2025-01-08 21:37:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ddd454c9c1 feat: add grind configuration options to control case-splitting (#6581)
This PR adds the following configuration options to `Grind.Config`:
`splitIte`, `splitMatch`, and `splitIndPred`.
2025-01-08 20:52:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5be241cba0 fix: forall propagation in grind (#6578)
This PR fixes and improves the propagator for forall-expressions in the
`grind` tactic.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2025-01-08 18:03:31 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
034bc26740 feat: make classical tactic incremental (#6575)
This PR ensures tactics are evaluated incrementally in the body of
`classical`.
2025-01-08 13:04:31 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
680ede7a89 fix: set LLVM sysroot consistently (#6574)
This PR actually prevents Lake from accidentally picking up other
toolchains installed on the machine.

Fixes regression introduced in #6176
2025-01-08 12:56:27 +00:00
Henrik Böving
48eb3084a0 perf: speed up JSON serialisation (#6479)
This PR speeds up JSON serialisation by using a lookup table to check
whether a string needs to be escaped.

The approach is based on
https://byroot.github.io/ruby/json/2024/12/15/optimizing-ruby-json-part-1.html.
2025-01-08 12:06:25 +00:00
Sebastian Graf
f01471f620 fix: proper "excess binders" error locations for rintro and intro (#6565)
This PR fixes the location of the error emitted when the `rintro` and
`intro` tactics cannot introduce the requested number of binders.

This patch adds a few `withRef` wrappers to invocations of
`MVarId.intro` to fix error locations. Perhaps `MVarId.intro` should
take a syntax object to set the location itself in the future; however
there are a couple other call sites which would need non-trivial fixup.

Closes  #5659.
2025-01-08 08:36:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
00ef231a6e feat: split on match-expressions in the grind tactic (#6569)
This PR adds support for case splitting on `match`-expressions in
`grind`.
We still need to add support for resolving the antecedents of
`match`-conditional equations.
2025-01-08 03:10:11 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
9040108e2f feat: add BitVec.[toNat|toInt|toFin|getLsbD|getMsbD|getElem|msb]_fill (#6177)
This PR implements `BitVec.*_fill`.

We also add `toInt_allOnes` and `toFin_allOnes` as the former is needed
here. This completes the allOnes API.
2025-01-08 02:57:53 +00:00
Harun Khan
91cbd7c80e feat: BitVec.toInt_shiftLeft theorem (#6346)
This PR completes the toNat/Int/Fin family for `shiftLeft`.
2025-01-08 02:55:50 +00:00
Kyle Miller
18b183f62b feat: let induction take zero alteratives (#6486)
This PR modifies the `induction`/`cases` syntax so that the `with`
clause does not need to be followed by any alternatives. This improves
friendliness of these tactics, since this lets them surface the names of
the missing alternatives:
```lean
example (n : Nat) : True := by
  induction n with
/-            ~~~~
alternative 'zero' has not been provided
alternative 'succ' has not been provided
-/
```

Related to issue #3555
2025-01-08 02:25:21 +00:00
Vlad Tsyrklevich
78ed072ab0 feat: add Int.emod_sub_emod and Int.sub_emod_emod (#6507)
This PR adds the subtraction equivalents for `Int.emod_add_emod` (`(a %
n + b) % n = (a + b) % n`) and `Int.add_emod_emod` (`(a + b % n) % n =
(a + b) % n`). These are marked @[simp] like their addition equivalents.

Discussed on Zulip in

https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Adding.20some.20sub_emod.20lemmas.20to.20DivModLemmas
2025-01-08 02:20:43 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
22a799524f feat: add support for cast, Eq.rec, Eq.ndrec to grind (#6568)
This PR adds basic support for cast-like operators to the grind tactic.
Example:
```lean
example (α : Type) (β : Type) (a₁ a₂ : α) (b₁ b₂ : β)
        (h₁ : α = β)
        (h₂ : h₁ ▸ a₁ = b₁)
        (h₃ : a₁ = a₂)
        (h₄ : b₁ = b₂)
        : HEq a₂ b₂ := by
  grind
```
2025-01-08 00:21:13 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5decd2ce20 feat: trace messages for working and closing goals in the grind tactic (#6567)
This PR adds support for erasing the `[grind]` attribute used to mark
theorems for heuristic instantiation in the `grind` tactic.
2025-01-07 23:27:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0da5be1ba1 feat: add support for erasing the [grind] attribute (#6566)
This PR adds support for erasing the `[grind]` attribute used to mark
theorems for heuristic instantiation in the `grind` tactic.
2025-01-07 19:35:31 +00:00
Kim Morrison
83098cdaec chore: typos / improvements to grind messages (#6561)
This PR fixes some typos and makes minor improvements to grind
doc-strings and messages.
2025-01-07 14:25:01 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a2a525f5c7 fix: set absolute linker path (#6547)
This PR should prevent Lake from accidentally picking up other linkers
installed on the machine.
2025-01-07 14:06:24 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
97d07a54a3 feat: basic case-split for grind (#6559)
This PR adds a basic case-splitting strategy for the `grind` tactic. We
still need to add support for user customization.
2025-01-07 01:53:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a424029475 feat: Array lemma alignment; fold and map (#6546)
This PR continues aligning `Array` and `Vector` lemmas with `List`,
working on `fold` and `map` operations.
2025-01-06 22:20:09 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
db3ab39e05 feat: propagate implication in the grind tactic (#6556)
This PR adds propagators for implication to the `grind` tactic. It also
disables the normalization rule: `(p → q) = (¬ p ∨ q)`
2025-01-06 21:31:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8dec57987a feat: grind tests for basic category theory (#6543)
This PR adds additional tests for `grind`, demonstrating that we can
automate some manual proofs from Mathlib's basic category theory
library, with less reliance on Mathlib's `@[reassoc]` trick.

In several places I've added bidirectional patterns for equational
lemmas.

I've updated some other files to use the new `@[grind_eq]` attribute
(but left as is all cases where we are inspecting the info messages from
`grind_pattern`).

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2025-01-06 16:29:50 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3ca3f848a8 fix: avoid new tokens _=_ and =_ (#6554)
This PR an issue introduced by the `[grind _=_]` attribute.
2025-01-06 16:18:44 +00:00
Bhavik Mehta
2c9641f621 doc: modify aesop usage example of omegaDefault (#6549)
This PR fixes #6548.
2025-01-06 13:13:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
78ddee9112 feat: release checklist script (#6542)
This PR introduces a script that automates checking whether major
downstream repositories have been updated for a new toolchain release.

Sample output:
```
% ./release_checklist.py v4.16.0-rc1

Repository: Batteries
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: lean4checker
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: doc-gen4
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: Verso
   Not on target toolchain (needs ≥ v4.16.0-rc1, but main is on leanprover/lean4:v4.15.0)

Repository: ProofWidgets4
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)

Repository: Aesop
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: import-graph
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: plausible
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: Mathlib
   On compatible toolchain (>= v4.16.0-rc1)
   Tag v4.16.0-rc1 exists

Repository: REPL
   Not on target toolchain (needs ≥ v4.16.0-rc1, but master is on leanprover/lean4:v4.14.0)
```
2025-01-06 06:37:01 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2ed77f3b26 feat: attribute [grind] (#6545)
This PR introduces the parametric attribute `[grind]` for annotating
theorems and definitions. It also replaces `[grind_eq]` with `[grind
=]`. For definitions, `[grind]` is equivalent to `[grind =]`.

The new attribute supports the following variants:

- **`[grind =]`**: Uses the left-hand side of the theorem's conclusion
as the pattern for E-matching.
- **`[grind =_]`**: Uses the right-hand side of the theorem's conclusion
as the pattern for E-matching.
- **`[grind _=_]`**: Creates two patterns. One for the left-hand side
and one for the right-hand side.
- **`[grind →]`**: Searches for (multi-)patterns in the theorem's
antecedents, stopping once a usable multi-pattern is found.
- **`[grind ←]`**: Searches for (multi-)patterns in the theorem's
conclusion, stopping once a usable multi-pattern is found.
- **`[grind]`**: Searches for (multi-)patterns in both the theorem's
conclusion and antecedents. It starts with the conclusion and stops once
a usable multi-pattern is found.

The `grind_pattern` command remains available for cases where these
attributes do not yield the desired result.
2025-01-06 03:05:20 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
76f883b999 fix: remove unused -static-libgcc MinGW linker arg (#6535)
This PR avoids a linker warning on Windows.

The argument may have been superfluous ever since the initial
implementation.
2025-01-05 21:57:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
675244de76 feat: [grind_eq] attribute for the grind tactic (#6539)
This PR introduces the `[grind_eq]` attribute, designed to annotate
equational theorems and functions for heuristic instantiations in the
`grind` tactic.
When applied to an equational theorem, the `[grind_eq]` attribute
instructs the `grind` tactic to automatically use the annotated theorem
to instantiate patterns during proof search. If applied to a function,
it marks all equational theorems associated with that function.

```lean
@[grind_eq]
theorem foo_idempotent : foo (foo x) = foo x := ...

@[grind_eq] def f (a : Nat) :=
  match a with
  | 0 => 10
  | x+1 => g (f x)
```

In the example above, the `grind` tactic will add instances of the
theorem `foo_idempotent` to the local context whenever it encounters the
pattern `foo (foo x)`. Similarly, functions annotated with `[grind_eq]`
will propagate this annotation to their associated equational theorems.
2025-01-05 21:38:05 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fd091d1dfe feat: pattern normalization in the grind tactic (#6538)
This PR ensures patterns provided by users are normalized. See new test
to understand why this is needed.
2025-01-05 19:35:52 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7b29f488df fix: E-matching thresholds in the grind tactic (#6536)
This PR fixes different thresholds for controlling E-matching in the
`grind` tactic.
2025-01-05 17:34:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fb506b957c fix: allow projections in E-matching patterns (#6534)
This PR ensures that users can utilize projections in E-matching
patterns within the `grind` tactic.
2025-01-05 16:20:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
dc5c8097b5 feat: add term offset support to the grind E-matching modulo (#6533)
This PR adds support to E-matching offset patterns. For example, we want
to be able to E-match the pattern `f (#0 + 1)` with term `f (a + 2)`.
2025-01-05 02:20:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9dcbc330fd chore: fix signature of perm_insertIdx (#6532) 2025-01-04 23:43:23 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d22233fc7b fix: let_fun support in grind (#6531)
This PR fixes the support for `let_fun` in `grind`.
2025-01-04 22:22:55 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a5b1ed906c fix: nondeterministic failure in grind (#6530)
This PR fixes nondeterministic failures in the (WIP) `grind` tactic.
2025-01-04 21:40:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ad2c16dade feat: add support for let-declarations to grind (#6529)
This PR adds support for `let`-declarations to the (WIP) `grind` tactic.
2025-01-04 19:24:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
37127ead07 fix: missing propagation in grind (#6528)
This PR adds a missing propagation rule to the (WIP) `grind` tactic.
2025-01-04 18:45:55 +00:00
Kitamado
31435e9cd1 doc: fix broken code blocks in RELEASES.md (#6527)
just fix markdown
2025-01-04 08:08:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
639e6e92a4 chore: cleanup imports in Lean.Lsp (#6523)
This PR splits a definition out of `Lean.Lsp.Basic`, with the effect
that material about JSON is not needed for `Lean.Meta.Sorry` and its
dependencies.
2025-01-04 04:33:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9080df3110 chore: import cleanup in Init (#6522)
This PR avoids unnecessarily importing "kitchen sink" files.
2025-01-04 04:13:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cdeb958afd chore: add plausible to release checklist (#6525) 2025-01-04 04:08:21 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d2189542b5 chore: upstream some List.Perm lemmas (#6524)
This PR upstreams some remaining `List.Perm` lemmas from Batteries.
2025-01-04 04:04:13 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ad593b36d9 feat: add support for match-expressions to grind (#6521)
This PR adds support for activating relevant `match`-equations as
E-matching theorems. It uses the `match`-equation lhs as the pattern.
2025-01-04 02:18:43 +00:00
Kim Morrison
28a7098728 feat: add script for generating release notes (#6519)
This PR adds a script to automatically generate release notes using the
new `changelog-*` labels and "This PR ..." conventions.

Usage:
```
script/release_notes.py v4.X.0
```
where `v4.X.0` is the **previous** release, i.e. the script will process
all commits *since* that tag.
2025-01-04 01:31:02 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d991feddad chore: cherry-pick release notes from releases/v4.15.0 and releases/v4.16.0 (#6520)
These release notes were automatically generated by the script in #6519.
2025-01-04 01:25:33 +00:00
Henrik Böving
58d178e68f fix: cond reflection bug in bv_decide (#6517)
This PR fixes a slight bug that was created in the reflection of `bif`
in `bv_decide`.

Tagged as changelog-no as the code in question isn't in an RC yet.
2025-01-03 19:35:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7b496bf44b feat: improve cases tactic used in grind (#6516)
This PR enhances the `cases` tactic used in the `grind` tactic and
ensures that it can be applied to arbitrary expressions.
2025-01-03 15:54:55 +00:00
Mitchell Lee
10b2f6b27e feat: bdiv and bmod lemmas (#6494)
This PR proves the basic theorems about the functions `Int.bdiv` and
`Int.bmod`.

For all integers `x` and all natural numbers `m`, we have:
- `Int.bdiv_add_bmod`: `m * bdiv x m + bmod x m = x` (which is stated in
the docstring for docs#Int.bdiv)
- `Int.bmod_add_bdiv`: `bmod x m + m * bdiv x m = x`
- `Int.bdiv_add_bmod'`: `bdiv x m * m + bmod x m = x`
- `Int.bmod_add_bdiv'`: `bmod x m + bdiv x m * m = x`
- `Int.bmod_eq_self_sub_mul_bdiv`: `bmod x m = x - m * bdiv x m`
- `Int.bmod_eq_self_sub_bdiv_mul`: `bmod x m = x - bdiv x m * m`

These theorems are all equivalent to each other by the basic properties
of addition, multiplication, and subtraction of integers.

The names `Int.bdiv_add_bmod`, `Int.bmod_add_bdiv`,
`Int.bdiv_add_bmod'`, and `Int.bmod_add_bdiv'` are meant to parallel the
names of the existing theorems docs#Int.tmod_add_tdiv,
docs#Int.tdiv_add_tmod, docs#Int.tmod_add_tdiv', and
docs#Int.tdiv_add_tmod'.

The names `Int.bmod_eq_self_sub_mul_bdiv` and
`Int.bmod_eq_self_sub_bdiv_mul` follow mathlib's naming conventions.
Note that there is already a theorem called docs#Int.bmod_def, so it
would not have been possible to parallel the name of the existing
theorem docs#Int.tmod_def.

See
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/217875-Is-there-code-for-X.3F/topic/bdiv.20and.20bmod.

Closes #6493.
2025-01-03 09:37:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
19078655bc perf: avoid unnecessary assert/intro pairs in grind (#6514)
This PR enhances the assertion of new facts in `grind` by avoiding the
creation of unnecessary metavariables.
2025-01-03 02:16:08 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
df9ed20385 feat: ite and dite support in grind (#6513)
This PR adds support for (dependent) if-then-else terms (i.e., `ite` and
`dite` applications) in the `grind` tactic.
2025-01-03 01:05:44 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3e2f1faebf feat: add user-defined fallback procedure for the grind tactic (#6512)
This PR introduces support for user-defined fallback code in the `grind`
tactic. The fallback code can be utilized to inspect the state of
failing `grind` subgoals and/or invoke user-defined automation. Users
can now write `grind on_failure <code>`, where `<code>` should have the
type `GoalM Unit`. See the modified tests in this PR for examples.
2025-01-02 23:56:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9d622270a1 feat: custom congruence rule for equality in grind (#6510)
This PR adds a custom congruence rule for equality in `grind`. The new
rule takes into account that `Eq` is a symmetric relation. In the
future, we will add support for arbitrary symmetric relations. The
current rule is important for propagating disequalities effectively in
`grind`.
2025-01-02 22:08:19 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e46b5f39bf fix: congruence closure in the grind tactic (#6509)
This PR fixes a bug in the congruence closure data structure used in the
`grind` tactic. The new test includes an example that previously caused
a panic. A similar panic was also occurring in the test
`grind_nested_proofs.lean`.
2025-01-02 19:08:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3cba17140f fix: missing case in checkParents (#6508)
This PR fixes a bug in the sanity checkers for the `grind` tactic. See
the new test for an example of a case where it was panicking.
2025-01-02 16:06:52 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
092449adb8 chore: update stage0 2025-01-02 12:29:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e9f069146c feat: partial_fixpoint: monotonicity tactic (#6506)
This PR adds the `monotonicity` tactic, intended to be used inside the
`partial_fixpoint` feature.

Part of #6355.
2025-01-02 11:07:05 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
7d0c0d4d92 feat: partial_fixpoint: theory (#6477)
This PR adds the necessary domain theory that backs the
`partial_fixpoint` feature.

Part of #6355.
2025-01-02 09:39:18 +00:00
Eric Wieser
9eb173e444 fix: ignore no_index around OfNat.ofNat in norm_cast (#6438)
This PR ensures `norm_cast` doesn't fail to act in the presence of
`no_index` annotations

While leanprover/lean4#2867 exists, it is necessary to put `no_index`
around `OfNat.ofNat` in simp lemmas.
This results in extra `Expr.mdata` nodes, which must be removed before
checking for `ofNat` numerals.
2025-01-02 09:10:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8d9d81453b feat: grind simple strategy (#6503)
This PR adds a simple strategy to the (WIP) `grind` tactic. It just
keeps internalizing new theorem instances found by E-matching. The
simple strategy can solve examples such as:

```lean
grind_pattern Array.size_set => Array.set a i v h
grind_pattern Array.get_set_eq  => a.set i v h
grind_pattern Array.get_set_ne => (a.set i v hi)[j]

example (as bs : Array α) (v : α)
        (i : Nat)
        (h₁ : i < as.size)
        (h₂ : bs = as.set i v)
        : as.size = bs.size := by
  grind

example (as bs cs : Array α) (v : α)
        (i : Nat)
        (h₁ : i < as.size)
        (h₂ : bs = as.set i v)
        (h₃ : cs = bs)
        (h₄ : i ≠ j)
        (h₅ : j < cs.size)
        (h₆ : j < as.size)
        : cs[j] = as[j] := by
  grind


opaque R : Nat → Nat → Prop
theorem Rtrans (a b c : Nat) : R a b → R b c → R a c := sorry

grind_pattern Rtrans => R a b, R b c

example : R a b → R b c → R c d → R d e → R a d := by
  grind
```
2025-01-02 05:36:01 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a08379ce2e fix: proof generation for grind tactic (#6502)
This PR fixes a bug in the proof assembly procedure utilized by the
`grind` tactic.
2025-01-02 04:42:31 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f0c59364f4 feat: add PersistentHashSet.toList (#6501)
This PR adds `PersistentHashSet.toList`
2025-01-02 03:52:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c0d67e2a65 fix: bug in markNestedProofs within grind (#6500)
This PR fixes a bug in the `markNestedProofs` used in `grind`. See new
test.
2025-01-02 02:14:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a8d09dad1b fix: proof canonicalizer in grind (#6499)
This PR fixes the proof canonicalizer for `grind`.
2025-01-02 01:26:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f7c4edc2b7 feat: dependent forall propagator in grind (#6498)
This PR adds support in the `grind` tactic for propagating dependent
forall terms `forall (h : p), q[h]` where `p` is a proposition.
2025-01-02 00:08:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
82bae24e59 fix: another bug in theorem instantiation in grind (#6497)
This PR fixes another theorem instantiation bug in the `grind` tactic.
It also moves new instances to be processed to `Goal`.
2025-01-01 23:09:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fedaf850bb fix: theorem instantiation in grind (#6492)
This PR fixes a bug in the theorem instantiation procedure in the (WIP)
`grind` tactic. For example, it was missing the following instance in
one of the tests:

```lean
[grind.ematch.instance] Array.get_set_ne: ∀ (hj : i < bs.size), j ≠ i → (bs.set j w ⋯)[i] = bs[i]
```

This PR also renames the `grind` base monad to `GrindCoreM`.
2025-01-01 17:56:27 +00:00
Kyle Miller
6d447156c4 fix: make sure parent structure projections have 'go to definition' information (#6487)
This PR adds source position information for `structure` parent
projections, supporting "go to definition". Closes #3063.
2024-12-31 21:59:38 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3427630a14 feat: configuration options for the grind tactic (#6490)
This PR adds basic configuration options for the `grind` tactic.
2024-12-31 21:09:41 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5ba476116f fix: E-matching module for grind (#6488)
This PR fixes and refactors the E-matching module for the (WIP) `grind`
tactic.

Next step: top-level search procedure for `grind`.
2024-12-31 20:07:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8899c7ed8c feat: instantiate ematch theorems in grind (#6485)
This PR implements `Grind.EMatch.instantiateTheorem` in the (WIP)
`grind` tactic.
2024-12-31 19:25:12 +00:00
Kyle Miller
640b356a04 chore: add missing diff-exposing in type/value mismatch errors (#6484)
This PR addresses a few error messages where diffs weren't being
exposed.
2024-12-31 17:47:12 +00:00
Kyle Miller
8f5ce3a356 feat: upstream ToExpr deriving handler from Mathlib (#6473)
This PR adds a deriving handler for the `ToExpr` class. It can handle
mutual and nested inductive types, however it falls back to creating
`partial` instances in such cases. This is upstreamed from the Mathlib
deriving handler written by @kmill, but has fixes to handle autoimplicit
universe level variables.

This is a followup to #6285 (adding the `ToLevel` class). This PR
supersedes #5906.

Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
2024-12-31 15:11:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2c87905d77 feat: E-matching procedure for the grind tactic (#6481)
This PR implements E-matching for the (WIP) `grind` tactic. We still
need to finalize and internalize the new instances.
2024-12-31 02:46:09 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
32dc16590b chore: reduce churn in tests/lean/run/meta5.lean (#6480) 2024-12-31 02:32:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7e8e22e2bd fix: internalize nested ground patterns when activating ematch theorems (#6478)
This PR internalize nested ground patterns when activating ematch
theorems in the (WIP) `grind` tactic.
2024-12-30 16:13:47 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9b28c5879a feat: ematch theorem activation for grind (#6475)
This PR adds support for activating relevant theorems for the (WIP)
`grind` tactic. We say a theorem is relevant to a `grind` goal if the
symbols occurring in its patterns also occur in the goal.
2024-12-30 09:57:33 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
24a8561ec4 feat: check pattern coverage in the grind_pattern command (#6474)
This PR adds pattern validation to the `grind_pattern` command. The new
`checkCoverage` function will also be used to implement the attributes
`@[grind_eq]`, `@[grind_fwd]`, and `@[grind_bwd]`.
2024-12-30 03:40:43 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
3c326d771c chore: update stage0 2024-12-29 21:10:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7433e74fc4 feat: theorem patterns for heuristic instantiation in grind (#6472)
This PR implements the command `grind_pattern`. The new command allows
users to associate patterns with theorems. These patterns are used for
performing heuristic instantiation with e-matching. In the future, we
will add the attributes `@[grind_eq]`, `@[grind_fwd]`, and
`@[grind_bwd]` to compute the patterns automatically for theorems.
2024-12-29 20:26:58 +00:00
Eric Wieser
11eea84fd5 doc: explain app_delab (#6450)
This PR adds a docstring to the `@[app_delab]` attribute.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
2024-12-29 15:06:55 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
536c6a8ea6 chore: update stage0 2024-12-29 01:19:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9c0ef2a282 feat: add grind_pattern command (#6470)
This PR introduces a command for specifying patterns used in the
heuristic instantiation of global theorems in the `grind` tactic. Note
that this PR only adds the parser.
2024-12-29 00:44:40 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a781f9858c feat: missing data for grind e-match (#6469)
This PR adds support code for implementing e-match in the (WIP) `grind`
tactic.
2024-12-29 00:33:25 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5930db946c fix: Int.reduceNeg simproc (#6468)
This PR fixes issue #6467 


closes #6467
2024-12-28 22:58:09 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3fc74854d7 fix: check function types when detecting congruences in grind (#6466)
This PR completes the implementation of `addCongrTable` in the (WIP)
`grind` tactic. It also adds a new test to demonstrate why the extra
check is needed. It also updates the field `cgRoot` (congruence root).
2024-12-28 19:53:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fe45ddd610 feat: projections in grind (#6465)
This PR adds support for projection functions to the (WIP) `grind`
tactic.
2024-12-27 23:50:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f545df9922 feat: literal values in grind (#6464)
This PR completes support for literal values in the (WIP) `grind`
tactic. `grind` now closes the goal whenever it merges two equivalence
classes with distinct literal values.
2024-12-27 22:18:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
844e82e176 feat: constructors in grind (#6463)
This PR adds support for constructors to the (WIP) `grind` tactic. When
merging equivalence classes, `grind` checks for equalities between
constructors. If they are distinct, it closes the goal; if they are the
same, it applies injectivity.
2024-12-27 21:15:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2d7d3388e2 fix: missing Not propagation rule in grind (#6461)
This PR adds a new propagation rule for negation to the (WIP) `grind`
tactic.
2024-12-27 17:37:32 +00:00
Henrik Böving
c14e5ae7de chore: implement reduceCond for bv_decide (#6460)
This PR implements the equivalent of `reduceIte` for `cond` in
`bv_decide` as we switched to `bif` for the `if` normal form.
2024-12-27 10:12:52 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
6a839796fd feat: add grind tactic (#6459)
This PR adds the (WIP) `grind` tactic. It currently generates a warning
message to make it clear that the tactic is not ready for production.
2024-12-27 03:48:01 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e76dc20200 feat: use compact congruence proofs in grind if applicable (#6458)
This PR adds support for compact congruence proofs in the (WIP) `grind`
tactic. The `mkCongrProof` function now verifies whether the congruence
proof can be constructed using only `congr`, `congrFun`, and `congrArg`,
avoiding the need to generate the more complex `hcongr` auxiliary
theorems.
2024-12-26 23:58:04 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
dca874ea57 feat: congruence proofs for grind (#6457)
This PR adds support for generating congruence proofs for congruences
detected by the `grind` tactic.
2024-12-26 22:20:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c282d558fa fix: fix: bug in mkEqProof within grind (#6456)
This PR fixes another bug in the equality proof generator in the (WIP)
`grind` tactic.
2024-12-26 19:03:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
57050be3ab fix: bug in mkEqProof within grind (#6455)
This PR fixes a bug in the equality proof generator in the (WIP) `grind`
tactic.
2024-12-26 18:25:11 +00:00
Henrik Böving
37b53b70d0 perf: improve bv_decide performance with large literals (#6453)
This PR improves bv_decide's performance in the presence of large
literals.

The core change of this PR is the reformulation of the reflection code
for literals to:
```diff
 def eval (assign : Assignment) : BVExpr w → BitVec w
   | .var idx =>
-    let ⟨bv⟩ := assign.get idx
-    bv.truncate w
+    let packedBv := assign.get idx
+    /-
+    This formulation improves performance, as in a well formed expression the condition always holds
+    so there is no need for the more involved `BitVec.truncate` logic.
+    -/
+    if h : packedBv.w = w then
+      h ▸ packedBv.bv
+    else
+      packedBv.bv.truncate w
```
The remainder is merely further simplifications that make the terms
smaller and easier to deal with in general. This change is motivated by
applying the following diff to the kernel:
```diff
diff --git a/src/kernel/type_checker.cpp b/src/kernel/type_checker.cpp
index b0e6844dca..f13bb96bd4 100644
--- a/src/kernel/type_checker.cpp
+++ b/src/kernel/type_checker.cpp
@@ -518,6 +518,7 @@ optional<constant_info> type_checker::is_delta(expr const & e) const {
 optional<expr> type_checker::unfold_definition_core(expr const & e) {
     if (is_constant(e)) {
         if (auto d = is_delta(e)) {
+//            std::cout << "Working on unfolding: " << d->get_name() << std::endl;
             if (length(const_levels(e)) == d->get_num_lparams()) {
                 if (m_diag) {
                     m_diag->record_unfold(d->get_name());
```
and observing that in the test case from #6043 we see a long series of
```
Working on unfolding: Bool.decEq
Working on unfolding: Bool.decEq.match_1
Working on unfolding: Bool.casesOn
Working on unfolding: Nat.ble
Working on unfolding: Nat.brecOn
Working on unfolding: Nat.beq.match_1
Working on unfolding: Nat.casesOn
Working on unfolding: Nat.casesOn
Working on unfolding: Nat.beq.match_1
Working on unfolding: Nat.casesOn
Working on unfolding: Nat.casesOn
```
the chain begins with `BitVec.truncate`, works through a few
abstractions and then continues like above forever, so I avoid the call
to truncate like this. It is not quite clear to me why removing `ofBool`
helps so much here, maybe some other kernel heuristic kicks in to rescue
us.

Either way this diff is a general improvement for reflection of `BitVec`
constants as we should never have to run `BitVec.truncate` again!

Fixes: #6043
2024-12-26 16:50:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8a1e50f0b9 feat: equality proof generation for grind (#6452)
This PR adds support for generating (small) proofs for any two
expressions that belong to the same equivalence class in the `grind`
tactic state.
2024-12-26 06:01:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
bdcb7914b5 chore: check whether pointer equality implies structural equality in grind (#6451)
This PR checks whether in the internal state of the `grind` tactic
pointer equality implies structural equality.
2024-12-26 03:50:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0ebe9e5ba3 feat: support for builtin grind propagators (part 2) (#6449)
This PR completes the implementation of the command
`builtin_grind_propagator`.
2024-12-25 23:54:55 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
65e8ba0574 chore: update stage0 2024-12-25 23:27:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3cddae6492 feat: support for builtin grind propagators (#6448)
This PR declares the command `builtin_grind_propagator` for registering
equation propagator for `grind`. It also declares the auxiliary the
attribute.
2024-12-25 22:55:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
977b8e001f refactor: move simplifier support to GrindM (#6447)
This PR refactors `grind` and adds support for invoking the simplifier
using the `GrindM` monad.
2024-12-25 21:01:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f9f8abe2a3 feat: propagate equality in grind (#6443)
This PR adds support for propagating the truth value of equalities in
the (WIP) `grind` tactic.
2024-12-24 23:54:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ec80de231e fix: checkParents in grind (#6442)
This PR fixes the `checkParents` sanity check in `grind`.
2024-12-24 22:45:18 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
630577a9ea feat: truth value propagation for grind (#6441)
This PR adds basic truth value propagation rules to the (WIP) `grind`
tactic.
2024-12-24 21:12:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
cde35bcc0d test: grind (#6440)
This PR adds additional tests for `grind` and fixed minor issues.
2024-12-24 04:33:05 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b18f3a3877 feat: detect congruent terms in grind (#6437)
This PR adds support for detecting congruent terms in the (WIP) `grind`
tactic. It also introduces the `grind.debug` option, which, when set to
`true`, checks many invariants after each equivalence class is merged.
This option is intended solely for debugging purposes.
2024-12-24 00:11:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5240405cf4 feat: congruence table for grind tactic (#6435)
This PR implements the congruence table for the (WIP) `grind` tactic. It
also fixes several bugs, and adds a new preprocessing step.
2024-12-23 02:31:42 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
eb6c52e7e2 feat: canonicalizer for the grind tactic (#6433)
This PR adds a custom type and instance canonicalizer for the (WIP)
`grind` tactic. The `grind` tactic uses congruence closure but
disregards types, type formers, instances, and proofs. Proofs are
ignored due to proof irrelevance. Types, type formers, and instances are
considered supporting elements and are not factored into congruence
detection. Instead, `grind` only checks whether elements are
structurally equal, which, in the context of the `grind` tactic, is
equivalent to pointer equality. See new tests for examples where the
canonicalizer is important.
2024-12-21 22:32:25 +00:00
Kyle Miller
71942631d7 feat: explanations for cases applied to non-inductive types (#6378)
This PR adds an explanation to the error message when `cases` and
`induction` are applied to a term whose type is not an inductive type.
For `Prop`, these tactics now suggest the `by_cases` tactic. Example:
```
tactic 'cases' failed, major premise type is not an inductive type
  Prop

Explanation: the 'cases' tactic is for constructor-based reasoning as well as for applying
custom cases principles with a 'using' clause or a registered '@[cases_eliminator]' theorem.
The above type neither is an inductive type nor has a registered theorem.

Consider using the 'by_cases' tactic, which does true/false reasoning for propositions.
```

[Zulip
discussion](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Improving.20the.20error.20for.20.60cases.20p.60.20when.20.60p.60.20is.20a.20proposition/near/488882682)
2024-12-21 21:38:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
16bc6ebcb6 fix: ensure simp and dsimp do not unfold too much (#6397)
This PR ensures that `simp` and `dsimp` do not unfold definitions that
are not intended to be unfolded by the user. See issue #5755 for an
example affected by this issue.

Closes #5755

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-12-21 04:16:15 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9e30ac3265 feat: add Expr.fvarsSubset (#6430)
This PR adds the predicate `Expr.fvarsSet a b`, which returns `true` if
and only if the free variables in `a` are a subset of the free variables
in `b`.
2024-12-20 22:29:47 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
bf1d253764 feat: add support for extern LCNF decls (#6429)
This PR adds support for extern LCNF decls, which is required for parity
with the existing code generator.
2024-12-20 21:20:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
052f3f54c8 fix: normalize universe levels in grind preprocessor (#6428)
This PR adds a new preprocessing step to the `grind` tactic:
universe-level normalization. The goal is to avoid missing equalities in
the congruence closure module.
2024-12-20 20:41:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
39eaa214d4 chore: protect some lemmas in List/Array/Vector namespace (#6425) 2024-12-20 11:23:56 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9a53c88ecf chore: temporarily disable Web Assembly build in CI (#6424) 2024-12-20 08:58:10 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e06673e200 feat: lemmas about List/Array/Vector lexicographic order (#6423)
This PR adds missing lemmas about lexicographic order on
List/Array/Vector.
2024-12-20 06:16:27 +00:00
Mac Malone
7b0b1909f1 feat: lake: local package overrides (#6411)
This PR adds the ability to override package entries in a Lake manifest
via a separate JSON file. This file can be specified on the command line
with `--packages` or applied persistently by placing it at
`.lake/package-overrides.json`.

The overrides file is a subset of `lake-manifest.json` with just a
version and a `packages` field. The entries in the package share the
syntax of the manifest file and take precedence over the entries there.
Lake loads the entries from the manifest, then overrides them with those
in `.lake/package-overrides.json` (if any) and then those in any file
passed to `--packages`.
2024-12-20 05:33:50 +00:00
Mac Malone
759da5d52c fix: lake: afterBuildCache* traces (#6422)
This PR fixes a bug in #6388 where the `Package.afterBuildCahe*`
functions would produce different traces depending on whether the cache
was fetched.
2024-12-20 04:39:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9fca337f38 fix: multiple bugs in grind (#6419)
This PR fixes multiple bugs in the WIP `grind` tactic. It also adds
support for printing the `grind` internal state.
2024-12-19 23:44:44 +00:00
Kyle Miller
12cadda3bd fix: process delayed assignment metavariables correctly in Lean.Meta.Closure (#6414)
This PR fixes a bug in `Lean.Meta.Closure` that would introduce
under-applied delayed assignment metavariables, which would keep them
from ever getting instantiated. This bug affected `match` elaboration
when the expected type contained postponed elaboration problems, for
example tactic blocks.

Closes #5925, closes #6354
2024-12-19 20:15:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b4ff5455ba feat: lemmas about lexicographic order on Array and Vector (#6399)
This PR adds basic lemmas about lexicographic order on Array and Vector,
achieving parity with List.

Many lemmas are still missing for all three, particularly about how
order interacts with `++`.
2024-12-19 10:36:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5dd35360d9 chore: protect Nat.div_eq_iff (#6417)
Protects a recently added lemma to avoid collision in Mathlib. I will
need to protect many more of the core `Nat` lemmas later.
2024-12-19 10:35:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5b14d3e809 fix: sharecommon bug (#6415)
This PR fixes a bug in the `sharecommon` module, which was returning
incorrect results for objects that had already been processed by
`sharecommon`. See the new test for an example that triggered the bug.
2024-12-19 02:52:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7b81fb7050 feat: grind preprocessing and Expr internalization (#6413)
This PR introduces the following features to the WIP `grind` tactic:
- `Expr` internalization.
- Congruence theorem cache.
- Procedure for adding new facts
- New tracing options
- New preprocessing steps: fold projections and eliminate dangling
`Expr.mdata`
2024-12-19 00:16:48 +00:00
François G. Dorais
75fc103be4 chore: fix some docstrings (#6410)
Minor: Uniformize language. Fix some typos.
2024-12-18 19:32:07 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
1214e6463f chore: update stage0 2024-12-18 17:14:27 +00:00
Mac Malone
3e942f2654 refactor: lake: merge BuildJob into Job (#6388)
This PR merges `BuildJob` and `Job`, deprecating the former. `Job` now
contains a trace as part of its state which can be interacted with
monadically. This PR also simplifies the implementation of `OpaqueJob`.

This merger removes the need in Lake to distinguish between different
kinds of jobs, which helps enable the overall goal of making all targets
return a `Job` (and therefore make it easer for the frontend to
manipulate them in, e.g., #6323).
2024-12-18 08:19:01 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
bc9b814858 feat: reserved names for congruence theorems (#6412)
This PR adds reserved names for congruence theorems used in the
simplifier and `grind` tactics. The idea is prevent the same congruence
theorems to be generated over and over again.

After update stage0, we must use the new API in the simplifier.
2024-12-18 06:19:29 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
11fc9b9bca chore: update documentation title and link README to reference (#6409)
This PR makes the title of the mdbook documentation page reflect the
updated link on lean-lang.org and adds the reference manual to the
README.
2024-12-17 22:18:56 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
dc24ebde2f fix: ghost goals in autoparam tactic block (#6408)
This PR fixes a regression where goals that don't exist were being
displayed. The regression was triggered by #5835 and originally caused
by #4926.

Bug originally reported at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/tactic.20doesn't.20change.20primary.20goal.20state/near/488957772.

The cause of this issue was that #5835 made certain `SourceInfo`s
canonical, which was directly transferred to several `TacticInfo`s by
#4926. The goal state selection mechanism would then pick up these extra
`TacticInfo`s.

The approach taken by this PR is to ensure that the `SourceInfo` that is
being transferred by #4926 is noncanonical.
2024-12-17 20:57:39 +00:00
Kyle Miller
64d3e9a48e chore: in #print for structures, mention 'field notation' (#6406)
This PR modifies `#print` for structures to say "field notation
resolution order" instead of just "resolution order".
2024-12-17 02:21:03 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
1880c61507 feat: support erasure of Decidable.decide in new code generator (#6405)
This PR adds support for erasure of `Decidable.decide` to the new code
generator. It also adds a new `Probe.runOnDeclsNamed` function, which is
helpful for writing targeted single-file tests of compiler internals.

---------

Co-authored-by: Cameron Zwarich <cameron@lean-fro.org>
2024-12-17 01:48:55 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
5fcd42d71a chore: remove old language manual (#6401)
To avoid user confusion, there should be just one manual.

This PR deletes the old manual, adding a link to the new one; the
website config will redirect these pages to the corresponding new manual
content.
2024-12-16 14:37:16 +00:00
Eric Wieser
1b15a0f27c fix: add missing fields in the profiler datastructures (#6363)
This PR fixes errors at load time in the comparison mode of the Firefox
profiler.

See https://github.com/firefox-devtools/profiler/issues/5254


6306555856/src/types/profile.js (L313)
suggests there are a _lot_ of missing fields in these structures, which
means the firefox profiler could at any point break any historic
profiler data.


https://profiler.firefox.com/compare/calltree/?globalTrackOrder=0w2&profiles[]=https%3A%2F%2Fprofiler.firefox.com%2Fpublic%2Fx1j7asq6jwsyc368j58m8brbqef6s8vqsx0mnzr%2Fcalltree%2F%3FglobalTrackOrder%3D0%26thread%3D0%26v%3D10&profiles[]=https%3A%2F%2Fprofiler.firefox.com%2Fpublic%2F55hw0v1q2zhe2w6ds3zckt04d55vsa6wd9kqb4r%2Fcalltree%2F%3FglobalTrackOrder%3D0%26thread%3D0%26v%3D10&thread=0&timelineType=category&v=10
is a demo of this working.
2024-12-16 08:23:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0340f904b3 fix: check must check projections (#6398)
This PR ensures `Meta.check` check projections.

closes #5660
2024-12-16 06:42:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
791bea027f feat: lemmas about Std.Range (#6396)
This PR adds lemmas reducing for loops over `Std.Range` to for loops
over `List.range'`.

Equivalent theorems previously existed in Batteries, but the underlying
definitions have changed so these are written from scratch.
2024-12-16 03:16:46 +00:00
Eric Wieser
5c2ef51b44 chore: add gitpod configuration (#6382)
This PR adds a dockerfile for use with Gitpod.

This provides all the dependencies, and kicks off a build once the
editor is opened for the first time.

It can be tested by going to
https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/6382

This should make it less painful for users hoping to contribute small
lemmas to `Init/` and `Std/`; they can open gitpod and wait, rather than
having to read the docs to run a series of commands.
2024-12-15 21:38:13 +00:00
Mac Malone
a8656c5812 feat: generalize panic to Sort (#6333)
This PR generalizes the panic functions to a type of `Sort u` rather
than `Type u`. This better supports universe polymorphic types and
avoids confusing errors.

An minimal (but somewhat contrived) example of such a confusing error
is:

```lean
/-
stuck at solving universe constraint
  ?u.59+1 =?= max 1 ?u.7
while trying to unify
  Subtype.{?u.7} P : Sort (max 1 ?u.7)
with
  Subtype.{?u.7} P : Sort (max 1 ?u.7)
-/
def assertSubtype! {P : α → Prop} [Inhabited (Subtype P)] (a : α) [Decidable (P a)] : Subtype P := -- errors on :=
  if h : P a then 
    ⟨a, h⟩ 
  else 
    panic! "Property not satisified"
```
2024-12-15 21:36:45 +00:00
Eric Wieser
a8dc619f8e doc: split the docstring of LocalContext (#6340)
This results in better hovers in VSCode, without duplicating information
in a way that might go out of sync.
2024-12-15 21:35:25 +00:00
Kim Morrison
80fb404a04 chore: require 0 < Range.step (#6391)
This PR requires that the step size in `Std.Range` is positive, to avoid
ill-specified behaviour.
2024-12-15 11:33:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
474adc8c9e feat: redefine Range.forIn' (#6390)
This PR redefines `Range.forIn'` and `Range.forM`, in preparation for
writing lemmas about them.
2024-12-15 09:47:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6893913683 feat: replace List.lt with List.Lex (#6379)
This PR replaces `List.lt` with `List.Lex`, from Mathlib, and adds the
new `Bool` valued lexicographic comparatory function `List.lex`. This
subtly changes the definition of `<` on Lists in some situations.

`List.lt` was a weaker relation: in particular if `l₁ < l₂`, then
`a :: l₁ < b :: l₂` may hold according to `List.lt` even if `a` and `b`
are merely incomparable
(either neither `a < b` nor `b < a`), whereas according to `List.Lex`
this would require `a = b`.

When `<` is total, in the sense that `¬ · < ·` is antisymmetric, then
the two relations coincide.

Mathlib was already overriding the order instances for `List α`,
so this change should not be noticed by anyone already using Mathlib.

We simultaneously add the boolean valued `List.lex` function,
parameterised by a `BEq` typeclass
and an arbitrary `lt` function. This will support the flexibility
previously provided for `List.lt`,
via a `==` function which is weaker than strict equality.
2024-12-15 08:22:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a8a160b091 fix: revertAll must clear auxiliary declarations (#6386)
This PR ensures that `revertAll` clears auxiliary declarations when
invoked directly by users.

closes #6263
2024-12-15 00:56:57 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e08d35cea1 fix: type incorrect term produced by contradiction (#6387)
This PR fixes a type error in the proof generated by the `contradiction`
tactic.

closes #4851
2024-12-15 00:21:15 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
94641e88cf fix: simp_all? local declarations (#6385)
This PR fixes a bug in `simp_all?` that caused some local declarations
to be omitted from the `Try this:` suggestions.

closes #3519
2024-12-14 23:13:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b721c0f540 test: add test for issue #4585 (#6384)
This issue has been fixed by #6123

closes #4585
2024-12-14 22:12:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f790b1999f fix: new code generator must generate code for opaque declarations that are not @[extern] (#6383)
This PR ensures the new code generator produces code for `opaque`
definitions that are not tagged as `@[extern]`.
Remark: This is the behavior of the old code generator.
2024-12-14 20:26:14 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
6571bc01d7 fix: withTrackingZetaDelta must reset cache (#6381)
This PR fixes a bug in `withTrackingZetaDelta` and
`withTrackingZetaDeltaSet`. The `MetaM` caches need to be reset. See new
test.
2024-12-14 18:23:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
37122c3262 chore: move implementation details of mergeSort into namespace (#6380) 2024-12-14 11:24:15 +00:00
Mac Malone
280fcc9883 feat: lean --error=kind (#6362)
This PR adds the `--error=kind` option (shorthand: `-Ekind`) to the
`lean` CLI. When set, messages of `kind` (e.g.,
`linter.unusedVariables`) will be reported as errors. This setting does
nothing in interactive contexts (e.g., the server).

Closes #5194.

The spelling `--error` was chosen instead of the common `-Werror` both
for practical and behavioral reasons. Behaviorally, this option effects
not just warnings, but informational messages as well. Practically,
`-Werror` conflicts with the existing `-W` option for the worker and
`lean` also does not currently use long single-hyphen option names.
2024-12-14 01:31:14 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
19eac5f341 fix: propagate Simp.Config when reducing terms and checking definitional equality in simp (#6123)
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>
2024-12-14 00:59:40 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
aa00725624 chore: stop running compiler twice during tests (#6321)
The reason given for this in the comment seemingly no longer holds.

Co-authored-by: Cameron Zwarich <cameron@lean-fro.org>
2024-12-13 23:59:20 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
7530fd6955 chore: remove Lean.Compiler.LCNF.ForEachExpr (#6313)
Co-authored-by: Cameron Zwarich <cameron@lean-fro.org>
2024-12-13 23:58:42 +00:00
Alissa Tung
58ffd15a8f doc: fix typo reference in doc of lazy discrimination tree (#6377)
This PR fix a bad reference in doc of lazy discrimination tree.
2024-12-13 07:41:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
bac34c7767 feat: theorems about == on Vector (#6376)
This PR adds theorems about `==` on `Vector`, reproducing those already
on `List` and `Array`.
2024-12-13 02:07:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
db354d2cde chore: run Batteries linter on Lean (#6364)
This PR makes fixes suggested by the Batteries environment linters,
particularly `simpNF`, and `unusedHavesSuffices`.
2024-12-13 01:28:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
945abe0065 fix: unused let_fun elimination in simp (#6375)
This PR fixes a bug in the simplifier. It was producing terms with loose
bound variables when eliminating unused `let_fun` expressions.

This issue was affecting the example at #6374. The example is now timing
out.
2024-12-13 01:18:46 +00:00
Kim Morrison
48be424eaa feat: lemmas about Vector.any/all/set (#6369)
This PR adds lemmas about `Vector.set`, `anyM`, `any`, `allM`, and
`all`.

With these additions, `Vector` is now as in-sync with the `List` API as
`Array` is, and in future I'll be updating both simultaneously.
2024-12-12 04:48:34 +00:00
Kyle Miller
58f8e21502 feat: labeled and unique sorries (#5757)
This PR makes it harder to create "fake" theorems about definitions that
are stubbed-out with `sorry` by ensuring that each `sorry` is not
definitionally equal to any other. For example, this now fails:
```lean
example : (sorry : Nat) = sorry := rfl -- fails
```
However, this still succeeds, since the `sorry` is a single
indeterminate `Nat`:
```lean
def f (n : Nat) : Nat := sorry
example : f 0 = f 1 := rfl -- succeeds
```
One can be more careful by putting parameters to the right of the colon:
```lean
def f : (n : Nat) → Nat := sorry
example : f 0 = f 1 := rfl -- fails
```
Most sources of synthetic sorries (recall: a sorry that originates from
the elaborator) are now unique, except for elaboration errors, since
making these unique tends to cause a confusing cascade of errors. In
general, however, such sorries are labeled. This enables "go to
definition" on `sorry` in the Infoview, which brings you to its origin.
The option `set_option pp.sorrySource true` causes the pretty printer to
show source position information on sorries.

**Details:**

* Adds `Lean.Meta.mkLabeledSorry`, which creates a sorry that is labeled
with its source position. For example, `(sorry : Nat)` might elaborate
to
  ```
sorryAx (Lean.Name → Nat) false
`lean.foo.12.8.12.13.8.13._sorry._@.lean.foo._hyg.153
  ```
It can either be made unique (like the above) or merely labeled. Labeled
sorries use an encoding that does not impact defeq:
  ```
sorryAx (Unit → Nat) false (Function.const Lean.Name ()
`lean.foo.14.7.13.7.13.69._sorry._@.lean.foo._hyg.174)
  ```

* Makes the `sorry` term, the `sorry` tactic, and every elaboration
failure create labeled sorries. Most are unique sorries, but some
elaboration errors are labeled sorries.

* Renames `OmissionInfo` to `DelabTermInfo` and adds configuration
options to control LSP interactions. One field is a source position to
use for "go to definition". This is used to implement "go to definition"
on labeled sorries.

* Makes hovering over a labeled `sorry` show something friendlier than
that full `sorryAx` expression. Instead, the first hover shows the
simplified ``sorry `«lean.foo:48:11»``. Hovering over that hover shows
the full `sorryAx`. Setting `set_option pp.sorrySource true` makes
`sorry` always start with printing with this source position
information.

* Removes `Lean.Meta.mkSyntheticSorry` in favor of `Lean.Meta.mkSorry`
and `Lean.Meta.mkLabeledSorry`.

* Changes `sorryAx` so that the `synthetic` argument is no longer
optional.

* Gives `addPPExplicitToExposeDiff` awareness of labeled sorries. It can
set `pp.sorrySource` when source positions differ.

* Modifies the delaborator framework so that delaborators can set Info
themselves without it being overwritten.

Incidentally closes #4972.

Inspired by [this Zulip
thread](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/287929-mathlib4/topic/Is.20a.20.60definition_wanted.60.20keyword.20possible.3F/near/477260277).
2024-12-11 23:53:02 +00:00
Mac Malone
a64a17e914 feat: Nat.shiftRight_bitwise_distrib (#6334)
This PR adds `Nat` theorems for distributing `>>>` over bitwise
operations, paralleling those of `BitVec`.

This enables closing goals like the following using `simp`:

```lean
example (n : Nat) : (n <<< 2 ||| 3) >>> 2 = n := by simp [Nat.shiftRight_or_distrib]
```

It might be nice for these theorems to be `simp` lemmas, but they are
not currently in order to be consistent with the existing `BitVec` and
`div_two` theorems.
2024-12-11 23:30:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
b862e2d251 chore: preserve reported messages in MessageLog (#6307)
Fixes #4460 (and similar future changes) making prior messages
inaccessible to metaprograms such as linters
2024-12-11 12:24:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8709ca35e9 chore: DecidableRel allows a heterogeneous relation (#6341)
This PR generalizes `DecidableRel` to allow a heterogeneous relation.
2024-12-11 05:02:58 +00:00
Mac Malone
19fb1fb388 feat: do not propagate pretty printer errors through messages (#3696)
This PR makes all message constructors handle pretty printer errors.

Prior to this change, pretty printer errors in messages were not
uniformly handled. In core, some printers capture their errors (e.g.,
`ppExprWithInfos` and `ppTerm` ) and some do not (e.g., `ppGoal` and
`ppSignature`) propagate them to whatever serializes the message (e.g.,
the frontend).

To resolve this inconsistency and uniformly handle errors, the signature
for `ofLazy` now uses `BaseIO`. As such, all printers been adapted to
capture any errors within them and print similar messages to
`ppExprWithInfos` and `ppTerm` on such errors.
2024-12-11 04:10:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cb31ddc6ad feat: lemmas about indexing and membership for Vector (#6367)
This PR brings Vector lemmas about membership and indexing to parity
with List and Array.
2024-12-11 03:52:04 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
633c825ff3 feat: add Float32 support (#6366)
This PR adds support for `Float32` and fixes a bug in the runtime.
2024-12-11 02:55:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c83ce020bf feat: alignment of Array.set lemmas with List lemmas (#6365)
This PR expands the `Array.set` and `Array.setIfInBounds` lemmas to
match existing lemmas for `List.set`.
2024-12-11 01:45:06 +00:00
Kyle Miller
cd909b0a98 fix: when pretty printing constant names, do not use aliases from "non-API exports" (#5689)
This PR adjusts the way the pretty printer unresolves names. It used to
make use of all `export`s when pretty printing, but now it only uses
`export`s that put names into parent namespaces (heuristic: these are
"API exports" that are intended by the library author), rather than
"horizontal exports" that put the names into an unrelated namespace,
which the dot notation feature in #6189 now incentivizes.

Closes the already closed #2524
2024-12-10 17:50:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d27c5afa6e refactor: ArgsPacker.unpack to return Option (#6359)
so that it can be used in pure code and that the error message can be
adjusted
2024-12-10 15:23:13 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
938651121f refactor: elabWFRel to take names, not PreDefinition (#6358)
just to clarify what this function can or cannot do
2024-12-10 14:46:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a9b6a9a975 refactor: WF.EqnInfo.hasInduct (#6357)
after #6355 not all functions with equation infos will support
functional induction, so prepare a flag to guide the name reservation.
2024-12-10 14:33:10 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d5b565e95f refactor: make mkInhabitantFor error message configurable (#6356)
preparation for #6355
2024-12-10 14:32:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
27c2323ef9 chore: alignment of Array.any/all lemmas with List (#6353)
This PR reproduces the API around `List.any/all` for `Array.any/all`.
2024-12-10 09:23:52 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
17865394d4 feat: BitVec.[toInt|toFin|getMsbD]_ofBool (#6317)
This PR completes the basic API for BitVec.ofBool.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-12-10 08:46:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a805946466 chore: adjust CODEOWNERS (#6327)
Remove some noise from my assignments
2024-12-10 08:37:20 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
8a3a806b1a chore: update stage0 2024-12-10 03:47:20 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5c333ef969 fix: Float32 runtime support (#6350)
This PR adds missing features and fixes bugs in the `Float32` support
2024-12-10 01:37:01 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e69bcb0757 chore: improve BitVec ext lemmas (#6349)
This PR modifies `BitVec` extensionality lemmas to prefer bounded Nats
over `Fin`, and avoids unnecessary use of `bif` in BitVec theorems.
2024-12-10 01:33:09 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
c5b82e0b16 feat: BitVec.[toFin|getMsbD]_setWidth and [getMsbD|msb]_signExtend (#6338)
This PR adds `BitVec.[toFin|getMsbD]_setWidth` and
`[getMsb|msb]_signExtend` as well as `ofInt_toInt`.

Also correct renamed the misnamed theorem for
`signExtend_eq_setWidth_of_msb_false`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
2024-12-10 01:17:20 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
b6177bad9c chore: update stage0 2024-12-09 22:30:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2e11b8ac88 feat: add support for Float32 to the Lean runtime (#6348)
This PR adds support for `Float32` to the Lean runtime.

We need an update stage0, and then uncomment `Float32.lean` file.
2024-12-09 21:33:43 +00:00
Alex Keizer
ff3d12c8b5 doc: clarify difference between Expr.hasLooseBVars and Expr.hasLooseBVar (#6344)
This PR adds docstrings to `Expr.hasLooseBVars` and `Expr.hasLooseBVar`,
to clarify the difference between these functions, and to document that
the former traverses the expression, while the latter is constant-time,
using cached information.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-12-09 21:15:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
520d4b698f chore: cleanup of Array lemmas (#6343)
Continuing cleanup of Array lemmas.
2024-12-09 14:04:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c7b8c5c6a6 chore: alignment of Array and List lemmas (#6342)
Further alignment of `Array` and `List` lemmas. Moved lemmas about
`List.toArray` to a separate file, and aligned lemmas about membership.
2024-12-09 11:30:45 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3f791933f1 chore: release notes for 4.14.0 (#6339) 2024-12-09 05:30:50 +00:00
Kyle Miller
63791f0177 feat: _ separators in numeric literals (#6204)
This PR lets `_` be used in numeric literals as a separator. For
example, `1_000_000`, `0xff_ff` or `0b_10_11_01_00`. New lexical syntax:
```text
numeral10 : [0-9]+ ("_"+ [0-9]+)*
numeral2  : "0" [bB] ("_"* [0-1]+)+
numeral8  : "0" [oO] ("_"* [0-7]+)+
numeral16 : "0" [xX] ("_"* hex_char+)+
float     : numeral10 "." numeral10? [eE[+-]numeral10]
```

Closes #6199
2024-12-08 22:23:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6abb8aad43 chore: cleanup of Array lemmas (#6337)
This PRs continues cleaning up Array lemmas and improving alignment with
List.
2024-12-08 22:03:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4dd182c554 chore: remove deprecated aliases for Int.tdiv and Int.tmod (#6322)
This PR removes the deprecated aliases `Int.div := Int.tdiv` and
`Int.mod := Int.tmod`. Later we will rename `Int.ediv` to `Int.div` and
`Int.emod` to `Int.mod`.
2024-12-08 05:19:42 +00:00
jsr-p
762c5758f5 doc: missing (type := true) in reader monad example (#6196)
This PR adds missing `(types := true)` to `#reduce` example in [Readers
example](https://lean-lang.org/lean4/doc/monads/readers.lean.html).
Since [4.10](https://lean-lang.org/blog/2024-8-1-lean-4100/) the `(types
:= true)` is necessary for the `ReaderM Environment String` type to be
reduced into `Environment → String`.
2024-12-07 15:59:36 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
6447fda253 feat: FunInd: omit unused parameters (#6330)
This PR removes unnecessary parameters from the funcion induction
principles. This is a breaking change; broken code can typically be adjusted
simply by passing fewer parameters.

Part 2, adjusting after stage0 update.

Closes #6320
2024-12-07 04:19:21 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
279f36b4cc chore: update stage0 2024-12-07 04:19:21 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
d2853ecbc4 feat: FunInd: omit unused parameters (#6330)
This PR removes unnecessary parameters from the funcion induction
principles. This is a breaking change; broken code can typically be adjusted
simply by passing fewer parameters.

Part 1, before stage0 update.

Closes #6320
2024-12-07 04:19:21 +01:00
Kim Morrison
6e60d13084 feat: getElem lemmas for Vector operations (#6324)
This PR adds `GetElem` lemmas for the basic `Vector` operations.

The `Vector` API is still very sparse, but I'm hoping to infill rapidly.
2024-12-06 01:45:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
019f8e175f chore: protect Fin.cast and BitVec.cast (#6315)
This PR adds `protected` to `Fin.cast` and `BitVec.cast`, to avoid
confusion with `_root_.cast`. These should mostly be used via
dot-notation in any case.
2024-12-05 06:11:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c366a291ca chore: generalize universe in Array.find? (#6318)
This PR generalizes the universe level for `Array.find?`, by giving it a
separate implementation from `Array.findM?`.
2024-12-05 06:11:40 +00:00
Alex Keizer
1400b95ffb feat: upstream ToLevel from mathlib (#6285)
This PR upstreams the `ToLevel` typeclass from mathlib and uses it to
fix the existing `ToExpr` instances so that they are truly universe
polymorphic (previously it generated malformed expressions when the
universe level was nonzero). We improve on the mathlib definition of
`ToLevel` to ensure the class always lives in `Type`, irrespective of
the universe parameter.

This implements part one of the plan to upstream a derive handler for
`ToExpr`, as discussed in #5906 and #5909.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-12-05 05:50:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
00c7b85261 feat: lemmas about for loops over Option (#6316)
This PR adds lemmas simplifying `for` loops over `Option` into
`Option.pelim`, giving parity with lemmas simplifying `for` loops of
`List` into `List.fold`.
2024-12-05 05:09:07 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f6e88e5a05 fix: missing HEq support at ToLCNF (#6311)
This PR adds support for `HEq` to the new code generator.
2024-12-04 19:49:16 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
88573c802d test: do not filter output for non-diff tests (#6308) 2024-12-04 17:49:35 +00:00
Henrik Böving
faf07e58db chore: remove unused imports (#6305)
This PR removes an unused import in the time library that can yield to
import cycles when building stuff that gets imported by `Std.Internal`
but also wants to import `Std.Time`.
2024-12-04 12:46:08 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
c5181569f9 feat: BitVec.[toInt|toFin]_concat and Bool.toInt (#6182)
This PR adds `BitVec.[toInt|toFin]_concat` and moves a couple of
theorems into the concat section, as `BitVec.msb_concat` is needed for
the `toInt_concat` proof.

We also add `Bool.toInt`.
2024-12-04 01:53:30 +00:00
Siddharth
77211029da feat: BitVec.toFin/ToInt BitVec.ushiftRight (#6238)
This PR adds theorems characterizing the value of the unsigned shift
right of a bitvector in terms of its 2s complement interpretation as an
integer.
Unsigned shift right by at least one bit makes the value of the
bitvector less than or equal to `2^(w-1)`,
makes the interpretation of the bitvector `Int` and `Nat` agree.
In the case when `n = 0`, then the shift right value equals the integer
interpretation.

```lean
theorem toInt_ushiftRight_eq_ite {x : BitVec w} {n : Nat} :
  (x >>> n).toInt = if n = 0 then x.toInt else x.toNat >>> n
```

```lean
theorem toFin_uShiftRight {x : BitVec w} {n : Nat} :
  (x >>> n).toFin = x.toFin / (Fin.ofNat' (2^w) (2^n))
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Harun Khan <harun19@stanford.edu>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-12-04 01:49:58 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
da9a0c4190 chore: update stage0 2024-12-04 00:04:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b9bf94313a feat: add debug.proofAsSorry (#6300)
This PR adds the `debug.proofAsSorry` option. When enabled, the proofs
of theorems are ignored and replaced with `sorry`.
2024-12-03 23:21:38 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
2a891a3889 chore: CMAKE_CXX_SYSROOT_FLAG is also needed for linking (#6297)
Fixes #6296
2024-12-03 16:14:22 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
00718c3959 chore: clean up Elab.async handling (#6299)
* Make sure metaprogramming users cannot be surprised by its
introduction
* Make `#guard_msgs` compatible with its use
2024-12-03 12:42:02 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
473274f145 chore: update stage0 2024-12-03 13:59:37 +01:00
Kim Morrison
7b98fbece4 feat: reverse HashMap.toList, so it agrees with HashMap.toArray (#6244)
This PR changes the implementation of `HashMap.toList`, so the ordering
agrees with `HashMap.toArray`.

Currently there are no verification lemmas about `HashMap.toList`, so no
contract is being broken yet!
2024-12-03 12:25:35 +00:00
Henrik Böving
24b412ebe3 refactor: move IO.Channel and IO.Mutex to Std.Sync (#6282)
This PR moves `IO.Channel` and `IO.Mutex` from `Init` to `Std.Sync` and
renames them to `Std.Channel` and `Std.Mutex`.

Note that the original files are retained and the deprecation is written
manually as we cannot import `Std` from `Init` so this is the only way
to deprecate without a hard breaking change. In particular we do not yet
move `Std.Queue` from `Init` to `Std` both because it needs to be
retained for this deprecation to work but also because it is already
within the `Std` namespace and as such we cannot maintain two copies of
the file at once. After the deprecation period is finished `Std.Queue`
will find a new home in `Std.Data.Queue`.
2024-12-03 09:36:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cb600ed9b4 chore: restore broken proofs
This reverts commit d099f560f72b5f18695c7fb586a9da93af0cb17e.
2024-12-03 17:59:23 +11:00
Kim Morrison
57d83c835e feat: add simp configuration to norm_cast macros 2024-12-03 17:59:23 +11:00
Kim Morrison
ce27d49e31 chore: update stage0 2024-12-03 17:59:23 +11:00
Kim Morrison
8a7889d602 chore: temporarily sorry broken proofs 2024-12-03 17:59:23 +11:00
Kim Morrison
69340297be chore: add simp configuration to norm_cast syntax
chore: define NormCastConfig earlier
2024-12-03 17:59:23 +11:00
Kim Morrison
222abdd43d feat: simprocs for other Fin operations (#6295)
This PR sets up simprocs for all the remaining operations defined in
`Init.Data.Fin.Basic`
2024-12-03 04:42:17 +00:00
François G. Dorais
490be9282e chore: specialize fold loops (#6293)
This PR adds `specialize` and `semireducible` attributes to loops for
`Fin.fold[lr]M?`
2024-12-03 02:44:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cda6d5c67a chore: upstream List.length_flatMap (#6294)
This PR upstreams `List.length_flatMap`, `countP_flatMap` and
`count_flatMap` from Mathlib. These were not possible to state before we
upstreamed `List.sum`.
2024-12-03 01:59:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
904404303b chore: robustify for byAsSorry (#6287)
This PR makes some proofs more robust so they will still work with
`byAsSorry`. Unfortunately, they are not a complete fix and there are
remaining problems building with `byAsSorry`.
2024-12-02 23:53:16 +00:00
Mac Malone
f6bc6b2eb1 fix: lake: properly prepend job log in ensureJob (#6291)
This PR ensures the the log error position is properly preserved when
prepending stray log entries to the job log. It also adds comparison
support for `Log.Pos`.
2024-12-02 23:43:12 +00:00
Mac Malone
d9d54c1f99 chore: lake: use & check prelude (#6289)
This PR adapts Lake modules to use `prelude` and includes them in the
`check-prelude` CI.
2024-12-02 19:55:05 +00:00
Henrik Böving
b2336fd980 perf: speed up bv_decide reflection using Lean.RArray (#6288)
This PR uses Lean.RArray in bv_decide's reflection proofs. Giving
speedups on problems with lots of variables.

Implement like #6068, speedup:
```
# before
λ hyperfine "lean +nightly-2024-12-02 tests/lean/run/bv_reflection_stress.lean"
Benchmark 1: lean +nightly-2024-12-02 tests/lean/run/bv_reflection_stress.lean
  Time (mean ± σ):      1.939 s ±  0.007 s    [User: 1.549 s, System: 0.104 s]
  Range (min … max):    1.928 s …  1.947 s    10 runs
# after
λ hyperfine "lean tests/lean/run/bv_reflection_stress.lean"                                                                                                                                                                                                                        
Benchmark 1: lean tests/lean/run/bv_reflection_stress.lean
  Time (mean ± σ):      1.409 s ±  0.006 s    [User: 1.058 s, System: 0.073 s]
  Range (min … max):    1.401 s …  1.419 s    10 runs
```
2024-12-02 17:44:58 +00:00
Mac Malone
f156f22d7c feat: lake: build without leanc (#6176)
This PR changes Lake's build process to no longer use `leanc` for
compiling C files or linking shared libraries and executables. Instead,
it directly invokes the bundled compiler (or the native compiler if
none) using the necessary flags.
2024-12-02 17:11:27 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
3c348d4526 chore: CI: bump dawidd6/action-download-artifact from 6 to 7 (#6274)
Bumps
[dawidd6/action-download-artifact](https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact)
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<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/core</code> from 1.10.1 to 1.11.0
by <a href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a>
in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/310">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#310</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/core</code> from 1.11.0 to 1.11.1
by <a href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a>
in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/312">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#312</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.10 to
2.1.11 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/313">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#313</a></li>
<li>build(deps): Fix cross-spawn &gt;=7.0.0 &lt;= 7.0.5 vulnerability by
<a href="https://github.com/alexcouret"><code>@​alexcouret</code></a> in
<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/317">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#317</a></li>
</ul>
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href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/317">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#317</a></li>
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Sebastian Ullrich
0b8f50f78d feat: async linting (#4460)
This PR runs all linters for a single command (together) on a separate
thread from further elaboration, making a first step towards
parallelizing the elaborator.
2024-12-02 14:37:03 +00:00
Henrik Böving
0d89f0194b perf: bv_decide uses rfl in reflection if possible (#6286)
This PR ensure `bv_decide` uses definitional equality in its reflection
procedure as much as possible. Previously it would build up explicit
congruence proofs for the kernel to check. This reduces the size of
proof terms passed to kernel speeds up checking of large reflection
proofs.
2024-12-02 14:27:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e157fcbcd1 chore: missing Array/Vector injectivity lemmas (#6284) 2024-12-02 11:00:03 +00:00
Henrik Böving
95dbac26cf chore: shake Std.Time (#6283)
This PR reduces the import closure of `Std.Time` such that it doesn't
have to be rebuilt on every change in `Init.Data`.

Noticed while working on `Init` refactorings.
2024-12-02 10:52:43 +00:00
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Sebastian Ullrich
6fcf35e930 chore: script/mathlib-bench (#6280)
A simple approach to benchmarking lean4 PRs against Mathlib
2024-12-02 10:00:57 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
b3e0c9c3fa fix: use sensible notion of indentation in structure instance field completion (#6279)
This PR fixes a bug in structure instance field completion that caused
it to not function correctly for bracketed structure instances written
in Mathlib style.
2024-12-02 09:37:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3c5e612dc5 chore: begin development cycle for v4.16.0 (#6277) 2024-12-02 04:11:10 +00:00
Kim Morrison
29e84fa7ea feat: omega doesn't get stuck on bare Int.negSucc (#6276)
This PR ensures `omega` doesn't get stuck on bare `Int.negSucc` terms in
goals.

This came up in https://github.com/ImperialCollegeLondon/FLT/pull/260.
2024-12-01 23:57:15 +00:00
Mac Malone
6bf8ff32f0 feat: more UInt bitwise theorems (#6188)
This PR completes the `toNat` theorems for the bitwise operations
(`and`, `or`, `xor`, `shiftLeft`, `shiftRight`) of the UInt types and
adds `toBitVec` theorems as well. It also renames `and_toNat` to
`toNat_and` to fit with the current naming convention.
2024-12-01 22:38:49 +00:00
Henrik Böving
62b8238782 chore: remove accidentally added file (#6262)
This PR removes an accidentally comitted file.
2024-12-01 21:11:44 +00:00
Kyle Miller
0a2a8e8aa4 feat: make "foo has been deprecated" warning be hoverable (#6273)
This PR modifies the "foo has been deprecated: use betterFoo instead"
warning so that foo and betterFoo are hoverable.
2024-12-01 19:12:42 +00:00
Kyle Miller
23236ef520 fix: have Lean.Meta.isConstructorApp'? be aware of n + k Nat offsets (#6270)
This PR fixes a bug that could cause the `injectivity` tactic to fail in
reducible mode, which could cause unfolding lemma generation to fail
(used by tactics such as `unfold`). In particular,
`Lean.Meta.isConstructorApp'?` was not aware that `n + 1` is equivalent
to `Nat.succ n`.

Closes #5064
2024-12-01 18:04:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b2f70dad52 feat: Array.swap_perm (#6272)
This PR introduces the basic theory of permutations of `Array`s and
proves `Array.swap_perm`.

The API falls well short of what is available for `List` at this point.
2024-12-01 08:35:28 +00:00
Kim Morrison
819cb879e1 chore: upstream Vector lemmas (#6271)
This PR upstreams existing lemmas about `Vector` from Batteries.

Thanks to @fgdorais for preparing these in
https://github.com/leanprover-community/batteries/pull/1062. Further
contributions to the `Vector` API welcome via PR here.
2024-12-01 06:44:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3ee2842e77 feat: remove runtime bounds checks and partial from qsort (#6241)
This PR refactors `Array.qsort` to remove runtime array bounds checks,
and avoids the use of `partial`. We use the `Vector` API, along with
auto_params, to avoid having to write any proofs. The new code
benchmarks indistinguishably from the old.
2024-12-01 06:26:00 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7b8504cf06 chore: post-stage0 cleanup for #6165 (#6268)
This PR puts code in terms of syntax quotations now that there has been
a stage0 update. Fixes a lingering bug in StructInst where some
intermediate syntax was malformed, but this had no observable effects
outside of some debug messages.
2024-12-01 00:20:59 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
ca96922b4b chore: update stage0 2024-11-30 21:22:30 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a1c3a36433 feat: parity between structure instance notation and where notation (#6165)
This PR modifies structure instance notation and `where` notation to use
the same notation for fields. Structure instance notation now admits
binders, type ascriptions, and equations, and `where` notation admits
full structure lvals. Examples of these for structure instance notation:
```lean
structure PosFun where
  f : Nat → Nat
  pos : ∀ n, 0 < f n

def p : PosFun :=
  { f n := n + 1
    pos := by simp }

def p' : PosFun :=
  { f | 0 => 1
      | n + 1 => n + 1
    pos := by rintro (_|_) <;> simp }
```
Just like for the structure `where` notation, a field `f x y z : ty :=
val` expands to `f := fun x y z => (val : ty)`. The type ascription is
optional.

The PR also is setting things up for future expansion. Pending some
discussion, in the future structure/`where` notation could have have
embedded `where` clauses; rather than `{ a := { x := 1, y := z } }` one
could write `{ a where x := 1; y := z }`.
2024-11-30 20:27:25 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
734ea3071d chore: update stage0 2024-11-30 12:58:59 +00:00
Kyle Miller
f3f00451c8 feat: add structInstFieldDecl syntax category (#6265)
This PR is preparation for changes to structure instance notation in
#6165. It adds a syntax category that will be used for field syntax.
2024-11-30 12:12:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
27df5e968a feat: Simp.Config.implicitDefEqProofs (#4595)
This PR implements `Simp.Config.implicitDefEqsProofs`. When `true`
(default: `true`), `simp` will **not** create a proof term for a
rewriting rule associated with an `rfl`-theorem. Rewriting rules are
provided by users by annotating theorems with the attribute `@[simp]`.
If the proof of the theorem is just `rfl` (reflexivity), and
`implicitDefEqProofs := true`, `simp` will **not** create a proof term
which is an application of the annotated theorem.

The default setting does change the existing behavior. Users can use
`simp -implicitDefEqProofs` to force `simp` to create a proof term for
`rfl`-theorems. This can positively impact proof checking time in the
kernel.

This PR also fixes an issue in the `split` tactic that has been exposed
by this feature. It was looking for `split` candidates in proofs and
implicit arguments. See new test for issue exposed by the previous
feature.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-11-29 22:29:27 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
3752241edd chore: update stage0 2024-11-29 21:32:14 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
39bffb6fda fix: don't walk full project file tree on every file save (#6246)
This PR fixes a performance issue where the Lean language server would
walk the full project file tree every time a file was saved, blocking
the processing of all other requests and notifications and significantly
increasing overall language server latency after saving.

This issue was originally reported at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Compiling.20too.20slow/near/484386515
and uncovered in a lengthy investigation. The performance bug that
causes the Lean language server to walk the full project file tree when
the file watcher for .ilean files is triggered was introduced when the
.ileans were first introduced, whereas the specific issue of file saving
also triggering the walk was introduced by #3247 in 4.8.0 and the use of
the file watcher for .lean files, which would then also trigger the
directory walk. Combining this with VS Code's auto-save feature causes
the language server to walk the full project file tree on every change
of the document.

It somehow hasn't really been much of an issue until now, but we still
do way too much work in the watchdog main loop. I'll look into resolving
that more general issue in the future.
2024-11-29 15:34:44 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
86f303774a chore: harden markPersistent uses (#6257)
This API may or may not have been a footgun, better to be safe than
`sorry`
2024-11-29 14:33:33 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d97af36867 feat: simpler trace timing annotation logic (#6259)
This PR ensures that nesting trace nodes are annotated with timing
information iff `trace.profiler` is active.

The previous connection to the otherwise unrelated `profiler` option was
a remnant from before `trace.profiler` existed; if users want to
annotate explicitly activated trace classes only, they can instead
increase `trace.profiler.threshold`.
2024-11-29 14:03:01 +00:00
Mac Malone
27cc0c8039 feat: USize.reduceToNat (#6190)
This PR adds the builtin simproc `USize.reduceToNat` which reduces the
`USize.toNat` operation on literals less than `UInt32.size` (i.e.,
`4294967296`).
2024-11-29 08:24:40 +00:00
Mac Malone
c9ee66fb1f chore: lake: fix typo in materialize error (#6250) 2024-11-29 06:20:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5c7e027b03 chore: cleanup of List/Array lemmas (#6249)
This PR performs further cleanup of `List/Lemmas.lean` and
`Array/Lemmas.lean`, trying to make them more parallel.

Still a long way to go.
2024-11-29 06:12:38 +00:00
Mac Malone
4969ec9cdb feat: more UInt lemmas (#6205)
This PR upstreams some UInt theorems from Batteries and adds more
`toNat`-related theorems. It also adds the missing `UInt8` and `UInt16`
to/from `USize` conversions so that the the interface is uniform across
the UInt types.

**Summary of all changes:**

* Upstreamed and added `toNat` constructors lemmas: `toNat_mk`,
`ofNat_toNat`, `toNat_ofNat`, `toNat_ofNatCore`, and
`USize.toNat_ofNat32`
* Upstreamed and added `toNat` canonicalization; `val_val_eq_toNat` and
`toNat_toBitVec_eq_toNat`
* Added injectivity iffs: `toBitVec_inj`, `toNat_inj`, and `val_inj`
* Added inequality iffs: `le_iff_toNat_le` and `lt_iff_toNat_lt`
* Upstreamed antisymmetry lemmas: `le_antisymm` and `le_antisymm_iff`
* Upstreamed missing `toNat` lemmas on arithmetic operations:
`toNat_add`, `toNat_sub`, `toNat_mul`
* Upstreamed and added missing conversion lemmas: `toNat_toUInt*` and
`toNat_USize`
* Added missing `USize` conversions: `USize.toUInt8`, `UInt8.toUSize`,
`USize.toUInt16`, `UInt16.toUSize`
2024-11-29 02:08:52 +00:00
Mac Malone
827062f807 feat: System.Platform.numBits inequalities (#6247)
This PR adds the theorems `numBits_pos`, `le_numBits`, `numBits_le` ,
which make proving inequalities about `System.Platform.numBits` easier.
2024-11-28 21:20:47 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6d495586a1 chore: deprecate Fin.ofNat (replaced by Fin.ofNat', subsequently to be renamed) (#6242)
This PR deprecates `Fin.ofNat` in favour of `Fin.ofNat'` (which takes an
`[NeZero]` instance, rather than returning an element of `Fin (n+1)`).

After leaving the deprecation warning in place for some time, we will
then rename `ofNat'` back to `ofNat`.
2024-11-28 05:23:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
10d1d2cc25 chore: cleanup in Array/Lemmas (#6243) 2024-11-28 03:50:41 +00:00
Wojciech Nawrocki
2325f5c7b9 doc: explain abstraction order (#6239)
This PR explains the order in which `Expr.abstract` introduces de Bruijn
indices.
2024-11-28 01:37:30 +00:00
Sofia Rodrigues
88e3a2b1ab fix: improve directory fallback on Linux and trim local time identifier (#6221)
This PR fixes:
- Problems in other linux distributions that the default `tzdata`
directory is not the same as previously defined by ensuring it with a
fallback behavior when directory is missing.
- Trim unnecessary characters from local time identifier.
2024-11-27 14:52:35 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
b378fe98a7 chore: update stage0 2024-11-27 14:20:47 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5f1ff42a15 fix: Runtime.markPersistent is unsafe (#6209)
This PR documents under which conditions `Runtime.markPersistent` is
unsafe and adjusts the elaborator accordingly
2024-11-27 13:32:05 +00:00
Jens Petersen
30d01f7a9a fix: add cmake COPY_CADICAL option to allow turning off install copy (#5931)
This PR adds a cmake knob to allow turning off installing a copy of
`cadical`.
This can be useful for custom builds/installs where cadical is already
available in the system.

Closes: #5603
2024-11-27 13:21:20 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
81b85d8e2f fix: reparsing may need to backtrack two commands (#6236)
This PR fixes an issue where edits to a command containing a nested
docstring fail to reparse the entire command.

Fixes #6227
2024-11-27 13:06:57 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5982a6d230 chore: default parseQuotWithCurrentStage to true in stage 0 (#6212)
Use the default that solves bootstrapping issues in exchange for an
insignificant(?) perf overhead
2024-11-27 12:58:44 +00:00
Mac Malone
ac1197ff59 feat: Lean.loadPlugin (#6130)
This PR adds `Lean.loadPlugin` which exposes functionality similar to
the `lean` executable's `--plugin` option to Lean code.

This will allow custom Lean frontends (e.g., Lake, the Lean language
server) to also load plugins.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-11-27 09:56:31 +00:00
Kim Morrison
609346f5e0 feat: relate Nat.fold/foldRev/any/all to List.finRange (#6235)
This PR relates that operations `Nat.fold`/`foldRev`/`any`/`all` to the
corresponding List operations over `List.finRange`.
2024-11-27 05:38:18 +00:00
Mac Malone
04f80a1f9f feat: lake: detailed Reservoir fetch error (#6231)
This PR improves the errors Lake produces when it fails to fetch a
dependency from Reservoir. If the package is not indexed, it will
produce a suggestion about how to require it from GitHub.

Closes #5330.
2024-11-27 05:07:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7e9dd5668b feat: upstream List.finRange from Batteries (#6234)
This PR upstreams the definition and basic lemmas about `List.finRange`
from Batteries.

Thanks for contributors to Batteries and Mathlib who've previously
worked on this material. Further PRs are welcome here. I'll be adding
more API later.
2024-11-27 04:27:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
79f050b816 feat: upstream Vector lemmas (#6233)
This PR upstreams lemmas about `Vector` from Batteries.

I'll be adding more soon, and PRs are welcome, particularly from those
who have previously contributed to `Vector` in Batteries.
2024-11-27 04:19:30 +00:00
Siddharth
af4a3f2251 feat: BitVec.toInt_abs (#6154)
This PR implements `BitVec.toInt_abs`.


The absolute value of `x : BitVec w` is naively a case split on the sign
of `x`.
However, recall that when `x = intMin w`, `-x = x`.
Thus, the full value of `abs x` is computed by the case split:
- If `x : BitVec w` is `intMin`, then its absolute value is also `intMin
w`, and
  thus `toInt` will equal `intMin.toInt`.
- Otherwise, if `x` is negative, then `x.abs.toInt = (-x).toInt`.
- Finally, when `x` is nonnegative, then `x.abs.toInt = x.toInt`.

```lean
theorem toInt_abs {x : BitVec w} :
  x.abs.toInt =
    if x = intMin w then (intMin w).toInt
    else if x.msb then -x.toInt
    else x.toInt
```

We also provide a variant of `toInt_abs` that
hides the case split for `x` being positive or negative by using
`natAbs`.
```lean
theorem toInt_abs_eq_natAbs {x : BitVec w} : x.abs.toInt =
    if x = intMin w then (intMin w).toInt else x.toInt.natAbs
```

Supercedes https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5787

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-11-27 03:50:55 +00:00
Siddharth
7692343720 feat: BitVec.toNat BitVec.signExtend (#6155)
This PR adds `toNat` theorems for `BitVec.signExtend.`

Sign extending to a larger bitwidth depends on the msb. If the msb is
false, then the result equals the original value. If the msb is true,
then we add a value of `(2^v - 2^w)`, which arises from the sign
extension.

```lean
theorem toNat_signExtend (x : BitVec w) {v : Nat} :
    (x.signExtend v).toNat = (x.setWidth v).toNat + if x.msb then 2^v - 2^w else 0
```

Co-authored-by: Harun Khan <harun19@stanford.edu>
2024-11-27 03:50:15 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
597ef8cfee feat: add Nat.mod_eq_sub and fix dependencies from Nat.sub_mul_eq_mod_of_lt_of_le (#6160)
This PR adds theorem `mod_eq_sub`, makes theorem
`sub_mul_eq_mod_of_lt_of_le` not private anymore and moves its location
within the `rotate*` section to use it in other proofs.
2024-11-27 03:48:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
321e148f51 feat: Array fold lemmas (#6230)
This PR copies some lemmas about `List.foldX` to `Array`.
2024-11-27 02:09:41 +00:00
Kyle Miller
ce692436f4 feat: expose diff at "synthesized type class instance is not definitionally equal" error (#6213)
This PR exposes the difference in "synthesized type class instance is
not definitionally equal" errors.
2024-11-27 00:52:58 +00:00
Mac Malone
23bec25fce feat: Nat.lt_pow_self (#6200)
This PR upstreams `Nat.lt_pow_self` and `Nat.lt_two_pow` from Mathlib
and uses them to prove the simp theorem `Nat.mod_two_pow`.

This simplifies expressions like `System.Platform.numBits % 2 ^
System.Platform.numBits = System.Platform.numBits`, which is needed for
#6188.
2024-11-26 23:42:23 +00:00
Mac Malone
3d511a582a feat: USize.size inequalities (#6203)
This PR adds the theorems `le_usize_size` and `usize_size_le`, which
make proving inequalities about `USize.size` easier.

It also deprecates `usize_size_gt_zero` in favor of `usize_size_pos` (as
that seems more consistent with our naming covention) and adds
`USize.toNat_ofNat_of_lt_32` for dealing with small USize literals.

It also moves `USize.ofNat32` and `USize.toUInt64` to
`Init.Data.UInt.Basic` as neither are used in `Init.Prelude` anymore.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-11-26 23:42:15 +00:00
Mac Malone
51015bf5c0 fix: lake: eager logging when materializing deps (#6225)
This PR makes `lake build` also eagerly print package materialization
log lines. Previously, only a `lake update` performed eager logging.
2024-11-26 22:11:23 +00:00
Mac Malone
3ece36de9d feat: GitHub cloud releases do not clobber prebuilt artifacts (#6218)
This PR makes Lake no longer automatically fetch GitHub cloud releases
if the package build directory is already present (mirroring the
behavior of the Reservoir cache). This prevents the cache from
clobbering existing prebuilt artifacts. Users can still manually fetch
the cache and clobber the build directory by running `lake build
<pkg>:release`.
2024-11-26 22:10:42 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
54c48363ca feat: proper let_fun support in simp (#6220)
This PR adds proper support for `let_fun` in `simp`.
2024-11-26 21:42:08 +00:00
Markus Himmel
0a22f8fa6f chore: improve consistency & documentation for hash table insert and insertMany (#6222)
This PR changes the definition of `HashSet.insertMany` and
`HashSet.Raw.insertMany` so that it is equivalent to repeatedly calling
`HashSet.insert`/`HashSet.Raw.insert`. It also clarifies the docstrings
of all the `insert` and `insertMany` functions.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-11-26 11:22:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f70b7e5722 feat: @[deprecated] requires a replacement identifier or message, and a since field (#6112)
This PR makes stricter requirements for the `@[deprecated]` attribute,
requiring either a replacement identifier as `@[deprecated bar]` or
suggestion text `@[deprecated "Past its use by date"]`, and also
requires a `since := "..."` field.
2024-11-26 08:45:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9a17919ef1 feat: missing lemmas about List's BEq (#6217)
This PR adds `simp` lemmas about `List`'s `==` operation.
2024-11-25 22:55:03 +00:00
Kyle Miller
606aeddf06 feat: make dot notation be affected by export/open (#6189)
This PR changes how generalized field notation ("dot notation") resolves
the function. The new resolution rule is that if `x : S`, then `x.f`
resolves the name `S.f` relative to the root namespace (hence it now
affected by `export` and `open`). Breaking change: aliases now resolve
differently. Before, if `x : S`, and if `S.f` is an alias for `S'.f`,
then `x.f` would use `S'.f` and look for an argument of type `S'`. Now,
it looks for an argument of type `S`, which is more generally useful
behavior. Code making use of the old behavior should consider defining
`S` or `S'` in terms of the other, since dot notation can unfold
definitions during resolution.

This also fixes a bug in explicit-mode generalized field notation
(`@x.f`) where `x` could be passed as the wrong argument. This was not a
bug for explicit-mode structure projections.

Closes #3031. Addresses the `Function` namespace issue in #1629.
2024-11-25 18:38:17 +00:00
Kyle Miller
0eca3bd55d feat: add a coercion from List Nat to Lean.Meta.Occurrences (#6206)
This PR makes it possible to write `rw (occs := [1,2]) ...` instead of
`rw (occs := .pos [1,2]) ...` by adding a coercion from `List.Nat` to
`Lean.Meta.Occurrences`.
2024-11-25 13:19:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
43dfc2a25f chore: fix Vector.indexOf? (#6208)
Just a better defeq.
2024-11-25 10:47:58 +00:00
Mac Malone
935fcfb6ec feat: non-opaque UInt64.toUSize (#6202)
This PR makes `USize.toUInt64` a regular non-opaque definition. 

It also moves it to `Init.Data.UInt.Basic`, as it is not actually used
in `Init.Prelude` anymore.
2024-11-25 08:33:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
20acc72a29 feat: ensure Fin.foldl/r are semireducible (#6207)
This PR ensures the `Fin.foldl` and `Fin.foldr` are semireducible.
Without this the defeq `example (f : Fin 3 → ℕ) : List.ofFn f = [f 0, f
1, f 2] := rfl` was failing.

Thanks @eric-wieser and @digama0 for diagnosing on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/287929-mathlib4/topic/.60List.2EfinRange.60.20in.20Mathlib/near/484191814).
2024-11-25 03:21:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c3948cba24 feat: upstream definition of Vector from Batteries (#6197)
This PR upstreams the definition of `Vector` from Batteries, along with
the basic functions.
2024-11-24 23:01:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4e885be96d feat: rename Array.setD to setIfInBounds (#6195)
This PR renames `Array.setD` to `Array.setIfInBounds`.
2024-11-24 08:54:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
42e98bd3c9 feat: Array.swap takes Nat arguments, with tactic provided proofs (#6194)
This PR changes the signature of `Array.swap`, so it takes `Nat`
arguments with tactic provided bounds checking. It also renames
`Array.swap!` to `Array.swapIfInBounds`.
2024-11-24 07:59:57 +00:00
Kim Morrison
884a9ea2ff feat: remove partial keyword and runtime bounds checks from Array.binSearch (#6193)
This PR completes the TODO in `Init.Data.Array.BinSearch`, removing the
`partial` keyword and converting runtime bounds checks to compile time
bounds checks.
2024-11-24 06:08:16 +00:00
Kyle Miller
2f5c7d0465 fix: structures with copied parents can now use other parents as instances (#6175)
This PR fixes a bug with the `structure`/`class` command where if there
are parents that are not represented as subobjects but which used other
parents as instances, then there would be a kernel error. Closes #2611.

Note: there is still the limitation that parents that are not
represented as subobjects do not themselves provide instances to other
parents.
2024-11-24 04:22:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a5ffef7e13 feat: Array.zipWithAll (#6191)
This PR adds `Array.zipWithAll`, and the basic lemmas relating it to
`List.zipWithAll`.
2024-11-24 03:49:57 +00:00
Kim Morrison
442c3d5097 chore: missing deprecations for Lean.HashMap (#6192)
This PR adds deprecations for `Lean.HashMap` functions which did not
receive deprecation attributes initially.

(Requested on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/348111-batteries/topic/Unifying.20.60Batteries.2EHashMap.60.20and.20.60Std.2EHashMap.60.2E/near/484113660).)

Note that I've used the original deprecation date of 2024-08-08, when
the type itself was deprecated; this will not delay removal.
2024-11-24 03:29:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
bf13b24692 doc: refine kernel code comments (#6150)
I just spent too much time being confused about the kernel type checker
until I noticed that `lazy_delta_reduction` modifies its arguments.
2024-11-23 17:13:51 +00:00
Andrii Kurdiumov
51d1cc61d7 fix: remove obsolete sentence in doc-string (#6185)
Even if this sentence is technically true, it do not add anything to the
explanation of typechecker and code.
2024-11-23 07:56:31 +00:00
Siddharth
107a2e8b2e feat: BitVec.toInt BitVec.signExtend (#6157)
This PR adds toInt theorems for BitVec.signExtend.

If the current width `w` is larger than the extended width `v`,
then the value when interpreted as an integer is truncated,
and we compute a modulo by `2^v`.

```lean
theorem toInt_signExtend_of_le (x : BitVec w) (hv : v ≤ w) :
    (x.signExtend v).toInt = Int.bmod (x.toNat) (2^v)
```

Co-authored-by: Siddharth Bhat <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Harun Khan <harun19@stanford.edu>


Stacked on top of #6155

---------

Co-authored-by: Harun Khan <harun19@stanford.edu>
2024-11-23 07:29:08 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c4b0b94c91 chore: use Array.findFinIdx? where it is better than findIdx? (#6184)
This PR uses `Array.findFinIdx?` in preference to `Array.findIdx?` where
it allows converting a runtime bounds check to a compile time bounds
check.

(and some other minor cleanup)
2024-11-23 07:22:31 +00:00
Kyle Miller
ba3f2b3ecf fix: make sure #check id heeds pp.raw (#6181)
This PR fixes a bug where the signature pretty printer would ignore the
current setting of `pp.raw`. This fixes an issue where `#check ident`
would not heed `pp.raw`. Closes #6090.
2024-11-23 00:39:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4a69643858 fix: nontermination while generating equation lemmas for match-expressions (#6180)
This PR fixes a non-termination bug that occurred when generating the
match-expression equation theorems. The bug was triggered when the proof
automation for the equation theorem repeatedly applied `injection(` to
the same local declaration, as it could not be removed due to forward
dependencies. See issue #6067 for an example that reproduces this issue.

closes #6067
2024-11-23 00:06:34 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b6a0d63612 feat: have "motive is not type correct" come with an explanation (#6168)
This PR extends the "motive is not type correct" error message for the
rewrite tactic to explain what it means. It also pretty prints the
type-incorrect motive and reports the type error.

Suggested [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/113489-new-members/topic/tactic.20'rewrite'.20failed.2C.20motive.20is.20not.20type.20correct/near/483545154).
2024-11-22 23:56:17 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5145030ff4 chore: refactor Elab.StructInst to use mutual for its structures/inductives (#6174)
Making use of #6125.
2024-11-22 19:17:48 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d3cb812fb6 chore: add test for recursive structures (#6173)
Closes #6140. This was fixed by #6125.
2024-11-22 18:53:59 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
e066c17a65 chore: update stage0 2024-11-22 18:29:01 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
38cff08888 feat: creation and reporting for asynchronous elaboration tasks (#6170)
This PR adds core metaprogramming functions for forking off background
tasks from elaboration such that their results are visible to reporting
and the language server
2024-11-22 17:12:30 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
3388fc8d06 doc: fix typo and make docstring more precise (#6009)
This PR fixes a typo in the docstring for prec and makes the text
slightly more precise.
2024-11-22 16:30:01 +00:00
Eric Wieser
5adcd520fa fix: make the stack handling more robust to sanitizers and -O3 (#6143)
This PR should make lean better-behaved around sanitizers, per
https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/1688.
As far as I can tell,
https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerUseAfterReturn#algorithm
replaces local variables with heap allocations, and so taking the
address of a local is not effective at producing a monotonic measure of
stack usage.

The approach used here is the same as the one used by clang.
2024-11-22 15:10:20 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
1126407d9b feat: create temporary directories (#6148)
This PR adds a primitive for creating temporary directories, akin to the
existing functionality for creating temporary files.
2024-11-22 12:24:32 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a19ff61e15 feat: allow structure in mutual blocks (#6125)
This PR adds support for `structure` in `mutual` blocks, allowing
inductive types defined by `inductive` and `structure` to be mutually
recursive. The limitations are (1) that the parents in the `extends`
clause must be defined before the `mutual` block and (2) mutually
recursive classes are not allowed (a limitation shared by `class
inductive`). There are also improvements to universe level inference for
inductive types and structures. Breaking change: structure parents now
elaborate with the structure in scope (fix: use qualified names or
rename the structure to avoid shadowing), and structure parents no
longer elaborate with autoimplicits enabled.

Internally, this is a large refactor of both the `inductive` and
`structure` commands. Common material is now in
`Lean.Elab.MutualInductive`, and each command plugs into this mutual
inductive elaboration framework with the logic specific to the
respective command. For example, `structure` has code to add projections
after the inductive types are added to the environment.

Closes #4182
2024-11-22 09:20:07 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
6202461a21 chore: update stage0 2024-11-22 04:42:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ea221f3283 feat: Nat.(fold|foldRev|any|all)M? take a function which sees the upper bound (#6139)
This PR modifies the signature of the functions `Nat.fold`,
`Nat.foldRev`, `Nat.any`, `Nat.all`, so that the function is passed the
upper bound. This allows us to change runtime array bounds checks to
compile time checks in many places.
2024-11-22 03:05:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7c50d597c3 feat: add builtin attribute to support elaboration of mutual inductives/structures (#6166)
This PR is a prerequisite for #6125.
2024-11-22 01:48:37 +00:00
Tony Beta Lambda
99031695bd feat: display coercions with a type ascription (#6119)
This PR adds a new delab option `pp.coercions.types` which, when
enabled, will display all coercions with an explicit type ascription.

[Link to Zulip
discussion](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/239415-metaprogramming-.2F-tactics/topic/Roundtripping.20delaboration.20involving.20coercions)

Towards #4315
2024-11-21 23:02:47 +00:00
JovanGerb
b7248d5295 fix: revert creates natural metavariable goal (#6145)
This PR fixes the `revert` tactic so that it creates a `syntheticOpaque`
metavariable as the new goal, instead of a `natural` metavariable

I reported it on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/.60revert.60.20gives.20natural.20metavariable.20goal/near/483388096)
2024-11-21 23:00:57 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
7f2e7e56d2 feat: BitVec.getMsbD_[ofNatLt|allOnes|not] (#6149)
This PR completes the elementwise accessors for `ofNatLt`, `allOnes`,
and `not` by adding their implementations of `getMsbD`.
2024-11-21 22:13:09 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
1fe66737ad feat: BitVec.toInt_[or|and|xor|not] (#6151)
This PR completes the `toInt` interface for `BitVec` bitwise operations.
2024-11-21 22:10:33 +00:00
Bhavik Mehta
765eb02279 doc: adjust file reference in Data.Sum (#6158)
This file was upstreamed from batteries; I just got bitten by the
invalid reference and it took quite a while to figure out that this one
had been moved!
2024-11-21 21:48:27 +00:00
Henrik Böving
a101377054 perf: speed up reflection of if in bv_decide (#6162)
This PR adds a slight performance improvement to reflection of `if`
statements that I noticed by profiling Leanwuzla against SMTCOMP's
`non-incremental/QF_BV/fft/Sz256_6616.smt2`.

In particular:
1. The profile showed about 4 percent of the total run time were spent
constructing these decidable instances in reflection of `if` statements.
We can construct them much quicker by hand as they always have the same
structure
2. This delays construction of these statements until we actually
generate the reflection proof that we wish to submit to the kernel. Thus
if we encounter a SAT instad of an UNSAT problem we will not spend time
generating these expressions anymore.

```
baseline
  Time (mean ± σ):     31.236 s ±  0.258 s
  Range (min … max):   30.899 s … 31.661 s    10 runs

after
  Time (mean ± σ):     30.671 s ±  0.288 s
  Range (min … max):   30.350 s … 31.156 s    10 runs
```
2024-11-21 19:40:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
aca9929d84 fix: make sure whitespace is printed before tactic configuration (#6161)
This PR ensures whitespace is printed before `+opt` and `-opt`
configuration options when pretty printing, improving the experience of
tactics such as `simp?`.

Reported [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Minor.20simp.3F.20annoyances/near/483736310)
2024-11-21 19:21:59 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
19a701e5c9 refactor: one more recursive structure (#6159) 2024-11-21 18:30:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fc4305ab15 fix: nontermination when generating the match-expression splitter theorem (#6146)
This PR fixes a non-termination bug that occurred when generating the
match-expression splitter theorem. The bug was triggered when the proof
automation for the splitter theorem repeatedly applied `injection` to
the same local declaration, as it could not be removed due to forward
dependencies. See issue #6065 for an example that reproduces this issue.

closes #6065
2024-11-21 17:20:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9cf83706e7 chore: add changelog-* labels via comment (#6147)
This PR enables contributors to modify `changelog-*` labels simply by
writing a comment with the desired label.
2024-11-21 07:23:13 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
459c6e2a46 feat: BitVec.getElem_[sub|neg|sshiftRight'|abs] (#6126)
This PR adds lemmas for extracting a given bit of a `BitVec` obtained
via `sub`/`neg`/`sshiftRight'`/`abs`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-11-21 07:01:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
72e952eadc chore: avoid runtime array bounds checks (#6134)
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.
2024-11-21 05:04:52 +00:00
damiano
56a80dec1b doc: doc-strings to module docs in Data/Array/Lemmas (#6144)
This PR converts 3 doc-string to module docs since it seems that this is
what they were intended to be!
2024-11-21 05:04:09 +00:00
JovanGerb
b894464191 fix: type occurs check bug (#6128)
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
2024-11-21 00:28:36 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
b30903d1fc refactor: make use of recursive structures in snapshot types (#6141) 2024-11-20 15:15:14 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7fbe8e3b36 fix: Inhabited Float produced a bogus run-time value (#6136)
This PR fixes the run-time evaluation of `(default : Float)`.
2024-11-20 10:43:59 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
2fbc46641d fix: trace.profiler pretty-printing (#6138)
This PR fixes `trace.profiler.pp` not using the term pretty printer.

Fixes #5872
2024-11-20 10:21:02 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
17419aca7f feat: thread support for trace.profiler.output (#6137)
This PR adds support for displaying multiple threads in the trace
profiler output.

`TraceState.tid` needs to be adjusted for this purpose, which is not
done yet by the Lean elaborator as it is still single-threaded.
2024-11-20 10:02:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f85c66789d feat: Array.insertIdx/eraseIdx take a tactic-provided proof (#6133)
This PR replaces `Array.feraseIdx` and `Array.insertAt` with
`Array.eraseIdx` and `Array.insertIdx`, both of which take a `Nat`
argument and a tactic-provided proof that it is in bounds. We also have
`eraseIdxIfInBounds` and `insertIdxIfInBounds` which are noops if the
index is out of bounds. We also provide a `Fin` valued version of
`Array.findIdx?`. Together, these quite ergonomically improve the array
indexing safety at a number of places in the compiler/elaborator.
2024-11-20 09:52:38 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c8b4f6b511 feat: duplicate List.attach/attachWith/pmap API for Array (#6132)
This PR duplicates the verification API for
`List.attach`/`attachWith`/`pmap` over to `Array`.
2024-11-20 01:16:48 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
3c7555168d feat: add BitVec.(msb, getMsbD)_(rotateLeft, rotateRight) (#6120)
This PR adds theorems `BitVec.(getMsbD, msb)_(rotateLeft, rotateRight)`.

We follow the same strategy taken for `getLsbD`, constructing the
necessary auxilliary theorems first (relying on different hypotheses)
and then generalizing.

---------

Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-11-19 23:04:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5eef3d27fb feat: have #print show precise fields of structures (#6096)
This PR improves the `#print` command for structures to show all fields
and which parents the fields were inherited from, hiding internal
details such as which parents are represented as subobjects. This
information is still present in the constructor if needed. The pretty
printer for private constants is also improved, and it now handles
private names from the current module like any other name; private names
from other modules are made hygienic.

Example output for `#print Monad`:
```
class Monad.{u, v} (m : Type u → Type v) : Type (max (u + 1) v)
number of parameters: 1
parents:
  Monad.toApplicative : Applicative m
  Monad.toBind : Bind m
fields:
  Functor.map : {α β : Type u} → (α → β) → m α → m β
  Functor.mapConst : {α β : Type u} → α → m β → m α
  Pure.pure : {α : Type u} → α → m α
  Seq.seq : {α β : Type u} → m (α → β) → (Unit → m α) → m β
  SeqLeft.seqLeft : {α β : Type u} → m α → (Unit → m β) → m α
  SeqRight.seqRight : {α β : Type u} → m α → (Unit → m β) → m β
  Bind.bind : {α β : Type u} → m α → (α → m β) → m β
constructor:
  Monad.mk.{u, v} {m : Type u → Type v} [toApplicative : Applicative m] [toBind : Bind m] : Monad m
resolution order:
  Monad, Applicative, Bind, Functor, Pure, Seq, SeqLeft, SeqRight
```

Suggested by Floris van Doorn [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/.23print.20command.20for.20structures/near/482503637).
2024-11-19 21:54:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
75d1504af2 fix: isDefEq for constants with different universe parameters (#6131)
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
2024-11-19 21:39:13 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
a00cf6330f fix: add a missing case to Level.geq (#2689)
This PR adds a case to `Level.geq` that is present in the kernel's level
`is_geq` procedure, making them consistent with one another.

This came up during testing of `lean4lean`. Currently `Level.geq`
differs from `level::is_geq` in the case of `max u v >= imax u v`. The
elaborator function is overly pessimistic and yields `false` on this
while the kernel function yields true. This comes up concretely in the
`Trans` class:
```lean
class Trans (r : α → β → Sort u) (s : β → γ → Sort v) (t : outParam (α → γ → Sort w)) where
  trans : r a b → s b c → t a c
```
The type of this class is `Sort (max (max (max (max (max (max 1 u) u_1)
u_2) u_3) v) w)` (where `u_1 u_2 u_3` are the levels of `α β γ`), but if
you try writing that type explicitly then the `class` command fails.
Omitting the type leaves the `class` to infer the universe level (the
command assumes the level is correct, and the kernel agrees it is), but
including the type then the elaborator checks the level inequality with
`Level.geq` and fails.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
2024-11-19 21:27:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1f32477385 fix: isDefEq when zetaDelta := false (#6129)
This PR fixes a bug at `isDefEq` when `zetaDelta := false`. See new test
for a small example that exposes the issue.
2024-11-19 21:22:02 +00:00
Thomas Köppe
91c14c7ee9 fix: only consider salient bytes in sharecommon eq, hash (#5840)
This PR changes `lean_sharecommon_{eq,hash}` to only consider the
salient bytes of an object, and not any bytes of any
unspecified/uninitialized unused capacity.

Accessing uninitialized storage results in undefined behaviour.

This does not seem to have any semantics disadvantages: If objects
compare equal after this change, their salient bytes are still equal. By
contrast, if the actual identity of allocations needs to be
distinguished, that can be done by just comparing pointers to the
storage.

If we wanted to retain the current logic, we would need initialize the
otherwise unused parts to some specific value to avoid the undefined
behaviour.

Closes #5831
2024-11-19 13:56:46 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
69530afdf9 chore: update stage0 2024-11-19 13:06:43 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
b7667c1604 fix: don't issue atomic id completions when there is a dangling dot (#5837)
This PR fixes an old auto-completion bug where `x.` would issue
nonsensical completions when `x.` could not be elaborated as a dot
completion.
2024-11-19 12:23:41 +00:00
Eric Wieser
d6f898001b chore: generalize List.get_mem (#6095)
This is syntactically more general than before, though up to eta
expansion it make no difference.
2024-11-19 11:08:10 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
a38566693b test: fix brittle structure instance completion test (#6127)
#5835 contains a brittle test that uses an FVar ID, which caused a
failure on master. This PR changes that test to use a declaration
instead.
2024-11-19 10:13:51 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
4bef3588b5 chore: update stage0 2024-11-19 09:26:58 +01:00
Marc Huisinga
64538cf6e8 chore: prepare for bootstrap
Co-Authored-By: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-11-19 09:26:58 +01:00
Marc Huisinga
aadf3f1d2c feat: use new structInstFields parser to tag structure instance fields 2024-11-19 09:26:58 +01:00
Marc Huisinga
95bf45ff8b refactor: split Completion.lean 2024-11-19 09:26:58 +01:00
Marc Huisinga
2a02c121cf feat: structure auto-completion & partial InfoTrees 2024-11-19 09:26:58 +01:00
Mac Malone
4600bb16fc feat: use BaseIO at IO.rand (#6102)
This PR moves `IO.rand` and `IO.setRandSeed` to be in the `BaseIO`
monad.

This is their proper monad as neither can error.
2024-11-19 05:26:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7ccdfc30ff chore: turn off pp.mvars in apply? results (#6108)
Per request on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/apply.3F.20using.20tombstones/near/482895588).
2024-11-19 02:02:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7f0bdefb6e chore: fix apply? error reporting when out of heartbeats (#6121) 2024-11-19 00:57:59 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
799b2b6628 fix: handle reordered indices in structural recursion (#6116)
This PR fixes a bug where structural recursion did not work when indices
of the recursive argument appeared as function parameters in a different
order than in the argument's type's definition.

Fixes #6015.
2024-11-18 11:28:02 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
b8d6e44c4f fix: liberalize rules for atoms by allowing leading '' (#6114)
This PR liberalizes atom rules by allowing `''` to be a prefix of an
atom, after #6012 only added an exception for `''` alone, and also adds
some unit tests for atom validation.
2024-11-18 10:19:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5a99cb326c chore: make Lean.Elab.Command.mkMetaContext public (#6113) 2024-11-18 06:14:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e10fac93a6 feat: lemmas for Array.findSome? and find? (#6111)
This PR fills in the API for `Array.findSome?` and `Array.find?`,
transferring proofs from the corresponding List statements.
2024-11-18 04:19:56 +00:00
Kyle Miller
62ae320e1c chore: document Lean.Elab.StructInst, refactor (#6110)
This PR does some mild refactoring of the `Lean.Elab.StructInst` module
while adding documentation.

Documentation is drawn from @thorimur's #1928.
2024-11-18 02:57:22 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
98b1edfc1f fix: backtrack at injection failure (#6109)
This PR fixes an issue in the `injection` tactic. This tactic may
execute multiple sub-tactics. If any of them fail, we must backtrack the
partial assignment. This issue was causing the error: "`mvarId` is
already assigned" in issue #6066. The issue is not yet resolved, as the
equation generator for the match expressions is failing in the example
provided in this issue.
2024-11-18 02:26:06 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ab162b3f52 fix: isDefEq, whnf, simp caching and configuration (#6053)
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`.
2024-11-18 01:17:26 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b8a13ab755 chore: fix naming of left/right injectivity lemmas (#6106)
We've been internally inconsistent on the naming of these lemmas in
Lean; this changes them to match Mathlib (which, moreover, I think is
correct).
2024-11-18 00:53:46 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
405593ea28 chore: avoid stack overflow in debug tests (#6103) 2024-11-17 14:54:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
24f305c0e3 chore: fix canonicalizer handling over forall/lambda (#6082)
This PR changes how the canonicalizer handles `forall` and `lambda`,
replacing bvars with temporary fvars. Fixes a bug reported by @hrmacbeth
on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Quantifiers.20in.20CanonM/near/482483448).
2024-11-17 07:34:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5d553d6369 fix: circular assignment at structure instance elaborator (#6105)
This PR fixes a stack overflow caused by a cyclic assignment in the
metavariable context. The cycle is unintentionally introduced by the
structure instance elaborator.

closes #3150
2024-11-17 00:56:52 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a449e3fdd6 feat: IO.getTID (#6049)
This PR adds a primitive for accessing the current thread ID

To be used in a thread-aware trace profiler
2024-11-16 19:13:11 +00:00
Kyle Miller
764386734c fix: improvements to change tactic (#6022)
This PR makes the `change` tactic and conv tactic use the same
elaboration strategy. It works uniformly for both the target and local
hypotheses. Now `change` can assign metavariables, for example:
```lean
example (x y z : Nat) : x + y = z := by
  change ?a = _
  let w := ?a
  -- now `w : Nat := x + y`
```
2024-11-16 07:08:29 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7f1d7a595b fix: use Expr.equal instead of == in MVarId.replaceTargetDefEq and MVarId.replaceLocalDeclDefEq (#6098)
This PR modifies `Lean.MVarId.replaceTargetDefEq` and
`Lean.MVarId.replaceLocalDeclDefEq` to use `Expr.equal` instead of
`Expr.eqv` when determining whether the expression has changed. This is
justified on the grounds that binder names and binder infos are
user-visible and affect elaboration.
2024-11-16 02:03:16 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f13e5ca852 chore: naming convention and NaN normalization (#6097)
Changes:
- `Float.fromBits` => `Float.ofBits`
- NaN normalization
2024-11-16 00:14:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ecbaeff24b feat: add Float.toBits and Float.fromBits (#6094)
This PR adds raw transmutation of floating-point numbers to and from
`UInt64`. Floats and UInts share the same endianness across all
supported platforms. The IEEE 754 standard precisely specifies the bit
layout of floats. Note that `Float.toBits` is distinct from
`Float.toUInt64`, which attempts to preserve the numeric value rather
than the bitwise value.

closes #6071
2024-11-15 19:45:19 +00:00
Kyle Miller
691acde696 feat: pp.parens option to pretty print with all parentheses (#2934)
This PR adds the option `pp.parens` (default: false) that causes the
pretty printer to eagerly insert parentheses, which can be useful for
teaching and for understanding the structure of expressions. For
example, it causes `p → q → r` to pretty print as `p → (q → r)`.

Any notations with precedence greater than or equal to `maxPrec` do not
receive such discretionary parentheses, since this precedence level is
considered to be infinity.

This option was a feature in the Lean 3 community edition.
2024-11-15 19:11:54 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b1e0c1b594 chore: remove decide! tactic (#6016)
This PR removes the `decide!` tactic in favor of `decide +kernel`
(breaking change).
2024-11-15 17:49:33 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
93b4ec0351 refactor: use mkFreshUserName in ArgsPacker (#6093)
and other small refinements done while investigating an issue; not
actually user-visible.
2024-11-15 15:59:14 +00:00
JovanGerb
f06fc30c0b perf: remove @[specialize] from mkBinding (#6019)
This PR removes @[specilize] from `MkBinding.mkBinding`, which is a
function that cannot be specialized (as none of its arguments are
functions). As a result, the specializable function `Nat.foldRevM.loop`
doesn't get specialized, which leads to worse performing code.

As expected, the mathlib bench shows a very small improvement. About 95%
of files show a speedup.
(http://speed.lean-fro.org/mathlib4/compare/e7b27246-a3e6-496a-b552-ff4b45c7236e/to/6033df75-aa53-44d9-819d-51f93fc05e94?hash1=b28f0d7f7e9cc3949a9a3556a6b36513f37f690d)
2024-11-15 15:06:49 +00:00
Markus Himmel
64b35a8c19 perf: add LEAN_ALWAYS_INLINE to some functions (#6045)
Otherwise, clang refuses to inline them for large functions which leads
to a performance cliff.
2024-11-15 15:05:32 +00:00
Markus Himmel
688ee4c887 fix: constant folding for Nat.ble and Nat.blt (#6087)
This PR fixes a bug in the constant folding for the `Nat.ble` and
`Nat.blt` function in the old code generator, leading to a
miscompilation.

Closes #6086
2024-11-15 12:09:52 +00:00
Henrik Böving
9a3dd615e0 chore: bv_decide remove noop rewrites (#6080)
Merely removes rules that are actually just syntactic aliases but equal
at the `Expr` level.
2024-11-15 11:41:54 +00:00
Violeta Hernández
7e6363dc05 chore: join → flatten in docstring (#6040)
Update the docstring of `List.flatten`.
2024-11-15 10:11:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a074bd9a2b feat: implementation of Array.pmap (#6052)
This PR adds `Array.pmap`, as well as a `@[csimp]` lemma in terms of the
no-copy `Array.attachWith`.
2024-11-15 02:10:04 +00:00
Kyle Miller
498d41633b fix: pretty print .coeFun with terminfo of coercee (#6085)
This PR improves the term info for coercions marked with
`CoeFnType.coeFun` (such as `DFunLike.coe` in Mathlib), making "go to
definition" on the function name work. Hovering over such a coerced
function will show the coercee rather than the coercion expression. The
coercion expression can still be seen by hovering over the whitespace in
the function application.
2024-11-15 01:45:38 +00:00
Sofia Rodrigues
e0d7c3ac79 feat: add date and time functionality (#4904)
This PR introduces date and time functionality to the Lean 4 Std.

Breaking Changes:
- `Lean.Data.Rat` is now `Std.Internal.Rat` because it's used by the
DateTime library.

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@himmel-villmar.de>
Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-11-14 14:04:19 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
6a5b122b40 perf: use RArray in simp_arith meta code (#6068 part 2)
This PR makes `simp_arith` use `RArray` for the context of the
reflection proofs, which scales better when there are many variables.

On our synthetic benchmark:
```
simp_arith1               instructions    -25.1% (-4892.6 σ)
```

No effect on mathlib, though, guess it’s not used much on large goals there:
http://speed.lean-fro.org/mathlib4/compare/873b982b-2038-462a-9b68-0c0fc457f90d/to/56e66691-2f1f-4947-a922-37b80680315d
2024-11-14 14:08:48 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
bf9ddf2c74 chore: update stage0 2024-11-14 14:08:48 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
3f47871e73 perf: use RArray in simp_arith meta code (#6068 part 1)
This PR prepares #6068 by using the `RArray` data structure in
`simp_arith` the simp-arith meta code.

After the subsequent stage0 we can change the simp-arith theorems in
`Init`.
2024-11-14 14:08:48 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
85f25967ea feat: Lean.RArray (#6070)
This PR adds the Lean.RArray data structure.

This data structure is equivalent to `Fin n → α` or `Array α`, but
optimized for a fast kernel-reduction `get` operation.

It is not suitable as a general-purpose data structure. The primary
intended use case is the “denote” function of a typical proof by
reflection proof, where only the `get` operation is necessary, and where
using `List.get` unnecessarily slows down proofs with more than a
hand-full of atomic expressions.


There is no well-formedness invariant attached to this data structure,
to keep it concise; it's semantics is given through `RArray.get`. In
that way one can also view an `RArray` as a decision tree implementing
`Nat → α`.

In #6068 this data structure is used in `simp_arith`.
2024-11-14 10:56:50 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
8e1ddbc5aa fix: validate atoms modulo leading and trailing whitespace (#6012)
This PR improves the validation of new syntactic tokens. Previously, the
validation code had inconsistencies: some atoms would be accepted only
if they had a leading space as a pretty printer hint. Additionally,
atoms with internal whitespace are no longer allowed.

Closes #6011
2024-11-14 10:40:17 +00:00
Henrik Böving
e6e39f502f feat: add options to configure all of bv_decide's preprocessing (#6077)
This PR adds options to `bv_decide`'s configuration structure such that
all non mandatory preprocessing passes can be disabled.
2024-11-14 09:22:23 +00:00
Henrik Böving
debb82bc20 perf: make andFlattening work on deeply nested hyps in one pass (#6075)
No changelog as this PR improves performance of a feature that is not
yet released.
2024-11-14 09:09:25 +00:00
Violeta Hernández
9a85433477 refactor: allow Sort u in Squash (#6074)
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-11-14 05:55:21 +00:00
Mac Malone
4616c0ac3e refactor: lake: avoid v! in builtin code (#6073)
Use of `v!` in Lake code can cause bootstrapping failures and is easily
avoided. It is perfectly safe in user code.
2024-11-14 05:00:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e55b681774 feat: add Context.setConfig (#6072)
This PR adds `Lean.Simp.Context.setConfig` function.
2024-11-14 00:32:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
63132105ba feat: lemmas about for loops over Array (#6055)
This PR adds lemmas about for loops over `Array`, following the existing
lemmas for `List`.
2024-11-13 23:23:55 +00:00
Kim Morrison
350b36411c chore: upstream some NameMap functions (#6056) 2024-11-13 23:22:01 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1c30c76e72 chore: remove >6 month old deprecations (#6057) 2024-11-13 23:21:23 +00:00
Alissa Tung
d5adadc00e chore: add newline at end of file for lake new templates (#6026)
This PR adds a newline at end of each Lean file generated by `lake new`
templates.

I have tested it with a locally compiled Lean with this commit. I hope
these changes make `lake new`'s behavior more consistent with the Lean 4
plugins and libraries newlines convention.
2024-11-13 19:39:47 +00:00
Mac Malone
f08805e5c4 feat: message kinds (#5945)
This PR adds a new definition `Message.kind` which returns the top-level
tag of a message. This is serialized as the new field `kind` in
`SerialMessaege` so that i can be used by external consumers (e.g.,
Lake) to identify messages via `lean --json`.

The tag of trace messages has also been changed from `_traceMsg` to the
more friendly `trace`.
2024-11-13 18:05:52 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
256b49bda9 perf: optimize Nat.Linear.Poly.norm (#6064)
Not a huge benefit, but actually reduces the code complexity (no need
for the `.fuse` function), and can help with problems with many repeated
varibles.
2024-11-13 17:36:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
28cf146d00 fix: make sure monad lift coercion elaborator has no side effects (#6024)
This PR fixes a bug where the monad lift coercion elaborator would
partially unify expressions even if they were not monads. This could be
taken advantage of to propagate information that could help elaboration
make progress, for example the first `change` worked because the monad
lift coercion elaborator was unifying `@Eq _ _` with `@Eq (Nat × Nat)
p`:
```lean
example (p : Nat × Nat) : p = p := by
  change _ = ⟨_, _⟩ -- used to work (yielding `p = (p.fst, p.snd)`), now it doesn't
  change ⟨_, _⟩ = _ -- never worked
```
As such, this is a breaking change; you may need to adjust expressions
to include additional implicit arguments.
2024-11-13 16:22:31 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
970261b1e1 perf: optimize Nat.Linear.Expr.toPoly (#6062) 2024-11-13 15:54:29 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
6b811f8c92 test: synthetic simp_arith benchmark (#6061)
This PR adds a simp_arith benchmark.

This benchmark highlights some improvable asymptotics in `Nat.Linear`,
which
will be fixed subsequently.
2024-11-13 15:49:52 +00:00
Henrik Böving
f721f94045 feat: Bool.to(U)IntX (#6060)
This PR implements conversion functions from `Bool` to all `UIntX` and
`IntX` types.

Note that `Bool.toUInt64` already existed in previous versions of Lean.
2024-11-13 15:49:16 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
86524d5c23 fix: line break in simp? output (#6048)
This PR fixes `simp?` suggesting output with invalid indentation 

Fixes #6006
2024-11-13 15:49:11 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f18d9e04bc refactor: omega: avoid MVar machinery (#5991)
This PR simplifies the implementation of `omega`.

When constructing the proof, `omega` is using MVars only for the purpose
of doing case analysis on `Or`. We can simplify the implementation a
fair bit if we just produce the proof directly using `Or.elim`.

While it didn’t yield the performance benefits I was hoping for, this
still seems a worthwhile simplification, now that we already have it.
2024-11-13 15:49:03 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
fa33423c84 chore: pr-body: run as part of merge_group, but do not do anything (#6069) 2024-11-13 15:47:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1315266dd3 refactor: mark the Simp.Context constructor as private
motivation: this is the first step to fix the mismatch
between `isDefEq` and the discrimination tree indexing.
2024-11-13 14:12:55 +11:00
Leonardo de Moura
b1e52f1475 chore: mark Meta.Context.config as private (#6051)
Motivation: we want to modify the internal representation and improve
`isDefEq` caching.
This PR is preparing the stage for future modifications.
2024-11-13 13:30:06 +11:00
Kim Morrison
985600f448 chore: update stage0 2024-11-13 11:16:34 +11:00
Kim Morrison
ace6248e20 chore: deprecate Array.sequenceMap 2024-11-13 11:16:34 +11:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
9f42368e1a chore: update stage0 2024-11-12 13:28:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a401368384 feat: various minor changes to List/Array API (#6044)
Minor emendations to the List/Array API, collected from other PRs that
are still in the pipeline.
2024-11-12 08:27:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5e01e628b2 chore: review Array operations argument order (#6041)
This PR modifies the order of arguments for higher-order `Array`
functions, preferring to put the `Array` last (besides positional
arguments with defaults). This is more consistent with the `List` API,
and is more flexible, as dot notation allows two different partially
applied versions.
2024-11-12 04:55:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3a408e0e54 feat: change Array.get to take a Nat and a proof (#6032)
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>
2024-11-12 03:30:46 +00:00
Kyle Miller
675d2d5a11 feat: only direct parents of classes create projections (#5920)
This PR changes the rule for which projections become instances. Before,
all parents along with all indirect ancestors that were represented as
subobject fields would have their projections become instances. Now only
projections for direct parents become instances.

Features:
- Only parents that are not ancestors of other parents get instances.
This allows "discretionary" indirect parents to be inserted for the
purpose of computing strict resolution orders when
`structure.strictResolutionOrder` is enabled, without having an impact
on typeclass synthesis.
- Non-subobject projections are now theorems if the parent is a
proposition. These are also no longer `@[reducible]`.

Closes #2905
2024-11-12 01:55:17 +00:00
Henrik Böving
281c07ca97 fix: bv_decide embedded constraint substitution changes models (#6037)
This PR fixes `bv_decide`'s embedded constraint substitution to generate
correct counter examples in the corner case where duplicate theorems are
in the local context.
2024-11-11 16:33:21 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
004430b568 fix: avoid new term info around def bodies (#6031)
This PR fixes a regression with go-to-definition and document highlight
misbehaving on tactic blocks.

We explicitly avoid creating term info nodes around `by` blocks, which
#5338 might accidentally do; as the new info is not relevant for the
server, it is instead moved into a custom info.

Reported at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Go-to-def.20for.20tactics.20broken.20on.20v4.2E14.2E0-rc1.
2024-11-11 14:54:59 +00:00
Henrik Böving
61f7dcb36b feat: bv_decide and flattening (#6035)
This PR introduces the and flattening pre processing pass from Bitwuzla
to `bv_decide`. It splits hypotheses of the form `(a && b) = true` into
`a = true` and `b = true` which has synergy potential with the already
existing embedded constraint substitution pass.

Beyond this I also added some profiling infra structure for the passes.
2024-11-11 13:28:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5c611f7814 fix: simp only [· ∈ ·] (#6030)
This PR fixes `simp only [· ∈ ·]` after #5020.

Fixes #5905
2024-11-11 10:03:27 +00:00
Siddharth
722cb73019 feat: BitVec normalization rule for udiv by twoPow (#6029)
This PR adds a normalization rule to `bv_normalize` (which is used by
`bv_decide`) that converts `x / 2^k` into `x >>> k` under suitable
conditions. This allows us to simplify the expensive division circuits
that are used for bitblasting into much cheaper shifting circuits.
Concretely, it allows for the following canonicalization:

```lean
example {x : BitVec 16} : x / (BitVec.twoPow 16 2) = x >>> 2 := by bv_normalize
example {x : BitVec 16} : x / (BitVec.ofNat 16 8) = x >>> 3 := by bv_normalize
```
2024-11-11 09:45:47 +00:00
Kim Morrison
258d3725e7 feat: change Array.set to take a Nat and a tactic provided bound (#5988)
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.
2024-11-11 07:53:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
456e6d2b79 chore: deprecate duplicated Fin.size_pos (#6025) 2024-11-11 04:06:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
48e3d76173 feat: variants of List.forIn_eq_foldlM (#6023) 2024-11-11 02:30:40 +00:00
Siddharth
78fe92507c feat: BitVec lemmas for smtUDiv, smtSDiv when denominator is zero (#5616)
This PR is a follow-up to https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5609,
where we add lemmas characterizing `smtUDiv` and `smtSDiv`'s behavior
when the denominator is zero.

We build some `slt` theory, connecting it to `msb` for a clean proof. I
chose not to characterize `slt` in terms of `msb` a `simp` lemma, since
I anticipate use cases where we want to keep the arithmetic
interpretation of `slt`.
2024-11-10 22:08:43 +00:00
JovanGerb
811d8fb3c0 chore: cleanup (#6021)
This PR removes
- a duplicate `MonadMCtx` instance in `MetavarContext.lean`
- `:= return ←` that I had left there accidentally in a previous PR.
- the unnecessary application of `mapMetaM` in `withTransparency`.
2024-11-09 23:16:12 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f55a9a71cb chore: CI: do not run check-pr-body in merge group 2024-11-09 12:58:53 +01:00
Henrik Böving
d12df6c2ad fix: bv_decide benchmarks (#6017)
This PR fixes the nightly build after bv_decide changed its options
2024-11-09 11:18:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d1a99d8d45 fix: avoid delaborating with field notation if object is a metavariable (#6014)
This PR prevents `Nat.succ ?_` from pretty printing as `?_.succ`, which
should make `apply?` be more usable.

Closes #5993
2024-11-08 20:57:37 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c10e4c2256 feat: prop instance yields theorems (#5856)
This PR adds a feature to the the mutual def elaborator where the
`instance` command yields theorems instead of definitions when the class
is a `Prop`.

Closes #5672
2024-11-08 18:18:10 +00:00
Kyle Miller
e3420c08f1 feat: decide +revert and improvements to native_decide (#5999)
This PR adds configuration options for
`decide`/`decide!`/`native_decide` and refactors the tactics to be
frontends to the same backend. Adds a `+revert` option that cleans up
the local context and reverts all local variables the goal depends on,
along with indirect propositional hypotheses. Makes `native_decide` fail
at elaboration time on failure without sacrificing performance (the
decision procedure is still evaluated just once). Now `native_decide`
supports universe polymorphism.

Closes #2072
2024-11-08 18:17:46 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4f7aa8c3c8 chore: CI: exempt drafts from PR body check (#6002) 2024-11-08 15:53:48 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
dac73c15c8 perf: avoid negative environment lookup (#5429)
Avoids some `Environment.find?` lookup misses that become especially
expensive on the async branch
2024-11-08 15:37:39 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
cb40ddad69 fix: avoid max heartbeat error in completion (#5996)
This now occurs for some large completions downstream of `import
Mathlib`. I'd like to get rid of this `whnf` call entirely in the
future, but this is a decent quick mitigation.
2024-11-08 13:47:10 +00:00
Alex Keizer
fc0529b020 fix: ensure instantiateMVarsProfiling adds a trace node (#5501)
We add a new `Meta.instantiateMVars` trace node to the
`instantiateMVarsProfiling` definition used in `elabMutualDef`, and we
replace various uses of plain `instantiateMVars` with the profiled
version (which necessitated pulling up the definition to be higher in
the file).

This fixes a "time leak" when profiling large proofs, where
instantiating the goal metavariable can take a significant amount of
time, that previously would not be accounted for when using the trace
profiler.
2024-11-08 13:26:44 +00:00
Henrik Böving
837a67bedb feat: change bv_decide to an elaborated config (#6010)
This PR changes `bv_decide`'s configuration from lots of `set_option` to
an elaborated config like `simp` or `omega`. The notable exception is
`sat.solver` which is still a `set_option` such that users can configure
a custom SAT solver globally for an entire project or file. Additionally
it introduces the ability to set `maxSteps` for the simp preprocessing
run through the new config.

The latter feature was requested by people using `bv_decide` on SMTLIB
which has ginormous terms that exceed the default.
2024-11-08 13:15:04 +00:00
Kyle Miller
85f2213d5a fix: unset trailing for simpa? "try this" suggestion (#5907)
Closes #4581
2024-11-08 12:36:49 +00:00
Lukas Gerlach
9b167e2051 feat: verify keys method on HashMaps (#5866)
This PR verifies the `keys` function on `Std.HashMap`.

---

Initial discussions have already happend with @TwoFX and we are
collaborating on this matter.
This will remain a draft as long as not all desired results have been
added.

If we should still create an issue for the topic of this PR, let us
know.
Of course, any other feedback is appreciated as well :)

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
Co-authored-by: monsterkrampe <monsterkrampe@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: jt0202 <johannes.tantow@gmail.com>
2024-11-08 07:24:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1870c003d0 chore: missing @[ext] attribute on monad transformer ext lemmas (#6008) 2024-11-08 06:53:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
680177049f chore: List.modifyTailIdx naming fix (#6007) 2024-11-08 02:42:06 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
1b806c5535 chore: revert "CI: give Linux Debug unlimited test stack size" (#6001)
#5967 was the correct fix

Reverts leanprover/lean4#5953
2024-11-07 21:15:08 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9b18262567 chore: new PR changelog template (#5976)
Enables us to auto-generate the changelog from the list of PRs for a
modicum of summarizing/categorizing work on PR creation.

Does not (yet) allow external contributors to set category labels by
themselves as this creates issues with triggering one workflow from
another, it is not clear whether they should be allowed to create new
categories, and the reviewer/triage team likely is in a better position
to do the categorization anyway.
2024-11-07 16:59:45 +00:00
Henrik Böving
d76d631856 feat: BitVec.sshiftRight' in bv_decide (#5995) 2024-11-07 15:23:45 +00:00
Henrik Böving
17e6f3b3c2 style: fix style in bv_decide normalizer (#5992)
Address comments by Markus in #5987
2024-11-07 11:56:12 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5f7a40ae48 chore: fix test exclusion (#5990)
You cannot pass `-E` to `ctest` multiple times
2024-11-07 10:41:47 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
70435dfb5f refactor: name the default SizeOf instance (#5981)
This PR names the default SizeOf instance `instSizeOfDefault`

I regularly have to debug termination checking failures where I end up
hovering over some termination measure, and seeing `instSizeOfDefault`
is more likely to tell me that the default instance is used than
`instSizeOf`.
2024-11-07 09:21:32 +00:00
Henrik Böving
59ee47ad44 feat: BitVec.getMsbD in bv_decide (#5987)
Closes #5983.
2024-11-07 07:59:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ebc02fc6e8 feat: lemmas relating Array.findX and List.findX (#5985)
This PR relates the operations `findSomeM?`, `findM?`, `findSome?`, and
`find?` on `Array` with the corresponding operations on `List`, and also
provides simp lemmas for the `Array` operations `findSomeRevM?`,
`findRevM?`, `findSomeRev?`, `findRev?` (in terms of `reverse` and the
usual forward find operations).
2024-11-07 03:30:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
05caf1bda9 feat: interactions between List.foldX and List.filterX (#5984)
This PR adds lemmas for `List` for the interactions between {`foldl`,
`foldr`, `foldlM`, `foldlrM`} and {`filter`, `filterMap`}.
2024-11-07 02:37:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b1dee4a42e chore: upstream List.insertIdx from Batteries, lemmas from Mathlib, and revise lemmas (#5969)
To follow, connecting this to `Array.insertAt` (and renaming).
2024-11-06 23:29:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a54226196d feat: minor lemmas about List.ofFn (#5982)
`List.ofFn` still has very incomplete API.
2024-11-06 23:05:42 +00:00
Henrik Böving
196b1e9250 feat: BitVec.twoPow in bv_decide (#5979) 2024-11-06 17:51:44 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
345ecd20c9 chore: tag prerelease builds with -pre (#5943) 2024-11-06 14:47:52 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
7f0fe20315 chore: CI: bump mymindstorm/setup-emsdk from 12 to 14 (#5963)
Bumps
[mymindstorm/setup-emsdk](https://github.com/mymindstorm/setup-emsdk)
from 12 to 14.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/mymindstorm/setup-emsdk/releases">mymindstorm/setup-emsdk's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>Version 14</h2>
<h1>Breaking Changes</h1>
<p>The default cache key naming scheme was changed from
<code>{Emscripten version}-{OS type}-${CPU architecture}-master</code>
to <code>{Github workflow name}-{Emscripten version}-{OS type}-${CPU
architecture}</code>. If <code>actions-cache-folder</code> is defined,
ensure that there are no conflicts with other caches to prevent
issues.</p>
<h1>Changelog</h1>
<ul>
<li>Add option to override cache key naming scheme (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/mymindstorm/setup-emsdk/issues/20">#20</a>)</li>
<li>Add workflow name to cache key naming scheme (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/mymindstorm/setup-emsdk/issues/20">#20</a>)</li>
<li>Updated dependencies to latest versions</li>
</ul>
<h2>Version 13</h2>
<ul>
<li>Updated to Node 20</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="6ab9eb1bda"><code>6ab9eb1</code></a>
v13 -&gt; v14</li>
<li><a
href="bb630c3bf4"><code>bb630c3</code></a>
Update all dependencies to latest versions</li>
<li><a
href="74881103d0"><code>7488110</code></a>
Add workflow ID to cache key and cache key override option (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/mymindstorm/setup-emsdk/issues/40">#40</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="d233ac12b0"><code>d233ac1</code></a>
v13</li>
<li><a
href="1749b22b40"><code>1749b22</code></a>
npm audit fix + update runtime to node20</li>
<li>See full diff in <a
href="https://github.com/mymindstorm/setup-emsdk/compare/v12...v14">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
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2024-11-06 10:45:31 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1e98fd7f2d feat: add another List.find?_eq_some lemma (#5974)
Inspired by https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/18593
2024-11-06 10:02:25 +00:00
Markus Himmel
76d32cbd2a chore: exclude leanruntest_task_test_io for now (#5973)
To be reenabled after investigation.
2024-11-06 09:40:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
15139b6ef6 feat: relate Array.zipWith/zip/unzip with List versions (#5972) 2024-11-06 09:22:08 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
14c3d4b1a6 chore: CI: remove link checker for old manual
It started failing frequently after updating it and we're not actively working on this text anyway
2024-11-06 10:27:25 +01:00
Kim Morrison
910b20fb2c chore: consolidate decide_True and decide_true_eq_true (#5949) 2024-11-06 05:12:25 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4df71ed24f feat: relate Array.isPrefixOf with List.isPrefixOf (#5971) 2024-11-06 02:44:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
406da78fc6 fix: arg conv tactic misreported number of arguments on error (#5968) 2024-11-06 02:13:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5d2bd1e2e4 chore: deprecate Array.split in favour of identical Array.partition (#5970) 2024-11-06 00:37:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c31daece6c chore: fix all_goals test, simulate the max rec depth error (#5967) 2024-11-05 20:09:06 +00:00
Markus Himmel
c157ddda11 fix: do not link statically against pthread/dl/rt (#5966) 2024-11-05 18:20:42 +00:00
Henrik Böving
c77b6a2c64 feat: define ISize and basic operations on it (#5961) 2024-11-05 15:08:19 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
c6e4947f4a chore: CI: bump dcarbone/install-jq-action from 1.0.1 to 2.1.0 (#5965)
Bumps
[dcarbone/install-jq-action](https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action)
from 1.0.1 to 2.1.0.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
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<blockquote>
<h2>v2.1.0</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Support running action inside containers by <a
href="https://github.com/TaxBusby"><code>@​TaxBusby</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/pull/10">dcarbone/install-jq-action#10</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/TaxBusby"><code>@​TaxBusby</code></a>
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</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/compare/v2.0.2...v2.1.0">https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/compare/v2.0.2...v2.1.0</a></p>
<h2>v2.0.2</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>use curl instead of wget to avoid download failure on macOS by <a
href="https://github.com/vaidyakhil"><code>@​vaidyakhil</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/pull/8">dcarbone/install-jq-action#8</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/vaidyakhil"><code>@​vaidyakhil</code></a> made
their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/pull/8">dcarbone/install-jq-action#8</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
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<h2>v2.0.1</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>using macos as dl link os prefix in lieu of osx by <a
href="https://github.com/dcarbone"><code>@​dcarbone</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/pull/7">dcarbone/install-jq-action#7</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/compare/v2.0.0...v2.0.1">https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/compare/v2.0.0...v2.0.1</a></p>
<h2>v2.0.0</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>quick &amp; dirty 1.7 support by <a
href="https://github.com/dcarbone"><code>@​dcarbone</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/pull/4">dcarbone/install-jq-action#4</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/dcarbone"><code>@​dcarbone</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/pull/4">dcarbone/install-jq-action#4</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/compare/v1.0.1...v2.0.0">https://github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/compare/v1.0.1...v2.0.0</a></p>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="8867ddb478"><code>8867ddb</code></a>
remove windows gubbins from container tests</li>
<li><a
href="945d84920f"><code>945d849</code></a>
Support running action inside containers (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/issues/10">#10</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="1090b8bd11"><code>1090b8b</code></a>
use curl instead of wget to fix failure on macOS runners (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/issues/8">#8</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="ff922c75b7"><code>ff922c7</code></a>
Update example-windows.yaml</li>
<li><a
href="7f4d6f4833"><code>7f4d6f4</code></a>
Update example-macos.yaml</li>
<li><a
href="bfb9fa8e7d"><code>bfb9fa8</code></a>
Update example-linux.yaml</li>
<li><a
href="c1548c666d"><code>c1548c6</code></a>
using macos as dl link os prefix in lieu of osx (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dcarbone/install-jq-action/issues/7">#7</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="f07422da1e"><code>f07422d</code></a>
fixing version</li>
<li><a
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trying without stupid</li>
<li><a
href="f6b58bacfe"><code>f6b58ba</code></a>
its late.</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
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</ul>
</details>
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dependabot[bot]
01814185a6 chore: CI: bump dawidd6/action-download-artifact from 2 to 6 (#5964)
Bumps
[dawidd6/action-download-artifact](https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact)
from 2 to 6.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
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<blockquote>
<h2>v6</h2>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v5...v6">https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v5...v6</a></p>
<h2>v5</h2>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v4...v5">https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v4...v5</a></p>
<h2>v4</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li><strong>VERSIONING CHANGE</strong>: now there will only be major
releases of this action, e.g. v5, v6 and so on</li>
<li>build(deps): bump undici from 5.28.3 to 5.28.4 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/284">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#284</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.4 to
2.1.5 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/285">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#285</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.5 to
2.1.7 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/287">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#287</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump adm-zip from 0.5.12 to 0.5.13 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/289">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#289</a></li>
<li>Set allow_forks to false by default by <a
href="https://github.com/timweri"><code>@​timweri</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/290">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#290</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/timweri"><code>@​timweri</code></a> made
their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/290">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#290</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3...v4">https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3...v4</a></p>
<h2>v3.1.4</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>build(deps): bump adm-zip from 0.5.10 to 0.5.12 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/282">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#282</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.2 to
2.1.4 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/280">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#280</a></li>
<li>fix: accept expired artifacts with documentation url by <a
href="https://github.com/wdconinc"><code>@​wdconinc</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/283">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#283</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/wdconinc"><code>@​wdconinc</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/283">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#283</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3...v3.1.4">https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3...v3.1.4</a></p>
<h2>v3.1.3</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>node_modules: upgrade by <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6"><code>@​dawidd6</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/276">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#276</a></li>
<li>build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.1 to
2.1.2 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/277">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#277</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3.1.2...v3.1.3">https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3.1.2...v3.1.3</a></p>
<h2>v3.1.2</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Read workflow_search input as a boolean by <a
href="https://github.com/klutchell"><code>@​klutchell</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/273">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#273</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/klutchell"><code>@​klutchell</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/pull/273">dawidd6/action-download-artifact#273</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3.1.1...v3.1.2">https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v3.1.1...v3.1.2</a></p>
<h2>v3.1.1</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
</blockquote>
<p>... (truncated)</p>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="bf251b5aa9"><code>bf251b5</code></a>
node_modules: upgrade</li>
<li><a
href="93c6296611"><code>93c6296</code></a>
README: v5</li>
<li><a
href="deb3bb8325"><code>deb3bb8</code></a>
node_modules: upgrade</li>
<li><a
href="1d93f37db2"><code>1d93f37</code></a>
README: v4</li>
<li><a
href="854e2de939"><code>854e2de</code></a>
Set allow_forks to false by default (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/issues/290">#290</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="436c9d3774"><code>436c9d3</code></a>
build(deps): bump adm-zip from 0.5.12 to 0.5.13 (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/issues/289">#289</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="14040524bb"><code>1404052</code></a>
build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.5 to 2.1.7
(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/issues/287">#287</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="8a9be734dc"><code>8a9be73</code></a>
build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/artifact</code> from 2.1.4 to 2.1.5
(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/issues/285">#285</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="df593bbd04"><code>df593bb</code></a>
build(deps): bump undici from 5.28.3 to 5.28.4 (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/issues/284">#284</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="09f2f74827"><code>09f2f74</code></a>
fix: accept expired artifacts with documentation url (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/issues/283">#283</a>)</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/dawidd6/action-download-artifact/compare/v2...v6">compare
view</a></li>
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dependabot[bot]
47d0060934 chore: CI: bump actions/github-script from 6 to 7 (#5962)
Bumps [actions/github-script](https://github.com/actions/github-script)
from 6 to 7.
<details>
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href="https://github.com/viktorlott"><code>@​viktorlott</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/402">actions/github-script#402</a>,
see for details <a
href="https://github.com/actions/github-script#use-scripts-with-jsdoc-support">https://github.com/actions/github-script#use-scripts-with-jsdoc-support</a></li>
<li>Update dependencies and use Node 20 by <a
href="https://github.com/joshmgross"><code>@​joshmgross</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/425">actions/github-script#425</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a
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made their first contribution in <a
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<li><a href="https://github.com/robandpdx"><code>@​robandpdx</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/429">actions/github-script#429</a></li>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/viktorlott"><code>@​viktorlott</code></a> made
their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/402">actions/github-script#402</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.4.1...v7.0.0">https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.4.1...v7.0.0</a></p>
<h2>v6.4.1</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Add <code>@​octokit/plugin-request-log</code>, to produce debug
output for requests by <a
href="https://github.com/mjpieters"><code>@​mjpieters</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/358">actions/github-script#358</a></li>
<li>fix input handling by <a
href="https://github.com/mjpieters"><code>@​mjpieters</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/357">actions/github-script#357</a></li>
<li>Remove unused dependencies by <a
href="https://github.com/mjpieters"><code>@​mjpieters</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/356">actions/github-script#356</a></li>
<li>Default debug to current runner debug state by <a
href="https://github.com/mjpieters"><code>@​mjpieters</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/363">actions/github-script#363</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/mjpieters"><code>@​mjpieters</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/358">actions/github-script#358</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.4.0...v6.4.1">https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.4.0...v6.4.1</a></p>
<h2>v6.4.0</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Bump json5 from 2.1.3 to 2.2.3 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/319">actions/github-script#319</a></li>
<li>Bump minimatch from 3.0.4 to 3.1.2 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/320">actions/github-script#320</a></li>
<li>Add node-fetch by <a
href="https://github.com/danmichaelo"><code>@​danmichaelo</code></a> in
<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/321">actions/github-script#321</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/jongwooo"><code>@​jongwooo</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/313">actions/github-script#313</a></li>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/austinvazquez"><code>@​austinvazquez</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/306">actions/github-script#306</a></li>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/danmichaelo"><code>@​danmichaelo</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/321">actions/github-script#321</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.3.3...v6.4.0">https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.3.3...v6.4.0</a></p>
<h2>v6.3.3</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Update <code>@actions/glob</code> to 0.3.0 by <a
href="https://github.com/nineinchnick"><code>@​nineinchnick</code></a>
in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/279">actions/github-script#279</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/nineinchnick"><code>@​nineinchnick</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/279">actions/github-script#279</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.3.2...v6.3.3">https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6.3.2...v6.3.3</a></p>
<h2>v6.3.2</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Update <code>@​actions/core</code> to 1.10.0 by <a
href="https://github.com/rentziass"><code>@​rentziass</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/pull/295">actions/github-script#295</a></li>
</ul>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
</blockquote>
<p>... (truncated)</p>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="60a0d83039"><code>60a0d83</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/issues/440">#440</a>
from actions/joshmgross/v7.0.1</li>
<li><a
href="b7fb2001b4"><code>b7fb200</code></a>
Update version to 7.0.1</li>
<li><a
href="12e22ed06b"><code>12e22ed</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/issues/439">#439</a>
from actions/joshmgross/avoid-setting-base-url</li>
<li><a
href="d319f8f5b5"><code>d319f8f</code></a>
Avoid setting <code>baseUrl</code> to undefined when input is not
provided</li>
<li><a
href="e69ef5462f"><code>e69ef54</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/github-script/issues/425">#425</a>
from actions/joshmgross/node-20</li>
<li><a
href="ee0914b839"><code>ee0914b</code></a>
Update licenses</li>
<li><a
href="d6fc56f33b"><code>d6fc56f</code></a>
Use <code>@types/node</code> for Node 20</li>
<li><a
href="384d6cf581"><code>384d6cf</code></a>
Fix quotations in tests</li>
<li><a
href="84724927e3"><code>8472492</code></a>
Only validate GraphQL <code>previews</code></li>
<li><a
href="84903f5182"><code>84903f5</code></a>
Remove <code>node-fetch</code> from type</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/actions/github-script/compare/v6...v7">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />


[![Dependabot compatibility
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You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:
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Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
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2024-11-05 11:06:39 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
b1c2d851e5 chore: CI: bump lycheeverse/lychee-action from 1.9.0 to 2.0.2 (#5959)
Bumps
[lycheeverse/lychee-action](https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action)
from 1.9.0 to 2.0.2.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/releases">lycheeverse/lychee-action's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>Version 2.0.2</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Fix a typos by <a
href="https://github.com/szepeviktor"><code>@​szepeviktor</code></a> in
<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/257">lycheeverse/lychee-action#257</a></li>
<li>Document and use correct permissions in the GitHub workflows by <a
href="https://github.com/dscho"><code>@​dscho</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/258">lycheeverse/lychee-action#258</a></li>
<li>Add security policy by <a
href="https://github.com/mondeja"><code>@​mondeja</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/259">lycheeverse/lychee-action#259</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/szepeviktor"><code>@​szepeviktor</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/257">lycheeverse/lychee-action#257</a></li>
<li><a href="https://github.com/mondeja"><code>@​mondeja</code></a> made
their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/259">lycheeverse/lychee-action#259</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/compare/v2...v2.0.2">https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/compare/v2...v2.0.2</a></p>
<h2>Version 2.0.1</h2>
<h2>What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li>Don't remove the lychee config file by <a
href="https://github.com/dmathieu"><code>@​dmathieu</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/255">lycheeverse/lychee-action#255</a></li>
<li>Bump lycheeverse/lychee-action from 1 to 2 by <a
href="https://github.com/dependabot"><code>@​dependabot</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/252">lycheeverse/lychee-action#252</a></li>
<li>Fix variable name in docs by <a
href="https://github.com/kdeldycke"><code>@​kdeldycke</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/253">lycheeverse/lychee-action#253</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/dmathieu"><code>@​dmathieu</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/pull/255">lycheeverse/lychee-action#255</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/compare/v2...v2.0.1">https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/compare/v2...v2.0.1</a></p>
<h2>Version 2.0.0</h2>
<h2>Breaking Changes</h2>
<p><strong>Note:</strong> This release improves the action's robustness
by changing default behaviors. Changes are only required if you want to
opt out of the new failure conditions. Most users won't need to modify
their existing configurations.</p>
<h3>Fail pipeline on error by default</h3>
<p>We've changed the default behavior: pipelines will now fail on broken
links automatically. This addresses user feedback that not failing on
broken links was unexpected (see [issue <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/71">#71</a>](<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/71">lycheeverse/lychee-action#71</a>)).</p>
<p><strong>What you need to do:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Update to version 2 of this action to apply this change.</li>
<li>Users of the <code>lychee-action@master</code> branch don't need to
make any changes, as <code>fail: true</code> has been the default there
for a while.</li>
<li>If you prefer the old behavior, explicitly set <code>fail</code> to
<code>false</code> when updating:</li>
</ul>
<pre lang="yaml"><code>- name: Link Checker
  id: lychee
  uses: lycheeverse/lychee-action@v2
  with:
    fail: false  # Don't fail action on broken links
</code></pre>
<h3>Fail pipeline if no links were found</h3>
<p>Similar to the above change, we now fail the pipeline if no links are
found during a run. This helps warn users about potential configuration
issues.</p>
<p><strong>What you need to do:</strong></p>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
</blockquote>
<p>... (truncated)</p>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="7cd0af4c74"><code>7cd0af4</code></a>
Merge commit from fork</li>
<li><a
href="8ad54d3568"><code>8ad54d3</code></a>
fix link</li>
<li><a
href="762333c189"><code>762333c</code></a>
Create SECURITY.md (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/259">#259</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="71a38a3bd7"><code>71a38a3</code></a>
Document and use correct permissions in the GitHub workflows (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/258">#258</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="f141760066"><code>f141760</code></a>
Fix a typos (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/257">#257</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="2bb232618b"><code>2bb2326</code></a>
don't remove the lychee config file (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/255">#255</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="731bf1a2af"><code>731bf1a</code></a>
Fix variable name (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/253">#253</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="e360f3c891"><code>e360f3c</code></a>
Bump lycheeverse/lychee-action from 1 to 2 (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/252">#252</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="f87f0a6299"><code>f87f0a6</code></a>
Update version to <code>lycheeverse/lychee-action@v2</code> in docs</li>
<li><a
href="7da8ec1fc4"><code>7da8ec1</code></a>
Test latest lychee version tag (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/issues/236">#236</a>)</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/lycheeverse/lychee-action/compare/v1.9.0...v2.0.2">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />


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Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-11-05 10:41:16 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
970dc6f7aa chore: CI: give Linux Debug unlimited test stack size (#5953) 2024-11-05 10:06:53 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
8e2f92607f chore: CI: bump actions/stale from 8 to 9 (#5958)
Bumps [actions/stale](https://github.com/actions/stale) from 8 to 9.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale/releases">actions/stale's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>v9.0.0</h2>
<h2>Breaking Changes</h2>
<ol>
<li>Action is now stateful: If the action ends because of <a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale#operations-per-run">operations-per-run</a>
then the next run will start from the first unprocessed issue skipping
the issues processed during the previous run(s). The state is reset when
all the issues are processed. This should be considered for scheduling
workflow runs.</li>
<li>Version 9 of this action updated the runtime to Node.js 20. All
scripts are now run with Node.js 20 instead of Node.js 16 and are
affected by any breaking changes between Node.js 16 and 20.</li>
</ol>
<h2>What Else Changed</h2>
<ol>
<li>Performance optimization that removes unnecessary API calls by <a
href="https://github.com/dsame"><code>@​dsame</code></a> <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/1033/">#1033</a>
fixes <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/792">#792</a></li>
<li>Logs displaying current github API rate limit by <a
href="https://github.com/dsame"><code>@​dsame</code></a> <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/1032">#1032</a>
addresses <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/1029">#1029</a></li>
</ol>
<p>For more information, please read the <a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale#readme">action documentation</a>
and its <a href="https://github.com/actions/stale#statefulness">section
about statefulness</a></p>
<h2>New Contributors</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/jmeridth"><code>@​jmeridth</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/984">actions/stale#984</a></li>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/nikolai-laevskii"><code>@​nikolai-laevskii</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/1020">actions/stale#1020</a></li>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/dusan-trickovic"><code>@​dusan-trickovic</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/1056">actions/stale#1056</a></li>
<li><a
href="https://github.com/aparnajyothi-y"><code>@​aparnajyothi-y</code></a>
made their first contribution in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/1110">actions/stale#1110</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale/compare/v8...v9.0.0">https://github.com/actions/stale/compare/v8...v9.0.0</a></p>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md">actions/stale's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h1>Changelog</h1>
<h1>[7.0.0]</h1>
<p>⚠️ Breaking change ⚠️</p>
<ul>
<li>Allow daysBeforeStale options to be float by <a
href="https://github.com/irega"><code>@​irega</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/841">actions/stale#841</a></li>
<li>Use cache in check-dist.yml by <a
href="https://github.com/jongwooo"><code>@​jongwooo</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/876">actions/stale#876</a></li>
<li>fix print outputs step in existing workflows by <a
href="https://github.com/irega"><code>@​irega</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/859">actions/stale#859</a></li>
<li>Update issue and PR templates, add/delete workflow files by <a
href="https://github.com/IvanZosimov"><code>@​IvanZosimov</code></a> in
<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/880">actions/stale#880</a></li>
<li>Update how stale handles exempt items by <a
href="https://github.com/johnsudol"><code>@​johnsudol</code></a> in <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/874">actions/stale#874</a></li>
</ul>
<h1>[6.0.1]</h1>
<p>Update <code>@​actions/core</code> to v1.10.0 (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/839">#839</a>)</p>
<h1>[6.0.0]</h1>
<p>⚠️ Breaking change ⚠️</p>
<p>Issues/PRs default <code>close-issue-reason</code> is now
<code>not_planned</code>(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/789">#789</a>)</p>
<h1>[5.1.0]</h1>
<p><a href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/696">Don't
process stale issues right after they're marked stale</a>
[Add close-issue-reason option]<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/764">#764</a><a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/772">#772</a>
Various dependabot/dependency updates</p>
<h2><a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale/compare/v3.0.19...v4.1.0">4.1.0</a>
(2021-07-14)</h2>
<h2>Features</h2>
<ul>
<li><a
href="9912fa74d1">Ability
to exempt draft PRs</a></li>
</ul>
<h2><a
href="https://github.com/actions/stale/compare/v3.0.19...v4.0.0">4.0.0</a>
(2021-07-14)</h2>
<h3>Features</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>options:</strong> simplify config by removing skip stale
message options (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/457">#457</a>)
(<a
href="6ec637d238">6ec637d</a>),
closes <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/405">#405</a> <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/455">#455</a></li>
<li><strong>output:</strong> print output parameters (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/458">#458</a>)
(<a
href="3e6d35b685">3e6d35b</a>)</li>
</ul>
<h3>Bug Fixes</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>dry-run:</strong> forbid mutations in dry-run (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/500">#500</a>)
(<a
href="f1017f33dd">f1017f3</a>),
closes <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/499">#499</a></li>
<li><strong>logs:</strong> coloured logs (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/465">#465</a>)
(<a
href="5fbbfba142">5fbbfba</a>)</li>
<li><strong>operations:</strong> fail fast the current batch to respect
the operations limit (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/474">#474</a>)
(<a
href="5f6f311ca6">5f6f311</a>),
closes <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/466">#466</a></li>
<li><strong>label comparison</strong>: make label comparison case
insensitive <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/517">#517</a>,
closes <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/516">#516</a></li>
<li><strong>filtering comments by actor could have strange
behavior</strong>: &quot;stale&quot; comments are now detected based on
if the message is the stale message not <em>who</em> made the comment(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/519">#519</a>),
fixes <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/441">#441</a>, <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/509">#509</a>, <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/pull/518">#518</a></li>
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<h3>Breaking Changes</h3>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
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Upgrade Node to v20 (<a
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<li><a
href="b69b346013"><code>b69b346</code></a>
build(deps-dev): bump <code>@​types/node</code> from 18.16.18 to 20.5.1
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<li><a
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<li><a
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Merge pull request <a
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from akv-platform/fix-delete-cache</li>
<li><a
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Don not try to delete cache if it does not exists</li>
<li><a
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fix typo proceeded/processed</li>
<li><a
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build(deps-dev): bump
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<li><a
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Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/actions/stale/issues/1063">#1063</a>
from actions/dependabot/npm_and_yarn/jest-29.6.2</li>
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<h2>v2.0.0</h2>
<h2>🔄️ What's Changed</h2>
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href="https://redirect.github.com/raven-actions/actionlint/issues/16">#16</a>)</li>
<li>Fix debian install shellcheck <a
href="https://github.com/bhundven"><code>@​bhundven</code></a> (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/raven-actions/actionlint/issues/15">#15</a>)</li>
</ul>
<h2>🐛 Bug Fixes</h2>
<ul>
<li>fix: user flags parser <a
href="https://github.com/DariuszPorowski"><code>@​DariuszPorowski</code></a>
(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/raven-actions/actionlint/issues/19">#19</a>)</li>
<li>Fix debian install shellcheck <a
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href="https://redirect.github.com/raven-actions/actionlint/issues/15">#15</a>)</li>
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<h2>👥 Contributors</h2>
<p><a
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<h2>v1.0.2</h2>
<h2>🔄️ What's Changed</h2>
<ul>
<li> feat(inputs): group-result <a
href="https://github.com/DariuszPorowski"><code>@​DariuszPorowski</code></a>
(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/raven-actions/actionlint/issues/10">#10</a>)</li>
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(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/raven-actions/actionlint/issues/7">#7</a>)</li>
<li>📝 chore: minor docs and CI adjustments <a
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9d2a017704 chore: CI: bump softprops/action-gh-release from 1 to 2 (#5955)
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<h3>Added</h3>
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<h2>[1.2.3] - 2021-12-20</h2>
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<h2>[1.2.2] - 2021-05-08</h2>
<h3>Fixed</h3>
<ul>
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</ul>
<h3>Changed</h3>
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<h2>[1.2.1] - 2021-05-05</h2>
<h3>Added</h3>
<ul>
<li>Add &quot;fails-without-credentials&quot; input to fail if the
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href="https://redirect.github.com/nwtgck/actions-netlify/pull/532">#532</a></li>
</ul>
<h3>Changed</h3>
<ul>
<li>Update dependencies</li>
</ul>
<h2>[1.2.0] - 2021-04-29</h2>
<h3>Changed</h3>
<ul>
<li>Update dependencies</li>
<li>(breaking change for <code>overwrites-pull-request-comment:
true</code>): Support multiple app deploys in a single PR <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/nwtgck/actions-netlify/pull/484">#484</a>
by <a
href="https://github.com/kaisermann"><code>@​kaisermann</code></a></li>
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Merge branch 'release/3.0.0'</li>
<li><a
href="6b45669baf"><code>6b45669</code></a>
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<li><a
href="8d5d80bf73"><code>8d5d80b</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/nwtgck/actions-netlify/issues/1151">#1151</a>
from nwtgck/actions-build/nwtgck-dependabot/npm_and_...</li>
<li><a
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<li><a
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Build(deps): bump <code>@​actions/github</code> from 5.1.1 to 6.0.0</li>
<li><a
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<li><a
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Build(deps-dev): bump <code>@​vercel/ncc</code> from 0.36.1 to 0.38.1
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Build(deps): bump actions/setup-node from 3 to 4 (<a
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README.md, sample workflow: bump to latest action versions (<a
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2024-11-05 09:38:06 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
75602f7c29 chore: CI: adjust Dependabot prefix 2024-11-05 10:31:37 +01:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0fd90c1283 chore: CI: check for GitHub Actions updates once per month (#5954) 2024-11-05 10:20:23 +01:00
Kim Morrison
128b049904 feat: relate Array.eraseIdx with List.eraseIdx (#5952) 2024-11-05 06:13:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0e3f26e6df feat: relate Array.takeWhile with List.takeWhile (#5950) 2024-11-05 05:05:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1148e6e142 chore: remove @[simp] from BitVec.ofFin_sub and sub_ofFin (#5951)
Unused, and hurts confluence.
2024-11-05 04:56:21 +00:00
Violeta Hernández
02baaa42ff feat: add Option.or_some' (#5926)
`o.or (some a) = o.getD a`.

As discussed on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/217875-Is-there-code-for-X.3F/topic/a.2Eor.20.28some.20b.29.20.3D.20a.2EgetD.20b/near/472785093).
2024-11-05 01:39:02 +00:00
Violeta Hernández
e573676db1 feat: List.pmap_eq_self (#5927)
This is a `pmap` analog of
[`List.map_id''`](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Init/Data/List/Lemmas.html#List.map_id'').

As discussed on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/217875-Is-there-code-for-X.3F/topic/.60pmap_eq_self.60/near/472496933).
2024-11-05 01:38:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4dab6a108c chore: port release notes for v4.13.0 to master (#5947) 2024-11-05 01:34:52 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a4d521cf96 fix: make all_goals admit goals on failure (#5934)
New behavior: when in recovery mode, if any tactic fails in `all_goals`
then the metacontext is restored and all goals are admitted.

Without this, it can leave partially-solved metavariables and incomplete
goal lists.
2024-11-04 21:12:59 +00:00
Mac Malone
99070bf304 feat: update toolchain on lake update (#5684)
Lake will now update a package's `lean-toolchain` file on `lake update`
if it finds the package's direct dependencies use a newer compatible
toolchain. To skip this step, use the `--keep-toolchain` CLI option.

Closes #2582. Closes #2752. Closes #5615.

### Toolchain update details

To determine "newest compatible" toolchain, Lake parses the toolchain
listed in the packages' `lean-toolchain` files into four categories:
release , nightly, PR, and other. For newness, release toolchains are
compared by semantic version (e.g., `"v4.4.0" < "v4.8.0"` and
`"v4.6.0-rc1" < "v4.6.0"`) and nightlies are compared by date (e.g.,
`"nightly-2024-01-10" < "nightly-2014-10-01"`). All other toolchain
types and mixtures are incompatible. If there is not a single newest
toolchain, Lake will print a warning and continue updating without
changing the toolchain.

If Lake does find a new toolchain, Lake updates the workspace's
`lean-toolchain` file accordingly and restarts the update process on the
new Lake. If Elan is detected, it will spawn the new Lake process via
`elan run` with the same arguments Lake was initially run with. If Elan
is missing, it will prompt the user to restart Lake manually and exit
with a special error code (4).

### Other changes

To implement this new logic, various other refactors were needed. Here
are some key highlights:

* Logs emitted during package and workspace loading are now eagerly
printed.
* The Elan executable used by Lake is now configurable by the `ELAN`
environment variable.
* The `--lean` CLI option was removed. Use the `LEAN` environment
variable instead.
* `Package.deps` / `Package.opaqueDeps` have been removed. Use
`findPackage?` with a dependency's name instead.
* The dependency resolver now uses a pure breadth-first traversal to
resolve dependencies. It also resolves dependencies in reverse order,
which is done for consistency with targets. Latter targets shadow
earlier ones and latter dependencies take precedence over earlier ones.
**These changes mean the order of dependencies in a Lake manifest will
change after the first `lake update` on this version of Lake.**
2024-11-04 14:31:40 +00:00
Henrik Böving
93dd6f2b36 feat: add Int16/Int32/Int64 (#5885)
This adds all fixed width integers with the exception of `ssize_t` so
the code is quick to review as everything just behaves the same.
2024-11-04 13:18:05 +00:00
Henrik Böving
c61ced3f15 feat: introduce synthetic atoms in bv_decide (#5942)
This introduces a notion of synthetic atoms into `bv_decide`'s
reflection framework. An atom can be declared synthetic if its behavior
is fully specified by additional lemmas that are added in the process of
creating it. This is for example useful in the code that handles `if` as
the entire `if` block is abstracted as an atom and then two lemmas to
describe either branch are added. Previously this had the effect of
creating error messages about potentially unsound counterexamples, now
the synthetic atoms get filtered from the counter example generation.
2024-11-04 10:14:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c779f3a039 feat: List.mapFinIdx, lemmas, relate to Array version (#5941) 2024-11-04 05:29:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fc17468f78 chore: upstream List.ofFn and relate to Array.ofFn (#5938) 2024-11-04 01:35:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8b7e3b8942 chore: upstream lemmas about Fin.foldX (#5937) 2024-11-04 00:52:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9129990833 chore: begin development cycle for v4.15 (#5936) 2024-11-03 23:25:03 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1659f3bfe2 fix: .. in patterns should not make use of optparams or autoparams (#5933)
In patterns, ellipsis should always fill in each remaining argument as
an implicit argument, even if it is an optparam or autoparam. This
prevents examples such as the one in #4555 from failing:
```lean
match e with
| .internal .. => sorry
| .error .. => sorry
```
The `internal` constructor has an optparam (`| internal (id :
InternalExceptionId) (extra : KVMap := {})`).

We may consider having ellipsis suppress optparams and autoparams in
general. We avoid doing so for now since it's possible to opt-out of
them individually (for example with `.internal (extra := _) ..`) but
it's not possible to opt-in, and it is plausible that `..` with
optparams is useful in contexts such as the `refine` tactic. With
patterns however, it is hard to imagine a use case that offsets the
inconvenience of optparams being eagerly supplied.

Closes #4555
2024-11-03 18:40:21 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
87d3f1f2c8 chore: update stage0 2024-11-03 17:21:54 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b75cc35db2 feat: update omega/solve_by_elim to use new tactic syntax, use new tactic syntax (#5932)
Following up #5928, updates the syntax for `omega` and `solve_by_elim`
and restores the syntax quotations in their implementations.

Following up #5898, uses the new tactic syntax in the library, replacing
all uses of `(config := ...)`.
2024-11-03 16:23:37 +00:00
Jens Petersen
3952689fb1 feat: add --short-version (-V) option to display short version (#5930)
This just adds a `--short-version` (`-V`) option to the lean command,
which is useful for external tooling, etc.

Closes #5929
2024-11-03 15:18:23 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
cd24e9dad4 chore: update stage0 2024-11-03 07:04:44 +00:00
Kyle Miller
0de925eafc chore: prepare omega and solve_by_elim for new tactic config syntax (#5928)
The tactic elaborators match a too-restrictive syntax for the migration
to the new configuration syntax. This generalizes what they accept, and
the code will return to using quotations after a stage0 update and
syntax change.
2024-11-03 06:20:15 +00:00
Mac Malone
79428827b8 feat: add text option for buildFile* utilities (#5924)
Adds an optional `text` argument to the `fetchFile*` and `buildFile*`
definitions that can be used to hash built files as text files (with
normalized line endings) instead of as binary files (the previous
default).

Separately, this change also significantly expands the documentation in
the `Lake.Build.Trace` module and preforms minor touchups of some build
job signatures.
2024-11-03 00:23:39 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3c15ab3c09 feat: make MapDeclarationExtension tolerate multiple insertions (#5911)
Simplifies the definition of `MapDeclarationExtension` so that it only
contains a `NameMap` without an additional `List (Name × α)`. Uses the
`NameMap`'s natural ordering during export rather than sorting.

This fixes issues from inserting into a `MapDeclarationExtension`
multiple times with the same key. Inside a module it appears that each
insertion overwrites the data, since those queries access the `NameMap`.
But across modules, only the first insertion is accessible, since each
insertion was actually pushed to the front of a `List`.

Mathlib needs this for a documentation extension feature, and [they are
considering a PR with a
workaround](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/17043)
that digs into the `MapDeclarationExtension` data structures.
2024-11-02 15:28:34 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
3f33cd6fcd chore: update stage0 2024-11-01 23:33:27 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
1f8d7561fa chore: remove unused deriving handler argument syntax (#5265)
As far as I can tell, the ability to pass a structure instance to a
deriving handler is not actually used in practice. It didn't seem to be
used in the test suite, at least.

Do we want to remove this, or do we want to use and document it? This PR
removes it, but that's not something I feel strongly about - but seeing
if it breaks Mathlib is a useful data point.
2024-11-01 22:41:38 +00:00
Alex
16e5e09ffd feat: better error message for invalid induction alternative name (#5888)
Closes #5887
2024-11-01 21:33:15 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5549e0509f feat: on "type mismatch" errors, expose differences in functions and pi types (#5922)
Example: Normally subtype notation pretty prints as `{ x // x > 0 }`,
but now the difference in domains is exposed:
```lean
example (h : {x : Int // x > 0}) : {x : Nat // x > 0} := h
/-
error: type mismatch
  h
has type
  { x : Int // x > 0 } : Type
but is expected to have type
  { x : Nat // x > 0 } : Type
-/
```
2024-11-01 18:42:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c7f5fd9a83 feat: make "type mismatch" error add numeric type ascriptions (#5919)
Example:
```lean
example : 0 = (0 : Nat) := by
  exact Eq.refl (0 : Int)
/-
error: type mismatch
  Eq.refl 0
has type
  (0 : Int) = 0 : Prop
but is expected to have type
  (0 : Nat) = 0 : Prop
-/
```
2024-11-01 16:44:52 +00:00
Henrik Böving
a4057d373e fix: bv_normalize loose mvars (#5918)
`bv_normalize` would just silently drop other goals if called while not
focused on a singular goal, for example:
```lean
theorem mvarid (x y : Bool) (h : x ∨ y) : y ∨ x := by
  cases h
  bv_normalize
  -- we want to write another bv_normalize here but all goals are gone
```
Would make the second subgoal disappear and then throw an error about
meta variables in the kernel.
2024-11-01 15:16:11 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
fd08c92060 chore: update src/library/module.cpp after update stage0
Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>

Update src/library/module.cpp

Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>
2024-11-01 22:48:49 +11:00
Kim Morrison
be6507fe5b chore: update stage0 2024-11-01 22:48:49 +11:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c723ae7f97 chore: CI: build 64-bit platforms consistently with GMP
fix

arm64?

try different fix

`uses_gmp` .olean bit, bump .olean version

add lean_version

make sure to use cache gmp on x86 Linux
2024-11-01 22:48:49 +11:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
0973ba3e42 chore: update stage0 2024-11-01 03:36:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a75a03c077 feat: relate for loops over List with foldlM (#5913)
There are many more lemmas about `foldlM`, so this may be useful for
reasoning about for loops by transforming them into folds.

The transformation includes accounting for monad effects, but does have
a mild performance difference in that short-circuiting on
`ForInStep.done` is replaced by traversing the rest of the list with a
noop.
2024-11-01 02:41:05 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6922832327 chore: minor tweaks to Array lemmas (#5912) 2024-11-01 02:20:16 +00:00
Kyle Miller
f1707117f0 feat: conv arg now can access more arguments (#5894)
Specializes the congr lemma generated for the `arg` conv tactic to only
rewrite the chosen argument. This makes it much more likely that the
chosen argument is able to be accessed.

Lets `arg` access the domain and codomain of pi types via `arg 1` and
`arg 2` in more situations. Upstreams `pi_congr` for this from mathlib.

Adds a negative indexing option, where `arg -2` accesses the
second-to-last argument for example, making the behavior of `lhs`
available to `arg`. This works for `enter` as well.

Other improvement: when there is an error in the `enter [...]` tactic,
individual locations get underlined with the error. The tactic info now
also is like `rw`, so you can see the intermediate conv states.

Closes #5871
2024-11-01 02:12:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3b80d1eb1f feat: activate new tactic configuration syntax for most tactics (#5898)
PR #5883 added a new syntax for tactic configuration, and this PR
enables it in most tactics. Example: `simp +contextual`.

There will be followup PRs to modify the remaining ones.

Breaking change: Tactics that are macros for `simp` or other core
tactics need to adapt. The easiest way is to replace `(config)?` with
`optConfig` and then in the syntax quotations replace `$[$cfg]?` by
`$cfg:optConfig`. For tactics that manipulate the configuration, see
`erw` for an example:
```lean
macro "erw" c:optConfig s:rwRuleSeq loc:(location)? : tactic => do
  `(tactic| rw $[$(getConfigItems c)]* (transparency := .default) $s:rwRuleSeq $(loc)?)
```
Configuration options are processed left-to-right, so this forces the
`transparency` to always be `.default`.
2024-11-01 02:08:53 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
7730ddd1a0 feat: add BitVec.(msb, getMsbD, getLsbD)_(neg, abs) (#5721)
Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
Co-authored-by: Marc Huisinga <mhuisi@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
Co-authored-by: FR <zhao.yu-yang@foxmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aaron Tomb <aarontomb@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Arthur Adjedj <arthur.adjedj@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Yann Herklotz <git@yannherklotz.com>
Co-authored-by: Lean stage0 autoupdater <>
2024-11-01 01:27:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e4a2c3d8f0 feat: interim implementation of HashMap.modify/alter (#5880)
These implementations could be made more efficient by promoting them to
primitive operations, but I propose installing these in the meantime to
encourage users to avoid non-linearity problems.
2024-11-01 01:21:21 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c2391c45b9 chore: remove @[simp] from Sum.forall and Sum.exists (#5900) 2024-11-01 01:21:04 +00:00
Kyle Miller
465ed8af46 feat: resolve generalized field notation using all parents (#5770)
* Now `getPathToBaseStructure?` can navigate to all parent structures,
not just through subobjects.
* Adds a "resolution order" for methods. This is the order that
generalized field notation visits parent structures when trying to
resolve names. The algorithm to compute a resolution order is the
commonly used C3 (used for instance by Python). By default we use a
relaxed version of the algorithm that tolerates inconsistencies. Using
`set_option structure.strictResolutionOrder true` makes inconsistent
parent orderings into warnings.
* This makes generalized field notation be able to resolve names for all
parent structures, not just those that are embedded as subobjects.
Closes #3467. (And addresses side note in #1881.)
* Modifies `getAllParentStructures` to return *all* parents. This
improves dot completion in the editor.
2024-10-31 21:04:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
008537abbd fix: FunInd: unfold aux definitions more carefully (#5904)
fixes #5903
2024-10-31 18:04:36 +00:00
Kyle Miller
f8242fa965 fix: delta derived instances now have declaration ranges (#5899)
Fixes an issue where go-to definition on such instances does not work.

Reported [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/287929-mathlib4/topic/mystery.20guest/near/479820367)
2024-10-31 15:40:17 +00:00
Henrik Böving
844e7ae7eb chore: remove native code for UInt8.modn (#5901)
Closes #5818
2024-10-31 12:42:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
218601009b chore: rename Array.back to back! (#5897) 2024-10-31 09:18:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4af93813f2 chore: move @[simp] from back_eq_back? to back_push (#5896) 2024-10-31 08:25:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
34be25620f feat: LawfulBEq (Array α) ↔ LawfulBEq α (#5895) 2024-10-31 08:00:06 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a826de8a3d chore: remove duplicated ForIn instances (#5892)
I'd previously added an instance from `ForIn'` to `ForIn`, but this then
caused some non-defeq duplication. It seems fine to just remove the
concrete `ForIn` instances in cases where the `ForIn'` instance exists
too. We can even remove a number of type-specific lemmas in favour of
the general ones.
2024-10-31 07:40:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
0fcee100e7 feat: enable recursive structure command (#5783)
Now that the elaborator supports primitive projections for recursive
inductive types (#5822), enable defining recursive inductive types with
the `structure` command, which was set up in #5842.

Example:
```lean
structure Tree where
  n : Nat
  children : Fin n → Tree

def Tree.size : Tree → Nat
  | {n, children} => Id.run do
    let mut s := 0
    for h : i in [0 : n] do
      s := s + (children ⟨i, h.2⟩).size
    pure s
```

Note for kernel re-implementors: recursive structures are exercising the
kernel feature where primitive projections are valid for one-constructor
inductive types in general, so long as the structure isn't a `Prop` and
doesn't have any non-`Prop` fields, not just ones that are non-indexed
and non-recursive.

Closes #2512
2024-10-31 05:23:12 +00:00
Kyle Miller
03c6e99ef7 fix: bring elaborator in line with kernel for primitive projections (#5822)
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.
2024-10-31 03:16:52 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
0c8d28e9ba chore: update stage0 2024-10-31 02:11:42 +00:00
Kyle Miller
66d68484af fix: make structure parent info persist (#5890)
Modifies the `structureExt` from being a `SimplePersistentEnvExtension`
to a `PersistentEnvExtension`. The simple version contains a `List` of
all added entries, which we do not need since we already have a
`PersistentHashMap` of them in the state. The oversight was that this
`List` contained duplicate entries due to `setStructureParents`
re-adding entries.
2024-10-31 01:22:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5c70e5d845 chore: (belatedly) begin development cycle for v4.14.0 (#5889)
This hasn't affected release candidates or stables, but I realised that
I haven't been updating `LEAN_VERSION_MINOR` on `master` the last two
months, so it still says v4.12.0. This advances it to v4.14.0.
2024-10-30 23:48:02 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d4b1be094d feat: adds optConfig syntax for tactic configuration (#5883)
This PR adds a new syntax for tactic and command configurations. It also
updates the elaborator construction command to be able to process this
new syntax.

We do not update core tactics yet. Once tactics switch over to it,
rather than (for example) writing `simp (config := { contextual := true,
maxSteps := 22})`, one can write `simp +contextual (maxSteps := 22)`.
The new syntax is reverse compatible in the sense that `(config := ...)`
still sets the entire configuration.

Note to metaprogrammers: Use `optConfig` instead of `(config)?`. The
elaborator generated by `declare_config_elab` accepts both old and new
configurations. The elaborator has also been written to be tolerant to
null nodes, so adapting to `optConfig` should be as easy as changing
just the syntax for your tactics and deleting `mkOptionalNode`.

Breaking change: The new system is mostly reverse compatible, however
the type of the generated elaborator now lands in `TacticM` to make use
of the current recovery state. Commands that wish to elaborate
configurations should now use `declare_command_config_elab` instead of
`declare_config_elab` to get an elaborator landing in `CommandElabM`.
2024-10-30 23:31:34 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c3cbc92a0c feat: upstream and update #where command (#5065)
This command comes from Lean 3, which I had previously ported and
contributed to Batteries (née Std). In this new version, `#where`
produces actual command Syntax for all features of a top-level scope
(rather than splicing together strings), and it also now reports
included variables.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-10-30 18:00:08 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
0d12618539 fix: declareSimpLikeTactic macro to use mkSynthetic (#5838)
this fixes #5597
2024-10-30 14:27:56 +00:00
Henrik Böving
ac80e261bd feat: add embedded constraint substitution to bv_decide (#5886)
This adds the embedded constraint substitution preprocessing pass from
Bitwuzla to `bv_decide`.
It looks for hypotheses of the form `h : x = true` and then attempts to
find occurrences of
`x` within other hypotheses to replace them with true.
2024-10-30 11:43:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
38c39482f4 chore: add missing deprecation dates (#5884) 2024-10-30 05:37:36 +00:00
Kyle Miller
09802e83cd chore: mention #version in bug report template (#5769) 2024-10-30 02:46:48 +00:00
Alex Keizer
b5bbc57059 feat: prove that intMin is indeed the smallest signed bitvector (#5778) 2024-10-30 02:45:16 +00:00
Mac Malone
4714f84fb9 fix: lake: do not delete path dependencies (#5878)
Fixes a serious issue where Lake would delete path dependencies when
attempting to cleanup a dependency required with an incorrect name.

Closes #5876. Originally part of #5684, but also independently
discovered by François.
2024-10-30 02:31:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5e7d02e4ea feat: Hashable (BitVec n) (#5881) 2024-10-30 02:26:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5357fd2369 chore: rename List.groupBy to splitBy (#5879)
This makes room for adding a function that returns a HashMap, parallel
to `Array.groupByKey` (which I may also rename to `Array.groupBy`.
2024-10-30 00:56:52 +00:00
えび (ebi_chan)
3450c2a8ac feat: add Nat.log2_two_pow (#5756) 2024-10-29 23:46:17 +00:00
Kyle Miller
95d3b4b58f chore: move MessageData.ofConstName earlier (#5877)
Makes `MessageData.ofConstName` available without needing to import the
pretty printer. Any code making use of `MessageData` can write `m!" ...
{.ofConstName n} ... "` to have the name print with hover information.
More error messages now have hover information.

* Now `.ofConstName` also has a boolean flag to make names print fully
qualified. Default: false.
* Now `.ofConstName` will sanitize names that aren't constants. It is OK
to use it in `"unknown constant '{.ofConstName constName}'"` errors.

Usability note: it is more user-friendly to have "has already been
declared" errors report the fully qualified name. For this, write
`m!"{.ofConstName n true} has already been declared"`.
2024-10-29 21:23:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
cdbe29b46d feat: accurate binder names in signatures (like in output of #check) (#5827)
An important part of the interface of a function is the parameter names,
for making used of named arguments. This PR makes the parameter names
print in a reliable way. The parameters of the type now appear as
hygienic names if they cannot be used as named arguments.

Modifies the heuristic for how parameters are chosen to appear before or
after the colon. The rule is now that parameters start appearing after
the colon at the first non-dependent non-instance-implicit parameter
that has a name unusable as a named argument. This is a refinement of
#2846.

Fixes the issue where consecutive hygienic names pretty print without a
space separating them, so we now have `(x✝ y✝ : Nat)` rather than `(x✝y✝
: Nat)`.

Breaking change: `Lean.PrettyPrinter.Formatter.pushToken` now takes an
additional boolean `ident` argument, which should be `true` for
identifiers. Used to insert discretionary space between consecutive
identifiers.

Closes #5810
2024-10-29 16:43:11 +00:00
Xin Hao
0d471513c5 fix: init git only not inside git work tree (#5789)
Addresses part of #2758.
2024-10-29 13:37:11 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
d23a231908 chore: update stage0 2024-10-29 12:02:31 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
6514385bb9 feat: attribute [simp ←] (#5870)
This adds the ability to add the converse direction of a rewrite rule
not just in simp arguments `simp [← thm]`, but also as a global
attribute

```lean
attribute [simp ←] thm
```

This fixes #5828.

This can be undone with `attribute [-simp]`, although note that
`[-simp]` wins and cannot be undone at the moment (#5868).

Like `simp [← thm]` (see #4290), this will do an implicit `attribute
[-simp] thm` if the other direction is already defined.
2024-10-29 11:07:08 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
4ee44ceb1d chore: update stage0 2024-10-29 00:17:47 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1437033e69 fix: prevent addPPExplicitToExposeDiff from assigning metavariables (#5276)
Type mismatch errors have a nice feature where expressions are annotated
with `pp.explicit` to expose differences via `isDefEq` checking.
However, this procedure has side effects since `isDefEq` may assign
metavariables. This PR wraps the procedure with `withoutModifyingState`
to prevent assignments from escaping.

Assignments can lead to confusing behavior. For example, in the
following a higher-order unification fails, but the difference-finding
procedure unifies metavariables in a naive way, producing a baffling
error message:
```lean
theorem test {f g : Nat → Nat} (n : Nat) (hfg : ∀a, f (g a) = a) :
    f (g n) = n := hfg n

example {g2 : ℕ → ℕ} (n2 : ℕ) : (λx => x * 2) (g2 n2) = n2 := by
  with_reducible refine test n2 ?_
  /-
  type mismatch
    test n2 ?m.648
  has type
    (fun x ↦ x * 2) (g2 n2) = n2 : Prop
  but is expected to have type
    (fun x ↦ x * 2) (g2 n2) = n2 : Prop
  -/
```
With the change, it now says `has type ?m.153 (?m.154 n2) = n2`.

Note: this uses `withoutModifyingState` instead of `withNewMCtxDepth`
because we want to know something about where `isDefEq` failed — we are
trying to simulate a very basic version of `isDefEq` for function
applications, and we want the state at the point of failure to know
which argument is "at fault".
2024-10-28 22:51:41 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b308f2bb55 fix: let simp arguments elaborate with error recovery (#5863)
Modifies `simp` to elaborate all simp arguments without disabling error
recovery. Like in #4177, simp arguments with elaboration errors are not
added to the simp set. Error recovery is still disabled when `simp` is
used in combinators such as `first`.

This enables better term info and features like tab completion when
there are elaboration errors.

Also included is a fix to the `all_goals` and `<;>` tactic combinators.
Recall that `try`/`catch` for the Tactic monad restores the state on
failure. This meant that all messages were being cleared on tactic
failure. The fix is to use `Tactic.tryCatch` instead, which doesn't
restore state.

Part of addressing #3831

Closes #4888
2024-10-28 21:39:03 +00:00
Kyle Miller
9eded87462 fix: remove withoutRecover from apply elaboration (#5862)
The assumptions behind disabling error recovery for the `apply` tactic
no longer seem to hold, since tactic combinators like `first` themselves
disable error recovery when it makes sense.

This addresses part of #3831

Breaking change: `elabTermForApply` no longer uses `withoutRecover`.
Tactics using `elabTermForApply` should evaluate whether it makes sense
to wrap it with `withoutRecover`, which is generally speaking when it's
used to elaborate identifiers.
2024-10-28 21:27:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
19bebfc22f feat: improved calc error messages (#5719)
Makes the error messages report on RHSs and LHSs that do not match the
expected values when the relations are defeq. If the relations are not
defeq, the error message now no longer mentions the value of the whole
`calc` expression.

Adds a field to `mkCoe` with an optional callback to use to generate
error messages.

Note: it is tempting to try to make use of expected types when
elaborating the `calc` expression, but this runs into issue #2073.

Closes #4318
2024-10-28 20:38:45 +00:00
Henrik Böving
c57d054b87 feat: support all the SMTLIB BitVec divison/remainder operations in bv_decide (#5869) 2024-10-28 16:37:06 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
2f1dc878e4 feat: add BitVec.(msb, getMsbD)_concat (#5865) 2024-10-28 12:10:02 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
f558402ab8 feat: add BitVec.[zero_ushiftRight|zero_sshiftRight|zero_mul] and cle… (#5858)
…an up BVDecide

- Fix names

  shiftLeft_zero_eq -> shiftLeft_zero
  ushiftRight_zero_eq -> ushiftRight_zero

- Remove duplicate prefixes

  BitVec.mul_zero -> mul_zero
  BitVec.mul_add  -> mul_add

- Adapt BVDecide/Normalize/BitVec by reusing the following functions

  zero_add | add_zero
  and_self
  mul_zero | zero_mul
  shiftLeft_zero | zero_shiftLeft
  sshiftRight_zero | zero_sshiftRight
  ushiftRight_zero | zero_ushiftRight
2024-10-28 08:47:29 +00:00
Kyle Miller
62521f4f2d fix: let congr conv tactic handle "over-applied" functions (#5861)
Adds ability to chain congruence lemmas when a function's arity is less
than the number of supplied arguments. This improves `congr` as well as
all conv tactics implemented using `congr`, like `arg` and `enter`.

(The non-conv `congr` tactic still needs to be fixed.)

Toward #2942.
2024-10-28 07:34:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
9847923f9b feat: record all structure parents in StructureInfo (#5853)
Followup to #5841. Makes the `structure` command populate the new
`parentInfo` field with all the structures in the `extends` clause.

This will require a stage0 update to fully take effect.

Breaking change: now it's a warning if a structure extends a parent
multiple times.

Breaking change: now `getParentStructures` is `getStructureSubobjects`.
Adds `getStructureParentInfo` for getting all the immediate parents.
Note that the set of subobjects is neither a subset nor a superset of
the immediate parents.

Closes #1881
2024-10-28 01:23:48 +00:00
Kyle Miller
709ea6cdf8 feat: make it possible to use dot notation in m! strings (#5857)
This default instance makes it possible to write things like `m!"the
constant is {.ofConstName n}"`.

Breaking change: This weakly causes terms to have a type of
`MessageData` if their type is otherwise unknown. For example:
* `m!"... {x} ..."` can cause `x` to have type `MessageData`, causing
the `let` definition of `x` to fail to elaborate. Fix: give `x` an
explicit type.
* Arithmetic expressions in `m!` strings may need a type ascription. For
example, if the type of `i` is unknown at the time the arithmetic
expression is elaborated, then `m!"... {i + 1} ..."` can fail saying
that it cannot find an `HAdd Nat Nat MessageData` instance. Two fixes:
either ensure that the type of `i` is known, or add a type ascription to
guide the `MessageData` coercion, like `m!"... {(i + 1 : Nat)} ..."`.
2024-10-27 22:55:29 +00:00
Henrik Böving
8c7f7484f9 feat: if support and more in bv_decide (#5855)
Using the same strategy as #5852 this provides `bv_decide` support for
`Bool` and `BitVec` ifs
this in turn instantly enables support for:
- `sdiv`
- `smod`
- `abs`

and thus closes our last discrepancies to QF_BV!
2024-10-27 08:40:38 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c50f04ace0 feat: add delaborators for <|>, <*>, >>, <*, and *> (#5854)
Closes #5668
2024-10-26 23:49:16 +00:00
Henrik Böving
8b5443eb22 feat: support BitVec.ofBool in bv_decide (#5852)
This is the first step towards fixing the issue of not having mutual
recursion between the `Bool` and `BitVec` fragment of `QF_BV` in
`bv_decide`. This PR adds support for `BitVec.ofBool` by doing the
following:
1. Introduce a new mechanism into the reification engine that allows us
to add additional lemmas to the top level on the fly as we are
traversing the expression tree.
2. If we encounter an expression `BitVec.ofBool boolExpr` we reify
`boolExpr` and then abstract `BitVec.ofBool boolExpr` as some atom `a`
3. We add two lemmas `boolExpr = true -> a = 1#1` and `boolExpr = false
-> a = 0#1`. This mirrors the full behavior of `BitVec.ofBool` and thus
makes our atom `a` correctly interpreted again.

In order to do the reification in step 2 mutual recursion in the
reification engine is required. For this reason I started pulling out
logic from the, now rather large, mutual block into other files and
document the invariants that they assume explicitly.
2024-10-26 19:08:07 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
08c36e4306 feat: add (msb, getMsbD)_twoPow (#5851) 2024-10-26 17:27:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
8f0328b777 fix: deprecations in Init.Data.Array.Basic (#5848) 2024-10-26 10:33:47 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
38490a4ac7 refactor: Predefinition.Structural code cleanup (#5850)
useful bits from the shelved #5849
2024-10-26 10:21:47 +00:00
Kyle Miller
13036655e9 fix: reduce types when constructing default values in structure instance notation (#5844)
A step of expanding structure instances is to determine all the default
values, and part of this is reducing projections that appear in the
default values so that they get replaced with the user-provided values.
Binder types in foralls, lambdas, and lets have to be reduced too.

Closes #2186
2024-10-26 00:45:21 +00:00
Kyle Miller
4068cf00ee chore: remove unnecessary private Inhabited instance (#5846)
Since `partial` inhabitation is stronger in #5821, this private instance
is no longer needed.
2024-10-25 23:31:18 +00:00
Kyle Miller
abe6d5bca7 fix: declaration ranges changed after stage0 update (#5845)
Recently declaration ranges have changed slightly to include attribute
lists. Fixes a test that broke.
2024-10-25 21:38:06 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
f292184642 chore: update stage0 2024-10-25 20:35:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a310488b7f chore: refactor structure command, fixes (#5842)
Refactors the `structure` command to support recursive structures. These
are disabled for now, pending additional elaborator support in #5822.
This refactor is also a step toward `structure` appearing in `mutual`
blocks.

Error reporting is now more precise, and this fixes an issue where
general errors could appear on the last field. Adds "don't know how to
synthesize placeholder" errors for default values.

Closes #2512
2024-10-25 19:46:17 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
57a95c8b5f test: test case for #5836 (#5843) 2024-10-25 19:34:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
266ae428dc feat: preliminary work for parent projections in StructureInfo (#5841)
This adds a `parentInfo` field to the `StructureInfo`, which will
eventually be populated with the actual parents of a structure. This is
work toward #1881. Also documents fields of the structure info data
structures.

Requires a stage0 update before the next steps.
2024-10-25 18:54:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4c0d12b3f1 chore: cleanup some deprecations in tests (#5834) 2024-10-25 11:11:22 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
748f0d6c15 fix: instantiateMVars slowdown in the language server (#5805)
Fixes #5614
2024-10-25 09:35:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
07ea626560 feat: Array.forIn', and relate to List (#5833)
Adds support for `for h : x in my_array do`, and relates this to the
existing `List` version.
2024-10-25 07:24:39 +00:00
Henrik Böving
193b6f2bec feat: define Int8 (#5790) 2024-10-25 06:06:40 +00:00
Yann Herklotz
19ce2040a2 fix: wildcard generalize only generalizes visible theorems (#4846)
`generalize ... at *` sometimes will try to modify the recursive
hypothesis corresponding to the current theorem being defined, which may
not be the expected behaviour. It should only try to `generalize`
hypotheses that it can actually modify and are visible, not
implementation details. Otherwise this means that there are
discrepancies between `generalize ... at *` and `generalize ... at H`,
even though `H` is the only hypothesis in the context.

This commit uses `getLocalHyps` instead of `getFVarIds` to get the
current valid `FVarIds` in the context. This uses
`isImplementationDetail` to filter out `FVarIds` that are implementation
details in the context and are not visible to the user and should not be
manipulated by `generalize`.

Closes #4845
2024-10-25 05:09:28 +00:00
Kim Morrison
059674d967 chore: minor fixes in Array lemmas (#5832) 2024-10-25 04:28:41 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
7150a0d538 fix: reduce let-bodies correctly in StructInst (#3152)
Closes #3146

Reduction doesn't trigger correctly on the bodies of `let`-expressions
in `StructInst`, leading some meta-variables to linger in the terms of
some fields. Because of this, default fields may try multiple times (and
fail) to be generated, leading to an unexpected error.

The solution implemented here is to modify the values of the introduced
variables in the local context so as to reduce them correctly.
2024-10-24 23:33:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
0725cd39a2 fix: liftCommandElabM now carries more state over (#5800)
The `liftCommandElabM : CommandElabM α -> CoreM α` function now carries
over macro scopes, the name generator, info trees, and messages.

Adds a flag `throwOnError`, which is true by default. When it is true,
then if the messages contain an error message, it is converted into an
exception. In this case, the infotrees and messages are not carried
over; the motivation is that `throwOnError` is likely used for synthetic
syntax, and so the info and messages on errors will just be noise.
2024-10-24 23:19:06 +00:00
Kyle Miller
e07272a53a chore: review delaborators, make sure they respond to pp.explicit (#5830)
Rule: if an expression contains an implicit argument that the
delaborator would omit, only use the delaborator if `pp.explicit` is
false.
2024-10-24 22:56:47 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9157c1f279 test: big_omega benchmark (#5817)
Extracted from #5614
2024-10-24 07:26:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
09e1a05ee9 chore: cleanup imports (#5825) 2024-10-23 23:51:13 +00:00
Henrik Böving
8822b0fca7 feat: bv_decide BitVec.sdiv (#5823) 2024-10-23 21:10:27 +00:00
Kyle Miller
249530f3c1 feat: partial inhabitation uses local Inhabited instances created from parameters (#5821)
Rather than having a special pass where `mkInhabitantFor` uses the
`assumption` tactic, it creates `Inhabited` instances for each parameter
and just searches for an `Inhabited`/`Nonempty` instance for the return
type.

This makes examples like the following work:
```lean
partial def f (x : X) : Bool × X := ...
```

Removes the strategy where it looks for `Inhabited`/`Nonempty` instances
for every suffix of the signature.

This is a follow-up to #5780. Motivated [by
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/113489-new-members/topic/Why.20return.20type.20of.20partial.20function.20MUST.20.60inhabited.60.3F/near/477905312).
2024-10-23 18:15:31 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
174a5f345a refactor: nicer modifiers/ranges API (#5788)
Cleanup of #5650 

* default `Modifiers.stx` to missing
* rename and clarify `addDeclarationRangesFromSyntax` as the main
convenience function for user metaprograms
2024-10-23 09:21:50 +00:00
Aaron Tomb
45b1b367ca test: add a benchmark that is slow to elaborate (#5656)
Add an example Lean file that includes an unusually large definition
that takes a long time to elaborate.

It may be that it's difficult to process it more efficiently, but
perhaps someone will discover a way to improve it if it's in the
benchmark suite. Improved performance on this benchmark will likely make
some program analysis and verification tasks within Lean more feasible.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-10-23 08:20:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c1143d9432 feat: more lemmas for List.modify (#5816) 2024-10-23 06:45:20 +00:00
Kyle Miller
66dbad911e fix: improve error message for partial inhabitation and add delta deriving (#5780)
Example new output:
```text
failed to compile 'partial' definition 'checkMyList', could not prove that the type
  ListNode → Bool × ListNode
is nonempty.

This process uses multiple strategies:
- It looks for a parameter that matches the return type.
- It tries synthesizing 'Inhabited' and 'Nonempty' instances for the return type.
- It tries unfolding the return type.

If the return type is defined using the 'structure' or 'inductive' command, you can try
adding a 'deriving Nonempty' clause to it.
```
The inhabitation prover now also unfolds definitions when trying to
prove inhabitation. For example,
```lean
def T (α : Type) := α × α

partial def f (n : Nat) : T Nat := f n
```

Motivated [by
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/113489-new-members/topic/Why.20return.20type.20of.20partial.20function.20MUST.20.60inhabited.60.3F/near/477905312)
2024-10-23 06:32:11 +00:00
FR
fad57cf5a2 chore: remove redundant Decidable assumptions (#5812) 2024-10-23 04:52:54 +00:00
Kyle Miller
83129b7e3a fix: inductive elaboration should keep track of universe level parameters created in binders (#5814)
Refactors `inductive` elaborator to keep track of universe level
parameters created during elaboration of `variable`s and binders. This
fixes an issue in Mathlib where its `Type*` elaborator can result in
unexpected universe levels.

For example, in
```lean4
variable {F : Type*}
inductive I1 (A B : Type*) (x : F) : Type
```
before this change the signature would be
```
I1.{u_1, u_2} {F : Type u_1} (A : Type u_1) (B : Type u_2) (x : F) : Type
```
but now it is
```
I1.{u_1, u_2, u_3} {F : Type u_1} (A : Type u_2) (B : Type u_3) (x : F) : Type
```
Fixes this for the `axiom` elaborator too.

Adds more accurate universe level validation for mutual inductives.

Breaking change: removes `Lean.Elab.Command.expandDeclId`. Use
`Lean.Elab.Term.expandDeclId` from within `runCommandElabM`.
2024-10-23 04:07:40 +00:00
Kyle Miller
fa711253d6 feat: improved error message for unfold (#5815)
When `unfold` is trying to unfold a local variable that's not a local
definition, throws an error.

For issue from
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/270676-lean4/topic/Unqualified.20unfold.20no.20longer.20works/near/478387250)
2024-10-23 03:35:15 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
eddbdd77b8 doc: refine rwa docstring (#5811)
fixes #5792
2024-10-22 16:02:39 +00:00
Markus Himmel
f0c190239a feat: compile against Windows SDK headers under Windows (#5753)
Breaking changes:

To build Lean from source on Windows, it is now necessary to install the
[Windows
SDK](https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/windows-sdk/).
The build instructions have been updated to reflect this. Note that the
Windows SDK is **not** needed to compile Lean programs using a Lean
toolchain obtained using `elan`. The Windows SDK is only needed to build
Lean itself from source.

Furthermore, we are dropping support for Windows versions older than
Windows 10 1903 (released in May 2019).

No Windows version that is still supported by Microsoft as part of
mainstream support is affected by this.

The following Windows versions are still supported by Microsoft as part
of commercial extended support but are no longer supported by Lean:

- Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2015
- Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2016
- Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2019
- Windows Server 2019
2024-10-22 13:00:02 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
bab6aff173 chore: nix-ci.yml: fix test-results.xml path (#5804) 2024-10-22 11:18:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5bea46deb0 fix: FunInd: withLetDecl and mkLetVar don’t mix (#5803)
Fixes: #5767
2024-10-22 10:15:14 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
462e52d0c0 feat: use "eureka!" icon for theorem completions (#5801)
It's difficult to distinguish theorems from regular definitions in the
completion menu, which is annoying when using completion for searching
one or the other. This PR makes theorem completions use the "Eureka!"
icon (![eureka
icon](https://code.visualstudio.com/assets/docs/editor/intellisense/symbol-event.svg))
to distinguish them more clearly from other completions.

NB: We are very limited in terms of which icons we can pick here since
[the completion kinds provided by LSP / VS
Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/intellisense#_types-of-completions)
are optimized for object-oriented programming languages, but I think
this choice strikes a nice balance between being easy to identify,
having some visual connection to theorem proving and not being used a
lot in other languages and thus not clashing with pre-existing
associations.
2024-10-22 10:07:37 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d0abe1d382 fix: restore synchronous fast-forwarding path in language processor (#5802)
Between #3106 and this, it was possible that reparsing the file up to
the current position was stuck waiting in the threadpool queue,
displaying a yellow bar and not displaying any info on the unchanged
prefix.
2024-10-22 09:50:30 +00:00
Eric Wieser
f752ce2db9 doc: stub for ellipsis notation (#5794)
This is certainly better than no documentation, though it's not obvious
to me whether the `_` insertion is greedy, lazy, or somewhere in
between.
2024-10-22 01:33:46 +00:00
Kim Morrison
07c09ee579 feat: relate Array.forIn and List.forIn (#5799) 2024-10-22 01:20:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
919f64b2e6 chore: upstream List.modify, add lemmas, relate to Array.modify (#5798)
Note that the order of arguments still differs between `List.modify` and
`Array.modify`. I'll settle this later.
2024-10-22 01:01:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
71122696a1 feat: rename Array.shrink to take, and relate to List.take (#5796) 2024-10-21 23:35:32 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
8d789f7b63 feat: add BitVec.toInt_sub, simplify BitVec.toInt_neg (#5772)
This also requires us to expand the theory of `Int.bmod`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
2024-10-21 22:38:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
82d31a1793 perf: has_univ_mvar, has_univ_mvar, and has_fvar in C++ (#5793)
`instantiate_mvars` is now implemented in C/C++, and makes many calls to
`has_fvar`, `has_mvar`. The new C/C++ implementations are inlined and
avoid unnecessary RC inc/decs.
2024-10-21 16:56:30 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
76164b284b fix: RecursorVal.getInduct to return name of major argument’s type (#5679)
Previously `RecursorVal.getInduct` would return the prefix of the
recursor’s name, which is unlikely the right value for the “derived”
recursors in nested recursion. The code using `RecursorVal.getInduct`
seems to expect the name of the inductive type of major argument here.

If we return that name, this fixes #5661.

This bug becomes more visible now that we have structural mutual
recursion.

Also, to avoid confusion, renames the function to ``getMajorInduct`.
2024-10-21 08:45:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
51377afd6c feat: simp lemmas for Array.isEqv and beq (#5786)
- [ ] depends on: #5785
2024-10-21 07:37:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6f642abe70 feat: Nat.forall_lt_succ and variants (#5785) 2024-10-21 06:51:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8151ac79d6 chore: Array cleanup (#5782)
More cleanup of Array API. More to come.
2024-10-21 06:00:37 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4f18c29cb4 chore: make 'while' available earlier (#5784) 2024-10-21 05:56:37 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5d155d8b02 chore: simplify signature of Array.mapIdx (#5749)
This PR simplifies the signature of `Array.mapIdx`, to take a function
`f : Nat \to \a \to \b` rather than a function `f : Fin as.size \to \a
\to \b`.

Lean doesn't actually use the extra generality anywhere (so in fact this
change *simplifies* all the call sites of `Array.mapIdx`, since we no
longer need to throw away the proof).

This change would make the function signature equivalent to
`List.mapIdx`, hence making it easier to write verification lemmas.

We keep the original behaviour as `Array.mapFinIdx`.
2024-10-21 05:48:42 +00:00
Henrik Böving
def81076de feat: bv_decide introduces uninterpreted symbols everywhere (#5781)
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-10-20 21:01:21 +00:00
Kyle Miller
46f1335b80 fix: have Lake not create core aliases into Lake namespace (#5688)
This replaces `export Lean (Name NameMap)` and `export System
(SearchPath FilePath)` with the relevant `open` commands. This fixes
docgen output so that it can refer to, for example, `Lean.Name` instead
of `Lake.Name`.

The reason for these `export`s was convenience: by doing `open Lake` you
could get these aliases for free. However, aliases affect pretty
printing, and the Lake aliases took precedence. We don't want to disable
pretty printing re-exported names because this can be a valid pattern
(names could incrementally get re-exported from namespace to parent
namespace).

In the future we might implement a feature to be able to `scoped open`
some names.

Breaking change: Lakefiles that refer to `FilePath` may need to change
this to `System.FilePath` or otherwise add `open System (FilePath)`.

Closes #2524
2024-10-20 18:40:44 +00:00
Kyle Miller
682173d7c0 feat: #version command (#5768)
Prints `Lean.versionString` and target/platform information. Example:
```
Lean 4.12.0, commit 8218940152
Target: arm64-apple-darwin23.5.0 macOS
```
2024-10-18 20:17:52 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
26df545598 fix: structural nested recursion confused when nested type appears first (#5766)
this fixes #5726
2024-10-18 19:41:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
11ae8bae42 fix: include references in attributes in call hierarchy (#5650)
By ensuring all `declModifiers` are included in `addDeclarationRanges`,
`implementedBy` references etc are included in the call hierarchy
2024-10-18 15:38:32 +00:00
Henrik Böving
a167860e3b chore: @hargoniX Std.Sat codeowner, fix Kim's user name (#5765) 2024-10-18 11:13:28 +00:00
Markus Himmel
cc76496050 chore: check-prelude also for Std (#5764) 2024-10-18 10:53:52 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
41b35baea2 fix: duplicate info trees from IO.processCommandsIncrementally (#5763)
As reported in https://github.com/leanprover-community/repl/pull/57
2024-10-18 10:17:30 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a6243f6076 chore: deprecation for Array.data (#5687) 2024-10-18 03:16:38 +00:00
Kyle Miller
fd15d8f9ed feat: Lean.Expr.name? (#5760)
Adds a recognizer for `Name` literal expressions. Handles `Name`
constructors as well as the `Lean.Name.mkStr*` functions.
2024-10-18 02:40:26 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1d66ff8231 fix: app unexpander for sorryAx (#5759)
Fixes a long-standing bug in the the `sorryAx` app unexpander that
prevented it from applying. Now `sorry` pretty prints as `sorry`.
2024-10-18 01:44:52 +00:00
Kim Morrison
51ab162a5a chore: upstream Array.reduceOption (#5758) 2024-10-18 00:41:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
41797a78c3 chore: deprecate Nat.sum (#5746) 2024-10-18 00:03:36 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
d6a7eb3987 feat: add Hashable instance for Char (#5747)
I needed this in downstream code, and it seems to make the most sense to
just contribute it here.
2024-10-17 14:46:10 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
fc5e3cc66e fix: do not force snapshot tree too early (#5752)
This turns out to be the issue behind #5736, though really it is yet
another indicator of a general thread pool weakness.
2024-10-17 12:23:34 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
372f344155 fix: some goal state issues (#5677)
This PR resolves the following issues related to goal state display:
1. In a new line after a `case` tactic with a completed proof, the state
of the proof in the `case` would be displayed, not the proof state after
the `case`
1. In the range of `next =>` / `case' ... =>`, the state of the proof in
the corresponding case would not be displayed, whereas this is true for
`case`
1. In the `suffices ... by` tactic, the tactic state of the `by` block
was not displayed after the `by` and before the first tactic

The incorrect goal state after `case` was caused by `evalCase` adding a
`TacticInfo` with the full block proof state for the full range of the
`case` block that the goal state selection has no means of
distinguishing from the `TacticInfo` with the same range that contains
the state after the whole `case` block. Narrowing the range of this
`TacticInfo` to `case ... =>` fixed this issue.

The lack of a case proof state on `next =>` was caused by the `case`
syntax that `next` expands to receiving noncanonical synthetic
`SourceInfo`, which is usually ignored by the language server. Adding a
token antiquotation for `next` fixed this issue.

The lack of a case proof state on `case' ... =>` was caused by
`evalCase'` not adding a `TacticInfo` with the full block state to the
range of `case' ... =>`. Adding this `TacticInfo` fixed this issue.

The tactic state of the block not being displayed after the `by` was
caused by the macro expansion of `suffices` to `have` not transferring
the trailing whitespace of the `by`. Ensuring that this trailing
whitespace information is transferred fixed this issue.

Fixes #2881.
2024-10-17 12:09:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f2ac0d03c6 perf: do not lint unused variables defined in tactics by default (#5338)
Should ensure we visit at most as many expr nodes as in the final expr
instead of many possibly overlapping mvar assignments. This is likely
the only way we can ensure acceptable performance in all cases.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-10-17 09:55:11 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
08d8a0873e doc: remove docstring from implicitDefEqProofs (#5751)
this option was added in fb97275dcb to
prepare for #4595, due to boostrapping issues, but #4595 has not landed
yet. This is be very confusing when people discover this option and try
to use it (as I did).

So let's clearly mark this as not yet implemented on `master`, and add
the
docstring only with #4595.
2024-10-17 09:38:52 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
68b0471de9 chore: remove SplitIf.ext cache (#5571)
Incompatible as is with parallelism; let's first check if it has any
impact at all
2024-10-17 09:36:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3a34a8e0d1 chore: move Array.mapIdx lemmas to new file (#5748) 2024-10-17 05:54:25 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6fa75e346a chore: upstream List.foldxM_map (#5697) 2024-10-17 04:30:08 +00:00
Eric Wieser
2669fb525f feat: change lake new math to use autoImplicit false (#5715)
The reality is that almost every math project uses this setting already,
even if it is not the default:

*
36b7d4a6d0/lakefile.lean (L7)
*
9ea3a96243/lakefile.lean (L45)
*
97755eaae3/lakefile.toml (L6)
*
fb92dbf97f/lakefile.lean (L7)
*
c8569b3d39/lakefile.toml (L6)
*
c7fae107fd/lakefile.lean (L8)
*
1d891c770d/lakefile.lean (L27)

The fact that MIL uses it is particularly notable, as it means that
newcomers have an unexpected surprise when they want to take on a brand
new project.

---

I don't know whether this is `chore`, `feat`, `fix`, `refactor`, or
something else.
2024-10-17 04:29:48 +00:00
Eric Wieser
8632b79023 doc: point out that OfScientific is called with raw literals (#5725) 2024-10-17 04:29:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e8970463d1 fix: change String.dropPrefix? signature (#5745) 2024-10-17 03:51:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
69e8cd3d8a chore: cleanup in Array/Lemmas (#5744) 2024-10-17 03:36:26 +00:00
Kim Morrison
565ac23b78 chore: move Antisymm to Std.Antisymm (#5740) 2024-10-17 02:26:55 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c1750f4316 chore: upstream basic material on Sum (#5741) 2024-10-17 01:27:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
092c87a70f chore: upstream ne_of_apply_ne (#5743) 2024-10-17 01:24:01 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b8fc6c593a chore: upstream ne_of_mem_of_not_mem (#5742) 2024-10-17 01:18:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7c2425605c chore: upstream material on Prod (#5739) 2024-10-16 23:03:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3f7854203a chore: rename List.pure to List.singleton (#5732) 2024-10-16 22:11:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
79583d63f3 fix: don't block on snapshot tree if tracing is not enabled (#5736)
While there appears to be an underlying issue of blocking tasks that
this specific PR is not resolving, it should alleviate the problems
described in
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/reliable.20file.20desync.20on.20Linux.20Mint
as it effectively reverts the relevant change introduced in 4.13.0-rc1
when the trace option is not set.
2024-10-16 13:12:42 +00:00
Henrik Böving
741040d296 feat: UIntX.[val_ofNat, toBitVec_ofNat] (#5735) 2024-10-16 12:39:41 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
b69377cc42 feat: add BitVec.(getMSbD, msb)_(add, sub) and BitVec.getLsbD_sub (#5691)
Since `getMsbD_add`, `getMsbD_sub`, `getLsbD_sub`, `msb_sub` , `msb_add`
depend on `getLsbD_add` (which lives in`BitBlast.lean`) and on each
other, I put all of these in `BitBlast.lean`.
2024-10-16 11:47:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ef05bdc449 chore: rename List.bind and Array.concatMap to flatMap (#5731) 2024-10-16 11:30:49 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
50594aa932 chore: update stage0 2024-10-16 13:35:31 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
032c0257c3 feat: DiscrTree: index the domain of
It bothered me that inferring instances of the shape `Decidable (∀ (x : Fin _), _)`
will go linearly through all instances of that shape, even those that are
about `∀ (x : Nat), …`. And that  `Decidable (∃ (x : Fin _), _)` gets better
indexing than `Decidable (∀ (x : Fin _), _)`.

Judging from code comments, the discr tree used to index arrow types
with two arguments (domain and body), and that led to bugs due to the
dependency, so the arguments were removed. But it seems that indexing
the domain is completely simple and innocent.

So let’s see what happens…

Mostly only insignificant perf improvements, unfortunately (~Mathlib.Data.Matroid.IndepAxioms — instructions -11.4B, overall build instructions -0.097 %):
http://speed.lean-fro.org/mathlib4/compare/dd333cc1-fa26-42f2-96c6-b0e66047d0b6/to/6875ff8f-a17c-431d-8b8b-2f00799be794

This is just a small baby step compared to the more invasive improvements
done in the [`RefinedDiscrTree` by  J. W. Gerbscheid](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Mathlib/Tactic/FunProp/RefinedDiscrTree.html) in mathlib.
2024-10-16 13:35:31 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
a2d2977228 fix: ac_nf0, simp_arith: don't tempt the kernel to reduce atoms (#5708)
this fixes #5699 and fixes #5384.
2024-10-16 08:52:58 +00:00
Jerry Wu
b333de1a36 fix: make applyEdit optional in WorkspaceClientCapabilities of LSP (#5224)
The `applyEdit` field should be optional in
`WorkspaceClientCapabilities` by the LSP spec and some clients don't
populate it in requests

Closes #4541
2024-10-16 08:38:11 +00:00
Henrik Böving
19e06acc65 refactor: redefine unsigned fixed width integers in terms of BitVec (#5323)
I made a few choices so far that can probably be discussed:
- got rid of `modn` on `UInt`, nobody seems to use it apart from the
definition of `shift` which can use normal `mod`
- removed the previous defeq optimized definition of `USize.size` in
favor for a normal one. The motivation was to allow `OfNat` to work
which doesn't seem to be necessary anymore afaict.
- Minimized uses of `.val`, should we maybe mark it deprecated?
- Mostly got rid of `.val` in basically all theorems as the proper next
level of API would now be `.toBitVec`. We could probably re-prove them
but it would be more annoying given the change of definition.
- Did not yet redefine `log2` in terms of `BitVec` as this would require
a `log2` in `BitVec` as well, do we want this?
- I added a couple of theorems around the relation of `<` on `UInt` and
`Nat`. These were previously not needed because defeq was used all over
the place to save us. I did not yet generalize these to all types as I
wasn't sure if they are the appropriate lemma that we want to have.
2024-10-16 07:28:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a04b476431 chore: remove instBEqNat, which is redundant with instBEqOfDecidableEq but not defeq (#5694) 2024-10-16 04:42:22 +00:00
Kyle Miller
eea953b94f feat: push/pop tactic API (#5720)
Adds `pushGoal`/`pushGoals` and `popGoal` for manipulating the goal
state. These are an alternative to `replaceMainGoal` and `getMainGoal`,
and with them you don't need to worry about making sure nothing clears
assigned metavariables from the goal list between assigning the main
goal and using `replaceMainGoal`.

Modifies `closeMainGoalUsing`, which is like a `TacticM` version of
`liftMetaTactic`. Now the callback is run in a context where the main
goal is removed from the goal list, and the callback is free to modify
the goal list. Furthermore, the `checkUnassigned` argument has been
replaced with `checkNewUnassigned`, which checks whether the value
assigned to the goal has any *new* metavariables, relative to the start
of execution of the callback. This API is sufficient for the `exact`
tactic for example.

Modifies `withCollectingNewGoalsFrom` to take the `parentTag` argument
explicitly rather than indirectly via `getMainTag`. This is needed when
used under `closeMainGoalUsing`.

Modifies `elabTermWithHoles` to optionally take `parentTag?`. It
defaults to `getMainTag` if it is `none`.

Renames `Tactic.tryCatch` to `Tactic.tryCatchRestore`, and adds a
`Tactic.tryCatch` that doesn't do backtracking.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-10-16 03:54:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
dec1262697 chore: upstream classical tactic (#5730) 2024-10-16 03:35:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
487c2a937a feat: Expr helper functions (#5729)
`getNumHeadForalls` and `getNumHeadLambdas` were both duplicated
downstream with different names; I'll clean up those next.

Also adds `getAppNumArgs'`.
2024-10-16 03:07:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
831fa0899f chore: upstream String.dropPrefix? (#5728)
Useful String helper functions widely used in tactic implementations.
2024-10-16 02:41:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
94053c9b1b chore: make getIntrosize public (#5727)
This is the most popular target of `open private`, and seems a
reasonable part of the public API.
2024-10-16 02:35:12 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
94b1e512da fix: simpproc to reduce Fin literals consistently (#5632)
previously, it would not reduce `25 : Fin 25` to  `0 : Fin 25`.

fixes #5630
2024-10-15 15:59:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5a87b104f6 refactor: remove mkRecursorInfoForKernelRec (#5681)
it seems to be unused, arguably even for kernel recursors their type
should be usable with `mkRecursorInfo`, and removing this will help
understand the impact of #5679.
2024-10-15 15:59:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
dc83a607b2 fix: List.drop_drop addition order (#5716) 2024-10-15 10:14:02 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
7234ab79ed feat: add BitVec.sdiv_[zero|one|self] theorems (#5718)
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
2024-10-15 09:47:21 +00:00
Markus Himmel
c27e671036 chore: rename instDecidableEqQuotientOfDecidableEquiv to Quotient.decidableEq (#5722)
Mathlib has a duplicate of this instance as `Quotient.decidableEq` (with
the same implementation) and refers to it by name a few times, so let's
just rename our version to the mathlib name so that the copy in mathlib
can be dropped.
2024-10-15 09:46:25 +00:00
Alex Keizer
94dd1d61bd feat: bv_decide inequality regression tests (#5714)
This takes a few standalone bitvector problems, about inequalties, from
LNSym, and adds them as a benchmark to prevent further regressions with
bv_decide.

These problems are particularly interesting, because they've previously
had a bad interaction with bv_decides normalization pass, see
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues/5664.

---------

Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-10-15 08:51:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4409e39c43 chore: upstream List.sum, planning to later deprecate Nat.sum (#5703) 2024-10-15 08:41:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0bfe1a8c1a chore: better default value for Array.swapAt! (#5705) 2024-10-15 01:18:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a026bc7edb feat: let dot notation see through CoeFun instances (#5692)
Projects like mathlib like to define projection functions with extra
structure, for example one could imagine defining `Multiset.card :
Multiset α →+ Nat`, which bundles the fact that `Multiset.card (m1 + m2)
= Multiset.card m1 + Multiset.card m2` for all `m1 m2 : Multiset α`. A
problem though is that so far this has prevented dot notation from
working: you can't write `(m1 + m2).card = m1.card + m2.card`.

With this PR, now you can. The way it works is that "LValue resolution"
will apply CoeFun instances when trying to resolve which argument should
receive the object of dot notation.

A contrived-yet-representative example:
```lean
structure Equiv (α β : Sort _) where
  toFun : α → β
  invFun : β → α

infixl:25 " ≃ " => Equiv

instance: CoeFun (α ≃ β) fun _ => α → β where
  coe := Equiv.toFun

structure Foo where
  n : Nat

def Foo.n' : Foo ≃ Nat := ⟨Foo.n, Foo.mk⟩

variable (f : Foo)
#check f.n'
-- Foo.n'.toFun f : Nat
```

Design note 1: While LValue resolution attempts to make use of named
arguments when positional arguments cannot be used, when we apply CoeFun
instances we disallow making use of named arguments. The rationale is
that argument names for CoeFun instances tend to be random, which could
lead dot notation randomly succeeding or failing. It is better to be
uniform, and so it uniformly fails in this case.

Design note 2: There is a limitation in that this will *not* make use of
the values of any of the provided arguments when synthesizing the CoeFun
instances (see the tests for an example), since argument elaboration
takes place after LValue resolution. However, we make sure that
synthesis will fail rather than choose the wrong CoeFun instance.

Performance note: Such instances will be synthesized twice, once during
LValue resolution, and again when applying arguments.

This also adds in a small optimization to the parameter list computation
in LValue resolution so that it lazily reduces when a relevant parameter
hasn't been found yet, rather than using `forallTelescopeReducing`. It
also switches to using `forallMetaTelescope` to make sure the CoeFun
synthesis will fail if multiple instances could apply.

Getting this to pretty print will be deferred to future work.

Closes #1910
2024-10-14 21:49:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
36c2511b27 feat: options pp.mvars.anonymous and pp.mvars.levels (#5711)
Gives more control over pretty printing metavariables.

- When `pp.mvars.levels` is false, then universe level metavariables
pretty print as `_` rather than `?u.22`
- When `pp.mvars.anonymous` is false, then anonymous metavariables
pretty print as `?_` rather than `?m.22`. Named metavariables still
pretty print with their names. When this is false, it also sets
`pp.mvars.levels` to false, since every level metavariable is anonymous.
- When `pp.mvars` is false, then all metavariables pretty print as `?_`
or `_`.

Modifies TryThis to use `pp.mvars.anonymous` rather than doing a
post-delaboration modification. This incidentally improves TryThis since
it now prints universe level metavariables as `_` rather than `?u.22`.
2024-10-14 21:44:15 +00:00
Henrik Böving
adfbc56f91 chore: disable ac_nf by default (#5673)
We trust that the users read the error messages or tactic docs to
discover the option.
AWS problems have shown that this can be too eager of an operation to
do.
Given that we have the luxury of interactivity let's go for an approach
where the users
can optionally enable it.
2024-10-14 21:23:18 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
9f8ce47699 feat: add BitVec.[udiv|umod]_[zero|one|self] theorems (#5712)
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
2024-10-14 20:27:05 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3d175ab25f fix: the elaboration warning did not mention pp.maxSteps (#5710)
This also adds in the tip that hovering over `⋯` gives the option that
led to its presence.
2024-10-14 17:28:28 +00:00
Henrik Böving
9b6696be1d feat: use libuv for tempfiles (#5135)
This is currently broken because of linker issues. CC @TwoFX

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
2024-10-14 13:56:56 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
057482eb1c feat: denote deprecations in completion items (#5707)
This PR ensures that deprecated declarations are displayed with a
strikethrough markup in the completion popup of VS Code and that the
docstring of a completion item denotes the meta-data of the deprecation.
2024-10-14 13:05:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
16e2a785aa chore: remove @[simp] from Option.isSome_eq_isSome (#5704) 2024-10-14 12:28:43 +00:00
Johan Commelin
2580694e26 chore: mark prefix_append_right_inj as simp lemma (#5706) 2024-10-14 11:49:38 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9ec29b4e3a chore: update stage0 2024-10-14 22:28:12 +11:00
Kim Morrison
aa2360a41d chore: rename List.join to List.flatten
one more

one more

one more

fix test
2024-10-14 22:28:12 +11:00
Siddharth
65637b7683 feat: lemmas about BitVector arithmetic inequalities (#5646)
These lemmas are peeled from `leanprover/lnsym`.
Moreover, note that these lemmas only hold when we do not have overflow
in their operands, and thus, we are able to treat the operands as if
they were 'regular' natural numbers.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-10-14 08:14:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
20ea855e50 feat: upstream List.mapIdx, and add lemmas (#5696) 2024-10-14 07:25:02 +00:00
Kim Morrison
225e08965d chore: import orphaned Lean.Replay (#5693)
As noticed on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.E2.9C.94.20Reverse.20FFI.20undefined.20reference.20for.20mathlib/near/475824204).
2024-10-14 01:29:03 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
7fd2aa04ae chore: move BitVec.udiv/umod/sdiv/smod after add/sub/mul/lt (#5623)
Divison proofs are more likely to depend on add/sub/mul proofs than the
other way around. This cleans up
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5609, which added division
proofs that rely on negation to already be defined.
2024-10-13 20:11:31 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
47e0430b07 feat: complete BitVec.[getMsbD|getLsbD|msb] for shifts (#5604)
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-10-13 17:45:19 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
5d6553029c feat: expand relationship with BitVec and toFin (#5680) 2024-10-13 16:28:28 +00:00
James Oswald
1d8555fe0b fix: help message flags, removes -f flag and adds -g flag (#5685)
Closes #5682

- Removes the broken `-f` flag from the help message which doesn't
behave as expected as an alternative to `--features`.
- Adds the `-g` flag to the help message which is a working alternative
to the `--githash` flag.
2024-10-13 06:37:09 +00:00
Mac Malone
068208091f refactor: lake: restrict cache fetch to leanprover* (#5642)
Lake will now only automatically fetch Reservoir build caches for
package in the the `leanprover` and `leanprover-community`
organizations. We are not planning to expand the Reservoir build cache
to other packages until farther in the future.
2024-10-12 22:56:49 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
a3bc4d2359 fix: make IO-bound tasks dedicated (#5678)
This PR ensures that all I/O-bound tasks in the language server use
dedicated tasks.
2024-10-11 15:23:11 +00:00
Henrik Böving
087219bf5d feat: make bv_decide error when the LRAT proof is invalid (#5676) 2024-10-11 15:04:23 +00:00
Henrik Böving
e5bbda1c3d fix: context tracking in bv_decide counter example (#5675)
Closes #5674.
2024-10-11 08:57:06 +00:00
Kyle Miller
742ca6afa7 feat: support let rec in #eval (#5663)
Makes `#eval` use the `elabMutualDef` machinery to process all the `let
rec`s that might appear in the expression. This now works:
```lean
#eval
  let rec fact (n : Nat) : Nat :=
    match n with
    | 0 => 1
    | n' + 1 => n * fact n'
  fact 5
```

Closes #2374
2024-10-11 06:46:16 +00:00
Kyle Miller
fe0fbc6bf7 feat: decide! tactic for using kernel reduction (#5665)
The `decide!` tactic is like `decide`, but when it tries reducing the
`Decidable` instance it uses kernel reduction rather than the
elaborator's reduction.

The kernel ignores transparency, so it can unfold all definitions (for
better or for worse). Furthermore, by using kernel reduction we can
cache the result as an auxiliary lemma — this is more efficient than
`decide`, which needs to reduce the instance twice: once in the
elaborator to check whether the tactic succeeds, and once again in the
kernel during final typechecking.

While RFC #5629 proposes a `decide!` that skips checking altogether
during elaboration, with this PR's `decide!` we can use `decide!` as
more-or-less a drop-in replacement for `decide`, since the tactic will
fail if kernel reduction fails.

This PR also includes two small fixes:
- `blameDecideReductionFailure` now uses `withIncRecDepth`.
- `Lean.Meta.zetaReduce` now instantiates metavariables while zeta
reducing.

Some profiling:
```lean
set_option maxRecDepth 2000
set_option trace.profiler true
set_option trace.profiler.threshold 0

theorem thm1 : 0 < 1 := by decide!
theorem thm1' : 0 < 1 := by decide
theorem thm2 : ∀ x < 400, x * x ≤ 160000 := by decide!
theorem thm2' : ∀ x < 400, x * x ≤ 160000 := by decide
/-
[Elab.command] [0.003655] theorem thm1 : 0 < 1 := by decide!
[Elab.command] [0.003164] theorem thm1' : 0 < 1 := by decide
[Elab.command] [0.133223] theorem thm2 : ∀ x < 400, x * x ≤ 160000 := by decide!
[Elab.command] [0.252310] theorem thm2' : ∀ x < 400, x * x ≤ 160000 := by decide
-/
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-10-11 06:40:57 +00:00
Kyle Miller
8e88e8061a chore: deprecate := variants of inductive and structure (#5542)
Deprecates `inductive ... :=`, `structure ... :=`, and `class ... :=` in
favor of the `... where` variant. Currently this syntax produces a
warning, controlled by the `linter.deprecated` option.

Breaking change: modifies `Lean.Linter.logLintIf` to use
`Lean.Linter.getLinterValue` to determine if a linter value is set. This
means that the `linter.all` option now is taken into account when the
linter option is not set.

Part of #5236
2024-10-11 05:54:18 +00:00
Henrik Böving
96e996e16d feat: ~~~(-x) bv_decide (#5670)
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
2024-10-10 19:44:31 +00:00
Kyle Miller
4614b758e1 fix: make @[elab_as_elim] require at least one discriminant (#5671)
This is an oversight in `getElabElimExprInfo`. If there are no
discriminants, then there is no point in elaborating as an eliminator.
2024-10-10 17:20:35 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
3930100b67 feat: whitespace tactic completion & tactic completion docs (#5666)
This PR enables tactic completion in the whitespace of a tactic proof
and adds tactic docstrings to the completion menu.

Future work:
- A couple of broken tactic completions: This is due to tactic
completion now using @david-christiansen's `Tactic.Doc.allTacticDocs` to
obtain the tactic docstrings and should be fixed soon.
- Whitespace tactic completion in tactic combinators: This requires
changing the syntax of tactic combinators to produce a syntax node that
makes it clear that a tactic is expected at the given position.

Closes #1651.
2024-10-10 13:28:34 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d10d41bc07 fix: store local context for 'don't know how to synthesize implicit argument' errors (#5658)
When named arguments introduce eta arguments, the full application
contains fvars for these eta arguments, so `MVarErrorKind.implicitArg`
needs to keep a local context for its error messages. This is because
the local context of the mvar associated to the `MVarErrorKind` is not
sufficient, since when an eta argument come after an implicit argument,
the implicit argument's mvar doesn't contain the eta argument's fvar in
its local context.

Closes #5475
2024-10-09 08:40:21 +00:00
Kyle Miller
79930af11e feat: allow explicit mode with field notation (#5528)
Now one can write `@x.f`, `@(x).f`, `@x.1`, `@(x).1`, and so on.

This fixes an issue where structure instance update notation (like `{x
with a := a'}`) could fail if the field `a` had a type with implicit,
optional, or auto parameters.

Closes #5406
2024-10-09 07:03:46 +00:00
Eric Wieser
b814be6d6a fix: use MessageData.tagged to mark maxHeartbeat exceptions (#5566)
Fixes #5565, by using tags instead of trying to string match on a
`MessageData`. This ends up reverting some unwanted test output changes
from #4781 too.

This changes `isMaxRecDepth` for good measure too.

This was a regression in Lean 4.11.0, so may be worth backporting to
4.12.x, if not also 4.11.x.
2024-10-09 02:08:50 +00:00
Kyle Miller
feb8185a83 fix: upgrade instance synth order issues to hard errors (#5399)
Motivated [by a user's
question](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Confusing.20instance.20error/near/471539940),
this increases the severity of the "cannot find synthesization order"
message from a log error to throwing an exception. This saves some
confusion about whether the instance was added or not.
2024-10-08 23:29:59 +00:00
Mac Malone
7942b9eaae fix: lake: make package extraDep intransitive (#5641)
A Lake build of target within a a package will no longer build a
package's dependencies package-level extra targets dependencies. At the
technical level, a package's `extraDep` facet no longer transitively
builds its dependencies' `extraDep` facet.

Closes #5633.
2024-10-08 23:20:05 +00:00
Kyle Miller
15bb8a26d5 fix: have simpa ... using ... do exact-like checks (#5648)
Closes #5634. Before assigning the simplified `using` clause expression
to the goal, this adds a check that the expression has no new
metavariables. It also adjusts how new hypotheses are added to the goal
to prevent spurious "don't know how to synthesize placeholder" errors on
that goal metavariable. We also throw in an occurs check immediately
after elaboration to avoid some counterintuitive behavior when
simplifying such a term closes the goal.

Closes #4101. This also improves the type mismatch error message,
showing the elaborated `using` clause rather than `h✝`:
```lean
example : False := by
  simpa using (fun x : True => x)
/-
error: type mismatch, term
  fun x => x
after simplification has type
  True : Prop
but is expected to have type
  False : Prop
-/
```
2024-10-08 23:09:00 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a35e6f4af7 feat: infer Prop for inductive/structure when defining syntactic subsingletons (#5517)
A `Prop`-valued inductive type is a syntactic subsingleton if it has at
most one constructor and all the arguments to the constructor are in
`Prop`. Such types have large elimination, so they could be defined in
`Type` or `Prop` without any trouble, though users tend to expect that
such types define a `Prop` and need to learn to insert `: Prop`.

Currently, the default universe for types is `Type`. This PR adds a
heuristic: if a type is a syntactic subsingleton with exactly one
constructor, and the constructor has at least one parameter, then the
`inductive` command will prefer creating a `Prop` instead of a `Type`.
For `structure`, we ask for at least one field.

More generally, for mutual inductives, each type needs to be a syntactic
subsingleton, at least one type must have one constructor, and at least
one constructor must have at least one parameter. The motivation for
this restriction is that every inductive type starts with a zero
constructors and each constructor starts with zero fields, and
stubbed-out types shouldn't be `Prop`.

Thanks to @arthur-adjedj for the investigation in #2695 and to @digama0
for formulating the heuristic.

Closes #2690
2024-10-08 22:39:38 +00:00
Kyle Miller
fdd5aec172 feat: better #eval command (#5627)
This refactors and improves the `#eval` command, introducing some new
features.
* Now evaluated results can be represented using `ToExpr` and pretty
printing. This means **hoverable output**. If `ToExpr` fails, it then
tries `Repr` and then `ToString`. The `eval.pp` option controls whether
or not to try `ToExpr`.
* There is now **auto-derivation** of `Repr` instances, enabled with the
`pp.derive.repr` option (default to **true**). For example:
  ```lean
  inductive Baz
    | a | b

  #eval Baz.a
  -- Baz.a
  ```
It simply does `deriving instance Repr for Baz` when there's no way to
represent `Baz`. If core Lean gets `ToExpr` derive handlers, they could
be used here as well.
* The option `eval.type` controls whether or not to include the type in
the output. For now the default is false.
* Now things like `#eval do return 2` work. It tries using
`CommandElabM`, `TermElabM`, or `IO` when the monad is unknown.
* Now there is no longer `Lean.Eval` or `Lean.MetaEval`. These each used
to be responsible for both adapting monads and printing results. The
concerns have been split into two. (1) The `MonadEval` class is
responsible for adapting monads for evaluation (it is similar to
`MonadLift`, but instances are allowed to use default data when
initializing state) and (2) finding a way to represent results is
handled separately.
* Error messages about failed instance synthesis are now more precise.
Once it detects that a `MonadEval` class applies, then the error message
will be specific about missing `ToExpr`/`Repr`/`ToString` instances.
* Fixes a bug where `Repr`/`ToString` instances can't be found by
unfolding types "under the monad". For example, this works now:
  ```lean
  def Foo := List Nat
  def Foo.mk (l : List Nat) : Foo := l
  #eval show Lean.CoreM Foo from do return Foo.mk [1,2,3]
  ```
* Elaboration errors now abort evaluation. This eliminates some
not-so-relevant error messages.
* Now evaluating a value of type `m Unit` never prints a blank message.
* Fixes bugs where evaluating `MetaM` and `CoreM` wouldn't collect log
messages.

The `run_cmd`, `run_elab`, and `run_meta` commands are now frontends for
`#eval`.
2024-10-08 20:51:46 +00:00
Henrik Böving
81743d80e5 chore: reduce error on bv_check to warning (#5655) 2024-10-08 19:49:44 +00:00
Henrik Böving
248864c716 perf: benchmark for modulo on bv_decide (#5653)
This verifies a bit hack from here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehmer_random_number_generator#Sample_C99_code

I previously ran the SMTLIB equivalent this with Bitwuzla in my crypto
class and got the following numbers:
- 22s with Bitwuzla
- Z3 and CVC5 don't yet terminate after > 2min

Now with`bv_decide` the overall timing is 33.7s, consisting of:
- 5s of checking the LRAT cert
- 5s of trimming the LRAT cert from 800k to 300k proof steps
- remainder actual solving time

So running `bv_decide` like a normal SMT solver without verifying the
result of the SAT solver would yield approximately ~24s.
2024-10-08 18:58:15 +00:00
Kyle Miller
bd46319aee feat: add option pp.mvars.delayed (#5643)
Where before we had
```lean
#check fun x : Nat => ?a
-- fun x ↦ ?m.7 x : (x : Nat) → ?m.6 x
```
Now by default we have
```lean
#check fun x : Nat => ?a
-- fun x => ?a : (x : Nat) → ?m.6 x
```
In particular, delayed assignment metavariables such as `?m.7` pretty
print using the name of the metavariable they are delayed assigned to,
suppressing the bound variables used in the delayed assignment (hence
`?a` rather than `?a x`). Hovering over `?a` shows `?m.7 x`.

The benefit is that users can see the user-provided name in local
contexts. A justification for this pretty printing choice is that `?m.7
x` is supposed to stand for `?a`, and furthermore it is just as opaque
to assignment in defeq as `?a` is (however, when synthetic opaque
metavariables are made assignable, delayed assignments can be a little
less assignable than true synthetic opaque metavariables).

The original pretty printing behavior can be recovered using `set_option
pp.mvars.delayed true`.

This PR also extends the documentation for holes and synthetic holes,
with some technical details about what delayed assignments are. This
likely should be moved to the reference manual, but for now it is
included in this docstring.

(This PR is a simplified version of #3494, which has a round-trippable
notation for delayed assignments. The pretty printing in this PR is
unlikely to round trip, but it is better than the current situation,
which is that delayed assignment metavariables never round trip, and
plus it does not require introducing a new notation.)
2024-10-08 17:48:52 +00:00
Kyle Miller
6cdede33fb fix: make sure name literals use escaping when pretty printing (#5639)
The app unexpanders for `Name.mkStr1` through `Name.mkStr8` weren't
respecting the escaping rules for names. For example, ``#check `«a.b»``
would show `` `a.b``.

This PR folds the unexpanders into the name literal delaborator, where
escaping is already handled.
2024-10-08 17:36:49 +00:00
Kyle Miller
f1d3527fe8 fix: have Lean.Meta.ppGoal use hard newlines (#5640)
This function uses soft newlines in many places where hard newlines are
more appropriate. Pointed out by @gebner in #1967.
2024-10-08 17:36:08 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b2b450d7cb fix: now linters in general do not run on #guard_msgs itself (#5644)
The `#guard_msgs` command runs the command it is attached to as if it
were a top-level command. This is because the top-level command
elaborator runs linters, and we are interested in capturing linter
warnings using `#guard_msgs`. However, the linters will run on
`#guard_msgs` itself, leading sometimes to duplicate warnings (like for
the unused variable linter).

Rather than special-casing `#guard_msgs` in every affected linter, this
PR special-cases it in the top-level command elaborator itself. **Now
linters are only run if the command doesn't contain `#guard_msgs`.**
This way, the linters are only run on the sub-command that `#guard_msgs`
runs itself. This rule also keeps linters from running multiple times in
cases such as `set_option pp.mvars false in /-- ... -/ #guard_msgs in
...`.
2024-10-08 17:35:07 +00:00
Henrik Böving
abae95e170 feat: support umod in bv_decide (#5652) 2024-10-08 12:47:03 +00:00
Henrik Böving
e9ea99f6c6 feat: support udiv in bv_decide (#5628)
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
2024-10-08 10:40:00 +00:00
Siddharth
2ed7924bae chore: define udiv normal form to be /, resp. umod and % (#5645)
This follows the norm for all other Bitvector operations, and makes the
symbols `/` and `%` the simp normal form.

I'd imagine that @hargonix would prefer that this be merged after
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5628, so as to prevent churn
for his PR. I'm happy to rebase the PR once the other PR lands.

---------

Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-10-08 08:49:46 +00:00
Siddharth
4415a81f35 chore: add Siddharth to authors list of BitVec (#5647)
Add @bollu to the authors list of the BitVec files :)
2024-10-08 08:01:17 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
3e75d8f742 fix: FunInd: avoid over-eta-expanding in preprocessing step (#5619)
fixes #5602
2024-10-07 19:47:43 +00:00
Henrik Böving
f1ff9cebf2 feat: more getLsbD bitblaster theory (#5637) 2024-10-07 17:26:23 +00:00
Henrik Böving
99a9d9b381 doc: remarks about multiplication (#5636) 2024-10-07 17:25:22 +00:00
Henrik Böving
1914a2b3f2 feat: add auxiliary bitblasters for negation and subtraction (#5635) 2024-10-07 16:33:06 +00:00
Siddharth
6312787c30 feat: lemmas for Bitvector division when denominator is zero (#5609)
These lemmas explain what happens when the denominator is zero with
`udiv`, `umod`, `sdiv`, `smod`. A follow-up PR will show what happens
with `smtUDiv` and `smtSMod`, since these need some more bitvector
theory.
These lemmas will be used by `bv_decide` for bitblasting.

The theorems `{sdiv, smod}_zero` are located after `neg` theory has been
built for the purpose of writing terse proofs.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-10-07 15:58:12 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
ec5f206d80 fix: shutdown deadlock and crash desync (#5340)
This PR fixes three problems:
- When the language server is being stopped in a non-normal way without
going through the regular LSP shutdown protocol (e.g. by closing VS
Code), it could sometimes happen that both the watchdog and the file
worker were not properly terminated and lingered around forever,
resulting in zombie processes (#5296)
- When the file worker crashes and the user restarts it by making a
change to the document, the file worker would produce incorrect
diagnostics for the document until the file is restarted.
- (Minor) When the file worker would crash during initialization, the
error diagnostic would be reported on stderr instead of stdout

The deadlock-induced termination issue from #5296 should be resolved by
the following measures:
- The watchdog main task is always terminated with `IO.Process.exit` to
ensure that it terminates even if some other tasks in the process are
still running.
- The file worker communication task in the watchdog no longer waits for
the file worker process to terminate when writing to the client fails,
only when reading from the file worker fails.
- When the watchdog shuts down (either as a result of an orderly or a
non-normal shutdown), instead of waiting for the file worker
communication tasks to complete, it kills the file worker process. The
rationale behind this is that the file worker currently should have no
essential work to complete if the server is being stopped anyways, and
so waiting for the communication task is not necessary.

The file worker diagnostic desync after a crash was caused by us
tracking changes to the document of a crashed file worker twice: Once as
part of the document, and once as part of the queued messages to the
file worker. This meant that when the file worker was restarted, it
would receive the changes made to the document while the file worker was
crashed twice, leading to a desynced document state.

(Probably) fixes #5296.
2024-10-07 14:10:42 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d835616573 chore: fix MSYS2 build instructions (#5617) 2024-10-07 12:42:37 +00:00
Siddharth
9dac514c2f feat: Document Bitblasting in a documentation comment (#5620)
As requested by @kim-em at
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5281#issuecomment-2376102963.
We provide a high-level overview of the workflow for adding new
bitblasting theorems, by using the `BitVec.mul` as a prototypical
example.
2024-10-07 11:44:04 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
c0617da18d feat: support at in ac_nf and use it in bv_normalize (#5618)
... while at it also call `trivial` to close goals that can be trivially
closed.

---------

Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-10-07 11:37:17 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a3ee11103c chore: update stage0 2024-10-07 13:26:07 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
13e3a3839c fix: Lake: brittle dependency on env ext name 2024-10-07 13:26:07 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
0178f2b70d chore: update stage0 2024-10-04 15:25:08 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
4f5f39294d chore: update stage0 2024-10-04 13:55:42 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d4fdb5d7c0 fix: getFunInfo, inferType to use withAtLeastTransparency, not withTransparency (#5563)
when the transparency mode is `.all`, then one expects `getFunInfo` and
`inferType` to also work with that transparency mode.

Fixes #5562
Fixes #2975 
Fixes #2194
2024-10-04 13:04:35 +00:00
Siddharth
f9048c132d chore: add bv_toNat tag for toNat_ofInt (#5608)
These were missing from the `bv_toNat` simp-set,
discovered when refactoring LNSym's simp-set:
https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym/pull/208
2024-10-03 19:20:50 +00:00
Henrik Böving
53c5470200 perf: remove List.redLength (#5605) 2024-10-03 14:57:33 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3584a62411 fix: call hierarchy into (builtin_)initialize (#5560)
While `initialize` pretended it had the declaration name of the constant
to be initialized, missing declaration ranges for the latter led call
hierarchy etc. to ignore the definition
2024-10-03 12:03:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a4fda010f3 feat: Array/Option.unattach (#5586)
More support for automatically removing `.attach`, for `Array` and
`Option`.
2024-10-03 07:29:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b7d6a4b222 feat: adding Insert/Singleton/Union instances for HashMap/Set.Raw (#5590)
These were missing from https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5581.
2024-10-03 06:26:21 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
341c64a306 chore: update stage0 2024-10-03 06:56:06 +00:00
Mac Malone
a01166f045 refactor: reduce Reservoir build fetch attempts & warnings (#5600)
Lake no longer attempts to fetch the Reservoir build cache if the build
directory is already present. Plus, failure of the automatic fetch now
only produces a trace message, not a warning.
2024-10-03 01:12:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
14f80172bc chore: typo in fix-pr-release.yml (#5601) 2024-10-02 23:04:39 +00:00
euprunin
8f88d94d97 chore: fix spelling mistakes (#5599)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-02 21:32:22 +00:00
Markus Himmel
09dfe1c71c chore: induction-friendly List.min?_cons (#5594)
@kim-em, I'm happy to keep any subset of `foldl_min`, `foldl_min_right`,
`foldl_min_le`, `foldl_min_min_of_le` (should that one have been called
`foldl_min_le_of_le`?). Which ones do you like?
2024-10-02 14:10:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1b115eea42 feat: HashSet.Raw.all/any (#5591)
These were missing from #5582.
2024-10-02 06:04:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8da278e141 feat: variant of MVarId.tryClearMany (#5588)
Used in Aesop.
2024-10-02 05:26:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6a59a3a373 feat: allow MVarId.assertHypotheses to set BinderInfo/Kind (#5587)
This generalization of `assertHypotheses` is currently provided in
Batteries and used in Aesop.
2024-10-02 05:09:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1329a264c8 feat: HashSet.all/any (#5582)
I think the overhead (runtime/later proving) of using `for` is paid off
by being able to short-circuit.

These functions are needed downstream to switch over the Std.HashSet.
2024-10-02 04:23:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
478a34f174 feat: Singleton/Insert/Union instances for HashMap/Set (#5581) 2024-10-02 04:23:17 +00:00
Mac Malone
952c086a92 fix: rm new shared libs before build for Windows (#5541)
On Windows, shared libraries must be removed before linking. Otherwise,
linking can fail with "Permission denied" when the libraries are in use.
This ensures such removal is done for the new `libLake_shared.dll` and
both parts of `libleanshared`.
2024-10-02 04:06:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9322d8d639 feat: List.unattach and simp lemmas (#5550)
Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-10-02 02:42:54 +00:00
Mac Malone
9dcd2ad2a3 fix: --no-cache on server DependencyBuildMode.never (#5583)
Have the server disable Lake build cache fetches (via `--no-cache`) on
time-sensitive file opens (i.e.,, `DependencyBuildMode.never`).
2024-10-02 02:22:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e3811fd838 chore: cleanup unused variables (#5579)
This pulls changes to the standard library out of #5338.
2024-10-02 01:51:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
867e67b9f3 chore: cleanup unused variables in bv_decide (#5578)
This pulls the changes to `bv_decide` out of #5338.
2024-10-02 01:48:43 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6cd80c28b7 chore: add missing simp to Array.size_feraseIdx (#5577) 2024-10-02 01:07:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f202469c8a chore: upstream Array.flatten lemmas (#5551)
Just the upstreaming part of #5535 while we wait on a naming decision.
2024-10-02 00:54:30 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e417a2331c feat: expose Kernel.check for debugging purposes (#5412)
along `Kernel.isDefEq` and `Kernel.whnf`.
2024-10-01 21:28:02 +00:00
Mac Malone
5eb6c67a78 feat: lake: selective build cache fetch & display (#5572)
Lake no longer attempts to fetch Reservoir build caches (barrels) for
non-Reservoir dependencies, and it will only fetch them for Reservoir
dependencies in the presence of a known toolchain.

Also, optional build job failures are now only displayed in verbose
mode.
2024-10-01 21:18:08 +00:00
Henrik Böving
499c58796b feat: get bv_normalize up to date with the current BitVec rewrites (#5573) 2024-10-01 16:58:42 +00:00
Henrik Böving
863e9c073b feat: generalize the bv_normalize pipeline to support more general preprocessing passes (#5568)
Beyond what's in the title this also fixes: #5543
2024-10-01 15:28:39 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
60096e7d15 refactor: more idiomatic syntax for if h: (#5567)
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5552 introduced a fair number
of `if h:`, but the slightly preferred style is `if h :`, with a space,
so here goes a quick `sed`.
2024-10-01 15:23:54 +00:00
Eric Wieser
e90c3cf15a fix: remove non-conforming size-0 arrays (#5564)
In C, these are supported only as a vendor extension; they should
instead use proper C99 flexible array members.

In C++, both `[]` and `[0]` are vendor extensions.

Co-authored-by: Thomas Köppe <tkoeppe@google.com>
2024-10-01 15:05:17 +00:00
Andrii Kurdiumov
d4195c2605 fix: make lean.h compile with MSVC (#5558)
Closes #5557
2024-10-01 13:49:22 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4932dbc65d refactor: dead code AttributeExtensionOLeanEntry.decl (#5496)
The constructor `AttributeExtensionOLeanEntry.decl` and related code
seems to be unused, and has been unused since its introduction in
a77598f7cf three years ago. Probably worth
removing (and changing the now one-constructor inductive into a
structure).
2024-10-01 13:34:12 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d0ee9d0127 feat: expand invalid projection type inference error (#5556)
hopefully this will make debugging meta code a bit easier
2024-10-01 13:09:08 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
3e2bca7309 feat: add Bitvec.[add, sub, mul]_eq_xor and width_one_cases (#5554)
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-10-01 11:57:14 +00:00
TomasPuverle
ddec5336e5 chore: switch obvious cases of array "bang"[]! indexing to rely on hypothesis (#5552)
Update certain uses of `arr[i]!` to use the "provably correct" version
`arr[i]`, in order to use "best practices".

Some motivation and discussion on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Lean.20compiler.2Felaborator.20development.20question/near/472934715)
2024-10-01 11:12:22 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
37baa89d9b feat: add ac_nf and test [ac_nf|ac_rfl] for BitVec (#5524)
ac_nf is a counterpart to ac_rfl, which normalizes bitvector expressions
with respect to associativity and commutativity.

While there, also add test coverage for ac_rfl and ac_nf for BitVec,
complementing the existing test coverage.
2024-10-01 05:59:29 +00:00
Kyle Miller
949feb25a4 chore: move @[simp] from exists_prop' to exists_prop (#5529)
The lemma `exists_const` already handles all real cases of `(∃ _ : α, p)
↔ p` for general types `α`. If there are no `Nonempty` instances and
this lemma cannot apply, it seems unlikely that simp could make more
progress with `(∃ _ : α, p) ↔ Nonempty α ∧ p`.

However, it is still worth simplifying `(∃ _ : p, q)` to `p ∧ q`.

Also adds a `Nonempty (Decidable a)` instance, which is used by Mathlib.
2024-10-01 05:38:18 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
bfb73c4a5e feat: add BitVec.getElem_[add|add_add_bool|mul|rotateLeft|rotateRight… (#5508)
…|twoPow|one|replicate]

... and mark `getElem_setWidth` as `@[simp]`.

`getElem_rotateLeft` and `getElem_rotateRight` have a non-trivial rhs
but we follow `getLsbD_[rotateLeft|rotateRight]`for consistency.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-10-01 05:37:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b22dee8816 chore: release notes for 4.12.0 (#5549) 2024-10-01 04:07:28 +00:00
Mac Malone
4771741fa2 doc: update README w/ Reservoir package options (#5546)
Adds the new Reservoir-related package configuration options to Lake's
README.
2024-10-01 00:29:00 +00:00
Mac Malone
ffb4c5becf feat: lake: Reservoir build cache (#5486)
Adds Reservoir as another possible source of build caches in addition to
GitHub releases. If a GitHub release is not configured for a Reservoir
dependency, it will attempt download a build cache from Reservoir. Like
with GitHub releases, failure will not stop the build and instead issue
a warning. Many of the Lake API calls related to these build caches were
refactored and renamed, with the old names remaining around as
deprecated aliases.

Build cache downloads (from Reservoir or GitHub) can now be disabled via
the `--no-cache` CLI option or the `LAKE_NO_CACHE` environment variable.
A disabled cache can be re-enable with the `--try-cache` CLI option.
2024-09-30 23:59:36 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d3f7ed434b fix: automatic instance names about types with hygienic names should be hygienic (#5530)
Macros sometimes create auxiliary types and instances about them, and
they rely on the instance name generate to create unique names in that
case.

This modifies the automatic name generator to add a fresh macro scope to
the generated name if any of the constants in the type of the instance
themselves have macro scopes.

Closes #2044
2024-09-30 16:06:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6bd0d9d73b chore: fix explicitness of Option.mem_toList (#5539) 2024-09-30 09:55:19 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
db79d9e5ce doc: backticks around Lean code in docstrings (#5538)
Minor docstrings tweaks on the basis of #5497
2024-09-30 08:59:01 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5e8718dff9 chore: fix Array.modify lemmas (#5536)
Generally works best to pick up the proofs by unification with the lhs.

pinging @hargoniX as this goes by, as it changes some proofs in
bv_decide (nothing interesting, just a bit simpler)
2024-09-30 06:31:10 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4f2c4c7bd1 chore: cleanup of Array GetElem lemmas (#5534) 2024-09-30 05:42:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
56ba39d68a chore: more monadic simp lemmas (#5522) 2024-09-30 04:47:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1fca66b8c9 feat: Option.attach (#5532) 2024-09-30 04:13:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
36c29bee31 chore: fix name of Array.length_toList (#5526) 2024-09-30 04:08:56 +00:00
Kyle Miller
cf14178929 fix: default values for structure fields can be noncomputable (#5531)
Closes #2710
2024-09-30 04:02:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a4dfa83af5 chore: reduce use of deprecated lemmas in Array (#5527) 2024-09-30 02:59:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c5fd652765 feat: support Int.toNat in omega (#5523)
Trivial to add and works nicely.
2024-09-29 22:23:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4cd4bcc9be chore: List simp fixes (#5521) 2024-09-29 13:28:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7d26a1604f chore: restore @[simp] on List.getElem_mem et al (#5520) 2024-09-29 13:28:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3a46fd0fde chore: unsimp BitVec.divRec_succ' (#5505)
@bollu, it would be good to have confirmation from you, but presumably
this was not meant to be `@[simp]`? It competes with `divRec_succ`, and
has a terrible RHS.
2024-09-29 11:38:54 +00:00
TomasPuverle
994cfa4c74 doc: update documentation and tests for toUIntX functions (#5497)
Update documentation on functions to reflect actual behavior.
Add tests to ensure said behavior is as documented.

Closes #5483
2024-09-29 08:11:04 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
cf3e7de143 feat: let simp apply rules with higher-order patterns (#5479)
after this change, `simp` will be able to discharge side-goals that,
after simplification, are of the form `∀ …, a = b` with `a =?= b`.

Usually these side-goals are solved by simplification using `eq_self`,
but that does not work when there are metavariables involved.

This enables us to have rewrite rules like
```
theorem List.foldl_subtype (p : α → Prop) (l : List (Subtype p)) (f : β → Subtype p → β)
  (g : β → α → β) (b : β)
  (hf : ∀ b x h, f b ⟨x, h⟩ = g b x) :
  l.foldl f b = (l.map (·.val)).foldl g b := by
```    
where the parameter `g` does not appear on the lhs, but can be solved
for using the `hf` equation. See `tests/lean/run/simpHigherOrder.lean`
for more examples.

The motivating use-case is that `simp` should be able to clean up the
usual
```
  l.attach.map (fun <x, _> => x)
```
idiom often seen in well-founded recursive functions with nested
recursion.

Care needs to be taken with adding such rules to the default simp set if
the lhs is very general, and thus causes them to be tried everywhere.

Performance impact of just this PR (no additional simp rules) on mathlib
is unsuspicious:
http://speed.lean-fro.org/mathlib4/compare/b5bc44c7-e53c-4b6c-9184-bbfea54c4f80/to/ae1d769b-2ff2-4894-940c-042d5a698353

I tried a few alternatives, e.g. letting `simp` apply `eq_self` without
bumping the mvar depth, or just solve equalities directly, but that
broke too much things, and adding code to the default discharger seemed
simpler.
2024-09-29 07:26:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2ace579438 chore: upstream List.fold lemmas (#5519) 2024-09-29 07:21:32 +00:00
Kyle Miller
40d6a6def0 fix: use breakable instead of unbreakable whitespace when formatting tokens (#5513)
The formatter was using `tk ++ " "` to separate tokens from tokens they
would merge with, but `" "` is not whitespace that could merge. This
affected large binder lists, which wouldn't pretty print with any line
breaks. Now they can be flowed across multiple lines.

Closes #5424
2024-09-29 06:33:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d96b7a7d98 chore: rename List.maximum? to max? (#5518)
More consistent with other API.
2024-09-29 06:23:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
40e97bd566 chore: upstream Subarray.empty (#5516) 2024-09-29 05:53:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3bd01de384 feat: upstream Array.qsortOrd (#5515) 2024-09-29 05:50:25 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8835ab46ad feat: Array.eraseReps (#5514)
Just an `Array` version of `List.eraseReps`. These functions are for now
outside of scope for verification, so there's just a simple `example` in
the tests.
2024-09-29 05:44:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
96adf04a62 fix: reduce parents in structure command (#5511)
Makes it possible to `extend` another structure through an abbreviation.
Also inserts a `withSynthesize` checkpoint for parents.

Closes #5417
2024-09-29 02:15:07 +00:00
Kyle Miller
0db6daa8f1 feat: actual implementation for #5283 (#5512)
I did a bad git rebase before merging #5283, which reverted it to an
earlier version. This PR has the actual implementation of RFC #5397.
2024-09-29 01:22:12 +00:00
Kyle Miller
130b465aaf feat: generalize elab_as_elim to allow arbitrary motive applications (#5510)
Now the elab-as-elim procedure allows eliminators whose result is an
arbitrary application of the motive. For example, the following is now
accepted. It will generalize `Int.natAbs _` from the expected type.
```lean
@[elab_as_elim]
theorem natAbs_elim {motive : Nat → Prop} (i : Int)
  (hpos : ∀ (n : Nat), i = n → motive n)
  (hneg : ∀ (n : Nat), i = -↑n → motive n) :
  motive (Int.natAbs i) := by sorry
```

This change simplifies the elaborator, since it no longer needs to keep
track of discriminants (which can easily be read off from the return
type of the eliminator) or the difference between "targets" and "extra
arguments" (which are now both "major arguments" that should be eagerly
elaborated).

Closes #4086
2024-09-28 22:30:14 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
ccdf07b6a1 chore: update stage0 2024-09-28 14:05:01 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
5605e0198a chore: BitVec.Lemmas - drop non-terminal simps (#5499)
`BitVec.Lemmas` contained a couple of non-terminal simps. We turn
non-terminal `simp$`, `simp [`, and `simp at` expressions into `simp
only` to improve code maintainability.
2024-09-28 10:23:28 +00:00
Henrik Böving
5f22ba7789 feat: bv_normalize handle -> False (#5507) 2024-09-28 10:05:16 +00:00
Henrik Böving
16a16898d5 feat: improve bv_normalize rules for Prop and == (#5506) 2024-09-28 09:21:48 +00:00
Mac Malone
4ea76aadd1 refactor: lake: switch new/init default to TOML (#5504)
Changes the default configuration for new Lake packages to TOML.

Closes #4106.
2024-09-28 06:28:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ef71f0beab chore: restore @[simp] to upstreamed Nat.lt_off_iff (#5503)
This was upstreamed from Mathlib in #5478, but leaving off the `@[simp]`
attribute, thereby breaking Mathlib. (We could of course add the simp
attribute back in Mathlib, but wherever it lives it should have been in
place at the time we merged -- this way I have to add it temporarily in
Mathlib and then remove it again once it is redundant.)
2024-09-28 04:55:15 +00:00
Kyle Miller
9f4075be72 fix: refine how named arguments suppress explicit arguments (#5283)
Recall that currently named arguments suppress all explicit parameters
that are dependencies. This PR limits this feature to only apply to true
structure projections, except in the case where it is triggered when
there are no more positional arguments. This preserves the primary
reason for generalizing this feature (issue #1851), while removing the
generalized feature, which has led to numerous confusions (issue #1867).
This also fixes a bug pointed out [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.40foo.20.28A.20.3A.3D.20bar.29.20_.20_/near/468564862)
where in `@` mode, instance implicit parameter dependencies to named
arguments would be suppressed unless the next positional argument was
`_`.

More detail:
* The `NamedArg` structure now has a `suppressDeps : Bool` field. It is
set to `true` for the `self` argument in structure projections. If there
is such a `NamedArg`, explicit parameters that are dependencies to the
named argument are turned into implicit arguments. The consequence is
that *all* structure projections are treated as if their type parameters
are implicit, even for class projections. This flag is *not* used for
generalized field notation.
* We preserve the suppression feature when there are no positional
arguments remaining. This feature pre-dates the fix to issue #1851, and
it is useful when combining named arguments and the eta expansion
feature, since dependencies of named arguments cannot be turned into eta
arguments. Plus, there are examples of the form `rw [lem (h := foo)]`
where `lem` has explicit arguments that `h` depends on.
* For instance implicit parameters in explicit mode, now `_` arguments
register terminfo and are hoverable.
* Now `..` is respected in explicit mode.

This implements RFC #5397. The `suppressDeps` flag suggests a future
possibility of a named argument syntax that can suppress dependencies.
2024-09-27 20:14:29 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1b6572726f feat: have autoparams report parameter/field on failure (#5474)
Adds a mechanism where when an autoparam tactic fails to synthesize a
parameter, the associated parameter name or field name for the autoparam
is reported in an error.

Examples:
```text
could not synthesize default value for parameter 'h' using tactics

could not synthesize default value for field 'inv' of 'S' using tactics
```

Notes:
* Autoparams now run their tactics without any error recovery or
error-to-sorry enabled. This enables catching the error and reporting
the contextual information. This is justified on the grounds that
autoparams are not interactive.
* Autoparams for applications now cleanup the autoParam annotation,
bringing it in line with autoparams for structure fields.
* This preserves the old behavior that autoparams leave terminfo, but we
will revisit this after some imminent improvements to the unused
variable linter.

Closes #2950
2024-09-27 19:00:59 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
56b78a0ed1 chore: pr-release.yml: fix bot’s username to look for (#5495)
This didn’t make it in with #5490, but seems to be needed, just as in
https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/17182/files (the
code is duplicated in both repos, and should be the same).
2024-09-27 15:29:53 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
e28bfedae2 doc: remove inaccurate PersistentEnvExtension.setState/modifyState claim
Likely a copy-paste mistake

Fixes #3039
2024-09-27 15:59:36 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
e7691f37c6 fix: induction pre-tactic should be indented (#5494)
Fixes #2876
2024-09-27 12:43:42 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
48711ce6eb feat: BitVec.(not_sshiftRight, not_sshiftRight_not, getMsb_not, msb_not) (#5492) 2024-09-27 10:36:17 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
0733273a78 feat: add BitVec.toNat_[abs|sdiv|smod] (#5491)
Co-authored-by: Luisa Cicolini <48860705+luisacicolini@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-27 10:35:41 +00:00
Henrik Böving
2221296d3c chore: delete unused code (#5493) 2024-09-27 09:36:56 +00:00
Eric Wieser
f22998edfe fix: collect level parameters in evalExpr (#3090)
`elabEvalUnsafe` already does something similar: it also instantiates
universe metavariables, but it is not clear to me whether that is
sensible here.
To be conservative, I leave it out of this PR.

See https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/3090#discussion_r1432007590
for a comparison between `#eval` and `Meta.evalExpr`. This PR is not
trying to fully align them, but just to fix one particular misalignment
that I am impacted by.

Closes #3091
2024-09-27 11:55:33 +02:00
Kim Morrison
3817b16c35 chore: use separate secrets for commenting and branching in pr-release.yml (#5490)
Hopefully this will resolve the problem of duplicated comments when the
bots post about Mathlib CI status.
2024-09-27 07:27:55 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9eef726204 chore: commit lake-manifest.json when updating lean-pr-testing branches (#5489) 2024-09-27 06:52:24 +00:00
Siddharth
9460f79d28 feat: add sdiv_eq, smod_eq to allow sdiv/smod bitblasting (#5487)
We add lemmas to reduce `sdiv` to `udiv` and `smod` to `umod`, along
with `msb` comparisons which `bv_decide` understands.

We use the same implementation as Bitwuzla, as evidenced by the
following rewrite rules:
[sdiv](f229d64be7/src/rewrite/rewrites_bv.cpp (L3168C30-L3168C42)),
[smod](f229d64be7/src/rewrite/rewrites_bv.cpp (L3282C30-L3282C39)).
2024-09-27 04:46:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c38c07e1a1 chore: reverse simp direction for toArray_concat (#5485)
This is mistakenly pushing a `toArray` inwards rather than outwards.
2024-09-27 01:24:12 +00:00
Siddharth
062ecb5eae feat: add udiv/umod bitblasting for bv_decide (#5281)
This PR adds the theorems

```
@[simp]
theorem divRec_zero (qr : DivModState w) :
  divRec w w 0 n d qr  = qr

@[simp]
theorem divRec_succ' (wn : Nat) (qr : DivModState w) :
    divRec w wr (wn + 1) n d qr =
    let r' := shiftConcat qr.r (n.getLsbD wn)
    let input : DivModState w :=
      if r' < d then ⟨qr.q.shiftConcat false, r'⟩ else ⟨qr.q.shiftConcat true, r' - d⟩
    divRec w (wr + 1) wn n d input
```

The final statements may need some masasging to interoperate with
`bv_decide`. We prove the recurrence for unsigned division by building a
shift-subtract circuit, and then showing that this circuit obeys the
division algorithm's invariant.

--- 

A `DivModState` is lawful if the remainder width `wr` plus the dividend
width `wn` equals `w`,
and the bitvectors `r` and `n` have values in the bounds given by
bitwidths `wr`, resp. `wn`.
This is a proof engineering choice: An alternative world could have
`r : BitVec wr` and `n : BitVec wn`, but this required much more
dependent typing coercions.
Instead, we choose to declare all involved bitvectors as length `w`, and
then prove that
the values are within their respective bounds.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-09-26 23:45:31 +00:00
Henrik Böving
13969ad667 fix: handling BitVec.ofNat with Nat fvars in bv_decide (#5484) 2024-09-26 21:38:18 +00:00
Alex Keizer
91a033488c chore: remove mention of Lean.withSeconds (#5481)
There's a comment on `withHeartbeats` that says "See also
Lean.withSeconds", but his definition does not seem to actually exist.
Hence, I've removed the comment.
2024-09-26 18:15:58 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
1fb75b68ab feat: add BitVec.(shiftLeft_add_distrib, shiftLeft_ushiftRight) (#5478)
Moved some Nat theorems from Mathlib

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-09-26 15:51:13 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
26f508db87 test: check that recusive functions do not apply attriubutes twices (#5480)
I suspected a bug based on reading the code, but it seems there is no
bug.
2024-09-26 10:30:37 +00:00
Daniel Weber
3d1ac7cfa2 feat: add lemmas about List.IsPrefix (#5448)
Add iff version of `List.IsPrefix.getElem`, and `eq_of_length_le`
variants of `List.IsInfix.eq_of_length, List.IsPrefix.eq_of_length,
List.IsSuffix.eq_of_length`
2024-09-26 06:58:40 +00:00
Johan Commelin
0196bca784 doc: fix typo in docstring of computeSynthOrder (#5398) 2024-09-26 04:51:23 +00:00
L
b320dcfef9 doc: fix typo in BitVec.mul docstring (#5473)
Seems this was copy-pasted from `BitVec.neg`
2024-09-26 03:11:46 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5dea30f169 feat: @[simp] lemmas about List.toArray (#5472)
We make sure that we can pull `List.toArray` out through all operations
(well, for now "most" rather than "all"). As we also push `Array.toList`
inwards, this hopefully has the effect of them cancelling as they meet,
and `simp` naturally rewriting Array operations into List operations
wherever possible.

This is not at all complete yet.
2024-09-26 00:59:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
90cb6e5da8 chore: fix typos in Lean.MetavarContext (#5476) 2024-09-26 00:25:03 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a3ca15d2b2 refactor: back rfl tactic primarily via apply_rfl (#3718)
building upon #3714, this (almost) implements the second half of #3302.

The main effect is that we now get a better error message when `rfl`
fails. For
```lean
example : n+1+m = n + (1+m) := by rfl
```
instead of the wall of text
```
The rfl tactic failed. Possible reasons:
- The goal is not a reflexive relation (neither `=` nor a relation with a @[refl] lemma).
- The arguments of the relation are not equal.
Try using the reflexivity lemma for your relation explicitly, e.g. `exact Eq.refl _` or
`exact HEq.rfl` etc.
n m : Nat
⊢ n + 1 + m = n + (1 + m)
```
we now get
```
error: tactic 'rfl' failed, the left-hand side
  n + 1 + m
is not definitionally equal to the right-hand side
  n + (1 + m)
n m : Nat
⊢ n + 1 + m = n + (1 + m)
```

Unfortunately, because of very subtle differences in semantics (which
transparency setting is used when reducing the goal and whether the
“implicit lambda” feature applies) I could not make this simply the only
`rfl` implementation. So `rfl` remains a macro and is still expanded to
`eq_refl` (difference transparency setting) and `exact Iff.rfl` and
`exact HEq.rfl` (implicit lambda) to not break existing code. This can
be revised later, so this still closes: #3302.

A user might still be puzzled *why* to terms are not defeq. Explaining
that better (“reduced to… and reduces to… etc.”) would also be great,
but that’s not specific to `rfl`, so better left for some other time.
2024-09-25 10:34:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c2f6297554 feat: adjust simp attributes on monad lemmas (#5464) 2024-09-25 10:21:18 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
1defa2028f feat: add BitVec.toInt_[intMin|neg|neg_of_ne_intMin ] (#5450) 2024-09-25 10:04:21 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
78c40f380c doc: contradiction docstring indendation (#5470)
Just saw some bad markdown, thought I’ll quickly fix it.
2024-09-25 09:50:21 +00:00
Luisa Cicolini
3e2a465b13 feat: add BitVec.[not_not, allOnes_shiftLeft_or_shiftLeft, allOnes_shiftLeft_and_shiftLeft, one_shiftLeft_mul] (#5469)
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-09-25 09:33:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
1ec0c64c7b test: remove flaky test (#5468) 2024-09-25 08:18:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
604bcf50ef chore: upstream some monad lemmas (#5463) 2024-09-25 07:57:26 +00:00
Kim Morrison
145c9efb32 feat: Array.foldX lemmas (#5466) 2024-09-25 07:17:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e4f2de0a53 feat: improve Array GetElem lemmas (#5465)
This should be tested against Mathlib, but there are conflicts with the
`nightly-with-mathlib` branch right now, so I'll wait until tomorrow.
2024-09-25 07:17:13 +00:00
Mac Malone
7845a05cf1 chore: update src/lake/lakefie.toml (#5462)
Update the Lake-specific package configuration with the proper root for
the executable (after #5143).
2024-09-25 05:42:52 +00:00
Mac Malone
57679eeff5 fix: typo in run_new_frontend signature (#4685)
Fixes a mixed up between the parameter and global variable for
`json_output` the occurred during some name juggling in #3939.
2024-09-25 05:42:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
974cc3306c chore: restore @[simp] on Array.swapAt!_def (#5461) 2024-09-25 01:33:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c7819bd6eb chore: missing List.set_replicate_self (#5460) 2024-09-25 01:15:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a4fb740d2f chore: missing BitVec lemmas (#5459) 2024-09-25 01:06:39 +00:00
Kyle Miller
ea75c924a1 feat: add heq_comm (#5456)
Requested [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/217875-Is-there-code-for-X.3F/topic/heq_comm/near/472516757).
2024-09-24 23:36:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
65f4b92505 chore: cleanup of Array docstrings after refactor (#5458)
Sorry this is coming through in tiny pieces; I'm still hitting a
bootstrapping problem and getting things through piecemeal to localise
it.
2024-09-24 23:16:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a6f0112fc5 feat: refactor of Array (#5452)
This is a second attempt at #5446, first reverting parts of #5403.
2024-09-24 12:57:55 +00:00
Kim Morrison
eee0553318 chore: make some instance arguments implicit (#5454)
This was causing a few unnecessary `_` downstream.
2024-09-24 12:57:46 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
5d2c7fc1d9 feat: more of BitVec.getElem_* (#5404) 2024-09-24 08:04:39 +00:00
Kyle Miller
94de4ae964 fix: make Repr deriving instance handle explicit type parameters (#5432)
The `Repr` deriving instance was assuming that all type parameters are
implicit. However, if the parameter came from a type index that was
promoted to be a parameter, then it is explicit. The result was that
some explicit constructor arguments were not being represented.

Reported [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113489-new-members/topic/.23eval.20removes.20indexes.20inductive.20.20object.20descriptions/near/472301282).
2024-09-24 05:37:36 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1129160d80 fix: make formatter use current token table (#5389)
Previously the formatter was using the builtin token table rather that
the one in the current environment. This could lead to round-tripping
failures for user-defined notations.

For an illustrative example, given the following notation
```lean
infixl:65 "+'" => Int.add
notation:65 a:65 "+'-" b:66 => Int.add a (id b)
```
then `5 +' -1` would parse as `Int.add 5 (-1)` and incorrectly pretty
print as `5+'-1`, which in turn would parse as `Int.add 5 (id 1)`. Now
it pretty prints as `5+' -1`.
2024-09-24 05:33:12 +00:00
Kyle Miller
8cc62940e0 feat: localize universe metavariable errors at let bindings and fun binders (#5402)
Modifies how the declaration command elaborator reports when there are
unassigned metavariables. The visible effects are that (1) now errors
like "don't know how to synthesize implicit argument" and "failed to
infer 'let' declaration type" take precedence over universe level
issues, (2) universe level metavariables are reported as metavariables
(rather than as `u_1`, `u_2`, etc.), and (3) if the universe level
metavariables appear in `let` binding types or `fun` binder types, the
error is localized there.

Motivation: Reporting unsolved expression metavariables is more
important than universe level issues (typically universe issues are from
unsolved expression metavariables). Furthermore, `let` and `fun` binders
can't introduce universe polymorphism, so we can "blame" such bindings
for universe metavariables, if possible.

Example 1: Now the errors are on `x` and `none` (reporting expression
metavariables) rather than on `example` (which reported universe level
metavariables).
```lean
example : IO Unit := do
  let x := none
  pure ()
```

Example 2: Now there is a "failed to infer universe levels in 'let'
declaration type" error on `PUnit`.
```lean
def foo : IO Unit := do
  let x : PUnit := PUnit.unit
  pure ()
```


In more detail:
* `elabMutualDef` used to turn all level mvars into fresh level
parameters before doing an analysis for "hidden levels". This analysis
turns out to be exactly the same as instead creating fresh parameters
for level mvars in only pre-definitions' types and then looking for
level metavariables in their bodies. With this PR, error messages refer
to the same level metavariables in the Infoview, rather than obscure
generated `u_1`, `u_2`, ... level parameters.
* This PR made it possible to push the "hidden levels" check into
`addPreDefinitions`, after the checks for unassigned expression mvars.
It used to be that if the "hidden levels" check produced an "invalid
occurrence of universe level" error it would suppress errors for
unassigned expression mvars, and now it is the other way around.
* There is now a list of `LevelMVarErrorInfo` objects in the `TermElabM`
state. These record expressions that should receive a localized error if
they still contain level metavariables. Currently `let` expressions and
binder types in general register such info. Error messages make use of a
new `exposeLevelMVars` function that adds pretty printer annotations
that try to expose all universe level metavariables.
* When there are universe level metavariables, for error recovery the
definition is still added to the environment after assigning each
metavariable to level 0.
* There's a new `Lean.Util.CollectLevelMVars` module for collecting
level metavariables from expressions.

Closes #2058
2024-09-24 05:30:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b612403980 chore: update copyrights (#5449) 2024-09-24 05:27:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6b0d4e50c0 chore: update Pi instance names (#5447)
Override instance names for nonempty / inhabited / subsingleton arrows,
per
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Pi.20instance.20names.20in.20Lean.204.20core/near/466248246).
2024-09-24 04:12:51 +00:00
Siddharth
0cae7165aa feat: BitVec.toNat_{add,sub,mul_of_lt} for BitVector non-overflow reasoning (#5411)
These theorems are useful when one wants to simplify the goal state,
under knowledge that the bitvector operations don't overflow. This can
produce much smaller goal states that eventually allows `bv_omega` to
quickly close the goal.

Note that the LHS of the theorem is *not* in `simp` normal form, since
e.g. `(x + y).toNat` is normalized to `(x.toNat + y.toNat) % 2^w`. It's
not immediately clear to me what should be done about this.

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-09-24 03:54:50 +00:00
euprunin
ba43ce18c3 chore: remove repeated words (#5438)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-09-24 03:40:11 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
3190be3058 feat: add LawCommIdentity + IdempotentOp for BitVec.[and|or|xor] (#5416)
As these instances seemingly require explicit arguments, this PR also
makes some arguments explicit.
2024-09-24 03:27:57 +00:00
TomasPuverle
a108644461 feat: implement To/FromJSON Empty (#5421)
Resolve cases when the `To/FromJSON` type classes are used with `Empty`,
e.g. in the following motivating example.

```
import Lean

structure Foo (α : Type) where
  y : Option α
deriving Lean.ToJson

#eval Lean.toJson (⟨none⟩ : Foo Empty) -- fails
```

This is a follow-up to this PR
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5415, as suggested by
@eric-wieser. It expands on the original suggestion by also handling
`FromJSON`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
2024-09-24 03:27:23 +00:00
euprunin
4b47a10bef chore: fix spelling mistakes in tests (#5439)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-24 03:22:53 +00:00
euprunin
2d5ebf3705 chore: fix spelling mistakes in RELEASES.md (#5440)
---

Correct some stray spelling mistakes. I think the typo count is
asymptotically approaching zero.

Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-24 03:20:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5017b2bfbf chore: Mathlib's lean-pr-testing-NNNN branches should use Batteries' lean-pr-testing-NNNN branches (#5444)
The problem here was that in Mathlib's `lean-pr-testing-NNNN` branches,
we were setting Batteries to a `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` branch. This
means that when we merge or rebase a new `nightly-with-mathlib` into a
Lean PR, the corresponding Mathlib testing branch would keep using an
old version of Batteries.

We also make sure to bump Batteries if Mathlib's `lean-pr-testing-NNNN`
branch already exists.
2024-09-24 01:33:38 +00:00
euprunin
1b4ee185e8 chore: fix spelling mistakes in src/Lean/Meta/ (#5436)
---
This is the final set of fixes of this kind. Thanks for your patience!

Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 23:09:14 +00:00
euprunin
27c4c366b4 chore: remove (syntactically) duplicate imports (#5437)
---

Related: https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/16384
("feat: lint on (syntactically) duplicate imports")

Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 23:07:56 +00:00
euprunin
405b5aa047 chore: fix spelling mistakes in src/Lean/Elab/ (#5435)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 21:58:16 +00:00
euprunin
edf2327229 chore: fix spelling mistakes in examples (doc/examples/) (#5434)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 21:44:55 +00:00
euprunin
cda6733f97 chore: fix spelling mistakes in non-Lean files (#5430)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 21:11:20 +00:00
euprunin
624f1b9963 chore: fix spelling mistakes in src/Init/ (#5427)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 21:09:58 +00:00
euprunin
cf94f793a2 chore: fix spelling mistakes in src/Std/ (#5431)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 20:39:34 +00:00
Henrik Böving
9185955692 feat: present the bv_decide counter example at the API (#5433) 2024-09-23 20:29:39 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9d583ab4ec fix: worker: make sure to always report some recent range as progress when waiting (#5428)
On a document edit, it may be the case that the first nontrivial
snapshot is e.g. for a macro-generated tactic call that does not have
range information. In that case, instead of just displaying nothing, we
should fall back to a previous range, in this case of the original
tactic macro.
2024-09-23 15:52:52 +00:00
euprunin
50339e38d9 chore: fix spelling mistakes in src/Lean/ (#5426)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 14:56:59 +00:00
euprunin
8b61dda964 chore: fix spelling mistakes in error messages/exceptions (#5425)
Co-authored-by: euprunin <euprunin@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 13:19:05 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fc20b5dfb4 fix: must not reduce ite in the discriminant of match-expression when reducibility setting is .reducible (#5419)
closes #5388

See updated comment for additional details.
2024-09-23 12:26:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7fba7ed7b6 feat: decidable quantifers for BitVec (#5418) 2024-09-23 11:02:49 +00:00
Henrik Böving
2f2142ab37 feat: enhance the rewriting rules of bv_decide (#5423) 2024-09-23 09:22:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e551a366a0 feat: theorems about List.toArray (#5403) 2024-09-23 05:24:03 +00:00
Siddharth
f4afbc2f8b feat: BitVec analogues of Nat.{mul_two, two_mul, mul_succ, succ_mul} (#5410)
As requested by @hargoniX .
2024-09-23 04:37:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8c8585536c feat: refactor DecidableEq (Array α) (#5422) 2024-09-23 03:49:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c825b5a560 chore: reverse direction of List.set_map (#5405) 2024-09-23 03:44:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
738435b90a chore: make Array functions either semireducible or use structural recursion (#5420)
Previously, it was not possible to use `decide` with most Array
functions (including `==`).

Later, we may replace some of these functions with defeqs that go via
the `List` operations, and use `csimp` lemmas for fast runtime
behaviour. In the meantime, this allows using `decide`.
2024-09-23 02:41:41 +00:00
TomasPuverle
1883c9b7eb feat: implement Repr Empty (#5415)
Given the derived `Repr` instance for types with parameters, the absence
of `Repr Empty` can cause `Repr` instance synthesis to fail. For
example, given
```lean
inductive Prim (special : Type) where
  | plus
  | other : special → Prim special
deriving Repr
```
this works:
```lean
#eval (Prim.plus : Prim Int)
```
but this fails:
```lean
#eval (Prim.plus : Prim Empty)
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>
2024-09-23 01:11:36 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
fc52015841 feat: add _self, _zero, and _allOnes for BitVec.[and|or|xor] (#5413)
The `xor_allOnes` theorems end up in the `not` section, as the relevant
simplification lemmas are otherwise not defined.
2024-09-22 10:10:54 +00:00
Henrik Böving
a6830f90ab chore: basic cleanups for bv_decide (#5408) 2024-09-20 11:47:35 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
eceba0faf4 chore: update stage0 2024-09-20 09:14:22 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
fc963ffceb feat: apply_rfl tactic: handle Eq, HEq, better error messages (#3714)
This implements the first half of #3302: It improves the extensible
`apply_rfl` tactic (the one that looks at `refl` attributes, part of
the `rfl` macro) to

* Check itself and ahead of time that the lhs and rhs are defEq, and
give
a nice consistent error message when they don't (instead of just passing
on
  the less helpful error message from `apply Foo.refl`), and using the 
machinery that `apply` uses to elaborate expressions to highlight diffs
  in implicit arguments.

* Also handle `Eq` and `HEq` (built in) and `Iff` (using the attribute)

Care is taken that, as before, the current transparency setting affects
comparing the lhs and rhs, but not the reduction of the relation

So before we had

```lean
opaque P : Nat → Nat → Prop
@[refl] axiom P.refl (n : Nat) : P n n

/--
error: tactic 'apply' failed, failed to unify
  P ?n ?n
with
  P 42 23
⊢ P 42 23
-/
#guard_msgs in
example : P 42 23 := by apply_rfl

opaque withImplicitNat {n : Nat} : Nat

/--
error: tactic 'apply' failed, failed to unify
  P ?n ?n
with
  P withImplicitNat withImplicitNat
⊢ P withImplicitNat withImplicitNat
-/
#guard_msgs in
example : P (@withImplicitNat 42) (@withImplicitNat 23) := by apply_rfl
```

and with this PR the messages we get are

```
error: tactic 'apply_rfl' failed, The lhs
  42
is not definitionally equal to rhs
  23
⊢ P 42 23
```
resp.
```
error: tactic 'apply_rfl' failed, The lhs
  @withImplicitNat 42
is not definitionally equal to rhs
  @withImplicitNat 23
⊢ P withImplicitNat withImplicitNat
```

A test file checks the various failure modes and error messages.

I believe this `apply_rfl` can serve as the only implementation of
`rfl`, which would then complete #3302, and actually expose these
improved
error messages to the user. But as that seems to require a
non-trivial bootstrapping dance, it’ll be separate.
2024-09-20 08:25:10 +00:00
Alex Keizer
d8e0fa425b feat: instance for Inhabited (TacticM α) (#5401)
Provide an instance `Inhabited (TacticM α)`, even when `α` is not known
to be inhabited.

The default value is just the default value of `TermElabM α`, which
already has a similar instance.
2024-09-20 06:07:02 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
e43664c405 doc: add Verso to release checklist process (#5372)
This will help downstream users of Verso who aren't tracking Lean
`master`.
2024-09-20 06:06:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c50bc845c2 feat: HashSet.ofArray (unverified) (#5369)
This is being added downstream (in Batteries, and then used by Aesop).
2024-09-20 06:05:21 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b41019e8e8 feat: HashSet.partition (unverified) (#5370)
`Aesop` is depending on (a custom-rolled) `Set` data structure with
`.partition`.
2024-09-20 06:05:10 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0a2d121e45 fix: modify projection instance binder info (#5376)
closes #5333

This PR tries to address issue #5333.

My conjecture is that the binder annotations for `C.toB` and
`Algebra.toSMul` are not ideal. `Algebra.toSMul` is one of declarations
where the new command `set_synth_order` was used. Both classes, `C` and
`Algebra`, are parametric over instances, and in both cases, the issue
arises due to projection instances: `C.toB` and `Algebra.toSMul`. Let's
focus on the binder annotations for `C.toB`. They are as follows:

```
C.toB [inst : A 20000] [self : @C inst] : @B ...
```

As a projection, it seems odd that `inst` is an instance-implicit
argument instead of an implicit one, given that its value is fixed by
`self`. We observe the same issue in `Algebra.toSMul`:

```
Algebra.toSMul {R : Type u} {A : Type v} [inst1 : CommSemiring R] [inst2 : Semiring A]
   [self : @Algebra R A inst1 inst2] : SMul R A
```

The PR changes the binder annotations as follows:

```
C.toB {inst : A 20000} [self : @C inst] : @B ...
```

and

```
Algebra.toSMul {R : Type u} {A : Type v} {inst1 : CommSemiring R} {inst2 : Semiring A}
    [self : @Algebra R A inst1 inst2] : SMul R A
```

In both cases, the `set_synth_order` is used to force `self` to be
processed first.

In the MWE, there is no instance for `C ...`, and `C.toB` is quickly
discarded. I suspect a similar issue occurs when trying to use
`Algebra.toSMul`, where there is no `@Algebra R A ... ...`, but Lean
spends unnecessary time trying to synthesize `CommSemiring R` and
`Semiring A` instances. I believe the new binder annotations make sense,
as if there is a way to synthesize `Algebra R A ... ...`, it will tell
us how to retrieve the instance-implicit arguments.

TODO: 
- Impact on Mathlib.
- Document changes.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Johan Commelin <johan@commelin.net>
2024-09-20 06:03:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
152ca85fa9 chore: reorganization in Array/Basic (#5400)
Getting started on `Array`.
2024-09-20 02:01:52 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0ecf2a030a feat: List.fold relators (#5393) 2024-09-20 00:48:03 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
7b8f2fe54c doc: mark «tacticHave'_:=_» as an alternative form of have' (#5396)
This is to simplify the manual's cross-referencing.
2024-09-19 17:09:57 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
34f85bee02 fix: unused variable false positive when combining alias and non-lexical use (#5335)
We need to follow the fvar aliases registered by `match` in both
directions

Fixes #4714, fixes #2837

---------

Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-09-19 10:51:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
590c725943 feat: lemmas about List.maximum? (#5394) 2024-09-19 09:23:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9193196208 feat: List.fold / attach lemmas (#5392) 2024-09-19 08:26:06 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c3f384d6a5 feat: review of List.erase / List.find lemmas (#5391) 2024-09-19 05:37:04 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
daf24ff6aa feat: add BitVec.ofBool_[and|or|xor]_ofBool theorems (#5385)
... and use them to simplify some proofs.
2024-09-18 21:59:09 +00:00
Henrik Böving
fa6afa85df refactor: remove the last use of Lean.(HashSet|HashMap) (#5362) 2024-09-18 18:20:51 +00:00
Henrik Böving
592e1dc6c2 feat: bv_decide diagnosis (#5365)
Fixes: #5326
2024-09-18 17:55:16 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
c4293f04ef feat: add Nonempty instances for products (#5374)
After #5270, `partial` functions that use products of sums no longer
compile with only `Nonempty` constraints on their arguments. These
instances allow the compilation to work.
2024-09-18 16:34:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e417ad8a70 feat: missing Fin @[simp] lemmas (#5380) 2024-09-18 10:06:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ddd471223c chore: cleaning up redundant simp lemmas (#5381)
Problems reported by the simpNF linter downstream.
2024-09-18 10:06:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4e5e2ad311 chore: fixes spurious omega error in #5315 (#5382) 2024-09-18 09:43:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
dcff54edb5 chore: notation ^^ for Bool.xor (#5332)
Not sure why this had been missing. Precedence is slightly higher than
`||`, matching the precedence order we have for bitwise operators.
2024-09-18 08:59:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
30e90a4dff chore: upstream map_mergeSort (#5377)
This incorporates contributions from @eric-wieser in
https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/15952 and
@fgdorais in https://github.com/leanprover-community/batteries/pull/579
2024-09-18 08:19:42 +00:00
Jeremy Tan Jie Rui
988fc7b25a chore: ensure that the rfl tactic tries Iff.rfl (#5359)
Revert the removal of the macro containing `Iff.rfl` in #5329; it was
causing errors in leanprover-community/mathlib4#16839.
2024-09-18 08:01:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3872027d92 chore: update stage0 2024-09-18 18:20:06 +10:00
Tobias Grosser
d38dc72a54 chore: introduce BitVec.setWidth to unify zeroExtend and truncate
incomplete deprecations

chore: complete deprecations
2024-09-18 18:20:06 +10:00
Alex Keizer
4641ed8c96 feat: add bv_decide normalization rules for ofBool (a.getLsbD i) and ofBool a[i] (#5375)
In LNSym we often use the pattern `ofBool (a.getLsbD i)` to pick out a
specific bit (`i`) from a bitvector (`a`).

By adding a rewrite to `extractLsb` to `bv_decide`s normalization set,
we can still automatically close goals that have this pattern. In the
process, I also added a simp-lemma about the value of a `Fin 1`.
2024-09-18 07:04:30 +00:00
Kim Morrison
77cd700fa8 chore: remove some @[simp]s from Fin lemmas (#5379)
These were dubious simps, barely used, that hurt confluence.
2024-09-18 05:50:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a6a06a620f chore: modify signature of lemmas about mergeSort (#5378)
This slightly smooths the interaction with `Prop` based reasoning in
Mathlib. Still not totally happy here.
2024-09-18 01:49:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
21d71de481 chore: fix name of List.length_mergeSort (#5373) 2024-09-17 12:43:39 +00:00
Eric Wieser
b74f85accd fix: do not ban .. with a . on the next line (#4768)
Without this change,
```lean
example : True := by
  refine' trivial ..
  . trivial
```
is a parse error.
2024-09-17 09:57:35 +00:00
Eric Wieser
46b16b6df1 doc: explain the borrow syntax (#4305)
Obviously a link to the web docs isn't ideal, but having hovers
available on the symbol is much better than nothing.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-09-17 09:52:41 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
445c8f2ee0 feat: FunInd: more equalities in context, more careful cleanup (#5364)
A round of clean-up for the context of the functional induction
principle cases.

* Already previously, with `match e with | p => …`, functional induction
would ensure that `h : e = p` is in scope, but it wouldn’t work in
dependent cases. Now it introduces heterogeneous equality where needed
(fixes #4146)
* These equalities are now added always (previously we omitted them when
the discriminant was a variable that occurred in the goal, on the
grounds that the goal gets refined through the match, but it’s more
consistent to introduce the equality in any case)
* We no longer use `MVarId.cleanup` to clean up the goal; it was
sometimes too aggressive (fixes #5347)
* Instead, we clean up more carefully and with a custom strategy:
* First, we substitute all variables without a user-accessible name, if
we can.
  * Then, we substitute all variable, if we can, outside in.
* As we do that, we look for `HEq`s that we can turn into `Eq`s to
substitute some more
  * We substitute unused `let`s.
  
**Breaking change**: In some cases leads to a different functional
induction principle (different names and order of assumptions, for
example).
2024-09-16 12:30:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3f8e3e726d feat: some BitVec GetElem lemmas (#5361) 2024-09-16 11:30:05 +00:00
Kim Morrison
45af92fcd1 feat: lemmas about List.tail (#5360) 2024-09-16 09:25:24 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
7952a7f74d feat: add BitVec.getElem_truncate (#5278)
Co-authored-by: luisacicolini <luisacicolini@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-09-16 08:59:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c25d206647 chore: Fin.ofNat' uses NeZero (#5356) 2024-09-16 07:13:18 +00:00
Violeta Hernández
078e9b6d77 doc: add documentation for groupBy.loop (#5349)
We add some documentation explaining the auxiliary function in the
definition of `groupBy`. This has been moved here from Mathlib PR
[16818](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/16818) by
request of @semorrison.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-09-16 05:56:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a745e33123 feat: BitVec.truncate lemmas (#5357)
These improve confluence of lemmas involving `truncate`.
2024-09-16 05:55:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7740a38a71 chore: remove @[simp] from Option.bind_map (#5354) 2024-09-16 04:44:38 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9568f305d8 chore: switch primes on List.getElem_take (#5294)
This will probably have fallout downstream, and as it is a direct name
switch I'm not going to provide any deprecations.
2024-09-16 03:40:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b1179d5cc3 chore: fix implicitness of List.getElem_mem (#5331) 2024-09-16 03:28:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e6145a6937 feat: simp lemmas for LawfulBEq (#5355) 2024-09-16 03:21:30 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d47ae99721 feat: List.head_mem_head? (#5353) 2024-09-16 03:05:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0aac83fe40 feat: List.attachWith lemmas (#5352) 2024-09-16 02:24:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8c6ac845b1 chore: cleanup after export Bool.and/or/not/xor 2024-09-16 12:45:51 +10:00
Kim Morrison
b714a96034 chore: update stage0 2024-09-16 12:45:51 +10:00
Kim Morrison
4e0f6b8b45 feat: export Bool.and/or/not/xor 2024-09-16 12:45:51 +10:00
Kim Morrison
979c5a4d6a chore: update stage0 2024-09-16 12:45:51 +10:00
Kim Morrison
2079bdcbca feat: deprecate _root_.or/and/not/xor 2024-09-16 12:45:51 +10:00
Kim Morrison
1a2217d47e feat: cleanup of List.getElem_append variants (#5303) 2024-09-16 02:01:37 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3ef67c468a feat: List.replicate lemmas (#5350) 2024-09-15 23:57:04 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4c439c73a7 test: tracing and test case for #5347 (#5348)
not a fix, unfortunately, just recording the test.
2024-09-15 15:45:39 +00:00
thorimur
5eea8355ba fix: set check level correctly during workflow (#5344)
Fixes a workflow bug where the `check-level` was not always set
correctly. Arguments to a `gh` call used to determine the `check_level`
were accidentally outside of the relevant command substitution (`$(gh
...)`).

-----

This can be observed in [these
logs](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/actions/runs/10859763037/job/30139540920),
where the check level (shown first under "configure build matrix") is
`2`, but the PR does not have the `release-ci` tag. As a "test", run the
script for "set check level" printed in those logs (with some lines
omitted):
```
check_level=0

labels="$(gh api repos/leanprover/lean4/pulls/5343) --jq '.labels'"
if echo "$labels" | grep -q "release-ci"; then
  check_level=2
elif echo "$labels" | grep -q "merge-ci"; then
  check_level=1
fi

echo "check_level=$check_level"
```
Note that this prints `check_level=2`, but changing `labels` to
`labels="$(gh api repos/leanprover/lean4/pulls/5343 --jq '.labels')"`
prints `check_level=0`.
2024-09-14 08:14:08 +00:00
thorimur
60bb451d45 feat: allow addition of release-ci label via comment (#5343)
Updates the PR labeling workflow to allow an external contributor to add
the `release-ci` label to their own PR via comment. This is allows users
on Windows and Intel-based macs to generate toolchains for local
testing. The pull request template is also updated to reflect this.

-----

See Zulip discussion
[here](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/No.20binary.20for.20lean.20PR.20testing.20locally).
2024-09-14 08:13:48 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
f989520d2b fix: invalid namespace completions (#5322)
This PR fixes an issue reported a while ago at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.60Monad.2Emap.60.20is.20a.20namespace.3F/near/425662846
where `Monad.map` was incorrectly reported by the autocompletion as a
namespace.

The underlying issue is that `Monad.map` contains an internal
declaration `_default`. This PR ensures that no namespaces are
registered that only contain internal declarations.

This also means that `open`ing namespaces that only contain internal
declarations will now fail.

The Mathlib adaption for this is a minor change where a declaration
(i.e. a namespace that only contains internal declarations) was `open`ed
by accident.
2024-09-13 12:23:03 +00:00
Jeremy Tan Jie Rui
626dda9358 refactor: tag Iff.refl with @[refl] (#5329)
and remove `exact Off.rfl` from the `rfl` macro.


This upstreams a property found in
[`Mathlib.Init.Logic`](4e40837aec/Mathlib/Init/Logic.lean (L63)).
2024-09-13 11:55:36 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5f789e63fa chore: remove confusing test 2024-09-13 13:04:57 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
438061a924 fix: inaccessible pattern vars reported as binders (#5337)
Fixes an unused variable false positive on some wildcard patterns

Fixes #1633, fixes #2830
2024-09-13 09:53:58 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
ec98c92ba6 feat: @[builtin_doc] attribute (part 2) (#3918)
This solves the issue where certain subexpressions are lacking syntax
hovers because the hover text is not "builtin" - it only shows up if the
`Parser` constant is imported in the environment. For top level syntaxes
this is not a problem because `builtin_term_parser` will automatically
add this doc information, but nested syntaxes don't get the same
treatment.

We could walk the expression and add builtin docs recursively, but this
is somewhat expensive and unnecessary given that it's a fixed list of
declarations in lean core. Moreover, there are reasons to want to
control which syntax nodes actually get hovers, and while a better
system for that is forthcoming, for now it can be achieved by
strategically not applying the `@[builtin_doc]` attribute.

Fixes #3842
2024-09-13 08:05:10 +00:00
Henrik Böving
2080fc0221 feat: (DHashMap|HashMap|HashSet).(getKey?|getKey|getKey!|getKeyD) (#5244) 2024-09-13 05:40:10 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
b34379554d feat: completion fallback (#5299)
When the elaborator doesn't provide us with any `CompletionInfo`, we
currently provide no completions whatsoever. But in many cases, we can
still provide some helpful identifier completions without elaborator
information. This PR adds a fallback mode for this situation.

There is more potential here, but this should be a good start.

In principle, this issue alleviates #5172 (since we now provide
completions in these contexts). I'll leave it up to an elaboration
maintainer whether we also want to ensure that the completion infos are
provided correctly in these cases.
2024-09-12 16:09:20 +00:00
Siddharth
273b7540b2 feat: toNat_sub_of_le (#5314)
This adds a simplification lemma for `(x - y).toNat` when the
subtraction is known to not overflow (i.e., `y ≤ x`).

We make a new section for this for two reasons:
1. Definitions of subtraction occur before the definition of
`BitVec.le_def`, so we cannot directly place this lemma at `sub`.
2. There are other theorems of this kind, for addition and
multiplication, which can morally live in the same section.
2024-09-12 13:19:39 +00:00
Lars - he/him
b875627198 feat: add ediv_nonneg_of_nonpos_of_nonpos to DivModLemmas (#5320)
The theorem 

```lean
namespace Int

theorem ediv_nonneg_of_nonpos_of_nonpos {a b : Int} (Ha : a ≤ 0) (Hb : b ≤ 0) : 0 ≤ a / b := by
  match a, b with
  | ofNat a, b =>
    match Int.le_antisymm Ha (ofNat_zero_le a) with
    | h1 =>
    rw [h1, zero_ediv,]
    exact Int.le_refl 0
  | a, ofNat b =>
    match Int.le_antisymm Hb (ofNat_zero_le  b) with
    | h1 =>
    rw [h1, Int.ediv_zero]
    exact Int.le_refl 0
  | negSucc a, negSucc b =>
    rw [Int.div_def, ediv]
    have le_succ {a: Int} : a ≤ a+1 := (le_add_one (Int.le_refl a))
    have h2: 0 ≤ ((↑b:Int) + 1) := Int.le_trans (ofNat_zero_le b) le_succ
    have h3: (0:Int) ≤ ↑a / (↑b + 1) := (ediv_nonneg (ofNat_zero_le a) h2)
    exact Int.le_trans h3 le_succ
```
is nontrivial to prove from existing theorems and would be nice to add
as standard theorem in DivModLemmas.

See the zullip conversation
[here](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/Adding.20theorem.20theorem.20ediv_nonneg'.20for.20negative.20a.20and.20b)

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-09-12 11:26:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
adfd6c090e chore: add Nat.self_sub_mod lemma (#5306) 2024-09-12 03:36:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
da0d309d65 feat: provide mergeSort comparator autoParam (#5302)
Write `mergeSort xs ys cmp` to provide an explicit comparator, or
otherwise `mergeSort xs ys` falls back to `LE` and `DecidablePred` via
an autoparam.
2024-09-12 01:50:01 +00:00
Kim Morrison
87fdd7809f feat: List.tail lemma (#5316) 2024-09-12 01:09:57 +00:00
Henrik Böving
8fd6e46a9c feat: more basic BitVec ordering theory for UInt (#5313) 2024-09-11 18:16:21 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0602b805c8 fix: changing whitespace after module header may break subsequent commands (#5312)
`with` considered harmful when merging old and new state, let's always
be explicit in these cases
2024-09-11 13:00:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0b7debe376 chore: fix List.countP lemmas (#5311) 2024-09-11 10:09:37 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f5146c6edb chore: fix List.all/any lemmas (#5310) 2024-09-11 10:02:47 +00:00
Kim Morrison
461283ecf4 chore: restoring Option simp confluence (#5307) 2024-09-11 06:52:31 +00:00
Kim Morrison
27bf7367ca chore: rename Nat bitwise lemmas (#5305) 2024-09-11 06:29:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d4cc934149 chore: rename Int.div/mod to tdiv/tmod (#5301)
From the new doc-string:
```quote
In early versions of Lean, the typeclasses provided by `/` and `%`
were defined in terms of `tdiv` and `tmod`, and these were named simply as `div` and `mod`.

However we decided it was better to use `ediv` and `emod`,
as they are consistent with the conventions used in SMTLib, Mathlib,
and often mathematical reasoning is easier with these conventions.

At that time, we did not rename `div` and `mod` to `tdiv` and `tmod` (along with all their lemma).
In September 2024, we decided to do this rename (with deprecations in place),
and later we intend to rename `ediv` and `emod` to `div` and `mod`, as nearly all users will only
ever need to use these functions and their associated lemmas.
```
2024-09-11 06:15:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b88cdf6a3e chore: Array.not_mem_empty (#5304) 2024-09-11 06:13:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
325a058893 feat: more List.findIdx theorems (#5300) 2024-09-11 04:53:59 +00:00
Henrik Böving
f869018447 feat: BitVec unsigned order theoretic results (#5297)
Proves that `<` and `<=` on `BitVec` are (strict) (total) partial
orders. This is required for the `UInt` as `BitVec` refactor.

This does open the question how to state these theorems "correctly" for
`BitVec`, we have both `<` living in `Prop` and `BitVec.ult` living in
`Bool`. We might of course say to always use `<` but: Once we start
adding `IntX` we need to prove the same results for `BitVec.slt` to
provide an equivalent API. So it would appear that it is unavoidable to
have a `= true` variant of these theorems there?

Question answered: Use `<` and `slt`.
2024-09-10 12:32:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c1da100997 chore: remove debug.byAsSorry 2024-09-10 19:30:09 +10:00
Kim Morrison
6c97c4ce37 chore: update stage0 2024-09-10 19:30:09 +10:00
Kim Morrison
c209d0d745 chore: upstream Zero and NeZero 2024-09-10 19:30:09 +10:00
Kim Morrison
5bc199ea1c chore: debug.byAsSorry on broken proofs 2024-09-10 19:30:09 +10:00
Arthur Adjedj
cb4a73a487 refactor: Lean.Elab.Deriving.FromToJson (#5292)
Refactors the derive handlers for `ToJson` and `FromJson` in preparation
for #3160.
This splits up the different parts of the handler according to how other
similar handlers are implemented while keeping the original logic
intact. This makes the changes necessary to adapt the file in #3160 much
easier.
2024-09-10 08:55:52 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
92e1f168b2 chore: update stage0 2024-09-10 08:04:39 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
a58520da16 fix: travelling auto-completion (#5257)
Fixes #4455, fixes #4705, fixes #5219

Also fixes a minor bug where a dot in brackets would report incorrect
completions instead of no completions.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-09-10 07:26:44 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
8f899bf5bd doc: code comments about reflection support (#5235)
I found that the kernel has special support for `e =?= true`, and will
in this case aggressively whnf `e`. This explains the following behavior
(for a `sqrt` function with fuel):

```lean
theorem foo : sqrt 100000000000000000002 == 10000000000 := rfl       -- fast
theorem foo : sqrt 100000000000000000002 =  10000000000 := rfl       -- slow
theorem foo : sqrt 100000000000000000002 =  10000000000 := by decide -- fast
```

The special support in the kernel only applies for closed `e` and `true`
on the RHS. It could be generlized (also open terms, also `false`, other
data type's constructors, different orientation). But maybe I should
wait for evidence that this generaziation really matters, or whether
all applications (proof by reflection) can be made to have this form.
2024-09-10 06:36:38 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7a5a08960a feat: cleanup of List.findIdx / List.take lemmas (#5293) 2024-09-10 06:17:38 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
5a9cfa0aec chore: update stage0 2024-09-10 05:59:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c79b09fdbd chore: restore Lake build 2024-09-10 15:24:23 +10:00
Kim Morrison
0b9a4bd65e chore: update stage0 2024-09-10 15:24:23 +10:00
Kim Morrison
e41e305479 chore: rename Array.data to Array.toList 2024-09-10 15:24:23 +10:00
Kim Morrison
b1a03a471f chore: disable Lake build 2024-09-10 15:24:23 +10:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6aa0c46b04 chore: fix Nix update-stage0 (#5290) 2024-09-09 16:27:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7eedf6467f feat: List.mem_ite_nil_left and analogues (#5289) 2024-09-09 14:08:01 +00:00
Kim Morrison
64b35ba555 chore: use boolean predicates in List.filter (#5287) 2024-09-09 12:15:04 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
ab7aed2930 feat: use incrementality for completion in tactic blocks (#5205)
This PR enables the use of incrementality for completion in tactic
blocks. Consider the following example:
```lean
example : True := by
  have : True := T
  sleep 10000
```

Before this PR, in order to respond to a completion request after `T`,
`sleep 10000` has to complete first since the command must be fully
elaborated. After this PR, the completion request is responded to
immediately.
2024-09-09 12:08:37 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a9e6c41b54 feat: allow simplifying dite_not/decide_not with only Decidable (¬p) (#5263)
These lemmas are mostly useful for ensuring confluence of `simp`, but
rarely useful in proofs. However they don't seem to have any negative
impact.
2024-09-09 11:46:20 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
1a857aa4f8 fix: do not link to Lake_shared with absolute path (#5286)
batteries CI fell over this but there was no PR comment
2024-09-09 11:11:00 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c2761dc270 feat: Lake shared library (#5143)
Fixes #2436 #5050

Next step: when libLake_shared is in stage 0, --load-dynlib it when
building stage 1 Lake
2024-09-09 09:05:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ec7ae59473 feat: List.count lemmas (#5285) 2024-09-09 07:04:57 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c96fbdda44 chore: remove @[simp] from List.head_mem and similar (#5271)
These attributes do not seem particularly useful after all.
2024-09-09 06:05:06 +00:00
Kim Morrison
48db0f2d32 chore: turn off Inhabited (Sum α β) instances (#5284)
Alternative to #5270.
2024-09-09 01:10:20 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7a7440f59b feat: have IR checker suggest noncomputable (#4729)
Currently, `ll_infer_type` is responsible for telling the user about
`noncomputable` when a definition depends on one without executable
code. However, this is imperfect because type inference does not check
every subexpression. This leads to errors later on that users find to be
hard to interpret.

Now, `Lean.IR.checkDecls` has a friendlier error message when it
encounters constants without compiled definitions, suggesting to
consider using `noncomputable`. While this function is an internal IR
consistency check, it is also reasonable to have it give an informative
error message in this particular case. The suggestion to use
`noncomputable` is limited to just unknown constants.

Some alternatives would be to either (1) create another checker just for
missing constants, (2) change `ll_infer_type` to always visit every
subexpression no matter if they are necessary for inferring the type, or
(3) investigate whether `tests/lean/run/1785.lean` is due to a deeper
issue.

Closes #1785
2024-09-07 22:00:21 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c9239bfaa8 feat: let unfold do zeta-delta reduction of local definitions (#4834)
This is "upstreaming" mathlib's `unfold_let` tactic by incorporating its
functionality into `unfold`. Now `unfold` can, in addition to unfolding
global definitions, unfold local definitions. The PR also updates the
`conv` version of the tactic.

An improvement over `unfold_let` is that it beta reduces unfolded local
functions.

Two features not present in `unfold` are that (1) `unfold_let` with no
arguments does zeta delta reduction of *all* local definitions, and also
(2) `unfold_let` can interleave unfoldings (in contrast, `unfold a b c`
is exactly the same as `unfold a; unfold b; unfold c`).

Closes RFC #4090
2024-09-07 21:48:08 +00:00
Kyle Miller
8fcec4049b fix: make pretty printer escape identifiers that are tokens (#4979)
For example, if `forall` is a variable, it now pretty prints as
`«forall»`.

Closes #4686
2024-09-07 21:28:44 +00:00
Kyle Miller
e5e577865f doc: mention that inferType does not ensure type correctness (#5087)
This also adds links to the implementations of `whnf` and `inferType` to
make it easier to navigate this part of the code base.
2024-09-07 20:46:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7432a6f01f feat: more List.attach lemmas (#5277) 2024-09-07 05:29:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fcfead8cde feat: lemmas about List.attach (#5273)
#5272 should be merged first; this contains some material from that PR.
2024-09-06 22:14:56 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e5eea67020 chore: reverse direction of List.tail_map (#5275) 2024-09-06 11:55:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
943dec48c4 feat: remove @[simp] from Option.pmap/pbind and add simp lemmas (#5272) 2024-09-06 11:39:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
eba0cbaeb0 chore: remove HashMap's duplicated Pairwise and Sublist (#5269) 2024-09-06 09:28:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3ec55d3d49 chore: Nat.testBit_add_one should not be a global simp lemma (#5262) 2024-09-06 00:43:38 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c8c35ad3b9 chore: missing lemma about Fin.ofNat' (#5250) 2024-09-06 00:23:07 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7a6fa85ed1 chore: fix binders on ite_eq_left_iff (#5268) 2024-09-05 23:45:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f18ecd4493 chore: protect some Nat bitwise theorems (#5267) 2024-09-05 23:32:41 +00:00
Kyle Miller
74cf53f2b1 fix: preserve order of overapplied arguments in elab_as_elim procedure (#5266)
When an eliminator was overapplied with more than one additional
argument, elaboration produced an incorrect term because the list of
processed arguments was being reversed. Now these arguments are not
reversed.
2024-09-05 19:44:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
76ea33c4c6 chore: review of List API (#5264) 2024-09-05 13:08:31 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1b099521c1 feat: Nat bitwise lemmas (#5261) 2024-09-05 06:36:21 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7c364543a3 chore: review of List API (#5260) 2024-09-05 06:27:08 +00:00
Henrik Böving
795edcf8ad perf: reduce allocations in Json.compress (#5222)
1. Remove the need to allocate an intermediate `String` for literally
every character in a JSON `String`.
2. Use a single `String` buffer in the entire `Json.compress` machinery.
3. Use `toListAppend`

Number 1 is doing most of the lifting in the perf diff, the rest are
some minor but measurable improvements.
2024-09-04 19:52:10 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d08051cf0b chore: variables appearing on both sides of an iff should be implicit (#5254) 2024-09-04 08:33:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f1b2850aa4 chore: split Init.Data.Array.Lemmas for better bootstrapping (#5255)
This allows significantly reducing the imports of `Init.Data.List.Impl`.
2024-09-04 08:33:13 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
d55f55d575 fix: include identifier before cursor in document highlight request (#5237)
Fixes #3023. Also fixes a similar off-by-one in the file worker
definition request.
2024-09-04 08:05:54 +00:00
Alex Keizer
fa8439a663 refactor: make extractLsb' the primitive bv_decide understands, rather than extractLsb (#5211)
We change the `bv_decide` to understand `BitVec.extractLsb'` as a
primitive, and add a normalization lemma for `extractLsb`.
It's important to pick the primed version as a primitive, because it is
not always possible to rewrite `extractLsb'` back into `extractLsb` (see
#5007 for that direction, and the relevant side-conditions).

That is, with this PR, `bv_decide` is able to bitblast both versions of
extracting bits.
2024-09-04 08:02:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
05fe436bda chore: don't use simp_arith when simp will do (#5256) 2024-09-04 07:56:25 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a926d0ced0 chore: change BitVec.intMin/Max from abbrev to def (#5252)
I don't think we gain anything from having them as `abbrev` here, and
the simpNF linter complains:

```
-- Init.Data.BitVec.Lemmas
#check @BitVec.toNat_intMin /- simp can prove this:
  by simp only [BitVec.toNat_twoPow]
One of the lemmas above could be a duplicate.
If that's not the case try reordering lemmas or adding @[priority].
 -/
#check @BitVec.toNat_intMax /- Left-hand side simplifies from
  (BitVec.intMax w).toNat
to
  (2 ^ w - 1 % 2 ^ w + 2 ^ (w - 1)) % 2 ^ w
using
  simp only [@BitVec.toNat_sub, @BitVec.ofNat_eq_ofNat, BitVec.toNat_ofNat, BitVec.toNat_twoPow, Nat.add_mod_mod]
Try to change the left-hand side to the simplified term!
 -/
 ```
2024-09-04 05:29:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8c0c154ebf chore: remove Int simp lemmas that can't fire (#5253)
```
#lint only simpNF in all
```
reports (amongst others):

```
-- Init.Data.Int.Order
#check @Int.toNat_of_nonneg /- Left-hand side simplifies from
  ↑a.toNat
to
  max a 0
using
  simp only [Int.ofNat_toNat]
Try to change the left-hand side to the simplified term!
 -/
#check Int.toNat_sub_toNat_neg /- Left-hand side simplifies from
  ↑n.toNat - ↑(-n).toNat
to
  max n 0 - max (-n) 0
using
  simp only [Int.ofNat_toNat]
Try to change the left-hand side to the simplified term!
 -/
```
2024-09-04 05:29:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
52bc8dcb40 chore: remove redundant simp annotations (#5251) 2024-09-04 04:36:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c219303270 chore: remove @[simp] from some BitVec lemmas (#5249)
I think it would be reasonable, but for now unnecessary, to add @[simp]
to `toNat_of_zero_length` and the subsequent three lemmas.
2024-09-04 03:08:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
05ba835925 feat: simp lemmas for BitVec, improving confluence (#5248) 2024-09-04 03:03:46 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9587c67781 feat: BitVec.getElem_zeroExtend (#5247) 2024-09-04 02:29:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
744b68358e chore: cleanup imports of Array.Lemmas (#5246) 2024-09-04 01:48:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
318e455d96 chore: avoid importing List.Basic without List.Impl (#5245)
This doesn't completely resolve the danger (only relevant in `prelude`
files) of importing `Init.Data.List.Basic` but not `Init.Data.List.Impl`
and thereby not having `@[csimp]` lemmas installed for some list
operations.

I'm going to address this better while working on `Array`.
2024-09-04 01:25:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4eea57841d refactor: rfl tactic: do not use Kernel.isDefEq (#3772)
Sebastian mentioned that the use of the kernel defeq was to work around
a performance issue that was fixed since. Let's see if we can do
without.

This is also a semantic change: Ground terms (no free vars, no mvars)
are reduced at
“all” transparency even if the the transparency setting is default. This
was the case
even before 03f6b87647 switched to the
kernel defeq
checking for performance. It seems that this is rather surprising
behavior from the user
point of view. The fallout on batteries and mathlib is rather limited,
only a few
`rfl` proofs seem to have (inadvertently or not) have relied on this.

The speedcenter reports no significant regressions on core or mathlib.
2024-09-03 19:51:14 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a5162ca748 feat: add @[simp] to Nat.add_eq_zero_iff (#5241) 2024-09-03 09:05:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b053403238 chore: improve naming for List.mergeSort lemmas (#5242) 2024-09-03 06:42:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
66688e10ce chore: remove BitVec simps with complicated RHS (#5240) 2024-09-03 06:27:05 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4a2458b51d feat: gaps in Bool lemmas (#5228) 2024-09-03 04:33:43 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e9e858a448 chore: use Expr.numObjs instead of lean_expr_size_shared (#5239)
Remark: declarations like `sizeWithSharing` must be in `IO` since they
are not functions.

The commit also uses the more efficient `ShareCommon.shareCommon'`.
2024-09-02 21:26:00 +00:00
Mac Malone
df9cdcd1b7 feat: lake: Reservoir-related configuration for packages (#4770)
Adds additional fields to the package configuration which will be used
by Reservoir:

* `version`: The version of the package. Follows Lean's model of
`<major>.<minor>.<patch>[-<specialDescr>]`.
* `versionTags`: A pattern matching the set of Git tags Reservoir should
consider package version revisions.
* `description`: A short description for the package. Takes precedence
over the GitHub's description.
* `keywords`: An array of package keywords that will be used to group
packages into categories on Reservoir. Takes precedence over labels on
the repository.
* `homepage`: A URL to a website for the package. Takes precedence over
GitHub's homepage.
* `license`: An SPFX license identifier for the package's license (not
verified to be well-formed).
* `licenseFiles`: An array of (relative) files the contain license
information (e.g., `#["LICENSE", "NOTICE"]` for Apache 2.0).
* `readmeFile`: Relative path to the package's readme (enables
non-standard README locations).
* `reservoir`: Reservoir will use this setting to determine whether to
include packages in its index.

Also adds two new CLI commands:

* `lake reservoir-config`: Used by Reservoir to extract a package's
configuration.
* `lake check-build`: Determines whether the package has any default
build targets configured.

The Reservoir configuration also makes uses of the exiting `name` and
`platformIndependent` fields.
2024-09-02 16:07:08 +00:00
Markus Himmel
830b1191b3 doc: correct docstrings for integer division and modulus (#5230)
Fixes #5204.
2024-09-02 09:33:12 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
2117b89cd5 feat: pp.exprSizes debugging option (#5218) 2024-09-02 07:29:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4f04112446 chore: remove unused lemmas from a non-terminal simp (#5229)
These non-terminal `simp` calls broke on a branch, but can be fixed on
both `master` and that branch by removing a lemma.
2024-09-02 06:34:56 +00:00
Kyle Miller
db3631ba1f chore: release notes for 4.11.0 (#5221) 2024-09-02 00:19:41 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5214154ea9 perf: maximize term sharing at instantiateMVarDeclMVars (#5226)
The `instantiateMVarDeclMVars` is used by `runTactic`.

This commit address a performance issue at `LinearCategory`.
2024-09-01 23:00:48 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1b40ec5366 perf: cache visited exprs at CheckAssignmentQuick (#5225) 2024-09-01 22:04:40 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d31066646d feat: make #check and #reduce typecheck terms (#5079)
These commands were trusting that elaboration resulted in type-correct
terms, but users testing custom elaborators have found it to be
surprising that they do not do typechecking. This adds a `Meta.check`
step.
2024-08-31 02:39:38 +00:00
Henrik Böving
88c193d71c fix: out of bounds access when the CNF is too small (#5220)
As reported by @alexkeizer to me.
2024-08-30 22:30:03 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
e04a40ddc1 doc: include: currently applies to theorems only (#5206)
Fixes #5184
2024-08-30 12:51:50 +00:00
Henrik Böving
648239c6ec fix: BitVec benchmark after renaming of getLsb (#5217)
fallout from https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5200
2024-08-30 09:08:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a50ed83560 feat: List.erase_range (#5215) 2024-08-30 06:46:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
bb87a3314d chore: move @[csimp] lemmas earlier where possible (#5214) 2024-08-30 06:42:05 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a47c590a91 chore: make some AIG simps local (#5212)
These had leaked out and were being noticed by the confluence tool.
Better to just make them local.
2024-08-30 02:50:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0a0405f4fb chore: List.getElem_drop, add @[simp] and switch primes (#5210)
This is a breaking change, as it reverses the meaning of
`List.getElem_drop` and `List.getElem_drop'`.
2024-08-30 02:48:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
16aa80306e feat: Nat.bitwise lemmas (#5209) 2024-08-30 02:37:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a24370b049 chore: reverse direction of Int.toNat_sub (#5208)
The previous direction conflicted with `toNat_pred`, and this version is
equally helpful for confluence.
2024-08-30 02:25:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6b62fed82e feat: proposed change to BitVec API (#5200)
This renames `BitVec.getLsb` to `getLsbD` (`D` for "default" value, i.e.
false), and introduces `getLsb?` and `getLsb'` (which we can rename to
`getLsb` after a deprecation cycle).

(Similarly for `getMsb`.)

Also adds a `GetElem` class so we can use `x[i]` and `x[i]?` notation. 

Later, we will turn
```
theorem getLsbD_eq_getElem?_getD (x : BitVec w) (i : Nat) (h : i < w) :
    x.getLsbD i = x[i]?.getD false
```
on as a `@[simp]` lemma.

This PR doesn't attempt to demonstrate the benefits, but I think both
arguments are going to get easier, and this will bring the BitVec API
closer in line to List/Array, etc.

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
2024-08-30 02:00:57 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f30ff6ae79 refactor: put new eqns options into backward namespace (#5207)
in #4154 and #5129 the rules for equational lemmas have changed, and new
options were introduced that can be used to revert to the pre-4.12
behavior. Hopefully nobody really needs these options besides for
backwards compatibility, therefore we put these options in the
`backward` option name space.

So the previous behavior can be achieved by setting
```lean
set_option backward.eqns.nonrecursive false
set_option backward.eqns.deepRecursiveSplit false
```
2024-08-29 17:03:51 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
50a009f811 fix: recursion over predicates: add some whnf sprinkles (#5136)
This fixes #4540.

---------

Co-authored-by: Richard Kiss <him@richardkiss.com>
2024-08-29 16:55:54 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a993934839 feat: generate f.eq_unfold lemmas (#5141)
With this, lean produces the following zoo of rewrite rules:
```
Option.map.eq_1      : Option.map f none = none
Option.map.eq_2      : Option.map f (some x) = some (f x)
Option.map.eq_def    : Option.map f p = match o with | none => none | (some x) => some (f x)
Option.map.eq_unfold : Option.map = fun f p => match o with | none => none | (some x) => some (f x)
```

The `f.eq_unfold` variant is especially useful to rewrite with `rw`
under
binders.

This implements and fixes #5110
2024-08-29 16:47:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
aa3c87b2c7 fix: conv => arg n to handle .subsingletonInst (#5149)
this fixes #4394, see there for an analysis.
2024-08-29 15:48:31 +00:00
thorimur
869e42b7c3 fix: handle AttributeKinds in LabelAttributes correctly (#3698)
This PR propagates the `AttributeKind` to `SimpleScopedEnvExtension.add`
in attributes created with `register_label_attr`.

This also fixes a nearby stale docstring which referenced `Std`.

---

Closes #3697
2024-08-29 17:57:14 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
bdbadbd74b chore: update stage0 2024-08-29 13:56:52 +00:00
Henrik Böving
3120c3d8f8 feat: add bv_decide benchmarks (#5203) 2024-08-29 12:45:58 +00:00
FR
e1cbae26cc doc: fix typo in Quotient.liftOn docstring (#5202) 2024-08-29 12:00:36 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
9009c1ac91 fix: ilean loading performance (#4900)
This PR roughly halves the time needed to load the .ilean files by
optimizing the JSON parser and the conversion from JSON to Lean data
structures.

The code is optimized roughly as follows:
- String operations are inlined more aggressively
- Parsers are changed to use new `String.Iterator` functions `curr'` and
`next'` that receive a proof and hence do not need to perform an
additional check
- The `RefIdent` of .ilean files now uses a `String` instead of a `Name`
to avoid the expensive parse step from `String` to `Name` (despite the
fact that we only very rarely actually need a `Name` in downstream code)
- Instead of `List`s and `Subarray`s, the JSON to Lean conversion now
directly passes around arrays and array indices to avoid redundant
boxing
- Parsec's `peek?` sometimes generates redundant `Option` wrappers
because the generation of basic blocks interferes with the ctor-match
optimization, so it is changed to use an `isEof` check where possible
- Early returns and inline-do-blocks cause the code generator to
generate new functions, which then interfere with optimizations, so they
are now avoided
- Mutual defs are used instead of unspecialized passing of higher-order
functions to generate faster code
- The object parser is made tail-recursive

This PR also fixes a stack overflow in `Lean.Json.compress` that would
occur with long lists and adds a benchmark for the .ilean roundtrip
(compressed pretty-printing -> parsing).
2024-08-29 11:51:48 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5c61ad38be chore: revert "chore: temporarily remove test broken by #4746" (#5201)
This reverts commit 7aec6c9ae7.
2024-08-29 08:47:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
44985dc9a6 chore: remove >6 month deprecations (#5199) 2024-08-29 05:18:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3dfa7812f9 chore: cleanup allowUnsafeReducibility (#5198) 2024-08-29 05:12:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2dd6b2b9c8 chore: upstream Fin.le_antisymm (#5197) 2024-08-29 04:45:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6d0b00885e feat: List.Pairwise_erase and related lemmas (#5196) 2024-08-28 23:11:02 +00:00
Kim Morrison
75c0373c1a feat: lemmas about if-then-else improving confluence (#5191) 2024-08-28 23:10:13 +00:00
Henrik Böving
b37df8e31a chore: update-stage0 2024-08-28 18:14:39 +02:00
Henrik Böving
da9c68a37a feat: import LeanSAT's tactic frontends
Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
2024-08-28 18:14:39 +02:00
Marc Huisinga
6fce7b82bc fix: duplicate "import out of date" messages (#5185)
This PR fixes a small bug where over time, "import out of data" messages
would accumulate in files when their size changed before restarting its
file worker.
2024-08-28 14:03:17 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
f220efc5ba doc: update quickstart guide for new display name (#5193)
https://github.com/leanprover/vscode-lean4/pull/521 changed the display
name of the VS Code extension so that it can be found more easily when
searching for "Lean" (before it would appear far down in the list). This
PR updates the quickstart guide to reflect this fact.
2024-08-28 13:29:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
613dbf1637 feat: Int and Nat simp lemmas (#5190)
`@[simp]` lemmas for Int and Nat that improve confluence.
2024-08-28 10:53:28 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8e68c5d44e chore: cleanup simps in CNF.Basic / DHashMap.Internal.List (#5189)
A few unused implementation detail simp lemmas had leaked out and were
being detected by the confluence checker. Just remove them or make them
local.
2024-08-28 06:53:07 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9ce15fb0c6 chore: remove bad simp lemmas (#5180)
This disables some simp lemmas with bad discrimination tree keys, as
identified by @mattrobball on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/Infrastructure.20for.20tracking.20frequently.20applied.20simp.20theorems/near/459926416).
2024-08-28 02:55:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0dc317c73c feat: restore reduceCtorEq in norm_cast tactic (#5187)
#5167 removed `reduceCtorEq` from the default simproc set. `norm_cast`
relies on it, so we add it back in there.
2024-08-28 02:38:57 +00:00
Jannis Limperg
44366382d3 fix: ignore implementationDetail hyps in rename_i (#5183)
Closes #5176
2024-08-27 14:45:16 +00:00
Markus Himmel
095c7b2bfc chore: deprecate Nat.strongInductionOn (#5179) 2024-08-27 07:18:06 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c4e4248487 chore: remove @[simp] from List.getLast_eq_iff_getLast_eq_some (#5178)
This was not a great simp lemma, and hurts simp confluence. Better to
just use it locally where it is useful.

Similarly `List.head_eq_iff_head?_eq_some`.
2024-08-27 03:23:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9ef996259b feat: add BitVec.intMax_add_one 2024-08-27 11:26:16 +10:00
Kim Morrison
30fa18816c feat: activate and use boolToPropSimps 2024-08-27 11:26:16 +10:00
Kim Morrison
94fd406c04 chore: update stage0 2024-08-27 11:26:16 +10:00
Tobias Grosser
3411935e53 feat: add BitVec.intMin
This PR also pulls in some mathlib theorems on testBit and Nat and establishes facts about 2^w that are needed here and which are generally useful for bitvector reasoning.

The following theorem is not generalized to arbitrary x instead of 2, as this would require a condition to be added for x > 1 which would have to be passed to simp each time this theorem should fire.

chore: derive from testBit_two_pow

chore: convert first to prop and then decide

chore: move intMax down as well

chore: add simp set

Add simp-set into this PR

chore: fix simp extension

Move file to src/Lean to fix build

Add prelude

update date

Add university of cambridge as copyright holder

improve naming

use whitespace uniformly

use decide (n = m)

Drop the 'Nat.' namespace

Update src/Init/Data/BitVec/Lemmas.lean

Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>

Update src/Init/Data/BitVec/Lemmas.lean

Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>

Fix build

add some theorems

Revert "add some theorems"

This reverts commit fb97bc2007e371854b40badb3d6014da034c1f5e.

WIP

Shorten proof

Update src/Init/Data/Nat/Lemmas.lean

finish proofs

Update src/Init/Data/BitVec/Lemmas.lean

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>

Update src/Init/Data/Nat/Lemmas.lean

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>

chore: move BoolToPropSimps
2024-08-27 11:26:16 +10:00
Kim Morrison
b518091bd4 chore: better statement for List.find?_filterMap (#5177) 2024-08-27 00:22:59 +00:00
Siddharth
a58a09056f feat: relate BitVec.signExtend to truncate (#4392)
This adds helper lemmas to relate sign extension to truncation, and as a
corollary shows that sign extension to the same width is a no-op.
2024-08-26 23:39:49 +00:00
Jon Eugster
c45a6a93f9 chore: use emoji variant of ️,️,💥️ (#5173)
First part of #5015, using emoji variant of unicode symbols for
️,️,💥️.

---

(Partially) closes #5015
2024-08-26 19:46:37 +00:00
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
Lean stage0 autoupdater
3c687df6d5 chore: update stage0 2024-08-26 15:32:27 +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
Tobias Grosser
c6feffa2bd feat: add Bitvec.ofInt_ofNat (#5081)
We use `no_index` to work around special-handling of `OfNat.ofNat` in
`DiscrTree`, which has been reported as an issue in
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues/2867 and is currently in the
process of being fixed in https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/3684.
As the potential fix seems non-trivial and might need some time to
arrive in-tree, we meanwhile add the `no_index` keyword to the
problematic subterm.

---------

Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>
2024-08-26 13:12:40 +00:00
Matthew Robert Ballard
b54a9ec9b9 feat: swap arguments to Membership.mem (#5020)
We swap the arguments for `Membership.mem` so that when proceeded by a
`SetLike` coercion, as is often the case in Mathlib, the resulting
expression is recognized as eta expanded and reduce for many
computations. The most beneficial outcome is that the discrimination
tree keys for instances and simp lemmas concerning subsets become more
robust resulting in more efficient searches.

Closes `RFC` #4932

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-08-26 12:35:47 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
68bb92a35a feat: add BitVec.toInt_[pos|neg]_iff (#5083)
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-08-26 09:44:58 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
dcdbb9b411 fix: Syntax.unsetTrailing (#5170)
Fixes #4958
2024-08-26 07:56:04 +00:00
Jeremy Tan Jie Rui
dd22447afd chore: @[elab_as_elim] additions (#5147)
This adds `@[elab_as_elim]` to `Quot.rec`, `Nat.strongInductionOn` and
`Nat.casesStrongInductionOn`, and also renames the latter two to
`Nat.strongRecOn` and `Nat.casesStrongRecOn`.

The first change resolves the todos in
[`Mathlib.Init.Quot`](ca6a6fdc07/Mathlib/Init/Quot.lean)
while the other two are based on a suggestion of @YaelDillies on [the
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/Technical.20Debt.20Counters/near/464804567)
and related to
https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/16096.
2024-08-26 07:44:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f0b0c60e0f chore: running simpNF linter (#5168) 2024-08-26 07:07:52 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9305049f1e feat: lemmas about List.find? and range'/range/iota (#5164) 2024-08-26 04:44:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
852ee1683f feat: Int lemmas relating neg and emod/mod (#5166) 2024-08-26 03:05:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4c9db2fab8 feat: adjusting Int simp lemmas (#5165) 2024-08-26 03:05:10 +00:00
Kim Morrison
70c1e5690d feat: more improvements to List simp confluence (#5163) 2024-08-26 03:04:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5d84aebeb9 feat: lemmas about Function.comp that help confluence (#5162) 2024-08-26 03:04:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7e5d1103c2 feat: more lemmas about List.pmap/attach (#5160) 2024-08-26 02:15:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2d9cbdb450 feat: more List.findSome? lemmas (#5161) 2024-08-26 01:51:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fcdecacc4f feat: head/getLast lemmas for List.range (#5158) 2024-08-26 01:48:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c9c2c8720a fix: PANIC at Fin.isValue (#5159)
closes #4983
2024-08-26 00:36:47 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
703658391e fix: PANIC at Lean.MVarId.falseOrByContra (#5157)
closes #4985
closes #4984
2024-08-26 00:28:28 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8898c8eaa9 feat: Bool lemmas improving confluence (#5155) 2024-08-25 11:15:07 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2d89693b71 chore: Option lemmas (#5154) 2024-08-25 09:20:24 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c3655b626e chore: remove bad simp lemma in omega theory (#5156) 2024-08-25 07:47:16 +00:00
Wojciech Nawrocki
644a12744b doc: fix option name (#5150)
Small typo fix. I don't believe there is an `autoBoundImplicitLocal`
option.
2024-08-25 07:16:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
92b271ee64 feat: lemmas about List.erase(|P|Idx) (#5152) 2024-08-25 07:01:46 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
24f550fd6f feat: same equational lemmas for recursive and non-recursive functions (#5129)
This is part of #3983.

After #4154 introduced equational lemmas for non-recursive functions and
#5055
unififed the lemmas for structural and wf recursive funcitons, this now
disables the special handling of recursive functions in
`findMatchToSplit?`, so that the equational lemmas should be the same no
matter how the function was defined.

The new option `eqns.deepRecursiveSplit` can be disabled to get the old
behavior.

### Breaking change

This can break existing code, as there now can be extra equational
lemmas:

* Explicit uses of `f.eq_2` might have to be adjusted if the numbering
  changed.

* Uses of `rw [f]` or `simp [f]` may no longer apply if they previously
  matched (and introduced a `match` statement), when the equational
  lemmas got more fine-grained.

  In this case either case analysis on the parameters before rewriting
  helps, or setting the option `opt.deepRecursiveSplit false` while
  defining the function
2024-08-25 06:51:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cee84286e6 feat: improving confluence of List simp lemmas (#5151)
More theorems coming shortly that are easier after these changes, but
I'll test Mathlib on these simp changes first.
2024-08-25 04:32:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
75781b46f5 feat: lemmas about List.attach/pmap (#5153) 2024-08-25 03:58:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ea97aac83b feat: improve Nat simp lemma confluence (#5148) 2024-08-24 11:37:37 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b1ebe7b484 feat: missing Nat.and_xor_distrib_(left|right) (#5146) 2024-08-24 07:46:57 +00:00
Kim Morrison
07013da720 chore: running the simpNF linter over Lean (#5133)
This should resolve nearly all of the simpNF lints. This is a follow-up
to #4620.
2024-08-24 07:10:07 +00:00
Wojciech Nawrocki
2bc87298d9 doc: update user widget manual (#5006)
Updates the user widget manual to account for more recent changes. One
issue is that the samples no longer work on https://live.lean-lang.org/
because it uses an outdated version of the `@leanprover/infoview` NPM
package. They work on https://lean.math.hhu.de/ and in recent versions
of the VSCode extension.
2024-08-23 19:03:39 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
390a9a63a2 fix: mixing variable binder updates and declarations (#5142)
Fixes #2143
2024-08-23 09:31:49 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6d4ec153ad feat: ship cadical (#4325)
Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-08-23 09:13:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
bf304769e0 feat: misc List lemma updates (#5127) 2024-08-23 01:17:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7488b27b0d feat: lemmas about membership of sublists (#5132) 2024-08-23 01:16:53 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
33d24c3bca fix: improper handling of strict-implicit section variables (#5138)
This was actually broken even before `include`
2024-08-22 14:20:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f71a1fb4ae test: add missing test 2024-08-22 16:48:11 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
01ec8c5e14 doc: unfold tactic docstring (#5109) 2024-08-22 13:58:42 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d975e4302e feat: fine-grained equational lemmas for non-recursive functions (#4154)
This is part of #3983.

Fine-grained equational lemmas are useful even for non-recursive
functions, so this adds them.

The new option `eqns.nonrecursive` can be set to `false` to have the old
behavior.

### Breaking channge

This is a breaking change: Previously, `rw [Option.map]` would rewrite
`Option.map f o` to `match o with … `. Now this rewrite will fail
because the equational lemmas require constructors here (like they do
for, say, `List.map`).

Remedies:

 * Split on `o` before rewriting.
* Use `rw [Option.map.eq_def]`, which rewrites any (saturated)
application of `Option.map`
* Use `set_option eqns.nonrecursive false` when *defining* the function
in question.

### Interaction with simp

The `simp` tactic so far had a special provision for non-recursive
functions so that `simp [f]` will try to use the equational lemmas, but
will also unfold `f` else, so less breakage here (but maybe performance
improvements with functions with many cases when applied to a
constructor, as the simplifier will no longer unfold to a large
`match`-statement and then collapse it right away).

For projection functions and functions marked `[reducible]`, `simp [f]`
won’t use the equational theorems, and will only use its internal
unfolding machinery.

### Implementation notes

It uses the same `mkEqnTypes` function as for recursive functions, so we
are close to a consistency here. There is still the wrinkle that for
recursive functions we don't split matches without an interesting
recursive call inside. Unifying that is future work.
2024-08-22 13:26:58 +00:00
Henrik Böving
74715a0f9c feat: support for secure temporary files (#5125)
Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-08-22 13:01:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d540ba787a feat: Option lemmas (#5128) 2024-08-22 12:43:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b33d08078d feat: more lemmas about List.append (#5131) 2024-08-22 12:42:57 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e9025bdf79 feat: lemmas about List.join (#5130) 2024-08-22 12:09:45 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5651a11ac8 feat: improve unused section variable warning (#5036)
See
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Opt.20out.20of.20.22included.20section.20variable.20is.20not.20used.22.20linter
2024-08-22 10:18:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
481894e95d feat: range/iota lemmas (#5123) 2024-08-22 06:09:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7213583c8d feat: lemmas about List.find? (#5124) 2024-08-22 06:09:42 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
6a473e67aa chore: update stage0 2024-08-21 21:35:52 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e5d44f4033 fix: hover text over _ in ?_ (#5118)
in principle we'd like to use the existing parser
```
   "?" >> (ident <|> hole)
```
but somehow annotate it so that hovering the `hole` will not show the
hole's hover. But for now it was easier to just change the parser to
```
   "?" >> (ident <|> "_")
```
and be done with it.

Fixes #5021
2024-08-21 20:47:19 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
c78bb62c51 fix: get_elem_tactic_trivial to not loop in the presence of mvars (#5119)
The goal at the crucial step is
```
a : Array Nat
i : Fin ?m.27
⊢ ↑i < a.size
```
and after the `apply Fin.val_lt_of_le;` we have
```
a : Array Nat
i : Fin ?m.27
⊢ ?m.27 ≤ a.size
```
and now `apply Fin.val_lt_of_le` applies again, due to accidential
defeq. Adding `with_reducible` helps here.

fixes #5061
2024-08-21 19:51:58 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e620cf3c80 fix: count let-bound variables in induction … with correctly (#5117)
This fixes #5058 and is a follow-up to #3505.
2024-08-21 18:49:51 +00:00
Henrik Böving
edecf3d4ba chore: move Lean.Data.Parsec to Std.Internal.Parsec (#5115)
Again as discussed for bootstrapping reasons.
2024-08-21 15:26:17 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
1c73983dcf chore: update stage0 2024-08-21 14:11:59 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4b7b69c20a feat: omit (#5000) 2024-08-21 13:22:34 +00:00
Henrik Böving
87d361d9b6 chore: move LeanSAT logic to Std (#5113)
As discussed for bootstrapping reasons. The only new files here are
`Std.Tactic` and `Std.Tactic.BVDecide`. The rest is move +
renamespacing.
2024-08-21 13:00:41 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
a3ae75f847 chore: update stage0 2024-08-21 12:24:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0a8d1bf808 feat: basic instances for ULift and PLift (#5112) 2024-08-21 11:37:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a58da122b9 feat: change statement of List.getLast?_cons (#5106)
To avoid using `getLastD`, which is not simp-normal-form.
2024-08-21 10:59:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3b1af163eb feat: adjust List simp lemmas (#5102)
I'll do this in a few stages, testing against Mathlib as we go.
2024-08-21 07:25:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0e823710e3 feat: Nat.add_left_eq_self and relatives (#5104) 2024-08-21 04:11:57 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c38d271283 feat: lemmas about Option/if-then-else (#5101) 2024-08-21 03:16:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4dbd20343f chore: remove @[simp] from mem_of_find?_eq_some (#5105) 2024-08-21 03:16:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0203cb091d feat: more aggressive simp lemmas for List.subset (#5103) 2024-08-21 03:14:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f6ce866e39 chore: add mergeSort lemmas (#5107)
Some missing easy lemmas.
2024-08-21 03:03:05 +00:00
Henrik Böving
95549f17da feat: LeanSAT's LRAT parsers + SAT solver interface (#5100)
Step 5/6 in upstreaming LeanSAT.

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
2024-08-20 11:42:26 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
15c6ac2076 chore: restart-on-label: Also filter by commit SHA (#5099) 2024-08-20 07:45:43 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4aa74d9c0b feat: List.mergeSort (#5092)
Defines `mergeSort`, a naive stable merge sort algorithm, replaces it
via a `@[csimp]` lemma with something faster at runtime, and proves the
following results:

* `mergeSort_sorted`: `mergeSort` produces a sorted list.
* `mergeSort_perm`: `mergeSort` is a permutation of the input list.
* `mergeSort_of_sorted`: `mergeSort` does not change a sorted list.
* `mergeSort_cons`: proves `mergeSort le (x :: xs) = l₁ ++ x :: l₂` for
some `l₁, l₂`
so that `mergeSort le xs = l₁ ++ l₂`, and no `a ∈ l₁` satisfies `le a
x`.
* `mergeSort_stable`: if `c` is a sorted sublist of `l`, then `c` is
still a sublist of `mergeSort le l`.
2024-08-20 06:32:52 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
efbecf272d feat: explain reduce steps in trace.Debug.Meta.Tactic.simp (#5054) 2024-08-19 15:05:13 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
78146190e5 feat: mutual recursion: allow common prefix up to alpha-equivalence (#5041)
@arthur-adjedj was very confused when a mutually recursive definition
didn't work as expected, and the reason was that he used different names
for the fixed parameters.

It seems plausible to simply allow that and calculate the fixed-prefix
up to alpha renaming.

It does mean, though, that, for example, termination proof goals will
mention the names as used by the first function. But probably better
than simply failing. And we could even fix that later (by passing down
the
actual names, and renmaing the variables in the context of the mvar,
depending on the “current function”) should it bother our users.
2024-08-19 15:00:03 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b4db495f98 feat: unify equational theorems between wf and structural recursion (#5055)
by removing the `tryRefl` variation between the two.

Part of #3983
2024-08-19 14:59:15 +00:00
Henrik Böving
9f47e08ecc feat: import LeanSAT LRAT (#5074)
This PR imports LeanSAT's LRAT module as step 4/~6 (step 7 could go
after I did some refactorings to import this) of the LeanSAT
upstreaming. It is the last large component, after this only the LRAT
parser and the reflection tactic that hooks everything up to the meta
level remains. In particular it is the last component that contains
notable proofs, yay!

Again a few remarks:
1. Why is this not in `Std`? I'm not quite sure whether it should be
there. At the current level of code/proof quality we can certainly not
import the checker itself into `Std` but maybe having the data type as
well as the trimming algorithm there might be of interested? I'm hoping
that as we refactor the checker in the future its quality will be high
enough to be also put into `Std`. At this point we would have a full AIG
-> CNF -> LRAT verification pipeline in `Std` for everyone to use. One
additional blocker in this is that we cannot provide the parsers for the
format in `Std` as of today because `Parsec` is still in `Lean` so that
would also have to change.
2. There do exist two abstraction levels to make sure we can swap out
the LRAT implementation at any time:
- The public interface is just all files in the top level `LRAT`
directory. It basically only contains the LRAT format itself, the
checker + soundness proof and the trimming algorithm. As long as we
don't need to change their API (which we shouldn't have to I think) we
can always swap out the entire `Internal` directory without breaking
anything else in LeanSAT.
- The `Internal` module itself contains another layer of abstraction in
the form of the `Formula` class. This allows us to swap out the most
complex component in `Internal` as well, without having to touch any of
the infrastructure that is built around it either.
3. I mostly performed stylistic cleanups on the `Internal` module. In my
experience over upgrading to many nightlies during the course of LeanSAT
development, I have gotten these proofs cleaned up to the point, where
they only break if we change the `List` or `Array` proof API
significantly. Given that we are currently in the process of stabilizing
it I'm hoping that these proofs do not have to be touched anymore unless
we do something crazy. All of the custom theory that the LRAT component
developed around various basic data types has been upstreamed into Lean
over the course of various other PRs.
4. If there are some simple tricks that we can pull off to increase the
code / proof quality in `Internal` and in particular `Internal.Formula`
(this module is not for the light-hearted Lean reviewer) I'm all for it.
Otherwise the best course of action to provide LeanSAT to our users soon
would probably be to merge it as is and do a cut + rewrite at one of the
two interface points described above.
2024-08-19 14:31:00 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
728980443f refactor: rename new option to debug.rawDecreasingByGoal (#5066)
as suggested by @semorrison in 

https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/116290-rss/topic/cleanDecreasingBy/near/462659021


Follow-up to #5016.
2024-08-19 11:53:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
ca945be133 fix: disable incrementality in case .. | .. (#5090) 2024-08-19 09:17:03 +00:00
Eric Wieser
f2573dc51e fix: Do not overwrite existing signal handlers (#5062)
Such handlers can come from address sanitizers and similar. When
combined with #4971, this forward-ports
676b9bc477
/ rust-lang/rust#69685

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-08-19 09:11:38 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
51f01d8c8a feat: expose index option to dsimp tactic (#5071)
makes the option introduced in #4202 also available when using `dsimp`
2024-08-19 07:57:16 +00:00
Matthew Toohey
b486c6748b fix: correct typo in invalid reassignment error (#5080)
Corrects a small typo in the error message for when a user attempts to
mutate something which cannot be mutated.
2024-08-18 08:10:07 +00:00
Kim Morrison
38288ae07a feat: upstream List.Perm (#5069) 2024-08-17 04:11:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b939fef2cf chore: fix implicitness in refl/rfl lemma binders (#5077) 2024-08-16 22:31:06 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
eb15c08ea0 fix: instantiate mvars of indices before instantiating fvars (#4717)
When elaborating the headers of mutual indexed inductive types, mvars
have to be synthesized and instantiated before replacing the fvars
present there. Otherwise, some fvars present in uninstantiated mvars may
be missed and lead to an error later.
Closes #3242 (again)
2024-08-16 15:19:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
72f2e7aab1 feat: make structure type clickable in “not a field” error (#5072) 2024-08-16 09:06:18 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
cd21687884 feat: simp debug trace tag to use “dpre” in rlfOnly mode (#5073)
to distinguish from `pre`.
2024-08-16 08:56:38 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a08ef5ffa2 fix: remove partially copied code comment (#5070) 2024-08-16 08:42:30 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
53e6e99a29 refactor: generalize addMatcherInfo (#5068)
works in any `MonadEnv`.
2024-08-16 06:24:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
59ca274296 chore: minimize some imports (#5067) 2024-08-16 06:18:11 +00:00
Henrik Böving
ac4927de46 feat: List.foldlRecOn (#5039)
As discussed with @semorrison, feel free to do whatever to the branch.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-08-15 23:26:06 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0ecbcfdcc3 chore: remove stray markPersistent (#5056)
It is conditionally applied a few lines below
2024-08-15 15:41:42 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4d4d485c19 chore: avoid rebuilding leanmanifest in each build (#5057) 2024-08-15 14:55:36 +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
Sebastian Ullrich
a43356591c chore: CI: fix 32bit stage 0 builds (#5052)
Let's link stage 0 against libuv in both cases, even if for Emscripten
we won't for stage 1
2024-08-15 12:35:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
082ed944d8 fix: Windows stage 0 2024-08-15 14:50:56 +02:00
Kim Morrison
36d71f8253 feat: more List.find?/findSome?/findIdx? theorems (#5053) 2024-08-15 11:53:35 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
3c07e48a33 chore: update stage0 2024-08-15 12:12:52 +00:00
Markus Himmel
8a6eec0047 doc: add release note drafts for LibUV and hash map deprecation (#5049) 2024-08-15 09:10:02 +00:00
Kim Morrison
213a7221f6 feat: more List.Sublist theorems (#5048) 2024-08-15 05:38:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
42fcfcbad6 fix: macOS: install name of libleanshared_1 (#5034) 2024-08-15 05:22:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2ba7c995a6 chore: upstream List.Pairwise lemmas (#5047) 2024-08-15 02:59:05 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7e72f9ab85 chore: add libuv to the required packages heading in macos docs (#5045) 2024-08-15 01:33:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
326dbd1e15 chore: upstream #time command (#5044) 2024-08-15 00:17:48 +00:00
Markus Himmel
6bc98af67b chore: reduce usage of refine' (#5042) 2024-08-14 15:14:44 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f883fc0db6 chore: clean up cmdline snapshots logic (#5043) 2024-08-14 15:10:37 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
20a7fe89b5 perf: mark entire reported info tree as persistent (#5040)
As we can definitely not free it until .ilean generation at the very end
2024-08-14 13:39:35 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
ac64cfd70a fix: array_get_dec etc. tactics to solve more cases (#5037)
Using `Nat.lt_trans` is too restrictive, and using `Nat.lt_of_lt_of_le`
should make this tactic prove more goals.

This fixes a regression probably introduced by #3991; at least in some
cases before that `apply sizeOf_get` would have solved the goal here.
And it’s true that this is now subsumed by `simp`, but because of the
order that `macro_rules` are tried, the too restrictive variant with
`Nat.lt_trans` would be tried before `simp`, without backtracking.

Fixes #5027
2024-08-14 12:41:14 +00:00
Henrik Böving
958ad2b54b feat: upstream LeanSAT's bitblaster (#5013)
Step 3/~7 in upstreaming LeanSAT.

A few thoughts:
- Why is this not in `Std.Sat`? LeanSAT's bitblaster operates on a
limited internal language. For example it has no idea that signed
comparision operators even exist. This is because it relies on a
normalization pass before being given the goal. For this reason I would
not classify the bitblaster as an API that we should publicly advertise
at this abstraction level
- Sometimes I slightly rebuild parts of the LawfulOperator
infrastructure for operators that work non-tail-recursively. This is
because they do not return an `Entrypoint` but instead an
`ExtendingEntrypoint` in order to even be defined in the first place
(casting Ref's and all that). Given the fact that this barely happens
and I never actually commit to rebuilding the full API I'm hoping that
this is indeed a fine decision?
- The single explicit `decreasing_by` that has a simp only which
*almost* looks like `simp_wf` is missing a singular lemma from `simp_wf`
because it doesn't terminate otherwise.
- I am not using functional induction because it basically always fails
at some generalization step, that is also the reason that there is lots
of explicit `generalize` and manually recursive proofs.

---------

Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-08-14 09:54:10 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
bd5f8ef242 chore: update stage0 2024-08-14 09:45:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
337db03717 fix: report info trees on cmdline for .ileans (#5018)
In #4976, I forgot that we do need info trees eventually on the cmdline
for .ilean generation. Unfortunately, not reporting them incrementally
would require an API change, so let's see what the impact of incremental
reporting is
2024-08-14 08:59:29 +00:00
Markus Himmel
3efd0e4e1f chore: fix inconsistent style in internal hash map lemmas (#5033) 2024-08-14 07:49:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8c96d213f3 chore: use local instance in Lsp.Diagnostics (#5031)
I'm experimenting with changing the signature of `Ord.arrayOrd`; rather
than make a local synonym here, let's make a local instance so it
doesn't interact with the experiments.
2024-08-14 05:04:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
154385fdb9 chore: remove dead code in Lake.Util.Compare (#5030)
While exploring refactors of `List.lt` I ran into errors here, in code
that is entirely unused. Propose cleaning up to get things out of my
way!
2024-08-14 04:59:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9e39dc8100 feat: new+old lemmas about List.Sublist (#5029)
Some upstreamed from mathlib, some new.
2024-08-14 04:13:57 +00:00
Markus Himmel
dcadfd1c89 chore: remove oldSectionVars from hash map lemmas (#5023) 2024-08-14 03:04:33 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
7c5d8661f4 feat: add BitVec.toNat_[udiv|umod] and [udiv|umod]_eq (#4997)
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Atticus Kuhn <52258164+AtticusKuhn@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-08-14 03:03:31 +00:00
Alex Keizer
bff30fe98e feat: express BitVec.extractLsb' in terms of extractLsb (#5007)
Adds a lemma to rewrite `BitVec.extractLsb'` to `extractLsb` plus a
cast.
Note that `extractLsb'` with a length of 0 returns `BitVec 0`, while
`extractLsb` will never return an empty bitvector (because of the `+ 1`
in it `hi - lo + 1`). Hence, this lemma needs a side condition that the
length is non-zero.

Also adds `getLsb_extractLsb'`

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-08-14 03:01:58 +00:00
Jeremy Tan Jie Rui
ac2dabdedf chore: use in Fin.ne_of_val_ne (#5011)
Instead of a `Not (Eq …)` term use the proper `≠` in `Fin.ne_of_val_ne`,
to make it symmetric with `Fin.val_ne_of_ne`, and move the former to the
same place as the latter.

This answers a query of @eric-wieser at

https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/15762#discussion_r1714990412
2024-08-14 01:34:47 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
7283e2c14e chore: pr-release: pass --retry to curl (#5025)
Since https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4465 curl adheres to the
`Retry-After` header, so maybe this fixes the issues with
```
jq: error (at <stdin>:5): Cannot index string with string "body"
```
that sometimes make this workflow fail.
2024-08-13 16:19:43 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f500af99e8 chore: ci.yaml: build MacOS Aarch64 release for PRs by default (#5022)
should make https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/13301
unnecessary, which has a fair number of bad side-effects
2024-08-13 15:34:44 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
861ef27503 refactor: state WellFoundedRelation Nat using <, not Nat.lt (#5012)
as that’s the simp normal form.
2024-08-13 13:37:42 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
11be29e68c chore: pr-release: adjust lakefile editing sed to new git syntax (#5014) 2024-08-13 12:03:51 +00:00
Henrik Böving
74f9dea701 feat: use save-always in cache action (#5010)
Follows up on
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/5003#issuecomment-2284813940
2024-08-13 09:27:15 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
041b80a4f5 chore: speedcenter: reduce number of runs for "fast" benchmarks from 10 to 3 (#5009) 2024-08-13 09:06:06 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5bc6496a7c chore: more libuv search patterns for the speedcenter (#5008) 2024-08-13 10:40:09 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f3e7b455bb perf: avoid MT marking environment in language processor (#5004)
#4976 moved resolution of a promise to an earlier point, but that led to
object being marked MT earlier, so we need to move the code that
minimizes those objects earlier too to revert the performance
regression.
2024-08-12 19:15:38 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7cd406f335 fix: check is valid structure projection when pretty printing (#4982)
For structure projections, the pretty printer assumed that the
expression was type correct. Now it checks that the object being
projected is of the correct type. Such terms appear in type mismatch
errors.

Also, fixes and improves `#print` for structures. The types of
projections now use MessageData (so are now hoverable), and the type of
`self` is now the correct type.

Closes #4670
2024-08-12 15:52:17 +00:00
Henrik Böving
ecb35795eb chore: upgrade cache action to silence warnings (#5003)
According to the release notes of cache this should not break anything
as they merely upgraded the node version.
2024-08-12 15:46:53 +00:00
Henrik Böving
dc3eccdf26 feat: Std.Sat.AIG (#4953)
Step 2/~7 in upstreaming LeanSAT.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Siddharth <siddu.druid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-08-12 14:58:38 +00:00
Markus Himmel
c237c1f9fb feat: link LibUV (#4963) 2024-08-12 12:33:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
dd4e26f247 feat: output panics into Lean's redirected stderr (#4952)
...unless we are about to kill the process anyway (which is not the
default)

Ensures panics are visible as regular messages in the language server
and properly ordered in relation to other messages on the cmdline
2024-08-12 12:15:15 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c5114c971a fix: Windows needs more LEAN_EXPORTs 2024-08-12 14:14:42 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
adc799584c fix: split libleanshared on Windows to avoid symbol limit 2024-08-12 14:14:42 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
bbb448cdf6 chore: update stage0 2024-08-12 14:14:42 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9d0302e749 chore: remove LEAN_EXPORT denylist workaround 2024-08-12 14:14:42 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
8d12dd87a4 fix: disable incremental body elaboration in presence of where (#5001) 2024-08-12 10:42:19 +00:00
Henrik Böving
da9d44df2d feat: handle \r on all operating systems in IO.FS.lines (#4973)
Closes: #4573
2024-08-12 09:51:50 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
5c182bd540 fix: reduce default max depth for ext tactic (#4996)
The prior default of 1000000 could not be achieved in practice, because
the stack would overflow after around 5000 recursive invocations. This
meant that a poorly-chosen @[ext] lemma could crash Lean.

Talking to Mathlib users, it seems that 10 would be a very large number
in practice, so a default limit of 100 should not change successful
uses. But it does make it much easier to diagnose and recover from poor
choices of @[ext] lemmas.
2024-08-12 07:26:32 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
ecd3aa4b5d fix: handle SIGBUS when looking for stack overflows (#4971)
Without this change, a stack overflow on Mac OS during tactic execution
can lead to the message:

    terminated by signal SIGBUS (Misaligned address error)

This comes from `lean_alloc_small`. With the change, the process instead
terminates with the more accurate and actionable:

    Stack overflow detected. Aborting.
2024-08-12 07:08:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
12ca422d86 chore: upstream List.findIdx lemmas (#4995) 2024-08-12 04:11:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0a7af630a5 chore: when a linter crashes, prefix its name (#4967)
Helpful for diagnosing which linter is failing, c.f. [recent
problem](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/428973-nightly-testing/topic/quote4/near/457349304)
in quote4.
2024-08-12 02:36:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fc5615880e chore: add deprecation for Array.get_modify (#4957) 2024-08-12 02:02:18 +00:00
François G. Dorais
23d898c86b feat: TransGen r is transitive (#4960)
Closes #4959
2024-08-12 02:01:52 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
dfe493d9d8 feat: add BitVec.[sshiftRight/shiftLeft]_*_distrib (#4951)
After having added already `BitVec.ushiftRight_*_distrib`in
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/4667 for ushiftRight, this PR
now completes the `*_distrib` theorems for shift.
2024-08-12 02:00:58 +00:00
François G. Dorais
759ece7f9e fix: naming convention for UInt lemmas (#4514)
Closes #4513

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-08-12 01:03:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
89c3079072 chore: fix typo in hash code for Expr equality test (#4990)
We observed a small performance improvement at
https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym/blob/proof_size_expt/Proofs/SHA512/Experiments/Sym30.lean
Before: 2.65s
After: 2.60s
2024-08-12 00:47:08 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
37f9063c3e feat: add BitVec.neg_neg (#4977)
.. as well as neg_neq_iff_neq_neg.

---------

Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-08-12 00:34:46 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8364c3e178 chore: begin development cycle for v4.12.0 (#4986) 2024-08-12 00:33:05 +00:00
Kim Morrison
215b4a6a8d fix: omega regression (#4989)
This is a better fix to the problem reported at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/nat.20fighting,
which itself had a problem as reported at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/omega.20regression/near/456539091.
2024-08-12 00:24:24 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7d7447563d fix: panic at reducePow (#4988)
closes #4947
2024-08-12 00:20:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2436562d57 fix: regular mvar assignments take precedence over delayed ones (#4987)
closes #4920
2024-08-12 00:14:38 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
4236d8a85b feat: add Std.[Associative|Commutative] instances for BitVec.[and|or|xor] (#4981) 2024-08-11 09:40:07 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5f31e938c1 feat: @[app_delab] (#4976)
Adds `@[app_delab ident]` as a macro for `@[delab app.ident]`. Resolves
the identifier when expanding the macro, saving needing to use the fully
qualified identifiers that `@[delab]` requires. Also, unlike `@[delab]`,
throws an error if the identifier cannot be resolved.

Closes #4899
2024-08-10 16:54:39 +00:00
Kyle Miller
95bf6793aa fix: make cdot anonymous function notation handle ambiguous notation (#4833)
Fixes an issue where each alternative in choice nodes would get their
own arguments. Now cdot function expansion is aware of choice nodes.

Also modifies the variable naming so that multi-argument functions like
`(· + ·)` expand as `fun x1 x2 => x1 + x2` rather than `fun x x_1 => x +
x_1`.

Closes #4832
2024-08-09 21:16:51 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
30cf3bb3bf chore: update stage0 2024-08-09 16:16:48 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
238885436b fix: resolve parser promise before starting elaboration (#4974)
A regression introduced in #3106 that meant we could actually not
interrupt elaboration of previous document versions but would always
wait on them
2024-08-09 15:38:13 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
30a52b794a feat: add [ext] attribute to Array.ext (#4970)
This fixes a minor papercut.
2024-08-09 12:40:39 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5da9038fb4 chore: adapt stdlib to new variable behavior 2024-08-09 11:50:54 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3a588e7547 chore: update stage0 2024-08-09 11:50:54 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9f76cb9aa5 feat: new variable command 2024-08-09 11:50:54 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
88a7f5c592 chore: update stage0 2024-08-09 08:46:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
dd6ed124ba chore: upstream Thunk.ext (#4969) 2024-08-09 05:49:13 +00:00
Alok Singh
6dd502321f chore: add parallelism fallback for macOS on build (#4647)
1 less thing to think about.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-08-08 14:26:06 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
bcbd7299e9 fix: export more symbols needed by Verso (#4956)
This enables the Verso LSP server extensions to work.
2024-08-08 13:31:34 +00:00
Markus Himmel
b144107ed5 chore: deprecate Lean.HashMap and Lean.HashSet (#4954)
This restores all of the imports of `Lean.Data.HashMap` and
`Lean.Data.HashSet` so that users actually see the deprecation warnings
instead of a "declaration not found" error.
2024-08-08 12:46:10 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c24d2186fc doc: stderrAsMessages is now the default on the cmdline as well (#4955) 2024-08-08 10:28:22 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7ef2d2fea2 chore: CI: remove rebase command
We'll try using the buttons provided by GitHub for now
2024-08-08 11:17:52 +02:00
Henrik Böving
7776852d22 feat: revamp file IO, this time Windows compatible (#4950)
This implements a naive version of `getline` because Windows does not
have `getline`. Given the fact that `FILE` has buffered IO, calling
`fgetc` in a loop is not as big of a performance hazard as it might seem
at first glance.

The proper solution to this would of course be to have our own buffered
IO so we are fully in charge of the buffer. In this situation we could
check the entire buffer for a newline at once instead of char by char.
However that is not going to happen for the near future so I propose we
stay with this implementation. If reading individual lines of a file
does truly end up being the performance bottle neck we have already
won^^.
2024-08-07 22:33:37 +02:00
Markus Himmel
63c4de5fea chore: update stage0 2024-08-07 18:24:42 +02:00
Markus Himmel
3b14642c42 chore: build Lake again 2024-08-07 18:24:42 +02:00
Markus Himmel
d52da36e68 chore: update stage0 2024-08-07 18:24:42 +02:00
Markus Himmel
bf82965eec chore: avoid builing Lake 2024-08-07 18:24:42 +02:00
Markus Himmel
4bac74c4ac chore: switch to Std.HashMap and Std.HashSet almost everywhere 2024-08-07 18:24:42 +02:00
Henrik Böving
8b9d27de31 chore: Revert "feat: Revamp file reading and writing" (#4948)
Reverts leanprover/lean4#4906
2024-08-07 16:00:45 +00:00
Henrik Böving
d15f0335a9 feat: setup Std.Sat with definitions of SAT and CNF (#4933)
Step 1 out of approximately 7 to upstream LeanSAT.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Markus Himmel <markus@lean-fro.org>
2024-08-07 15:44:46 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
240ebff549 chore: Windows needs more LEAN_EXPORTs (#4941) 2024-08-07 17:13:13 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a29bca7f00 chore: CI: placate linter 2024-08-07 16:52:18 +02:00
Tobias Grosser
313f6b3c74 chore: name variables in Data/BitVec consistently (#4930)
This change canonicalizes the BitVec variable names to `x y z : BitVec`
instead of alternative namings such as `s t : BitVec` or `a b : BitVec`.
Variable names that carry semantic meaning such as `(msbs : BitVec w)
(lsb : Bool)` remain untouched.

This is purely a naming change to make our bitvector proofs more
consistent and polish the (auto-generated) documentation as a very small
step towards polishing the documentation of the BitVec library in Lean.

---------

Co-authored-by: AnotherAlexHere <153999274+AnotherAlexHere@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-08-07 13:43:15 +00:00
Markus Himmel
43fa46412d feat: deprecated variants of hash map query methods (#4943)
#4917 will expose users of the `Lean` API to the renaming of the hash
map query methods. This PR aims to make the transition easier by adding
deprecated functions with the old names.
2024-08-07 13:36:19 +00:00
Henrik Böving
234704e304 feat: upstream utilities around Array, Bool and Prod from LeanSAT (#4945)
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-08-07 12:32:40 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
12a714a6f9 chore: CI: fix rebase command 2024-08-07 14:27:53 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
cdc7ed0224 chore: CI: fix rebase command 2024-08-07 14:21:43 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
217abdf97a chore: CI: fix rebase command 2024-08-07 14:15:18 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
490a2b4bf9 chore: CI: fix rebase command 2024-08-07 14:05:00 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
84d45deb10 chore: CI: fix rebase 2024-08-07 14:02:57 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f46d216e18 chore: CI: !rebase PR comment command 2024-08-07 13:53:17 +02:00
Tobias Grosser
cc42a17931 feat: add ushiftRight_*_distrib theorems (#4667) 2024-08-07 10:43:54 +00:00
Siddharth
e106be19dd feat: sshiftRight bitblasting (#4889)
We follow the same strategy as
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/4872,
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/4571, and implement bitblasting
theorems for `sshiftRight`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-08-07 10:33:56 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
1efd6657d4 test: unflakify test cases (#4940)
With the recent unification of server and cmdline processing,
`IO.Process` tests that previously broke the server because they
directly wrote to stdout are now flaky on the cmdline because
elaboration and reporting are happening in separate threads. By removing
direct writes to stdout, the race condition is removed and the file can
actually be edited in the language server as well again.
2024-08-07 09:34:29 +00:00
Henrik Böving
473b34561d feat: Revamp file reading and writing (#4906)
This PR:
- changes the implementation of `readBinFile` and `readFile` to only
require two system calls (`stat` + `read`) instead of one `read` per
1024 byte chunk.
- fixes a bug where `Handle.getLine` would get tripped up by a NUL
character in the line and cut the string off. This is caused by the fact
that the original implementation uses `strlen` and `lean_mk_string`
which is the backer of `mk_string` does so as well.
- fixes a bug where `Handle.putStr` and thus by extension `writeFile`
would get tripped up by a NUL char in the line and cut the string off.
Cause here is the use of `fputs` when a NUL char is possible.

Closes: #4891 
Closes: #3546
Closes: #3741
2024-08-07 07:39:15 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
574066b30b fix: language server windows issues (#4821)
This PR resolves two language server bugs that especially affect Windows
users:
1. Editing the header could result in the watchdog not correctly
restarting the file worker (#3786, #3787), which would lead to the file
seemingly being processed forever.
- The cause of this issue was a race condition in the watchdog that was
accidentally introduced as far back as #1884: In specific circumstances,
the watchdog will attempt forwarding a message to the file worker after
the process has exited due to a changed header, but before the file
worker exiting has been noticed by the watchdog (which will then restart
the file worker). In this case, the watchdog would mark the file worker
as having crashed and not look at its exit code to restart the file
worker, but instead treat it like a crashed file worker that will only
be restarted when editing the file again. Not inspecting the exit code
of the file worker when it crashed from forwarding a message from the
file worker is necessary since we do not restart the file worker until
another notification from the client arrives, and so we would read the
same crash exit code over and over again in the main loop of the
watchdog if we did not remove it from our list of file workers that we
listen to.
- This PR resolves this issue by distinguishing between "crashes when
forwarding messages to the file worker" and "crashes when forwarding
messages from the file worker". In the former case, we still inspect the
exit code of the file worker and potentially restart it if the imports
changed, whereas in the latter case, we stop inspecting the exit code of
the file worker. This is correct because the latter case is exactly the
one where we need to stop inspecting the exit code but where a crash
cannot occur as a result of a changed header, whereas the former case is
exactly the one where we still need to inspect the exit code after a
crash to ensure that we restart the file worker in case it exited
because the header changed.
- At some point in the future, it would be nice to revamp the
concurrency model of the watchdog entirely now that we have all those
fancy concurrency primitives that were not available four years ago when
the watchdog was first written.

2. On an especially slow Windows machine, we found that starting the
language server would sometimes not succeed at all because reading from
the stdin pipe in the watchdog produced an EINVAL error, which was in
turn caused by an NT "pipe empty" error.
- After lots of debugging, @Kha found that Lake accidentally passes its
stdin to Git because it does not explicitly set the `stdin` field to
`null` when spawning the process.
- Changing this fixes the issue, which suggests that Git may mutate the
pipe we pass to it to be non-blocking, which then causes a "pipe empty"
error in the watchdog when we also attempt to read from that same pipe.
- I'm still very uncertain why we only saw this issue on one
particularly slow machine and not across the whole eco system.

This PR also resolves an issue where we would not correctly emit
messages that we received while the file worker is being restarted to
the corresponding file worker after the restart.

Closes #3786, closes #3787.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-08-07 06:19:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1e6d617aad chore: minor fixes to release checklist (#4937) 2024-08-07 01:09:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c17a4ddc94 perf: skip betaReduceLetRecApps if it is not needed (#4936) 2024-08-07 00:57:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5be4f5e30c perf: skip eraseRecAppSyntaxExpr if it is not needed (#4935) 2024-08-07 00:29:50 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3c5ac9496f perf: expr_eq_fn (#4934)
This PR contains a collection of small optimizations that improve the
equality test for `Expr`.
2024-08-07 00:02:14 +00:00
Kyle Miller
6c1f8a8a63 fix: ensure autoparam errors have correct positions (#4926)
Autoparam tactic scripts have no source positions, which until recently
made it so that any errors or messages would be logged at the current
ref, which was the application or structure instance being elaborated.
However, with the new incrementality features the ref is now carefully
managed to avoid leakage of outside data. This inhibits the elaborator's
ref from being used for the tactic's ref, causing messages to be placed
at the beginning of the file rather than on the syntax that triggered
the autoparam.

To fix this, now the elaborators insert the ref's source position
everywhere into the autoparam tactic script.

If in the future messages for synthetic tactics appear at the tops of
files in other contexts, we should consider an approach where
`Lean.Elab.Term.withReuseContext` uses something like `replaceRef` to
set the ref while disabling incrementality when the tactic does not
contain source position information.

Closes #4880
2024-08-06 22:27:51 +00:00
Matthew Robert Ballard
7bea3c1508 chore: wrap diagnostic results in MessageData.traces (#4897)
Currently, the messages in the diagnostic summaries are created by
appending interpolated strings. We wrap these in `.trace`'s, and the
results are better formatted when expanding child nodes in the info
view. Particularly, the latter diagnostic summaries remain on their own
lines flush to the left instead of on the same line directly adjacent to
the last child node.
2024-08-06 19:10:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a27d4a9519 chore: reduce stack space usage at instantiate_mvars_fn (#4931) 2024-08-06 17:38:59 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4a2fb6e922 chore: fix typo (#4929) 2024-08-06 15:27:20 +00:00
Henrik Böving
b7db82894b feat: generalized Parsec (#4774)
For experimentation by @the-sofi-uwu.

I also have an efficient number parser in LeanSAT that I am planning to
upstream after we have sufficiently bikeshed this change.
2024-08-06 15:17:23 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
35e1554ef7 chore: ignore stale leanpkg tests (#4925) 2024-08-06 08:19:33 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
14d59b3599 feat: theorem diagnostics (#4924)
When `set_option diagnostics true`, for each theorem with size >
`diagnostics.threshold.proofSize`, display proof size, and the number of
applications for each constant symbol.
2024-08-06 01:01:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a8e480cd52 chore: profile instantiateMVars at MutualDef.lean (#4923)
`instantiateMVars` can be a performance bottleneck when assembling the
final proof term.

For example, it takes approx. 1 second at

https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym/blob/proof_size_expt/Proofs/SHA512/Experiments/Sym30.lean
2024-08-05 19:15:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d07239d1bd perf: use lean_instantiate_expr_mvars at instantiateExprMVars (#4922)
This PR completes #4915
2024-08-05 19:02:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
590de785cc chore: cleanup betaRev (#4921) 2024-08-05 18:02:20 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
d671d0d61a chore: update stage0 2024-08-05 17:53:40 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8e476e9d22 perf: instantiateExprMVars (#4915)
TODO: 
- Support for `zeta := true` at `apply_beta`.
- Investigate test failure. 
- Break PR in pieces because of bootstrapping issues. The current PR
updates a stage0 file to workaround the issue.

Motivation: significant performance improvement at
https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym/blob/proof_size_expt/Proofs/SHA512/Experiments/Sym30.lean

With M1 Pro:
- Before: 4.56 secs
- After: 3.16 secs

Successfully built stage2 using this PR
2024-08-05 17:15:22 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a3d144a362 feat: new snapshot architecture on the cmdline (#3106)
This is #3014 with cad5cce reverted for testing.
2024-08-05 15:57:42 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
87d41e6326 chore: missing include on Windows (#4919) 2024-08-05 15:50:43 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d6cb2432c6 chore: remove unnecessary steps from release checklist (#4914) 2024-08-05 01:57:30 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c0ffc85d75 chore: require docs in BitVec (#4913) 2024-08-05 01:12:04 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f62359acc7 perf: use lean_instantiate_level_mvars (#4912)
implemented in C/C++.
Next step: same for `instantiateExprMVars`
2024-08-04 23:21:57 +00:00
Shuhao Song
2d09c96caf chore: cli help text: comma-separate alternative option forms (#4911)
The help message of Lean command line contains
```
--o=oname -o create olean file
```
This may lead to misunderstanding that the command needs both argument
`--o=oname` and `-o`, i. e. `lean --o=test.o -o test.lean`. In the help
message of GNU coreutils, such as `ls`, it is `-a, --all ...`, which
might be better.
Some discussion is on Zulip thread
[https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/The.20help.20message.20of.20Lean.20command.20line](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/The.20help.20message.20of.20Lean.20command.20line).
2024-08-04 22:54:34 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
21b4377d36 chore: update stage0 2024-08-04 19:11:50 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1e9d96be22 perf: add lean_instantiate_level_mvars (#4910)
The new code is not active yet because of bootstrapping issues.
It requires an `update_stage0`.
2024-08-04 18:31:44 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
647a5e9492 perf: use NatPow Int instead of HPow Int Nat Int (#4903)
This modification improves the performance of the example in issue
#4861. It no longer times out but is still expensive.

Here is the analysis of the performance issue: Given `(x : Int)`, to
elaborate `x ^ 1`, a few default instances have to be tried.

First, the homogeneous instance is tried and fails since `Int` does not
implement `Pow Int`. Then, the `NatPow` instance is tried, and it also
fails. The same process is performed for each term of the form `p ^ 1`.
There are seveal of them at #4861. After all of these fail, the lower
priority default instance for numerals is tried, and `x ^ 1` becomes `x
^ (1 : Nat)`. Then, `HPow Int Nat Int` can be applied, and the
elaboration succeeds. However, this process has to be repeated for every
single term of the form `p ^ 1`. The elaborator tries all homogeneous
`HPow` and `NatPow` instances for all `p ^ 1` terms before trying the
lower priority default instance `OfNat`.

This commit ensures `Int` has a `NatPow` instance instead of `HPow Int
Nat Int`. This change shortcuts the process, but it still first tries
the homogeneous `HPow` instance, fails, and then tries `NatPow`. The
elaboration can be made much more efficient by writing `p ^ (1 : Nat)`.
2024-08-03 00:35:04 +00:00
Clement Courbet
9c4028aab4 perf: avoid expr copies in replace_rec_fn::apply (#4702)
Those represent ~13% of the time spent in `save_result`,
even though `r` is a temporary in all cases but one.

See #4698 for details.

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-08-02 18:32:36 +00:00
Clement Courbet
2c002718e0 perf: fix implementation of move constructors and move assignment ope… (#4700)
…rators

Right now those constructors result in a copy instead of the desired
move. We've measured that expr copying and assignment by itself uses
around 10% of total runtime on our workloads.

See #4698 for details.
2024-08-02 17:55:03 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
b07384acbb feat: accept user-defined options on the cmdline (#4741)
Initial options are now re-parsed and validated after importing. Cmdline
option assignments prefixed with `weak.` are silently discarded if the
option name without the prefix does not exist.

Fixes #3403
2024-08-02 12:24:56 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
efc99b982e chore: deprecate Nix-based build, remove interactive components (#4895)
Users who prefer the flake build should maintain it externally
2024-08-02 09:57:34 +00:00
Siddharth
ee430b6c80 feat: getLsb_replicate (#4873)
This allows bitblasting `BitVec.replicate`.

I changed the definition of `BitVec.replicate` to use `BitVec.cast` in
order to make the proof smoother, since it's an easier time simplifying
away terms with `BitVec.cast`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-08-01 23:07:19 +00:00
Alok Singh
a8740f5ed9 doc: add docstring to IO.FS.realpath (#4648)
Based on `IO.FS.rename` template.
2024-08-01 14:00:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5e6a3cf5f9 chore: revert "fix: make import resolution case-sensitive on all platforms" (#4896)
Reverts leanprover/lean4#4538 because of unexpected overhead
2024-08-01 13:55:37 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0ed1cf7244 fix: LEAN_EXPORT in sharecommon (#4893) 2024-08-01 13:03:25 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
e83f78d5af chore: update stage0 2024-08-01 06:54:29 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
32b9de8c77 fix: export symbols needed by Verso (#4884)
Verso needed a symbol that was unexported - this exposes it again.
2024-08-01 04:56:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a856016b9d perf: precise cache for expr_eq_fn (#4890)
This performance issue was exposed by the benchmarks at
https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym/tree/proof_size_expt/Proofs/SHA512/Experiments
2024-08-01 02:56:41 +00:00
Siddharth
c517688f1d feat: ushiftRight bitblasting (#4872)
This adds theorems `ushiftRight_rec_zero`, `ushiftRight_rec_succ`,
`ushiftRight_rec_eq`, and `shiftRight_eq_shiftRight_rec`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-07-31 21:44:06 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
db594425bf refactor: sharecommon (#4887)
This PR also fixes a missing borrow annotation.
2024-07-31 19:13:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
dcea47db02 chore: shorten suggestion about diagnostics (#4882)
This message is often incorporated into source files via `#guard_msgs`.
This change ensures it won't go over the 100 character ruler, and I
think is equally grammatical. :-)
2024-07-31 17:56:43 +00:00
Siddharth
f869902a4b feat: Nat simprocs for simplifying bit expressions (#4874)
This came up in the context of simplifying proof states for
https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym.
2024-07-31 17:26:05 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d5a8c9647f fix: make import resolution case-sensitive on all platforms (#4538)
Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-07-31 16:48:14 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d19bab0c27 feat: include command (#4883)
To be implemented in #4814
2024-07-31 13:25:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6a4159c4a7 refactor: split out Lean.Language.Lean.Types (#4881) 2024-07-31 09:50:12 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8acdafd5b3 chore: correct doc-string for Array.swap! (#4869) 2024-07-31 04:02:30 +00:00
Kim Morrison
688da9d8a7 chore: updates to release_checklist.md (#4876)
Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
2024-07-31 04:02:19 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d5e7dbad80 fix: make "use `set_option diagnostics true" message conditional on current setting (#4781)
It is confusing that the message suggesting to use the `diagnostics`
option is given even when the option is already set. This PR makes use
of lazy message data to make the message contingent on the option being
false.

It also tones down the promise that there is any diagonostic information
available, since sometimes there is nothing to report.

Suggested by Johan Commelin.
2024-07-31 03:53:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
82f48740dc chore: copy release notes from releases/v4.10.0 (#4864)
This also updates the 4.9.0 release notes with backported changes.
2024-07-31 03:30:13 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a827759f1d fix: mistake in statement of List.take_takeWhile (#4875)
This theorem is meant to say that `List.take` and `List.takeWhile`
commute.
2024-07-31 03:29:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a4015ca36c chore: rename PSigma.exists (#4878) 2024-07-31 03:26:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
81719f94c9 chore: fix binder explicitness in List.map_subset (#4877) 2024-07-31 03:03:52 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
afe0b5a013 perf: precise cache for foldConsts (#4871)
It addresses a performance issue at
https://github.com/leanprover/LNSym/blob/proof_size_expt/Proofs/SHA512/Experiments/Sym20.lean
2024-07-30 18:35:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
90dab5e267 chore: fix naming of List.Subset lemmas (#4868) 2024-07-30 09:21:23 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6a904f2c85 chore: upstream List.eraseIdx lemmas (#4865) 2024-07-30 06:59:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2c396d6424 chore: upstream List.pairwise_iff_getElem (#4866) 2024-07-30 06:55:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
69f86d6478 chore: split Init.Data.List.Lemmas (#4863)
Init.Data.List.Lemmas had reached 5000 lines: splitting into
function-specific files.
2024-07-30 03:17:34 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4ea55687a5 refactor: deriving DecidableEq to use termination_by structural (#4826)
now that we support structural mutual recursion, I expect that every
`DecidableEq` instance be implemented using structural recursion, so
let's be explicit about it.
2024-07-29 21:24:05 +00:00
Kyle Miller
69c71f6476 fix: make elabAsElim aware of explicit motive arguments (#4817)
Some eliminators (such as `False.rec`) have an explicit motive argument.
The `elabAsElim` elaborator assumed that all motives are implicit.

If the explicit motive argument is `_`, then it uses the elab-as-elim
procedure, and otherwise it falls back to the standard app elaborator.

Furthermore, if an explicit elaborator is not provided, it falls back to
treating the elaborator as being implicit, which is convenient for
writing `h.rec` rather than `h.rec _`. Rationale: for `False.rec`, this
simulates it having an implicit motive, and also motives are generally
not going to be available in the expected type.

Closes #4347
2024-07-29 19:18:47 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7f128b39e7 feat: more than one optional argument can be omitted while pretty printing (#4854)
Before, the delaborator was conservative about omitting optional
arguments, only omitting the very last one. Now it can omit arbitrarily
long sequences of optional arguments from the end.

For simplicity of implementation, every optional argument is delaborated
and then potentially discarded. It could save state and lazily
delaborate, but we're running under the hypothesis that most optional
arguments are for very simple values (like `true`, `false`, or a numeric
literal), so it is unlikely that efficiency gains, if any, are worth it.
In particular, in the future structure constructors will have optional
arguments, but `unexpandStructureInstance` assumes none of the optional
fields are omitted.

Closes #4812
2024-07-29 19:02:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a845a007ac chore: fix universe in PSigma.exists (#4862) 2024-07-29 12:30:31 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
abf4206e9c chore: CI: fix msys2 2024-07-29 10:25:59 +02:00
Kim Morrison
83ad82162f feat: upstream more List lemmas (#4856) 2024-07-28 23:23:59 +00:00
arthur-adjedj
93ac635a89 chore: fix parenthesizing in test 2024-07-29 08:58:49 +10:00
Kim Morrison
642c28cdbb chore: update stage0 2024-07-29 08:58:49 +10:00
arthur-adjedj
a04f3cab5a fix: reduction behaviour of derived BEq instances
fix: forgot an assignation
2024-07-29 08:58:49 +10:00
arthur-adjedj
86af04cc08 fix: handle dependent fields when deriving BEq 2024-07-29 08:58:49 +10:00
arthur-adjedj
7253ef8751 chore: inverse rhs construction order in BEq's handler 2024-07-29 08:58:49 +10:00
Joachim Breitner
f830fc9f4d refactor: IndPredBelow: use apply_assumption (#4841)
when transforming the `match` statements in `IndPredBelow`, given a
local variable `x : T`, we need to search for `hx : T.below x`.
Previously this was done using the custom `backwardsChaining` method,
although my hypothesis is that we don’t need to chain anything here, and
can use `apply_assumption`.
2024-07-28 17:22:54 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
671ce7afd3 fix: IndPred: track function's motive in a let binding, use withoutProofIrrelevance, no chaining (#4839)
this improves support for structural recursion over inductive
*predicates* when there are reflexive arguments.

Consider
```lean
inductive F: Prop where
  | base
  | step (fn: Nat → F)

-- set_option trace.Meta.IndPredBelow.search true
set_option pp.proofs true

def F.asdf1 : (f : F) → True
  | base => trivial
  | step f => F.asdf1 (f 0)
termination_by structural f => f`
```

Previously the search for the right induction hypothesis would fail with
```
could not solve using backwards chaining x✝¹ : F
x✝ : x✝¹.below
f : Nat → F
a✝¹ : ∀ (a : Nat), (f a).below
a✝ : Nat → True
⊢ True
```

The backchaining process will try to use `a✝ : Nat → True`, but then has
no idea what to use for `Nat`.

There are three steps here to fix this.

1. We let-bind the function's type before the whole process. Now the
   goal is

   ```
   funType : F → Prop := fun x => True
   x✝ : x✝¹.below
   f : Nat → F
   a✝¹ : ∀ (a : Nat), (f a).below
   a✝ : ∀ (a : Nat), funType (f a)
   ⊢ funType (f 0)
   ```
2. Instead of using the general purpose backchaining proof search, which
is more
powerful than we need here (we need on recursive search and no
backtracking),
   we have a custom search that looks for local assumptions that 
   provide evidence of `funType`, and extracts the arguments from that
   “type” application to construct the recursive call.

   Above, it will thus unify `f a =?= f 0`.

3. In order to make progress here, we also turn on use
`withoutProofIrrelevance`,
because else `isDefEq` is happy to say “they are equal” without actually
looking
   at the terms and thus assigning `?a := 0`.

This idea of let-binding the function's motive may also be useful for
the other recursion compilers, as it may simplify the FunInd
construction. This is to be investigated.

fixes #4751
2024-07-28 17:22:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
87c92a3f87 feat: upstream more List operations (#4855)
Upstreams `tail`, `findIdx`, `indexOf`, `countP`, `count`, `range'` from
Batteries.
2024-07-28 04:52:21 +00:00
Ikko Eltociear Ashimine
15bf41cd67 chore: update Topological.lean (#4853)
minor fix
2024-07-27 18:14:42 +00:00
Kyle Miller
906bc583c5 fix: handle unimported builtin names for location links (#4780)
The function `locationLinksFromDecl` could throw an error if the name it
is provided doesn't exist in the environment, which is possible if for
example an elaborator is a builtin.

Closes #3789
2024-07-27 17:39:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ea43ebd54a chore: cleanups for Mathlib.Init (#4852)
It is convenient to adjust some attributes here, to allow easier cleanup
in `Mathlib.Init`.
2024-07-27 07:37:17 +00:00
Siddharth
bb9c9bd99f feat: bitVec shiftLeft recurrences for bitblasting (#4571)
```lean 
@[simp]
theorem shiftLeftRec_zero (x : BitVec w₁) (y : BitVec w₂) :
    shiftLeftRec x y 0 = x <<< (y &&& twoPow w₂ 0)  := by
  simp [shiftLeftRec]

@[simp]
theorem shiftLeftRec_succ (x : BitVec w₁) (y : BitVec w₂) :
    shiftLeftRec x y (n + 1) =
      (shiftLeftRec x y n) <<< (y &&& twoPow w₂ (n + 1)) := by
  simp [shiftLeftRec]

theorem shiftLeftRec_eq (x : BitVec w₁) (y : BitVec w₂) (n : Nat) (hn : n + 1 ≤ w₂) :
  shiftLeftRec x y n = x <<< (y.truncate (n + 1)).zeroExtend w₂ := by
```

These theorems are used for bitblasting shiftLeft in LeanSAT.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-07-27 06:36:52 +00:00
Mac Malone
fe5894f2f6 feat: lake: CLI options to control output & failure log levels (#4847)
Adds the `--log-level=<lv>` CLI option for controlling the minimum log
level Lake should output. For instance, `--log-level=error` will only
print errors (not warnings or info).

Also, adds the parallel `--fail-level` CLI option to control what the
minimum log level of build failures is. The existing `--iofail` and
`--wfail` options are equivalent to `--fail-level=info` and
`--fail-level=warning` , respectively.

Closes #4805,
2024-07-27 06:16:59 +00:00
Mac Malone
3ecbf4ae2d doc: lake: require @ git in README (#4849)
Demonstrates `require @ git` in Lake's README and tweaks related
documentation.
2024-07-27 02:44:50 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9b342efb84 fix: calling programs with spaces on Windows (#4515)
This entire API has been carefully optimized for maximum pain output

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-07-26 17:35:05 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c02aa98c6a doc: triage 2024-07-26 18:24:06 +02:00
Kim Morrison
18ba5f24e1 chore: correct List.Subset lemma names (#4843) 2024-07-26 11:36:28 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cbe39dc4bb chore: fix List deprecations (#4842) 2024-07-26 11:32:18 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a5b8d5b486 chore: upon nightly release, trigger nightly_bump_toolchain on mathlib4 (#4838)
as discussed at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/428973-nightly-testing/topic/Bumping.20more.20often/near/453976634
2024-07-26 06:51:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
895391b73f feat: List.IsPrefix/IsSuffix is decidable (#4837) 2024-07-26 05:17:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e280de00b6 feat: gaps/cleanup in List lemmas (#4835) 2024-07-26 05:00:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8c87a90cea chore: upstream IsPrefix/IsSuffix/IsInfix (#4836)
Further lemmas to follow; this is the basic material from Batteries.
2024-07-26 04:35:36 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
54c22efca1 fix: structural recursion: do not check for brecOn too early (#4831)
Due to nested recursion, we do two passes of `getRecArgInfo`: One on
each argument in isolation, to see which inductive types are around
(e.g. `Tree` and `List`), and
then we later refine/replace this result with the data for the nested
type former (the implicit `ListTree`).

If we have nested recursion through a non-recursive data type like
`Array` or `Prod` then arguemnts of these types should survive the first
phase, so that we can still use them when looking for, say, `Array
Tree`.

This was helpfully reported by @arthur-adjedj.
2024-07-25 15:25:34 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d4f2db9559 chore: report github actions failure on zulip (#4830)
only the master branch
2024-07-25 11:15:33 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
39e0b41fe1 test: make #1697 test case Linux-Debug safe (#4829) 2024-07-25 10:26:01 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
84f8871c3f fix: filter duplicate subexpressions (#4786)
For every parenthesized expression `(foo)`, the InfoView produces an
interactive component both for `(foo)` itself and its subexpression
`foo` because the corresponding `TaggedText` in the language server is
duplicated as well. Both of these subexpressions have the same
subexpression position and so they are identical w.r.t. interactive
features.

Removing this duplication would help reduce the size of the DOM of the
InfoView and ensure that the UI for InfoView features is consistent for
`(foo)` and `foo` (e.g. hovers would always highlight `(foo)`, not
either `(foo)` or `foo` depending on whether the mouse cursor is on the
bracket or not). It would also help resolve a bug where selecting a
subexpression will yield selection highlighting both for `(foo)` and
`foo`, as we use the subexpression position to identify which terms to
highlight.

This PR adjusts the parenthesizer to move the corresponding info instead
of duplicating it.
2024-07-25 08:58:49 +00:00
Austin Letson
93fa9c8837 feat: create ci workflow on lake new/init (#4608)
Draft of adding ci workflow using lean-action on `lake new/init`

This PR is currently missing lake options for the user to control this
feature.

Closes #4606

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-07-25 01:23:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0768ad4eb9 chore: CI: Jira sync 2024-07-24 19:52:55 +02:00
Kyle Miller
c545e7b0c9 fix: make sure anonymous dot notation works with pi-type-valued type synonyms (#4818)
When resolving anonymous dot notation (`.ident x y z`), it would reduce
the expected type to whnf. Now, it unfolds definitions step-by-step,
even if the type synonym is for a pi type like so
```lean
def Foo : Prop := ∀ a : Nat, a = a
protected theorem Foo.intro : Foo := sorry
example : Foo := .intro
```

Closes #4761
2024-07-24 17:09:42 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7b3c64fc85 feat: trailing whitespace changes should not invalidate imports (#4580)
Thus, starting to type the first declaration after the imports should
not make them reload
2024-07-24 13:08:01 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
af0b563099 feat: respond to info view requests as soon as relevant tactic has finished execution (#4727)
After each tactic step, we save the info tree created by it together
with an appropriate info tree context that makes it stand-alone (which
we already did before to some degree, see `Info.updateContext?`). Then,
in the adjusted request handlers, we first search for a snapshot task
containing the required position, if so wait on it, and if it yielded an
info tree, use it to answer the request, or else continue searching and
waiting, falling back to the full info tree, which should be unchanged
by this PR.

The definition header does *not* report info trees early as in general
it is not stand-alone in the tactic sense but may contain e.g.
metavariables solved by the body in which case we do want to show the
ultimate state as before. This could be refined in the future in case
there are no unsolved mvars.

The adjusted request handlers are exactly the ones waited on together by
the info view, so they all have to be adjusted to have any effect on the
UX. Further request handlers may be adjusted in the future.

No new tests as "replies early" is not something we can test with our
current framework but the existing test suite did help in uncovering
functional regressions.
2024-07-24 13:02:13 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
af40e61811 chore: typo 2024-07-24 15:11:54 +02:00
Kim Morrison
1758b37a71 chore: List.filterMapM runs and returns left-to-right (#4820)
Closes #4676. Previously `List.filterMapM` was returning results
left-to-right, but evaluating right-to-left.
2024-07-24 09:00:10 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
3701bee777 test: test case for #4751 (#4819)
and tracing for `IndPredBelow.backwardsChaining`.
2024-07-24 08:14:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6d971827e2 chore: CI: add back dropped check-stage3 2024-07-24 09:03:11 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
871c9b4164 test: update test output following stage0 update (#4815)
this is a consequenc of #4807 that only shows up once that change made
it to stage0, it seem.
2024-07-23 21:43:38 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
ee6737ab4d chore: update stage0 2024-07-23 16:14:57 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
7d60d8b563 feat: safer #eval, and #eval! (#4810)
previously, `#eval` would happily evaluate expressions that contain
`sorry`, either explicitly or because of failing tactics. In conjunction
with operations like array access this can lead to the lean process
crashing, which isn't particularly great.

So how `#eval` will refuse to run code that (transitively) depends on
the `sorry` axiom (using the same code as `#print axioms`).

If the user really wants to run it, they can use `#eval!`.

Closes #1697
2024-07-23 15:26:56 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a4673e20a5 chore: release notes for mutual structural induction (#4808) 2024-07-23 07:40:29 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
b2ee8c240d doc: update quickstart guide (#4806)
This PR updates the screenshots and instructions in the quickstart guide
for the most recent Lean 4 VS Code extension version and makes a small
stylistic change suggested by @semorrison.
2024-07-23 07:31:21 +00:00
Markus Himmel
5d632a97b8 feat: more hash map lemmas (#4803) 2024-07-23 06:57:44 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5938dbbd14 fix: make elab_as_elim eagerly elaborate arguments for parameters appearing in the types of targets (#4800)
The `elab_as_elim` elaborator eagerly elaborates arguments that can help
with elaborating the motive, however it does not include the transitive
closure of parameters appearing in types of parameters appearing in ...
types of targets.

This leads to counter-intuitive behavior where arguments supplied to the
eliminator may unexpectedly have postponed elaboration, causing motives
to be type incorrect for under-applied eliminators such as the
following:

```lean
class IsEmpty (α : Sort u) : Prop where
  protected false : α → False

@[elab_as_elim]
def isEmptyElim [IsEmpty α] {p : α → Sort _} (a : α) : p a :=
  (IsEmpty.false a).elim

example {α : Type _} [IsEmpty α] :
  id (α → False) := isEmptyElim (α := α)
```

The issue is that when `isEmptyElim (α := α)` is computing its motive,
the value of the postponed argument `α` is still an unassignable
metavariable. With this PR, this argument is now among those that are
eagerly elaborated since it appears as the type of the target `a`.

This PR also contains some other fixes:
* When underapplied, does unification when instantiating foralls in the
expected type.
* When overapplied, type checks the generalized-and-reverted expected
type.
* When collecting targets, collects them in the correct order.

Adds trace class `trace.Elab.app.elab_as_elim`.

This is a followup to #4722, which added motive type checking but
exposed the eagerness issue.
2024-07-22 23:23:28 +00:00
grunweg
852add3e55 doc: document Command.Scope (#4748)
Also extends existing definition for `getScope`/`getScopes` and
clarifies that the `end` command is optional at the end of a file.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
2024-07-22 21:55:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
20c857147c feat: unnecessary termination_by clauses cause warnings, not errors (#4809)
fixes #4804
2024-07-22 20:52:14 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
9f1eb479b0 feat: functional induction for mutual structural recursion (#4772) 2024-07-22 15:10:11 +00:00
Markus Himmel
92cca5ed1b chore: remove bif from hash map lemmas (#4791)
The original idea was to use `bif` in computation contexts and `if` in
propositional contexts, but this turned out to be really inconvenient in
practice.
2024-07-22 14:39:00 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
3a4d2cded3 refactor: Introduce PProdN module (#4807)
code to create nested `PProd`s, and project out, and related functions
were scattered in variuos places. This unifies them in
`Lean.Meta.PProdN`.

It also consistently avoids the terminal `True` or `PUnit`, for slightly
easier to read constructions.
2024-07-22 11:56:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
22ae04f3e7 refactor: FunInd overhaul (#4789)
This refactoring PR changes the structure of the `FunInd` module, with
the main purpose to make it easier to support mutual structural
recursion.

In particular the recursive calls are now longer recognized by their
terms (simple for well-founded recursion, `.app oldIH [arg, proof]`, but
tedious for structural recursion and even more so for mutual structural
recursion), but the type after replacing `oldIH` with `newIH`, where the
type will be simply and plainly `mkAppN motive args`).

We also no longer try to guess whether we deal with well-founded or
structural recursion but instead rely on the `EqnInfo` environment
extensions. The previous code tried to handle both variants, but they
differ too much, so having separate top-level functions is easier.

This also fuses the `foldCalls` and `collectIHs` traversals and
introduces a suitable monad for collecting the inductive hypotheses.
2024-07-21 14:46:52 +00:00
François G. Dorais
99f362979b feat: use usize for array types (#4802)
This is part 2 of 2 of #4801 (which closes #4654). That PR was split in
two to allow a stage0 update between declaring the `usize` functions and
using them where they are needed.
2024-07-21 12:26:04 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
3a309f7691 chore: update stage0 2024-07-21 11:05:36 +00:00
François G. Dorais
8f0631ab1f feat: usize for array types (#4801)
Add efficient `usize` functions for `Array`, `ByteArray`, `FloatArray`.

This is part 1 of 2 since there is a need to update stage0 between the
two parts. (See discussion below.)

Closes #4654
2024-07-21 10:23:49 +00:00
Markus Himmel
08acf5a136 fix: remove typeclass assumptions for Nodup.eraseP (#4790)
The `α` in the typeclass assumptions wasn't even the element type of the
list.
2024-07-21 07:51:42 +00:00
Markus Himmel
bdfaa00b1e doc: remove reference to HashMap.find? from Option docstring (#4782) 2024-07-21 07:51:06 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8ceb24a5e6 perf: Expr.replace (#4799)
use the kernel implementation.
2024-07-20 04:53:43 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
201749ccac chore: update stage0 2024-07-20 04:31:11 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d0bc4e4245 fix: replace_fn.cpp (#4798) 2024-07-19 21:20:43 -07:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
c2117d75a6 chore: update stage0 2024-07-20 03:58:16 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3477b0e7f6 fix: for_each_fn.cpp (#4797) 2024-07-20 03:22:56 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
696f70bb4e chore: update stage0 2024-07-20 02:35:13 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
726e162527 perf: kernel replace with precise cache (#4796)
Changes:

- We avoid the thread local storage.
- We use a hash map to ensure that cached values are not lost.
- We remove `check_system`. If this becomes an issue in the future we
should precompute the remaining amount of stack space, and use a cheaper
check.
- We add a `Expr.replaceImpl`, and will use it to implement
`Expr.replace` after update-stage0
2024-07-20 02:00:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
de5e07c4d2 perf: find? and findExt? (#4795)
use the kernel implementation.
2024-07-20 01:13:54 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
327986e6fb chore: update stage0 2024-07-20 00:51:23 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
6c33b9c57f perf: for_each with precise cache (#4794)
This commit also adds support for `find?` and `findExt?` using kernel
`for_each`.
We need to perform `update-stage0`.
2024-07-20 00:18:55 +00:00
Henrik Böving
d907771fdd feat: theory from LeanSAT (#4742)
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-07-19 16:21:03 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5c3360200e fix: add term elaborator for Lean.Parser.Term.namedPattern (#4792)
closes #4662
2024-07-19 16:14:32 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
204d4839fa refactor: add numFixed to Structural.EqnInfo (#4788) 2024-07-19 10:21:43 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e32f3e8140 refactor: IndGroupInst.brecOn (#4787)
this logic fits nicely within `IndGroupInst`.

Also makes `isAuxRecursorWithSuffix` recognize `brecOn_<n>`.
2024-07-19 10:20:50 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7d2155943c doc: fix integer division example
Fixes #4785
2024-07-19 10:36:43 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
78c4d6daff chore: update stage0 2024-07-18 20:38:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5526ff6320 chore: Simp.Config.implicitDefEqProofs := true by default (#4784)
Motivation: unblock PR #4595
`Simp.Config.implicitDefEqProofs := false` is currently creating too
many issues in Mathlib.
2024-07-18 19:10:18 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
bfca7ec72a fix: .eq_def theorem generation with messy universes (#4712)
closes #4673
2024-07-18 17:34:23 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9208b3585f chore: document replaceUnsafeM issue (#4783) 2024-07-18 16:26:20 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a94805ff71 perf: ensure Expr.replaceExpr preserve DAG structure in Exprs (#4779) 2024-07-18 02:24:15 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
4eb842560c chore: update stage0 2024-07-18 01:19:02 +00:00
Kyle Miller
490d16c80d fix: have elabAsElim check inferred motive for type correctness (#4722)
Declarations with `@[elab_as_elim]` could elaborate as type-incorrect
expressions. Reported by Jireh Loreaux [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/bug.20in.20revert/near/450522157).

(In principle the elabAsElim routine could revert fvars appearing in the
expected type that depend on the discriminants (if the discriminants are
fvars) to increase the likelihood of type correctness, but that's at the
cost of some complexity to both the elaborator and to the user.)
2024-07-17 20:48:03 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f60721bfbd feat: add some low level helper APIs (#4778) 2024-07-17 20:12:05 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a5ecdd0a17 feat: improve @[ext] error message when ext_iff generation fails (#4762)
Now it suggests using `@[ext (iff := false)]` to disable generating the
`ext_iff` lemma.

This PR also adjusts error messages and attribute documentation.
Additionally, to simplify the code now the `x` and `y` arguments can't
come in reverse order (this feature was was added in the refactor
#4543).

Closes #4758
2024-07-17 18:26:12 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
be717f03ef fix: missing assignment validation at closeMainGoal (#4777)
This primitive is used by the `exact` tactic. This issue allowed users
to create loops in the metavariable assignment.

closes #4773
2024-07-17 18:25:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
41b4914836 perf: Replacement.apply (#4776)
Avoid potentially expensive `e.replace` if it is not applicable.
2024-07-17 16:17:47 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
933445608c chore: simplify shareCommon' (#4775) 2024-07-17 15:32:35 +00:00
Markus Himmel
8e396068e4 doc: mention linearity in hash map docstring (#4771) 2024-07-17 09:26:38 +00:00
Markus Himmel
c1df7564ce fix: resolve instances for HashMap via unification (#4759) 2024-07-17 08:02:22 +00:00
Markus Himmel
ba3565f441 chore: fix BEq argument order in hash map lemmas (#4732)
The previous argument order was a conscious choice, but I had missed
#3056.
2024-07-17 04:25:21 +00:00
Kim Morrison
af03af5037 feat: simprocs for #[1,2,3,4,5][2] (#4765)
None of these were working previously:

```
#check_simp #[1,2,3,4,5][2]  ~> 3
#check_simp #[1,2,3,4,5][2]? ~> some 3
#check_simp #[1,2,3,4,5][7]? ~> none
#check_simp #[][0]? ~> none
#check_simp #[1,2,3,4,5][2]! ~> 3
#check_simp #[1,2,3,4,5][7]! ~> (default : Nat)
#check_simp (#[] : Array Nat)[0]! ~> (default : Nat)
```
2024-07-17 03:05:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f6666fe266 chore: add missing withTraceNode (#4769)
Motivation: improve `trace.profiler`
2024-07-17 02:32:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c580684c22 perf: add ShareCommon.shareCommon' (#4767)
A more restrictive but efficient max sharing primitive.

**Motivation:** Some software verification proofs may contain
significant redundancy that can be eliminated using hash-consing (also
known as `shareCommon`). For example, [theorem
`sha512_block_armv8_test_4_sym`](460fe5d74c/Proofs/SHA512/SHA512Sym.lean (L29))
took a few seconds at [`addPreDefinitions`
](1a12f63f74/src/Lean/Elab/PreDefinition/Main.lean (L155))
and one second at `fixLevelParams` on a MacBook Pro (with M1 Pro). The
proof term initially had over 16 million subterms, but the redundancy
was indirectly and inefficiently eliminated using `Core.transform` at
`addPreDefinitions`. I tried to use `shareCommon` method to fix the
performance issue, but it was too inefficient. This PR introduces a new
`shareCommon'` method that, although less flexible (e.g., it uses only a
local cache and hash-consing table), is much more efficient. The new
procedure minimizes the number of RC operations and optimizes the
caching strategy. It is 20 times faster than the old `shareCommon`
procedure for theorem `sha512_block_armv8_test_4_sym`.
2024-07-17 01:33:54 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
1a12f63f74 refactor: move Synax.hasIdent, shake dependencies (#4766)
I noticed that a change to `Lean.PrettyPrinter.Delaborator.Builtins`
rebuilt more modules than I expected, so I moved a definition and
reduced some dependcies.

More reduction would be possible to move const-delaboration out of the
big `Lean.PrettyPrinter`, and import from `Lean.PrettyPrinter`
selectively.
2024-07-16 21:19:26 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
95b8095fa6 feat: PProd syntax (part 3) (#4756)
reworks #4730 based on feedback from @kmill:

 * Uses `×'` for PProd
 * No syntax for MProd for now
 * Angle brackets (without nesting) for the values
2024-07-16 21:06:04 +00:00
Kyle Miller
94cc8eb863 chore: add comment for why anonymous constructor notation isn't flattened during pretty printing (#4764) 2024-07-16 19:04:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1cf47bce5a chore: rename TC to Relation.TransGen (#4760)
This is barely used in Lean, and this rename is both more readable, and
consistent with further developments downstream.

See
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/Relation.2ETransGen.20vs.2E.20TC.20from.20Init.2ECore/near/448941824)
discussion.
2024-07-16 17:06:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b73fe04710 feat: add Lean.Expr.numObjs (#4754)
Add helper function for computing the number of allocated
sub-expressions in a given expression. Note: Use this function primarily
for diagnosing performance issues.
2024-07-16 15:52:33 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f986a2e9ef chore: missing profileitM (#4753)
This PR addresses the absence of the `profileitM` function in two
auxiliary functions. The added `profileitM` instances are particularly
useful for diagnosing performance issues in declarations that contain
many repeated sub-terms.
2024-07-16 15:43:23 +00:00
Markus Himmel
1a9cbc96f1 chore: rename HashMap.remove to HashMap.erase (#4725)
The name `remove` was chosen because it is more popular in mainstream
programming languages, but being consistent with other Lean container
types (including `Lean.HashMap` and `Batteries.HashMap`) is more
important, so let's change the name while we still can.
2024-07-16 08:14:56 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7aec6c9ae7 chore: temporarily remove test broken by #4746 2024-07-16 09:43:26 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
31de2494fb chore: update stage0 2024-07-15 21:53:05 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
d679591880 chore: update stage0 2024-07-15 21:29:34 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f167cfba71 chore: exclude more symbols to get below Windows symbol limit 2024-07-15 23:19:04 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
180c6aaa5e feat: PProd and MProd syntax (part 2) (#4730)
the internal constructions for structural and well-founded recursion
use plenty of `PProd` and `MProd`, and reading these, deeply
nested and in prefix notation, is unnecessarily troublesome.

Therefore this introduces notations
```
a ×ₚ b   -- PProd a b
a ×ₘ b   -- MProd a b
()ₚ      -- PUnit.unit
(x,y,z)ₚ -- PProd.mk x (PProd.mk y z)
(x,y,z)ₘ -- MProd.mk x (MProd.mk y z)
```

(This is the post-stage0-part 2.)
2024-07-15 15:40:42 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
ab0241dac8 chore: update stage0 2024-07-15 15:02:32 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
dc65f03c41 feat: PProd and MProd syntax (part 1) (#4747)
the internal constructions for structural and well-founded recursion
use plenty of `PProd` and `MProd`, and reading these, deeply
nested and in prefix notation, is unnecessarily troublesome.

Therefore this introduces notations
```
a ×ₚ b   -- PProd a b
a ×ₘ b   -- MProd a b
()ₚ      -- PUnit.unit
(x,y,z)ₚ -- PProd.mk x (PProd.mk y z)
(x,y,z)ₘ -- MProd.mk x (MProd.mk y z)
```

(This is part 1, the rest will follow in #4730 after a stage0 update.)
2024-07-15 14:21:11 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
de96b6d8a7 feat: structural recursion over nested datatypes (#4733)
This now works:

```lean
inductive Tree where | node : List Tree → Tree

mutual
def Tree.size : Tree → Nat
  | node ts => list_size ts

def Tree.list_size : List Tree → Nat
  | [] => 0
  | t::ts => t.size + list_size ts
end
```

It is still out of scope to expect to be able to use nested recursion
(e.g. through `List.map` or `List.foldl`) here.

Depends on #4718.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-07-15 11:49:53 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
3ab2c714ec feat: infer mutual structural recursion (#4718)
the support for mutual structural recursion (new since #4575) is
extended so that Lean tries to infer it even without annotations.

* The error message when termination checking fails looks quite
different now. Maybe a bit better, maybe with more room for
improvements.
* If there are too many combinations (with an arbitrary cut-off) for a
given argument type, it will just give up and ask the user to use
`termination_by structural`.
* It is now legal to specify `termination_by structural` on not
necessarily all functions of a clique; this simply restricts the
combinations of arguments that Lean considers.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-07-15 09:34:06 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f99427bd1a test: extend test for #4671 with nice example reported on zulip (#4740)
from
<https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/.E2.9C.94.20Doubly-nested.20inductive/near/451204850>

I really like when I can respond to bug report with “will fix in -1
weeks”
2024-07-13 22:22:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
1118978cbb refactor: IndGroupInfo and IndGroupInst (#4738)
This adds the types
* `IndGroupInfo`, a variant of `InductiveVal` with information that
   applies to a whole group of mutual inductives and
* `IndGroupInst` which extends `IndGroupInfo` with levels and parameters
   to indicate a instantiation of the group.

One purpose of this abstraction is to make it clear when a fuction
operates on a group as a whole, rather than a specific inductive within
the group.

This is extracted from #4718 and #4733 to reduce PR size and improve
bisectability.
2024-07-13 08:30:09 +00:00
James Sully
4ea8c5ad8d doc: fix misplaced docstring for getThe (#4737) 2024-07-13 08:10:05 +00:00
Mac Malone
a6ae49c3ab feat: lake: cleaner release handling & related touchups (#4735)
Improves a number of elements related to Git checkouts, cloud releases,
and related error handling.

* On error, Lake now prints all top-level logs. Top-level logs are those
produced by Lake outside of the job monitor (e.g., when cloning
dependencies).
* When fetching a remote for a dependency, Lake now forcibly fetches
tags. This prevents potential errors caused by a repository recreating
tags already fetched.
* Tweaked Git error handling to hopefully be more informative.
* The builtin package facets `release`, `optRelease`, `extraDep` are now
caption in the same manner as other facets. Previously, they were
attempting to be too clever.
* `afterReleaseSync` and `afterReleaseAsync` now fetch `optRelease`
rather than `release`.
* Added support for optional jobs, whose failure does not cause the
whole build to failure (and made `optRelease` such a job).

Closes #4302.
2024-07-13 01:10:41 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
2ad6d397f8 refactor: use indVal.numNested or indVal.numTypeFormers where applicable (#4734)
follow-up to #4684
2024-07-12 22:07:25 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
891824bc51 feat: .below and .brecOn for nested inductive (#4658)
We now get `.below` and `.brecOn` definitions for nested inductives.

No surprises in the implementation: the kernel already gives us suitable
`.rec_1` etc. recursors, and our construction follows the structure of
this recursor.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-07-12 21:26:35 +00:00
Matthew Robert Ballard
f35c562ef8 feat: add #discr_tree_key command and discr_tree_key tactic (#4447)
Adds a command and tactic to print the `Array <| DiscrTree.Key` for
equalities helping the user to debug perceived `simp` failures.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-07-12 15:05:10 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
bcd8517307 feat: Meta.withErasedFVars (#4731)
this idiom shows up multiple times, is non-trivial (in the sense that
the `localInsts` has to be updated, and I am about to use it once more.
Hence time to abstract this out.
2024-07-12 14:58:04 +00:00
Kyle Miller
ce73bbe277 feat: detailed feedback on decide tactic failure (#4674)
When the `decide` tactic fails, it can try to give hints about the
failure:
- It tells you which `Decidable` instances it unfolded, by making use of
the diagnostics feature.
- If it encounters `Eq.rec`, it gives you a hint that one of these
instances was likely defined using tactics.
- If it encounters `Classical.choice`, it hints that you might have
classical instances in scope.
- During this, it tries to process `Decidable.rec`s and matchers to pin
blame on a particular instance that failed to reduce.

This idea comes from discussion with Heather Macbeth [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Decidable.20with.20structures/near/449409870).
2024-07-11 20:08:29 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f0eab4b7b1 fix: nested structural recursion over reflexive data type (#4728)
this code
```
inductive N where
 | cons : (Nat -> N) -> N

mutual
def f : N -> Nat
 | .cons a => g (a 32) + 1
termination_by structural n => n
def g : N -> Nat
 | .cons a => f (a 42) + 1
termination_by structural  n => n
end
```
would break. When searching for the right `belowDict` we now have to,
evne after instantiating the paramters for a reflexive argument, again
search through a bunch of `PProd`s.

(Instead of searching we could pass down the index, but since we are
searching anyways in this function let's just re-use.)

Fixes: #4726
2024-07-11 15:25:48 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5f70c1ca64 fix: make matcher pretty printer sensitive to pp.explicit (#4724)
Matchers usually have implicit arguments, and even if they don't the
notation hides the name of the matcher function.

Now when hovering over `match` expressions you can see the actual
underlying matcher expression.
2024-07-11 01:49:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fce82eba40 feat: further theorems for List.erase (#4723) 2024-07-10 22:19:12 +00:00
grunweg
9d14e4423c chore: fix typo in doc-string (#4719)
Fix a typo "to at" in a doc-string.
2024-07-10 22:03:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0c7859a7dd feat: upstream more erase API (#4720)
This should complete leansat's requirements.
2024-07-10 20:26:51 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
c01e003b49 fix: mutual structural recursion: check that datatype parameters agree (#4715)
if will fail otherwise, but with a worse error message, and it's helpful
in later transformation to know that the parameters are the same for the
whole group.
2024-07-10 08:14:57 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ce8a130724 fix: deprecated warnings for overloaded symbols (#4713)
closes #4636
2024-07-10 04:06:25 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3c18d151a6 fix: make iff theorem generated by @[ext] preserve inst implicits (#4710)
Previously all arguments from the ext theorem were made implicit, but
now only default and strict implicits are made implicit.
2024-07-10 03:48:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0f48e926eb fix: decide tactic transparency (#4711)
closes #4644
2024-07-10 01:40:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
850964999e fix: Repr instances for Int and Float (#4709)
closes #4677
2024-07-10 00:10:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
57b8b32c72 chore: reorganise lemmas on list getters (#4708)
Just reordering lemmas, sorting into subsections.
2024-07-09 22:55:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
bd2aefee01 feat: simp normal form tests for Pairwise and Nodup (#4707) 2024-07-09 22:26:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
74dcd6c2a9 feat: lemmas for List.head and List.getLast (#4678) 2024-07-09 22:13:41 +00:00
Kyle Miller
23b893f778 doc: update release checklist for new release notes workflow (#4458)
This makes it reflect how we are writing release notes for 4.9.0,
including how to handle the `releases_drafts` folder and how and when to
update `RELEASES.md`.

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-07-09 21:44:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1e02c08111 feat: basic material on List.Pairwise and Nodup (#4706)
Upstreaming of basic material on `List.Pairwise` and `List.Nodup`. More
complete API to follow later, this is just a first approximation of what
leansat will need.
2024-07-09 21:39:08 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0f6a802314 feat: characterisations of List.Sublist (#4704) 2024-07-09 21:34:29 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
be197cd431 fix: prefer original module in const2ModIdx (#4652)
When a definition is redeclared, the original code would clobber the
value of `const2ModIdx` every time, meaning that a constant would be
attributed to a module which occurs later than the modules for constants
referencing this one. Preferring the original module ensures that these
module indexes are dependency-ordered. This originally came up as a bug
in `shake`, which assumes this property, see
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/check.20for.20unused.20imports.20doesn't.20stop/near/449139309).
2024-07-09 14:14:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f531f4e5db feat: chore upstream List.Sublist and API from Batteries (#4697)
I'll update `list_simp.lean` (simp normal form testing) and add missing
lemmas in follow-up PRs.

This just upstreams the material, and reorders the lemmas to match the
other sections.
2024-07-09 12:57:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8229b28cc9 feat: omega doesn't push coercion over multiplication unnecessarily (#4695) 2024-07-09 12:49:31 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
582d6e7f71 chore: CI: update download-artifact actions 2024-07-09 10:17:19 +02:00
Mac Malone
4daa29e71d feat: lake: require @ git (#4692)
Adds syntactic sugar specifying a git revision as a dependency version
in a `require` command. For example:

```
require "leanprover-community" / "proofwidgets" @ git "v0.0.39"
```
2024-07-09 02:50:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9124426c55 chore: upstream eq_iff_true_of_subsingleton (#4689) 2024-07-08 21:09:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
cb0755bac0 chore: make use of ext_iff realization now that stage0 is updated (#4694)
This is a followup to #4543. This also adds "go to definition" for
generated lemmas.
2024-07-08 21:05:53 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
4b32d9b9a1 chore: update stage0 2024-07-08 20:22:24 +00:00
Kyle Miller
7602265923 feat: make @[ext] derive ext_iff theorems from user ext theorems (#4543)
This PR refactors the 'ext' attribute and implements the following
features:
- The 'local' and 'scoped' attribute kinds are now usable.
- The attribute realizes the `ext`/`ext_iff` lemmas when they do not
already exist, rather than always generating them. This is useful in
conjunction with `@[local ext]`.
- Adding `@[ext]` to a user ext lemma now realizes an `ext_iff` lemma as
well; formerly this was only for structures. The name of the generated
`ext_iff` theorem for a user `ext` theorem named `A.B.myext` is
`A.B.myext_iff`. If this process leads to an error, the user can write
`@[ext (iff := false)]` to disable this feature.

Breaking changes:
- Now the "x" and "y" term arguments to the realized `ext` and `ext_iff`
lemmas are implicit.
- Now the realized `ext` and `ext_iff` lemmas are protected.

Bootstrapping notes:
- There are a few `ext_iff` lemmas to address after the next stage0
update.

Closes https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues/3643

Suggested by Floris [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/.22Missing.20Tactics.22.20list/near/446267660).
2024-07-08 19:37:56 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
6ba5704e00 chore: update stage0 2024-07-08 21:18:50 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
98ee789990 refactor: InductiveVal.numNested instead of .isNested
right now, in order to find out how many auxilary datatype are in a
mutual group of inductive with nested data type, one has to jump
through hoops like this:

```
private def numNestedInducts (indName : Name) : MetaM Nat := do
  let .inductInfo indVal ← getConstInfo indName | panic! "{indName} is an inductive"
  let .recInfo recVal ← getConstInfo (mkRecName indName) | panic! "{indName} has a recursor"
  return recVal.numMotives - indVal.all.lengt
```

The `InductiveVal` data structure already has `.isNested : Bool`, so it
seems to be a natural extension to beef that up to `.numNested: Nat`.

This touched kernel code.
2024-07-08 21:18:50 +02:00
Kim Morrison
e08a562c48 chore: add step to release checklist (#4693) 2024-07-08 18:58:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
84c40d9999 chore: improve compatibility of tests/list_simp with Mathlib (#4691)
I'd like to be able to automatically re-test simp normal forms
post-Mathlib. This makes the file compatible with Mathlib.
2024-07-08 17:17:28 +00:00
Kim Morrison
aecebaab74 chore: upstream SMap.foldM (#4690) 2024-07-08 17:11:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3b3901b824 chore: forward and backward directions of not_exists (#4688)
These are added in Batteries.
2024-07-08 16:31:04 +00:00
Kim Morrison
811c1e3685 chore: upstream ToExpr FilePath and compile_time_search_path% (#4453) 2024-07-08 15:41:03 +00:00
Kim Morrison
27e85cc947 chore: adjust List.replicate simp lemmas (#4687) 2024-07-08 15:29:19 +00:00
Henrik Böving
9a852595c4 feat: Process.tryWait (#4660)
Reopen of #4659 due to "processing updates" bug.
2024-07-08 15:14:13 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
1311e36a98 feat: structural mutual recursion (#4575)
This adds support for mutual structural recursive functions.

For now this is opt-in: The functions must have a `termination_by
structural …` annotation (new since #4542) for this to work:

```lean
mutual
inductive A
  | self : A → A
  | other : B → A
  | empty
inductive B
  | self : B → B
  | other : A → B
  | empty
end

mutual
def A.size : A → Nat
  | .self a => a.size + 1
  | .other b => b.size + 1
  | .empty => 0
termination_by structural x => x
def B.size : B → Nat
  | .self b => b.size + 1
  | .other a => a.size + 1
  | .empty => 0
termination_by structural x => x
end
```

The recursive functions don’t have to be in a one-to-one relation to a
set of mutually recursive inductive data types. It is possible to ignore
some of the types:

```lean
def A.self_size : A → Nat
  | .self a => a.self_size + 1
  | .other _ => 0
  | .empty => 0
termination_by structural x => x
```

or have more than one function per argument type:

```lean
  def isEven : Nat → Prop
    | 0 => True
    | n+1 => ¬ isOdd n
  termination_by structural x => x

  def isOdd : Nat → Prop
    | 0 => False
    | n+1 => ¬ isEven n
  termination_by structural x => x
```


This does not include

 * Support for nested inductive data types or nested recursion
* Inferring mutual structural recursion in the absence of
`termination_by`.
 * Functional induction principles for these.
* Mutually recursive functions that live in different universes. This
may be possible,
maybe after beefing up the `.below` and `.brecOn` functions; we can look
into this some
   other time, maybe when there are concrete use cases.

---------

Co-authored-by: Richard Kiss <him@richardkiss.com>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
2024-07-08 14:39:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
db7a01d126 chore: update comments in kernel/declaration.h (#4683)
This file has comments that recall the data type definitions in Lean.
Most of them were still using lean3 syntax, and at least one of them was
out of date (one field missing), so I updated them.

I took the liberty to shorten the comments from the original file, or
omit them if they don’t add much over the field names.
2024-07-08 14:39:43 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4d2f2d7cc5 fix: calculate error suppression per snapshot (#4657)
Generalizes #3556 to not suppressing errors in tactic steps either when
the parse error is in a later step, as otherwise changes to the end of a
proof would affect (correctness or effectiveness of) incrementality of
preceding steps.

Fixes #4623, in combination with #4643
2024-07-08 09:54:43 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f6265e25f4 chore: fix "max dynamic symbols" metric (#4669)
As we do not build multiple shared libraries on non-Windows anymore,
count the max exported symbols per static library instead.
Unfortunately, this still does seem to match the number on Windows.
2024-07-08 09:09:19 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d6c6e16254 fix: unorphan modules in Std.Data (#4679) 2024-07-08 07:57:56 +00:00
Markus Himmel
818b9d7de0 chore: update codeowners (#4681) 2024-07-08 07:57:54 +00:00
Markus Himmel
34e6579190 chore: Inhabited instances for Std.HashMap (#4682) 2024-07-08 07:57:51 +00:00
Markus Himmel
2b0ed751bd fix: unorphan modules in Init (#4680) 2024-07-08 07:57:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6ed26dcf8f chore: cleanup unused arguments (from linter) (#4621) 2024-07-07 21:20:06 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
955135b3f9 chore: bump actions/checkout and actions/upload-artifacts (#4664)
to reduce warnings on CI. Based on the changelogs/migrations guides I
found they should work as before.
2024-07-07 20:26:59 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f36bbc8d56 fix: hasBadParamDep? to look at term, not type (#4672)
The previous check, looking only at the type of the parameter, was too
permissive and led to ill-typed terms later on.

This fixes #4671.

In some cases the previous code might have worked by accident, in this
sense this is a breaking change. Affected functions can be fixed by
reordering their parameters to that all the function parameters that
occur in the parameter of the inductive type of the parameter that the
function recurses on come first.
2024-07-07 16:00:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
64eeba726a chore: make Antisymm a Prop (#4666)
As pointed out on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.60Antisymm.60.20is.20in.20.60Type.60/near/449084812).
2024-07-07 12:31:35 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4ed79472af fix: explicitly initialize Std in lean_initialize (#4668)
Fixes the stage 2 build, which runs with `prefer_native=true`
2024-07-06 13:17:30 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
55d09a39b4 fix: move Std from libleanshared to much smaller libInit_shared (#4661)
Fixes the Windows build. As libLean is by far the biggest component,
there is no need for a separate libStd_shared for now.

```
$ find build/release/stage1/lib/lean -name '*.a' -exec bash -c 'echo -n "{} " ; nm {} | grep " T " | wc -l' \;
build/release/stage1/lib/lean/libleanrt.a 497
build/release/stage1/lib/lean/libleancpp.a 1320
build/release/stage1/lib/lean/libInit.a 7476
build/release/stage1/lib/lean/libStd.a 1696
build/release/stage1/lib/lean/libLean.a 64339
build/release/stage1/lib/lean/libLake.a 5722
```
2024-07-06 11:43:09 +02:00
Kyle Miller
7de0c58dc1 fix: don't set pp.tagAppFns when pretty printing signatures (#4665)
In #3911, a refactor to share `MessageData` code between `ppConst` and
the signature pretty printer unintentionally caused the signature pretty
printer to use the `pp.tagAppFns` option. This causes, for example, `+`
in `a + b` to independently have its own hover information due to the
fact that `notation` app unexpanders use the head function's syntax as
the `ref` when constructing the notation syntax. This behavior of
`pp.tagAppFns` is intentional, and it is used by docgen, but it should
not be activated for signatures.

This affects `#check` and was reported by Kevin Buzzard [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/degraded.20hover.20experience.20on.20.23check/near/449380674).

This PR also makes sure the initial `ref` when applying app unexpanders
is `.missing`, rather than whatever random value might be present in the
`CoreM` context.
2024-07-05 23:02:39 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
04fefdd728 chore: restart-on-label: wait for 30s (#4663)
this doesn't work reliable when it cancels jobs. Maybe sleeping helps.
2024-07-05 19:50:14 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
75fe520562 chore: update stage0 2024-07-05 16:43:21 +00:00
Markus Himmel
3e0ea762b8 feat: Std.HashMap (#4583)
### Preliminary PRs:

- [x] #4597 
- [x] #4599
- [x] #4600
- [x] #4602
- [x] #4603
- [x] #4604
- [x] #4605
- [x] #4607
- [x] #4627
- [x] #4629 

### Quick overview over API/naming changes compared to `Lean.HashMap`
and `Batteries.HashMap`:
#### Lean

* `find?` -> `get?`/`getElem?`
* `find!` -> `get!`/`gtetElem!`
* `findD` -> `getD`
* `findEntry?` -> not implemented for now
* `insert'` -> `containsThenInsert` (order reversed in result)
* `insertIfNew` -> `getThenInsertIfNew?` (order reversed in result)
* `numBuckets` -> `Internal.numBuckets`
* `ofListWith` -> not implemented for now
* `Array.groupByKey` -> not implemented for now
* `merge` -> not implemented for now, but you can use `insertMany`

#### Batteries

* `modify` -> not implemented for now
* `mergeWith` -> not implemented for now
* `mergeWithM` -> not implemented for now
2024-07-05 10:14:20 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5ce886cf96 refactor: Split Constructions module (#4656)
for better build paralleization and less rebuilding when editing one of
these files.
2024-07-05 08:25:44 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5ad5c2cf04 fix: universe level in .below and .brecOn construction (#4651)
I made a mistake in #4517, fixed here, so about time to add a test.

I wonder if this generic level optimization should be moved into
`mkLevelMax'`, but not today.

fixes #4650
2024-07-04 18:19:43 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d4e141e233 feat: EquivBEq and LawfulHashable classes (#4607)
Split from #4583

There are two open questions, opinions appreciated:

- Should this material be part of `Init` or `Std`?
- Should the typeclasses be in the `Std` namespace?
2024-07-04 05:07:18 +00:00
Markus Himmel
05f78939f6 feat: additional lemmas for arrays (#4627)
Split from #4583
2024-07-04 05:06:34 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7b965f3f18 fix: improve synthAppInstances (#4646)
This is an auxiliary procedured used by `rw` and `apply` tactics. It
synthesizes pending type class instances.
The new test contains an example where it failed. The comment at
`synthAppInstances.step` explains why, and the fix.
2024-07-03 19:14:25 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
0594bc4e5a refactor: lambdaBoundedTelescope (#4642)
we have a `forallBoundedTelescope`, and for a long while I was
wondering why we also don't have `lambdaBoundedTelescope`, and every now
and then felt the need for it. So let's just add it.
2024-07-03 15:57:12 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3fb7f632a5 fix: snapshot subtree was not restored on reuse (#4643)
This could lead to nested error messages and info trees vanishing on
edits (strictly) below them

Fixes the second issue in #4623
2024-07-03 15:27:15 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f6deaa8fb2 chore: update stage0 2024-07-03 14:54:58 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
15a41ffc1c refactor: include declNames in Structural.EqnInfo
this is in preparation for #4575. Because we use the EqnInfo in
attributes, this should be followed by a stage0 update before the field
is used.
2024-07-03 14:54:58 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
cc5c95f377 chore: CI: restart-on-label: view run more often (#4640)
this job sometimes fails, maybe a race condition with the `gh run
cancel` not happenign quickly enough. Maybe more verbose output will
help understand this better.
2024-07-03 12:35:50 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
62c5bc5d0d chore: manual nightly trigger (#4638)
Now that nightly releases may fail more often because of more checks,
let's make it possible to retry them on a later commit
2024-07-03 08:19:07 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c2edae92c8 fix: make sure syntax nodes always run their formatters (#4631)
Now syntax nodes have their formatters run even if the parsers they wrap
are all arity zero. This fixes an issue where if `ppSpace` appears in a
`macro`/`elab` then it does not format with a space due to the fact that
macro argument processing wraps this as `group(ppSpace)`, and `ppSpace`
has arity zero.

Implementation note: the fix is to make the `visitArgs` formatter
combinator always visit the last child, even if it does not exist (in
which case the visited node will be `Syntax.missing`). To compensate,
parser combinators like many and optional need to be sure to keep track
of whether there any children. Only optional's needed to be modified.

Closes #4561
2024-07-03 07:45:34 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
7ef95cd30b chore: update stage0 2024-07-03 07:48:23 +00:00
Alok Singh
2cd2364974 chore: typo (#4635) 2024-07-03 05:14:09 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f5fd962a25 feat: safe exponentiation (#4637)
Summary:
- Adds configuration option `exponentiation.threshold`
- An expression `b^n` where `b` and `n` are literals is not reduced by
`whnf`, `simp`, and `isDefEq` if `n > exponentiation.threshold`.

Motivation: prevents system from becoming irresponsive and/or crashing
without memory.

TODO: improve support in the kernel. It is using a hard-coded limit for
now.
2024-07-03 05:12:53 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d72fcb6b2a feat: Option.or (#4600)
Split from #4583
2024-07-03 01:30:15 +00:00
Markus Himmel
a2a73e9611 feat: USize.and_toNat (#4629)
Split from #4583
2024-07-03 01:28:36 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3f2cf8bf27 fix: set default value of pp.instantiateMVars to true and make the option be effective (#4558)
Before, `pp.instantiateMVars` generally had no effect because most call
sites for the pretty printer instantiated metavariables first, but now
this functionality is entrusted upon the `pp.instantiateMVars` option.

This also has an effect in hovers, where metavariables can be unfolded
one assignment at a time. However, the goal state still sees all
metavariables instantiated due to the fact that the algorithm relies on
expression equality post-instantiation (see
`Lean.Widget.goalToInteractive`).

Closes #4406
2024-07-02 22:59:44 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d39c4d6a1c chore: pr-release: use right tag name (#4632)
this improves upon #4598
2024-07-02 21:06:55 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
b28cfb9336 fix: Windows build (#4628) 2024-07-02 20:32:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
6080e3dd5c fix: enforce isDefEqStuckEx at unstuckMVar procedure (#4596)
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.
2024-07-02 13:42:47 +00:00
Markus Himmel
8959b2ca87 chore: make constructor-as-variable test more robust (#4625)
The test tended to fail every time the number of structures in `Init`
changes, which turns out to be quite often.
2024-07-02 11:44:46 +00:00
Kim Morrison
554e723433 chore: add 'since' dates to deprecated (#4617) 2024-07-02 04:30:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
9cc1164305 chore: follow simpNF linter's advice (#4620)
We can run the `simpNF` environment linter from Batteries. Nearly all
its advice is good.
2024-07-02 04:30:00 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0c6f83eb6d chore: satisfy duplicate namespace linter (#4616) 2024-07-02 04:29:56 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1225b0f651 chore: delete deprecations from 2022 (#4618) 2024-07-02 03:47:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
75e11ecf7c chore: defs that should be theorems (#4619) 2024-07-02 03:03:11 +00:00
Markus Himmel
4055aecba2 feat: additional lemmas for bounded integers (#4605)
Split from #4583
2024-07-02 02:03:13 +00:00
Markus Himmel
1681b2fa67 feat: additional lemmas for cond (#4604)
Split from #4583
2024-07-02 02:02:41 +00:00
Markus Himmel
c97f958ecf feat: getElem_congr (#4603)
Split from #4583

Rewriting the `i` in `xs[i]` usually fails with `motive is not type
correct`, but with this lemma it works.
2024-07-02 02:02:17 +00:00
Markus Himmel
e2dc85274b feat: additional lemmas for lists (#4602)
Split from #4583

`exists_of_set` appears in Batteries as `exists_of_set'`. The
`exists_of_set` version is unused in batteries and mathlib at least and
I would argue that the primed version (i.e., the one added in this PR)
is always better anyway.

`isEmpty_iff` appears in mathlib as `isEmpty_iff_eq_nil`.
2024-07-02 02:01:44 +00:00
Markus Himmel
e12999bcf6 feat: additional lemmas for Option (#4599)
Split from #4583

Mathlib has `isSome_map'` but calls it `isSome_map`.
2024-07-02 01:58:33 +00:00
Markus Himmel
7a0fe6f54c feat: Nat.and_le_(left|right) (#4597)
Split from #4583
2024-07-02 01:55:12 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
4a2210b7e6 fix: unresolve name avoiding locals (#4593)
Fixes #4591. The extra code already existed in the only other user of
`unresolveNameGlobal` (in the pretty printer), although I did not make
it use this function because it has some additional behavior around
universes and in pattern position.
2024-07-02 01:15:39 +00:00
Siddharth
e9d2f8f5f2 feat: mul recurrence theorems for LeanSAT (#4568)
This implements the recurrence theorems `getLsb_mul`, `mulRec_zero_eq`,
`mulRec_succ_eq` to allow bitblasting multiplication.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-07-01 23:47:29 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
d5a45dfa8b chore: update stage0 2024-07-01 17:36:58 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
fb0c46a011 feat: termination_by structural (#4542)
This implements the `termination_by structural` syntax proposed in
#3909.

I went with `termination_by structural` over, say,
`termination_by (config := {method := .structural})` mainly because it
was
easier to get going (otherwise I’d have to look into how to define
recursive
parsers, as `Parser.config` depends on `term` and `termination_by` is
part of
term. But also because I find it more ergonomic and aesthetic as a user.
But syntax can still change.

The `termination_by?` syntax will no longer force well-founded
recursion,
and instead the inferred `termination_by structurally` annotation will
be shown
if structural termination is possible.

While I was it, this fixes #4546 the easy way (log errors about but
otherwise
ignore incomplete `termination_by` sets for mutual recursion). Maybe we
get
multiple replacements (#4551), but even then this this good behavior.

Involves a bit of shuffling around `TerimationHints` (now validated for
a
clique already by `PreDefinition.main`) and `TerminationArguments` (now
lifted
out of the `WF` namespace, and a bit simplified).

Fixes #3909

---------

Co-authored-by: Richard Kiss <him@richardkiss.com>
2024-07-01 16:51:30 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
0635b277ec fix: diagnostics: show kernel diags even if it is the only section (#4611) 2024-07-01 16:45:39 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
087054172c feat: omega error message: normalize constraint order (#4612)
using the order as it comes out of the `HashMap` led to annying test
suite output variations. Moreover, sorting by the canonical order leads
to messages that are probably easier to digest as a user.
2024-07-01 16:11:15 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7f00767b1e fix: adapt kernel interruption to new cancellation system (#4584)
Kernel checks were not canceled on edit after #3014
2024-07-01 14:52:42 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
be54ccd246 chore: pr-release: adjust to new lakefile.lean syntax (#4598)
as per

f5c3f06aa7
2024-07-01 08:48:33 +00:00
Kim Morrison
4d0b7cf66c chore: begin development cycle for v4.11.0 (#4594) 2024-06-30 23:28:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
0629eebc09 chore: release triggers update of release.lean-lang.org (#4531) 2024-06-30 10:39:32 +00:00
Wojciech Nawrocki
9248ada3a8 feat: total ByteArray.toList/findIdx? (#4582)
This is to enable proving facts about these functions.
2024-06-30 07:09:08 +00:00
Kyle Miller
144a3d9463 fix: typo hearbeats -> heartbeats (#4590)
Reported [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/is.20.60trace.2Eprofiler.2EuseHeartbeats.60.20a.20thing.3F/near/447950838).
2024-06-30 07:07:11 +00:00
L
a7bbe7416b feat: upstream List.attach and Array.attach from Batteries (#4586)
Source material:

555ec79bc6/Batteries/Data/List/Init/Attach.lean

555ec79bc6/Batteries/Data/Array/Basic.lean (L133-L148)

Closes RFC #4414
2024-06-30 07:06:26 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f31d4dc128 chore: update stage0 2024-06-29 19:18:53 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
fb97275dcb feat: add Simp.Config.implicitDefEqProofs
This commit does **not** implement this feature.
2024-06-29 19:18:53 +02:00
Leni Aniva
d4d7c72365 fix: Add linking of -lStd back into nix build flags on darwin (#4587)
Adds linkage to `Std` so the build behaviour on darwin is in line with
linux

I'm not sure why linking with `Std` is needed. I deleted it in the
previous patch https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/3811 and Lean
still builds and runs. @tydeu mentioned this issue so I created this PR.
2024-06-29 08:12:57 +00:00
Mac Malone
93c9ae7c20 feat: lake: reservoir require (#4495)
Adds a new type of `require` which fetches package metadata from a
registry API endpoint (i.e., Reservoir) and then clones a Git package
using the information provided. To require such a dependency, the new
syntax is:

```lean
require <scope> / <pkg-name> [@ "git#<rev>"] -- e.g., require "leanprover" / "doc-gen4"
```

Or in TOML:

```toml
[[require]]
name = "<pkg-name>"
scope = "<scope>"
rev = "<rev>"
```

Unlike with Git dependencies, Lake can make use of the richer
information provided by the registry to determine the default branch of
the package. This means for repositories of packages like `doc-gen4`
which have a default branch that is not `master`, Lake will now use said
default branch (e.g., in `doc-gen4`'s case, `main`).

Lake also supports configuring the registry endpoint via an environment
variable: `RESERVIOR_API_URL`. Thus, any server providing a similar
interface to Reservoir can be used as the registry. Further
configuration options paralleling those of Cargo's [Alternative
Registries](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/registries.html)
and [Source
Replacement](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/source-replacement.html)
will come in the future.

Updated and split from #3174.
2024-06-29 01:40:54 +00:00
Leni Aniva
b8dd51500f fix: nix: add platform dependent flag to lib target (#3811)
Closes #3810
2024-06-28 10:40:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
bd091f119b chore: fix bv_omega regression since v4.9.0 (#4579)
This example, reported from LNSym, started failing when we changed the
definition of `Fin.sub` in
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/4421.

When we use the new definition, `omega` produces a proof term that the
kernel is very slow on.

To work around this for now, I've removed `BitVec.toNat_sub` from the
`bv_toNat` simp set,
and replaced it with `BitVec.toNat_sub'` which uses the old definition
for subtraction.

This is only a workaround, and I would like to understand why the term
chokes the kernel.

```
example
    (n : Nat)
    (addr2 addr1 : BitVec 64)
    (h0 : n ≤ 18446744073709551616)
    (h1 : addr2 + 18446744073709551615#64 - addr1 ≤ BitVec.ofNat 64 (n - 1))
    (h2 : addr2 - addr1 ≤ addr2 + 18446744073709551615#64 - addr1) :
    n = 18446744073709551616 := by
  bv_omega
```
2024-06-28 01:20:08 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d8e719f9ab feat: add set_option debug.skipKernelTC true
The new option `set_option debug.skipKernelTC true` is meant for
temporarily working around kernel performance issues.
It compromises soundness because a buggy tactic may produce an invalid
proof, and the kernel will not catch it if the new option is set to true.
2024-06-28 00:55:47 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
93d2ad5fa7 chore: update stage0 2024-06-28 00:55:47 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
7b56eb20a0 feat: prepare for adding new option debug.skipKernelTC
Remark: I had to comment
```
if debug.skipKernelTC.get opts then
  addDeclWithoutChecking env decl
else
```
because the build was crashing when trying to compile Lake.
Going to perform `update-stage0` and try again.
2024-06-28 00:55:47 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
30a922a7e9 feat: add option debug.byAsSorry true (#4576) 2024-06-27 18:29:26 +00:00
Mac Malone
294f7fbec5 fix: lake: computation of precompiled libs (#4566)
Addresses a few issues with precompile library computation. 

* Fixes a bug where Lake would always precompile the package of a
module.
* If a module is precompiled, it now precompiles its imports.
Previously, it would only do this if imported.

Closes #4565.
2024-06-27 15:08:52 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f3cb8a6c2d fix: interrupt exception was swallowed by some tryCatchRuntimeEx uses (#4569)
This appears to have been a semantic merge conflict between #3940 and
#4129. The effect on the language server is that if two edits are
sufficiently close in time to create an interrupt, some elaboration
steps like `simp` may accidentally catch the exception when it is
triggered during their execution, which makes incrementality assume that
elaboration of the body was successful, which can lead to incorrect
reuse, presenting the interrupted state to the user with symptoms such
as "uses sorry" without accompanying errors and incorrect lints.
2024-06-27 10:03:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
5c978a2e24 feat: remove Decidable instances from GetElem (#4560) 2024-06-27 02:09:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ee42c3ca56 fix: discrepancy in the elaborators for theorem, def, and example (#4482)
When the type of a definition or example is a proposition,
we should elaborate on them as we elaborate on theorems.
This is particularly important for examples that are often
used in educational material.

Recall that when elaborating theorem headers, we convert unassigned
universe metavariables into universe parameters. The motivation is
that the proof of a theorem should not influence its statement.
However, before this commit, this was not the case for definitions and
examples when their type was a proposition. This discrepancy often
confused users.

Additionally, we considered extending the above behavior whenever
the type of a definition is provided. That is, we would keep the
current behavior only if `: <type>` was omitted in a definition.
However, this proved to be too restrictive.
For example, the following instance in `Core.lean` would fail:
```
instance {α : Sort u} [Setoid α] : HasEquiv α :=
  ⟨Setoid.r⟩
```
and we would have to write instead:
```
instance {α : Sort u} [Setoid α] : HasEquiv.{u, 0} α :=
  ⟨Setoid.r⟩
```
There are other failures like this in the core, and we assume many more
in Mathlib.

closes #4398

@semorrison @jcommelin: what do you think?
2024-06-27 00:58:58 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
18c97926a1 refactor: extract withRecArgInfo from findRecArg (#4549)
this is  in preparation for #4542, and extracts from `findRecArg` the
functionality for trying one particular argument.

It also refactors the code a bit. In particular

 * It reports errors in the order of the parameters, not the order of
   in which they are tried (it tries non-indices first).
 * For every argument it will say why it wasn't tried, even if the
   reason is quite obviously (fixed prefix, or `Prop`-typed etc.)

Therefore there is some error message churn.
2024-06-26 11:10:57 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
ea22ef4485 refactor: port below and brecOn construction to Lean (#4517)
This ports the `.below` and `.brecOn` constructions to lean.

I kept them in the same file, as they were in the C code, because they
are
highly coupled and the constructions are very analogous.

For validation I developed this in a separate repository at
https://github.com/nomeata/lean-constructions/tree/fad715e
and checked that all declarations found in Lean and Mathlib are
equivalent, up to

    def canon (e : Expr) : CoreM Expr := do
      Core.transform (← Core.betaReduce e) (pre := fun
        | .const n ls  => return .done (.const n (ls.map (·.normalize)))
        | .sort l => return .done (.sort l.normalize)
        | _ => return .continue)

It was not feasible to make them completely equal, because the kernel's
type inference code seem to optimize level expressions a bit less
aggressively, and beta-reduces less in inference.

The private helper functions about `PProd` can later move into their own
file, used by these constructions as well as the structural recursion
module.
2024-06-26 11:10:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
62b6e58789 fix: avoid unnecessary proof steps in simp (#4567)
closes #4534
2024-06-26 05:48:03 +00:00
Mac Malone
714dc6d2bb fix: lake: non-ident script names (#4564)
Fixes a bug where non-identifier script names could not be entered on
the CLI without French quotes. [Reported on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Running.20.60lake.60.20scripts.20from.20the.20command.20line/near/446944450).

Also adds support for string literal script names in a `lakefile.lean`.
2024-06-26 04:24:01 +00:00
Mac Malone
5e7d2c34dc fix: lake: exe bad import errors & related touchups (#4529)
Fixes some issues with the executable build and bad imports.

**Release notes:** 
* A bad import in an executable no longer prevents the executable's root
module from being built., This also fixes a problem where the location
of a transitive bad import would not been shown.
 * The root module of the executable now respects `nativeFacets`.

**Technical touchups:**

* Expanded and better documented `tests/badImport`.
* Use `ensureJob` in `recBuildDeps` to catch import errors instead of
individual `try ... catch` blocks.
2024-06-26 03:39:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fb6d29e260 fix: IndPredBelow should not add auxiliary declarations containing sorry (#4563)
Issue #4535 is being affected by a bug in the structural inductive
predicate termination checker (`IndPred.lean`). This module did not
exist in Lean 3, and it is buggy in Lean 4. In the given example, it
introduces an auxiliary declaration containing a `sorry`, and the fails.
This PR ensures this kind of declaration is not added to the
environment.

Closes #4535

TODO: we need a new maintainer for the `IndPred.lean`.
2024-06-25 20:57:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4964ce3ce8 fix: two functions with the same name in a where/let rec block (#4562)
closes #4547
2024-06-25 20:03:53 +00:00
Kyle Miller
230f335702 fix: block implicit lambda feature for type-free type ascription (#4536)
The implicit lambda feature is already blocked for type ascriptions, but
there is an oversight where it was not blocked for the `(x :)` type
ascription as well. Reported on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.60refine.60.20with.20implicit.20variables/near/446327230).
2024-06-25 18:18:23 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
875e4b1904 fix: tactics in terms in tactic combinators breaking incrementality (#4554)
Fixes #4553
2024-06-25 08:59:38 +00:00
Kyle Miller
49249b9107 feat: introduce pp.maxSteps (#4556)
The `pp.maxSteps` option is a hard limit on the complexity of pretty
printer output, which is necessary to prevent the LSP from crashing when
there are accidental large terms. We're using the default value from the
corresponding Lean 3 option.

This PR also sets `pp.deepTerms` to `false` by default.
2024-06-24 19:19:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3b67e15827 feat: maximum?_eq_some_iff' (#4550)
Requested by @hargoniX.
2024-06-24 11:57:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e3578c2f36 fix: discrepancy theorem vs example (#4493)
When the type of an `example` is a proposition,
we should elaborate on them as we elaborate on theorems.
This is particularly important for examples that are often
used in educational material.

Recall that when elaborating theorem headers, we convert unassigned
universe metavariables into universe parameters. The motivation is
that the proof of a theorem should not influence its statement.
However, before this commit, this was not the case for examples when
their type was a proposition.
This discrepancy often confused users.

Additionally, we considered extending the above behavior to definitions
when
1- When their type is a proposition. However, it still caused disruption
in Mathlib.
2- When their type is provided. That is, we would keep the current
behavior only if `: <type>` was omitted. This would make the elaborator
for `def` much closer to the one for `theorem`, but it proved to be too
restrictive.
For example, the following instance in `Core.lean` would fail:
```
instance {α : Sort u} [Setoid α] : HasEquiv α :=
  ⟨Setoid.r⟩
```
and we would have to write instead:
```
instance {α : Sort u} [Setoid α] : HasEquiv.{u, 0} α :=
  ⟨Setoid.r⟩
```
There are other failures like this in the core, and we assume many more
in Mathlib.

closes #4398
closes #4482 Remark: PR #4482 implements option 1 above. We may consider
it again in the future.
2024-06-24 01:18:41 +00:00
Kim Morrison
0f416c6a83 chore: mark releases as prerelease (#4544) 2024-06-24 01:04:04 +00:00
Markus Schmaus
5178c4b6da feat: change succ to + 1 (#4532)
The simp normal form of `succ` is `+ 1`, this changes additional
theorems to use that normal form.
2024-06-24 00:38:22 +00:00
Siddharth
bc6188a70a feat: BitVec.twoPow and lemmas, toward bitblasting multiplication for LeanSAT (#4417)
We add a new definition `BitVec.twoPow w i` to represent `(1#w <<< i)`.
This expression is used to test bits when building the multiplication
bitblaster.

Patch 1/?, being peeled from https://github.com/opencompl/lean4/pull/6.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-06-23 22:37:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
33f7865bbb fix: cached results at synthInstance? (#4530)
Synthesized type class instances may introduce new metavariables, and we
should actually cache `AbstractMVarsResult`.

closes #2283
2024-06-23 17:54:35 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
968aff403b chore: update stage0 2024-06-23 10:09:59 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
1076ca1ead chore: unset parseQuotWithCurrentStage in stage1’s src/stdlib_flags.h (#4537) 2024-06-23 09:44:14 +00:00
Bhavik Mehta
43a9c73556 chore: fix typo and incorrect name in doc (#4404)
Fixes typo "reflexivitiy" to "reflexivity", and changes exact Eq.rfl to
exact rfl, since Eq.rfl does not exist.

(I got something confused wrt the bot message on #4367 and accidentally
closed that one, so making this one instead, which I think satisfies the
requirements it wanted.)

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-06-23 09:06:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a92e9c7944 chore: move @[simp] from pred_le to sub_one_le (#4522)
(We already have a simp lemma unfolding `pred` to `· - 1`.)

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-06-23 07:58:38 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
378b02921d refactor: port recOn construction to Lean (#4516)
this is the simplest of the constructions to be ported from C++ to Lean,
so I’ll PR this one first.

This begins to put each construction into its own file, as it was the
case with C++.

For validation I developed this in a separate repository at
https://github.com/nomeata/lean-constructions/tree/fad715e
and checked that all `.recOn` declarations found in Lean and Mathlib are
identical (per `==`) to the ones produced by the C code.
2024-06-23 07:36:27 +00:00
Bolton Bailey
5426a5c8b3 chore: Remove simp from Option.elim, replace with individal simp lemmas (#4504)
This PR removes the `simp` attribute from `Option.elim` and adds it to
two related simp lemmas, `Option.elim_none` and `Option.elim_some`.

This PR comes from some discussion
[here](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/optionEquivLeft_apply.20simp/near/438321459)
about `simps!` feeling too aggressive in unfolding this lemma.
2024-06-23 00:58:25 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d7da45cbe6 chore: fix explicitness of Prod.map lemmas (#4533) 2024-06-22 11:05:19 +00:00
Mac Malone
24d51b90cc fix: lake: remove module dynlib from platform-independent trace (#4478)
Fixes a bug where Lake incorrectly included the module dynlib in a
platform-independent trace. It was incorrectly excluded only external
native libraries from the trace. Also adds a test.
2024-06-22 01:24:23 +00:00
Mac Malone
0d529e18a6 feat: expose flags for the bundled C compiler (#4477)
Expose the C compiler and linker flags used with the bundled compiler
(clang) to Lean code. This is needed to skip the use of `leanc` in Lake.
2024-06-22 01:23:33 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4808eb7c4b chore: Nix: fix cacheRoots 2024-06-21 23:35:38 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5767a597d4 chore: update stage0 2024-06-21 22:04:02 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
e665a0d716 chore: Nix: fix update-stage0 2024-06-21 22:02:10 +02:00
Joachim Breitner
073b2cfc83 fix: cdot parser error message range (#4528)
as #4527 describes there is inconsistency between `by`, `case` and
`next` on the one hand who, if the goal isn’t closed, put squiggly
underlines on the first line, and `.`, which so far only squiggled the
dot (which is a very short symbol!)

With this change the same mechanism as used by `case`, namely
`withCaseRef`, is also used for `.`.

There is an argument for the status quo: The `.` tactic is more commonly
used
with further tactics on the same line, and thus there is now a higher
risk that
the user might think that the first tactic is broken. But 

* the same argument does apply to `by` and `case` where there was an
intentional
  choice to do it this way
* consistency and
* a squiggly line just under the short `.` is easy to miss, so it is
actually
better to underlining more here (at least until we have a better way to
  indicate incomplete proofs, which I have hopes for)

Fixes #4527, at least most of it.
2024-06-21 15:06:07 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
84e46162b5 feat: more infrastructure for tactic documentation (#4490)
This is the groundwork for a tactic index in generated documentation, as
there was in Lean 3. There are a few challenges to getting this to work
well in Lean 4:
* There's no natural notion of *tactic identity* - a tactic may be
specified by multiple syntax rules (e.g. the pattern-matching version of
`intro` is specified apart from the default version, but both are the
same from a user perspective)
* There's no natural notion of *tactic name* - here, we take the
pragmatic choice of using the first keyword atom in the tactic's syntax
specification, but this may need to be overridable someday.
* Tactics are extensible, but we don't want to allow arbitrary imports
to clobber existing tactic docstrings, which could become unpredictable
in practice.

For tactic identity, this PR introduces the notion of a *tactic
alternative*, which is a `syntax` specification that is really "the same
as" an existing tactic, but needs to be separate for technical reasons.
This provides a notion of tactic identity, which we can use as the basis
of a tactic index in generated documentation. Alternative forms of
tactics are specified using a new `@[tactic_alt IDENT]` attribute,
applied to the new tactic syntax. It is an error to declare a tactic
syntax rule to be an alternative of another one that is itself an
alternative. Documentation hovers now take alternatives into account,
and display the docs for the canonical name.

*Tactic tags*, created with the `register_tactic_tag` command, specify
tags that may be applied to tactics. This is intended to be used by
doc-gen and Verso. Tags may be applied using the `@[tactic_tag TAG1 TAG2
...]` attribute on a canonical tactic parser, which may be used in any
module to facilitate downstream projects introducing tags that apply to
pre-existing tactics. Tags may not be removed, but it's fine to
redundantly add them. The collection of tags, and the tactics to which
they're applied, can be seen using the `#print tactic tags` command.

*Extension documentation* provides a structured way to document
extensions to tactics. The resulting documentation is gathered into a
bulleted list at the bottom of the tactic's docstring. Extensions are
added using the `tactic_extension TAC` command. This can be used when
adding new interpretations of a tactic via `macro_rules`, when extending
some table or search index used by the tactic, or in any other way. It
is a command to facilitate its flexible use with various extension
mechanisms.
2024-06-21 12:49:30 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a1a245df40 chore: missing Prod.map lemmas (#4526) 2024-06-21 11:53:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
07ee719761 chore: fix statement of List.filter_congr (#4525) 2024-06-21 11:36:07 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ee9996ec89 chore: fix statement of List.filter_congr (#4524) 2024-06-21 11:35:43 +00:00
Markus Schmaus
d2ae678fbf feat: change List.length_cons to use + 1 instead of succ (#4500)
The simp normal form of `succ` is `+ 1`, this changes `List.length_cons`
to use that normal form.
2024-06-21 11:25:07 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
2a00d6cf70 doc: more detailed docstring for PersistentEnvExtension (#4501)
Describes the intended modes of use, potential performance tradeoffs,
and data representation in more detail.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-06-21 08:34:04 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d020a9c5a6 feat: introduce Std (#4499)
Situated between `Init` and `Lean`, provides functionality not in the
prelude to both Lean's implementation and external users
2024-06-21 07:08:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
301a89aba4 feat: lemmas about List.map (#4521) 2024-06-21 06:40:30 +00:00
Mac Malone
f32780d863 refactor: lake: more robust trace reading (#4518)
The recent change of the trace format exposed some unexpected issues
with Lake's tracing handling. This aims to fix that.

Lake will now perform a rebuild if the trace file is invalid/unreadable.
However, it will still fall back to modification times if the trace file
is missing. Also, Lake is now backwards compatible with the previous
pure numeric traces (and tolerates the absence of a `log` field in the
JSON trace).
2024-06-21 01:43:05 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d6eab393f4 chore: fix benchmark 2024-06-20 18:18:41 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
1f732bb3b7 fix: missing unboxing in interpreter when loading initialized value (#4512)
Fixes #4457
2024-06-20 10:06:24 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
7d7f378e02 feat: complete Int div/mod simprocs (#3850)
This PR introduces complete simprocs for all the Int versions of
div/mod, and makes some small refactoring of Int lemmas and
library_search.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-06-20 04:42:31 +00:00
Kim Morrison
95db616cb6 chore: cherry-pick stray test from #3850 (#4509)
#3850 included a commit that added an extra test for `exact?`, but was
otherwise unrelated the to PR. It also removed a test. I've
cherry-picked that test over, and restored the deleted test, and next
will remove the commit from #3850.
2024-06-20 01:00:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
45c5d009d6 fix: dsimp missing theorems for literals (#4467) 2024-06-20 00:35:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
458835360f fix: [implemented_by] at functions defined by well-founded recursion (#4508)
closes #2899
2024-06-20 00:06:38 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3e05b0641b chore: fix test 2024-06-20 01:05:52 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
53be53f5ae chore: update stage0 2024-06-20 01:05:52 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
dac1dacc5b feat: add Rewrite.Config.newGoals field
It is not used yet. We need a update-stage0.
2024-06-20 01:05:52 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
d3a7569c97 refactor: move ApplyNewGoals and ApplyConfig to Init 2024-06-20 01:05:52 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
49f058cb76 feat: open _root_.<namespace> (#4505)
closes #3045
2024-06-19 21:59:46 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
bc047b8530 refactor: port mk_definition_inferring_unsafe to Lean (#4498)
this already can be used in two places, and will be used more as I port
more constructions. Hope the location in `Lean.Environment` is ok.
2024-06-19 18:26:19 +00:00
JovanGerb
c7c50a8bec chore: fix linter errors (#4502)
The linters in Batteries can be used to spot mistakes in Lean. See the
message on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Go-to-def.20on.20typeclass.20fields.20and.20type-dependent.20notation/near/442613564).
These are the different linters with errors:

- unusedArguments:
There are many unused instance arguments, especially a redundant `[Monad
m]` is very common
- checkUnivs:
There was a problem with universes in a definition in
`Init.Control.StateCps`. I fixed it by adding a `variable` statement for
the implicit arguments in the file.
- defLemma:
many proofs are written as `def` instead of `theorem`, most notably
`rfl`. Because `rfl` is used as a match pattern, it must be a def. Is
this desirable?
The keyword `abbrev` is sometimes used for an alias of a theorem, which
also results in a def. I would want to replace it with the `alias`
keyword to fix this, but it isn't available.
- dupNamespace:
I fixed some of these, but left `Tactic.Tactic` and `Parser.Parser` as
they are as these seem intended.
- unusedHaveSuffices:
  I cleaned up a few proofs with unused `have` or `suffices`
- explicitVarsOfIff:
  I didn't fix any of these, because that would be a breaking change.
- simpNF:
I didn't fix any of these, because I think that requires knowing the
intended simplification order.
2024-06-19 18:24:08 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
de269060d1 chore: fix tests 2024-06-19 20:21:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
e8f768f9fd chore: cleanup PersistentHashMap.lean 2024-06-19 20:21:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
0783d0fcbe chore: re-enable #reduce elaborator 2024-06-19 20:21:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
2518105bd9 chore: update stage0 2024-06-19 20:21:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
9096d6fc71 fix: remove PersistentHashMap.size
It is buggy and was unnecessary overhead.

closes #3029
2024-06-19 20:21:34 +02:00
Mario Carneiro
0a1a855ba8 fix: validate UTF-8 at C++ -> Lean boundary (#3963)
Continuation of #3958. To ensure that lean code is able to uphold the
invariant that `String`s are valid UTF-8 (which is assumed by the lean
model), we have to make sure that no lean objects are created with
invalid UTF-8. #3958 covers the case of lean code creating strings via
`fromUTF8Unchecked`, but there are still many cases where C++ code
constructs strings from a `const char *` or `std::string` with unclear
UTF-8 status.

To address this and minimize accidental missed validation, the
`(lean_)mk_string` function is modified to validate UTF-8. The original
function is renamed to `mk_string_unchecked`, with several other
variants depending on whether we know the string is UTF-8 or ASCII and
whether we have the length and/or utf8 char count on hand. I reviewed
every function which leads to `mk_string` or its variants in the C code,
and used the appropriate validation function, defaulting to `mk_string`
if the provenance is unclear.

This PR adds no new error handling paths, meaning that incorrect UTF-8
will still produce incorrect results in e.g. IO functions, they are just
not causing unsound behavior anymore. A subsequent PR will handle adding
better error reporting for bad UTF-8.
2024-06-19 14:05:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
c4718a87ab refactor: constructions: modify environment in lean world (#4474)
this is a first step towards porting the code `constructions.cpp` to
Lean: It leaves the construction of the `Declaration` untouched, but
moves adding the declarations to the environment, and setting various
attributes, to the Lean world.

This allows the remaining logic (the construction of the `Declaration`)
to be implemented in Lean separately and easily compared to the C++
implementation, before we replace that too.

To that end, `Declaraion` gains an `BEq` instance.

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Arthur Adjedj <arthur.adjedj@ens-paris-saclay.fr>
2024-06-19 08:58:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
357b52928f fix: global definition shadowing a local one when using dot-notation (#4497)
closes #3079
2024-06-19 05:52:45 +00:00
Mac Malone
bd45c0cd04 fix: lake: visit direct deps before adding manifest entries (#4485)
Fixes a bug in #4371 where the version of a package used by a dependency
would take precedence over that of a the same package as a direct
dependency if that package had a a manifest. This was because the direct
dependency's manifest entries were added before all the direct
dependencies were visited.
2024-06-19 02:49:59 +00:00
Mac Malone
f9952e8c39 refactor: touchup require syntax & docs (#4496)
A set of general tweaks of the `require` syntax and docs that provide a
base for #4495.

The sole significant behavioral change is that the `name` field of a
`require` in TOML now falls back to being interpreted as a simple string
name if the value is not a valid Lean identifier. This means that a
require for a package like `doc-gen4` can be written without French
quotes.
2024-06-19 02:49:57 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1b5b91cccf doc: add docstrings for dsimp configuration (#4258)
The dsimp configuration is a subset of the simp configuration, and so
it's a matter of copying the docstrings.
2024-06-19 00:05:25 +00:00
JovanGerb
74f1373706 chore: remove redundant if-else in isDefEqQuickOther (#4388)
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
```
2024-06-18 23:44:29 +00:00
JovanGerb
c87205bc9b fix: eta reduce mvar assignments in isDefEq (#4387)
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
2024-06-18 23:41:40 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
294b1d5839 chore: cleanup (#4494)
closes #4287
closes #4288
2024-06-18 23:39:16 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
167771923e test: for isDefEq issue (#4492)
The issue has already been fixed in previous PRs.

closes #2461
2024-06-18 17:54:55 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
eb67654ae6 feat: incremental next and tactic if (#4459) 2024-06-18 12:36:59 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
6a8cb7ffa0 chore: nix shell: add gdb (#4476)
seems to work better when it comes from the same nixpkgs that we use for
building, it seems. And is plain convenient.
2024-06-18 11:07:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
face4cef75 feat: complete API for List.replicate (#4487)
This is not the most exciting place to start, but I started here to:
* pick a function with little development in Batteries and Mathlib, so I
wouldn't have conflicts
* that is easy!
* to see how much effort it is to get fairly complete coverage
* and to set up some infrastructure to be used later, i.e.
`tests/lean/run/list_simp.lean`
2024-06-18 08:30:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
6cad341764 chore: @[simp] List.getElem?_eq_getElem (#4488)
This is often helpful, and Mathlib doesn't mind.
2024-06-18 08:29:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2995e74133 chore: missing withSynthesize in #check_tactic (#4489)
Ran into this writing `#check_simp` tests for `List`. I guess it wasn't
a probably for `Bool` / `Prop`.
2024-06-18 05:24:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d768f46ba6 chore: @[simp] Nat.min_assoc (#4486) 2024-06-18 03:08:34 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
97588301e1 fix: deprecated warning position at simp arguments (#4484)
closes #4452
2024-06-17 23:21:14 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fca87da2d4 fix: simp support for OfNat instances that are functions (#4481)
closes #4462
2024-06-17 22:01:25 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3c4d6ba864 feat: new #reduce elaborator
closes #4465
2024-06-17 23:27:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
2c83e080f7 chore: update stage0 2024-06-17 23:27:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
8f023b85c5 chore: move #reduce parser to Init/Notation.lean 2024-06-17 23:27:34 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
06731f99d4 chore: missing instances (#4479)
cc @shigoel
2024-06-17 20:14:00 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
59a09fb4e7 feat: use priorities to ensure simp applies eqational lemmas in order (#4434)
This assigns priorities to the equational lemmas so that more specific
ones
are tried first before a possible catch-all with possible
side-conditions.

We assign very low priorities to match the simplifiers behavior when
unfolding
a definition, which happens in `simpLoop`’ `visitPreContinue` after
applying
rewrite rules.

Definitions with more than 100 equational theorems will use priority 1
for all
but the last (a heuristic, not perfect).

fixes #4173, to some extent.
2024-06-17 18:22:28 +00:00
Mac Malone
42c4a770c2 chore: lake: fix tests/init cleanup (#4468)
Forgot to update `tests/init/clean.sh` when I updated the test and
`.gitignore`.
2024-06-17 16:17:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d334e96275 chore: add forgotten deprecation (#4475) 2024-06-17 08:46:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e9caf40493 feat: cleanup @[simp] annotations for List (#4473)
These are mostly (sensible) `@[simp]` annotations that Mathlib adds.
2024-06-17 07:31:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a09726bb94 feat: lemmas about List.filter (#4472)
This upstreams some lemmas from Batteries, giving dumbed-down proofs, as
I do not (yet?) want to move up `List.Sublist`.
2024-06-17 06:53:16 +00:00
Markus Schmaus
1cf71e54cf feat: add missing theorems for + 1 and - 1 normal form (#4242)
`Nat.succ_eq_add_one` and `Nat.pred_eq_sub_one` are now simp lemmas. For
theorems about `Nat.succ` or `Nat.pred` without corresponding theorem
for `+ 1` or `- 1`, this adds the corresponding theorem.
2024-06-17 05:35:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2efcbfe803 feat: improvements to List.set and List.concat API (#4470) 2024-06-17 05:10:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
03d01f4024 chore: reorganisation of List API (#4469)
This PR neither adds nor removes material, but improves the organization
of `Init/Data/List/*`.

These files are essentially completely re-ordered, to ensure that
material is developed in a consistent order between `List.Basic`,
`List.Impl`, `List.BasicAux`, and `List.Lemmas`.

Everything is organised in subsections, and I've added some module docs.
2024-06-17 04:21:53 +00:00
John Tristan
f237fb67eb doc: documenting Char and upstreaming extensionality from batteries (#4438)
* Basic documentation for characters
* Upstreamed two extensionality theorems from batteries

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-06-16 00:43:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e10a37d80d feat: switching List lookup normal forms to L[n] and L[n]? (#4400)
This is presumably going to have significant breakage downstream.
2024-06-15 07:35:36 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
fe0cb97c5d feat: use lazy MessageData for omega errors (#4360)
presumably this avoids unnecessary work when `omega` is used in tactic
combinators where the error message is never seen. Measurement did not
show
any significant changes, though.

With an artificial sleep in
```diff
diff --git a/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Omega/Frontend.lean b/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Omega/Frontend.lean
index fd297eef60..31ea3f6bd0 100644
--- a/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Omega/Frontend.lean
+++ b/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Omega/Frontend.lean
@@ -538,6 +538,7 @@ def formatErrorMessage (p : Problem) : OmegaM MessageData := do
     else
       let as ← atoms
       return .ofLazyM (es := as) do
+        IO.sleep 10000
         let mask ← mentioned as p.constraints
         let names ← varNames mask
         return m!"a possible counterexample may satisfy the constraints\n" ++
```
I can observe that `omega` is slow and `try omega` fast, so it seems to
work at least.
2024-06-14 20:21:37 +00:00
JovanGerb
c96797eb93 fix: show argument name in implicit argument error (#4426)
When an implicit argument cannot be inferred, the error should show the
name of the argument.

Showing the argument name in the error message for an uninstantiated
metavariable was introduced in da33f498f5,
but this implementation causes some argument names to get lost.
2024-06-14 18:08:42 +00:00
JovanGerb
4798c8418c perf: replace hasMVar by hasExprMVar in CollectMVars, FindMVar (#4451)
The modules `CollectMVars` and `FindMVars` only search for expression
metavariables and not level metavariables, so we should use
`Expr.hasExprMVar` instead of `Expr.hasMVar`.
2024-06-14 18:06:00 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
456ed44550 feat: add a linter for local vars that clash with their constructors (#4301)
This came up when watching new Lean users in a class situation. A number
of them were confused when they omitted a namespace on a constructor
name, and Lean treated the variable as a pattern that matches anything.

For example, this program is accepted but may not do what the user
thinks:
```
inductive Tree (α : Type) where
  | leaf
  | branch (left : Tree α) (val : α) (right : Tree α)

def depth : Tree α → Nat
  | leaf => 0
```
Adding a `branch` case to `depth` results in a confusing message.

With this linter, Lean marks `leaf` with:
```
Local variable 'leaf' resembles constructor 'Tree.leaf' - write '.leaf' (with a dot) or 'Tree.leaf' to use the constructor.
note: this linter can be disabled with `set_option linter.constructorNameAsVariable false`
```

Additionally, the error message that occurs when invalid names are
applied in patterns now suggests similar names. This means that:
```
def length (list : List α) : Nat :=
  match list with
  | nil => 0
  | cons x xs => length xs + 1
```
now results in the following warning on `nil`:
```
warning: Local variable 'nil' resembles constructor 'List.nil' - write '.nil' (with a dot) or 'List.nil' to use the constructor.
note: this linter can be disabled with `set_option linter.constructorNameAsVariable false`
```

and error on `cons`:
```
invalid pattern, constructor or constant marked with '[match_pattern]' expected

Suggestion: 'List.cons' is similar
```

The list of suggested constructors is generated before the type of the
pattern is known, so it's less accurate, but it truncates the list to
ten elements to avoid being overwhelming. This mostly comes up with
`mk`.
2024-06-14 13:03:09 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
237f392cc1 chore: update stage0 2024-06-14 12:35:45 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5eb5fa49cf chore: Nix: fix update-stage0-commit 2024-06-14 12:35:14 +02:00
L
5d2403535a feat: default pp if pp expr/syntax/level without context (#4433)
This restores the behavior prior to
9f6bbfa106
for `MessageData.ofSyntax` `MessageData.ofExpr`, and
`MessageData.ofLevel` while staying within the new `.ofLazy` paradigm.

Also adds some documentation to help developers understand the missing
context issue.

Closes #4432

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-06-14 08:55:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
2cf478cbbe chore: prefer · == a over a == · (#3056)
We recently discovered inconsistencies in Mathlib and Std over the
ordering of the arguments for `==`.

The most common usage puts the "more variable" term on the LHS, and the
"more constant" term on the RHS, however there are plenty of exceptions,
and they cause unnecessary pain when switching (particularly, sometimes
requiring otherwise unneeded `LawfulBEq` hypotheses).

This convention is consistent with the (obvious) preference for `x == 0`
over `0 == x` when one term is a literal.

We recently updated Std to use this convention
https://github.com/leanprover/std4/pull/430

This PR changes the two major places in Lean that use the opposite
convention, and adds a suggestion to the docstring for `BEq` about the
preferred convention.
2024-06-14 04:08:45 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b096e7d5f2 chore: make Name.isInternalDetail public, to remove duplication downstream (#4454)
This private function is duplicated downstream, so move it to the
`Lean.Name` namespace.
2024-06-14 01:55:52 +00:00
Mac Malone
1835dd123d feat: configuration DSL touchups (#4439)
This incorporates many general Lake DSL changes from #2439 and adds some
new related changes.

* Rework configuration names (e.g., `package <name>`)
  * String literals ca now be used instead of identifiers for names.
* The name syntax is now optional and can instead be set via the `name`
field.
* Avoid French quotes in `lake new` / `lake init` templates (except in
`lean_lib` names). This is not done for `lean_lib` because it needs a
proper identifier for its root. It could use a string and reparse it as
an identifier, but this seems liable to produce confusion.
* The `exe` templates now names it main module `Main` like the `std`
template.
* Improve `math` template error if `lean-toolchain` fails to download.
* Lake now logs a warning rather than an error on unknown configuration
fields. This increases the Lake DSL's cross-version compatibility.

Closes #3385.
2024-06-14 00:17:43 +00:00
Mac Malone
db74ee9e83 feat: lake: reliably cache logs and hashes (#4402)
Moves the cached log into the trace file (no more `.log.json`). This
means logs are no longer cached on fatal errors and this ensures that an
out-of-date log is not associated with an up-to-date trace. Separately,
`.hash` file generation was changed to be more reliable as well. `.hash`
files are deleted as part of the build and always regenerate with
`--rehash`.

Closes #2751.
2024-06-13 23:15:49 +00:00
Mac Malone
285a313078 chore: src/lake/lakefile.toml (#4446)
Use a TOML file for the Lake configuration of the `src/lake` directory
instead of a Lean file. This avoids having to load a version of the Lake
library to build Lake.
2024-06-13 16:56:32 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
8fef03d1cc feat: support Lake for building Lean core oleans (#3886)
This is from a ~~pair~~triple programming session with @tydeu and
@mhuisi.

If stage 1 is built with `-DUSE_LAKE=ON`, the CMake run will generate
`lakefile.toml` files for the root, `src`, and `tests`. These Lake
configuration files can then be used to build core oleans. While they do
not yet allow Lake to be used to build the Lean binaries. they do allow
Lake to be used for working interactively with the Lean source. In our
preliminary experiments, this allowed updates to `Init.Data.Nat` to be
noticed automatically when reloading downstream files, rather than
requiring a full manual compiler rebuild. This will make it easier to
work on the system.

As part of this change, Lake is added to stage 0. This allows Lake to
function in `src`, which uses the stage 0 toolchain.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-06-13 16:18:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
749bf9c279 fix: bad 'unknown package' error message (#4424)
This message is older than corresponding, better checks in Lake and
vscode-lean4

Fixes #4419

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-06-13 15:48:20 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7b971b90c5 fix: redundant and wrong case in forEachModuleInDir (#4425)
Calling `f` on `dir.lean` for each `dir` is unnecessary as we call it on
each file anyway and the check was wrong because it ignored
`entry.root`.
2024-06-13 15:40:27 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
3119fd0240 fix: make watchdog more resilient against badly behaving clients (#4443)
This PR addresses some non-critical but annoying issues that sometimes
cause the language server to report an error:
- When using global search and replace in VS Code, the language client
sends `textDocument/didChange` notifications for documents that it never
told the server to open first. Instead of emitting an error and crashing
the language server when this occurs, we now instead ignore the
notification. Fixes #4435.
- When terminating the language server, VS Code sometimes still sends
request to the language server even after emitting a `shutdown` request.
The LSP spec explicitly forbids this, but instead of emitting an error
when this occurs, we now error requests and ignore all other messages
until receiving the final `exit` notification. Reported on Zulip several
times over the years but never materialized as an issue, e.g.
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Got.20.60shutdown.60.20request.2C.20expected.20an.20.60exit.60.20notification/near/441914289.
- Some language clients attempt to reply to the file watcher
registration request before completing the LSP initialization dance. To
fix this, we now only send this request after the initialization dance
has completed. Fixes #3904.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-06-13 13:48:36 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
16cad2b45c chore: CI: do not fetch complete history 2024-06-13 14:50:49 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6d265b42b1 chore: CI: fix github.event.pull_request.merge_commit_sha sometimes not being available 2024-06-13 14:47:42 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c5120c1d0d chore: CI: fix Wasm release-ci (#4442) 2024-06-13 11:58:49 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
37f8b0390d chore: CI: fix workflow change breaking unrebased PRs (#4441) 2024-06-13 09:56:31 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
bd3b466f2f chore: CI: fix speedcenter tests (#4440) 2024-06-13 10:53:47 +02:00
Mac Malone
f3274d375a refactor: lake: simplify load code (#4371)
Simplifies the Lake dependency resolution code. Largely split from
#3998.
2024-06-13 03:22:47 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a8de4b3b06 chore: CI: use Namespace runners (#4427) 2024-06-12 16:06:41 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
8d3be96024 fix: tactics in terms in tactics may break incremental reporting (#4436)
A pending tactic mvar managed to escape into an unexpected context in
specific circumstances.

```lean
example : True := by
  · rw [show 0 = 0 by rfl]
```
* Term elaboration of the `show` creates a pending mvar for the `by rfl`
proof
* `rw` fails with an exception because the pattern does not occur in the
target
* `cdot` catches the exception and admits the goal
* `Term.runTactic` [synthesizes all pending mvars from the tactic's
execution](5f9dedfe5e/src/Lean/Elab/SyntheticMVars.lean (L350)),
including the `by rfl` proof. But this would not have happened without
`cdot` as the exception would have skipped that invocation!
* Now incrementality is confused because the nested `by rfl` proof is
unexpectedly run in the same context as the top-level proof, writing to
the wrong promise, and the error message is lost

Solution: disable incrementality for these pending mvars
2024-06-12 14:59:24 +00:00
hwatheod
bedcbfcfee chore: fix typo in trace.split.failure error message (#4431)
should be "failure" not "failures"

Co-authored-by: q r <qr@abc.local>
2024-06-12 05:57:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ce6ebd1044 feat: dsimprocs for ite and dite (#4430) 2024-06-11 23:36:18 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ab73ac9d15 fix: missing simproc for BitVec equality (#4428) 2024-06-11 22:05:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3bd39ed8b6 perf: a isDefEq friendly Fin.sub (#4421)
The performance issue at #4413 is due to our `Fin.sub` definition.
```
def sub : Fin n → Fin n → Fin n
  | ⟨a, h⟩, ⟨b, _⟩ => ⟨(a + (n - b)) % n, mlt h⟩
```
Thus, the following runs out of stack space
```
example (a : UInt64) : a - 1 = a :=
  rfl
```
at the `isDefEq` test
```
(a.val.val + 18446744073709551615) % 18446744073709551616 =?= a.val.val
```

From the user's perspective, this timeout is unexpected since they are
using small numerals, and none of the other `Fin` basic operations (such
as `Fin.add` and `Fin.mul`) suffer from this problem.

This PR implements an inelegant solution for the performance issue. It
redefines `Fin.sub` as
```
def sub : Fin n → Fin n → Fin n
  | ⟨a, h⟩, ⟨b, _⟩ => ⟨((n - b) + a) % n, mlt h⟩
```
This approach is unattractive because it relies on the fact that
`Nat.add` is defined using recursion on the second argument.

The impact on this repo was small, but we want to evaluate the impact on
Mathlib.

closes #4413
2024-06-11 17:18:11 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5f9dedfe5e chore: slightly more informative trace.Elab.snapshotTree 2024-06-11 10:44:04 +02:00
Kim Morrison
2a2b276ede chore: unify String.csize : Nat and Char.utf8Size : UInt32 as Char.size : Nat (#4357)
It seems:
* there was no actual need for the UInt32 valued version
* downstream we were getting duplicative lemmas about both
* so lets reduce the API surface area!

If anyone would prefer the remaining function is still called
`Char.utf8Size` I will happily change it. (`size` is hopefully still
unambiguous, and it's helpful to rename here so we can give a
deprecation warning that explains the type signature change.)

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-06-11 02:51:18 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ec775df6cc fix: rw should not include existing goal metavariables in the resulting subgoals (#4385)
closes #4381
2024-06-11 02:50:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c8e668a9ad fix: occurs check at metavariable types (#4420)
closes #4405
2024-06-11 00:16:19 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a1c8a941f0 fix: universe parameter order discrepancy between theorem and def (#4408)
Before this commit, the `theorem` and `def` declarations had different
universe parameter orders.
For example, the following `theorem`:
```
theorem f (a : α) (f : α → β) : f a = f a := by
  rfl
```
was elaborated as
```
theorem f.{u_2, u_1} : ∀ {α : Sort u_1} {β : Sort u_2} (a : α) (f : α → β), f a = f a :=
  fun {α} {β} a f => Eq.refl (f a)
```
However, if we declare `f` as a `def`, the expected order is produced.
```
def f.{u_1, u_2} : ∀ {α : Sort u_1} {β : Sort u_2} (a : α) (f : α → β), f a = f a :=
  fun {α} {β} a f => Eq.refl (f a)
```

This commit fixes this discrepancy.

@semorrison @jcommelin: This might be a disruptive change to Mathlib,
but it is better to fix the issue asap. I am surprised nobody has
complained about this issue before. I discovered it while trying to
reduce discrepancies between `theorem` and `def` elaboration.
2024-06-10 23:37:52 +00:00
L
6a7bed94d3 fix: kernel exception from fvars left from ?m a b instantiation (#4410)
Closes #4375

The following example raises `error: (kernel) declaration has free
variables '_example'`:
```lean
example: Nat → Nat :=
  let a : Nat := Nat.zero
  fun (_ : Nat) =>
    let b : Nat := Nat.zero
    (fun (_ : a = b) => 0) (Eq.refl a)
```

During elaboration of `0`, `elabNumLit` creates a synthetic mvar
`?_uniq.16` which gets abstracted by `elabFun` to `?_uniq.16 :=
?_uniq.50 _uniq.6 _uniq.12`. The `isDefEq` to `instOfNatNat 0` results
in:
```
?_uniq.50 :=
  fun (x._@.4375._hyg.13 : Nat) =>
    let b : Nat := Nat.zero
    fun (x._@.4375._hyg.23 : Eq.{1} Nat _uniq.4 b) =>
      instOfNatNat 0
```

This has a free variable `_uniq.4` which was `a`.

When the application of `?_uniq.50` to `#[#2, #0]` is instantiated, the
`let b : Nat := Nat.zero` blocks the beta-reduction and `_uniq.4`
remains in the expression.

fix: add `(useZeta := true)` here:

ea46bf2839/src/Lean/MetavarContext.lean (L567)
2024-06-10 19:02:27 +00:00
Henrik Böving
366f3ac272 feat: order the output of #print axioms (#4416)
Closes #4415
2024-06-10 09:17:05 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
ea46bf2839 fix: non-incremental command blocking further incremental reporting in macro (#4407)
As [reported on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/v4.2E9.2E0-rc1.20discussion/near/443356495).
2024-06-08 16:50:15 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
adfd438164 fix: incremental reuse leading to goals in front of the text cursor being shown (#4395)
As [reported on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/maybe.20a.20cache.20bug.3F).

We expected that for sound reuse of elaboration results, it is
sufficient to compare the old and new syntax tree's structure and atoms
including position info, but not the whitespace in between them.
However, we have at least one request handler, the goal view, that
inspects the whitespace after a tactic and thus could return incorrect
results on reuse. For now we implement the straightforward fix of
checking the whitespace as well. Alternatives like updating the
whitespace stored in the reused info tree are tbd.

This has the slight disadvantage that adding whitespace at the end of a
tactic will re-execute it (or the entire body, but not the header, if
the body is not a tactic block), but only up to typing the first
character of the next tactic or command.
2024-06-08 15:08:14 +00:00
Mac Malone
748eab9511 refactor: lake: inputBinFile / inputTextFile (#4384)
Deprecates `inputFile` and replaces it with `inputBinFile` and
`inputTextFile`. `inputTextFile` normalizes line endings, which helps
ensure text file traces are platform-independent.
2024-06-08 01:20:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
fd4281a636 fix: misleading type at Option.forM (#4403)
The type uses `PUnit`, but the `pure ()` in the body was forcing the
implicit universe level at `PUnit` to be `1`.

We should probably elaborate `def`s like we elaborate theorems when the
resulting type is provided. This kind of mistake is hard to spot.
2024-06-07 23:33:15 +00:00
Markus Himmel
2d05ff8a48 perf: linearity in HashMap.(insert|erase) (#4372)
The speedcenter doesn't seem to care much, but in [my
benchmark](2e04b4f844/Hashmap/Benchmark/InsertReplace.lean)
for replace-heavy workloads, the fixed code is about 40% faster.
2024-06-07 22:41:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b02c1c56ab fix: improve split discriminant generalization strategy (#4401)
This commit also
- improves `split` error messages.
- adds `trace.split.failure` option.
- uses new convention for trace messages.

closes #4390
2024-06-07 21:35:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
73348fb083 chore: make Array.reverse_data proof more robust (#4399)
This proof was breaking during a refactor, so making it more robust
first.
2024-06-07 19:17:03 +00:00
Henrik Böving
18264ae62e feat: getBitVecValue? understands BitVec.ofNatLt (#4391) 2024-06-07 17:43:08 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7b72458392 chore: build Lake again 2024-06-07 13:59:22 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
bfcaaa3d9d chore: update stage0 2024-06-07 13:59:22 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0768b508e6 chore: temporarily avoid building Lake 2024-06-07 13:59:22 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d644b377bb chore: update stage0 2024-06-07 13:59:22 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d85d3d5f3a fix: accidental ownership with specialization 2024-06-07 13:59:22 +02:00
Kim Morrison
745d77b068 chore: upstream @[simp] attribute (#4389)
Very minor, but progress towards deleting a downstream file.
2024-06-07 03:32:18 +00:00
Kyle Miller
63739a42f3 chore: clear releases_drafts for start of 4.10.0 (#4377) 2024-06-06 23:45:54 +00:00
Mac Malone
a99007ac75 perf: remove @[inline] from NameMap.find? (#4382)
This `@[inline]` causes Lean to respecialize `RBMap.find?` to `NameMap`
at each call site of `NameMap.find?`, creating lots of unnecessary
duplicate IR.
2024-06-06 22:53:14 +00:00
Henrik Böving
b9bfd30514 chore: remove partial TODO (#4380) 2024-06-06 18:04:55 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0a0f1d7cc7 fix: variable must execute pending tactics and elaboration problems (#4370)
closes #2226
closes #3214
2024-06-06 13:06:18 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ba97928fbf chore: begin development cycle for v4.10.0 (#4374) 2024-06-06 12:06:13 +00:00
Kim Morrison
287d46e1f6 chore: update stage0 2024-06-06 06:20:50 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
0d30517dca feat: make <num>#<term> bitvector literal notation global
chore: `toFin_ofNat`
2024-06-06 06:20:50 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
faea7f98c1 chore: missing registerTraceClass (#4369)
closes #3373
2024-06-06 00:53:16 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ff0d338dd2 feat: improve error messages for numerals (#4368)
closes #4365
2024-06-06 00:28:42 +00:00
Kim Morrison
56adfb856d chore: upstream basic String lemmas (#4354) 2024-06-05 21:28:43 +00:00
Mac Malone
9c079a42e1 chore: lake: add build log file path to warning (#4356)
Adds the path to build log to the warning for a missing/invalid build
log to help with debugging.
2024-06-05 15:18:08 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
9d47377bda feat: incrementality for careful command macros such as set_option in theorem, theorem foo.bar, lemma (#4364)
See Note [Incremental Macros] for the caveat on correct `withRef` use
2024-06-05 14:10:38 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e33c32fb00 feat: ppOrigin to use MessageData.ofConst (#4362)
so that the pretty-printed origin is clickable, and avoid the
unnecessary `@`.

Particularly nice is this fix:
```diff
 /--
-info: [Meta.Tactic.simp.discharge] @bar discharge 
+info: [Meta.Tactic.simp.discharge] bar discharge 
       autoParam T _auto✝
-  [Meta.Tactic.simp.rewrite] { }:1000, T ==> True
-[Meta.Tactic.simp.rewrite] @bar:1000, U ==> True
+  [Meta.Tactic.simp.rewrite] T.mk:1000, T ==> True
+[Meta.Tactic.simp.rewrite] bar:1000, U ==> True
 -/
```
2024-06-05 11:00:34 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
42f12967a6 chore: CI: pr-release: install elan (#4361)
PR #4333 added a call to `lake`, but that needs elan installed
2024-06-05 08:20:57 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5cd9f805b7 fix: without recover bad simp arg should fail (#4359)
this is an amendment to #4177, after @kmill pointed out an issue:

Users might expect that within a tactic combinator like `first`, `simp
[h]` fails if `h` does not exist. Therefore the behavior introduced in
PR #4177, which is really most useful in mormal interactive use of
`skip`, is restricted to when `recover := true`.
2024-06-05 08:05:38 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f0a11b8864 fix: FunInd: support structural recursion on reflexive types (#4327)
types like
```
inductive Many (α : Type u) where
  | none : Many α
  | more : α → (Unit → Many α) → Many α
```
have a `.brecOn` only supports motives producing `Type u`, but not `Sort
u`, but our induction principles produce `Prop`. So the previous
implementation of functional induction would fail for functions that
structurally recurse over such types.

We recognize this case now and, rather hazardously, replace `.brecOn`
with `.binductionOn` (and thus `.below ` with `.ibelow` and `PProd` with
`And`). This assumes that these definitions are highly analogous.

This also improves the error message when realizing a reserved name
fails with an exception, by prepending
```
Failed to realize constant {id}:
```
to the error message.

Fixes #4320
2024-06-05 07:54:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5a25612434 fix: GuessLex: delaborate unused parameters as _ (#4329)
fixes #4230
2024-06-05 07:54:29 +00:00
Kim Morrison
37d60fd2ec chore: use match_expr in omega (#4358) 2024-06-05 06:53:45 +00:00
Siddharth
fbb3055f82 feat: getLsb_signExtend (#4187)
The key idea is to notice that `signExtend` behavior is controlled by
the `msb`. When `msb = false`, `sext` behaves the same as `trunc`. When
`msb = true`, `sext` behaves like `trunc` but adds high 1-bits. This is
expressed using the negate-truncate-negate pattern. Lemma statements
below:

```lean
theorem signExtend_eq_neg_truncate_neg_of_msb_false {x : BitVec w} {v : Nat} (hmsb : x.msb = false) :
    (x.signExtend v) = x.truncate v := by
 
theorem signExtend_eq_neg_truncate_neg_of_msb_true {x : BitVec w} {v : Nat} (hmsb : x.msb = true) :
    (x.signExtend v) = ~~~((~~~x).truncate v) := by
```

These give the final theorem statement:


```lean
theorem getLsb_signExtend {x  : BitVec w} {v i : Nat} :
    (x.signExtend v).getLsb i = (decide (i < v) && if i < w then x.getLsb i else x.msb) := by
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-06-05 05:17:29 +00:00
Austin Letson
644c1d4e36 doc: add docstrings and examples for String functions (#4332)
Add docstrings, usage examples, and doctests for `String.get'`,
`String.next'`, `String.posOf`, `String.revPosOf`.
2024-06-05 05:16:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
46db59d1d9 fix: split (for if-expressions) should work on non-propositional goals (#4349)
Remark: when splitting an `if-then-else` term, the subgoals now have
tags `isTrue` and `isFalse` instead of `inl` and `inr`.
closes #4313

---------

Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-06-05 04:43:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c53a350a9e chore: apply naming convention to IsLawfulSingleton (#4350)
closes #4324
2024-06-05 04:33:20 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8f507b1008 chore: simplify lean4checker step in release checklist (#4355) 2024-06-05 04:14:36 +00:00
Mac Malone
28b8778218 perf: lake: fix LogIO inling/lifting (#4351)
The current manner of lifting `LogIO` into `CliM` produces excessive
specializations (due to a nested inlined `forM`). There was also a bug
where `IO` was lifted into `CliM` via `LogIO` rather than directly
through `MainM`.
2024-06-05 01:59:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
982c338b45 fix: missing dsimp simplification when applying auto-congr theorems (#4352)
closes #4339
2024-06-05 01:01:33 +00:00
Mac Malone
ce67d6ef9e fix: lake: track trace of cached build logs (#4343)
Stores the dependency trace for a build in the cached build log and then
verifies that it matches the trace of the current build before replaying
the log. Includes test.

Closes #4303.
2024-06-05 00:35:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
1d6fe34b29 chore: upstream Char lemmas from Mathlib (#4348)
The main purpose here is to add `Char.ofUInt8`, so I can delete the
semantically suspect `UInt8.toLower` etc in Mathlib.
2024-06-04 23:45:26 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5924c5aea9 fix: simp must not use the forward version of an user-specified backward theorem (#4345)
closes #4290
2024-06-04 22:49:31 +00:00
Mac Malone
612bdee68c test: lake: more robust tests/serve (#4346)
In Lake's `tests/serve`, save server log to a file and give it a timeout
(one smaller than CMake's).
2024-06-04 22:38:20 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
28cf1cf5cf fix: mutual inductives with instance parameters (#4342)
closes #4310
2024-06-04 17:35:41 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2ae762eb75 fix: panic when applying @[simp] to malformed theorem syntax (#4341)
closes #4309
2024-06-04 16:52:26 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
8437d1f660 fix: incorrect info tree reuse (#4340)
The `save` happened in a slightly different context from the restore,
which a refinement of the `saveOrRestoreFull` signature now makes
impossible.

Fixes #4328
2024-06-04 09:28:40 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d45952e386 feat: incremental have (#4308)
Implemented as a macro special case, with some implementation caveats
2024-06-04 09:12:27 +00:00
Siddharth
9d46961236 chore: deprecate shiftLeft_shiftLeft, shiftRight_shiftRight (#4321)
As discussed previously
(https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/4179#discussion_r1615183093),
we deprecate the two functions in favour of `shift{Left, Right}_add`.
2024-06-04 01:57:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
e47d84e37a doc: improve docstrings for repeat* tactics (#4338) 2024-06-04 01:47:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
05ea3ac19f chore: update batteries in manifest when creating lean-pr-testing-NNNN at Mathlib (#4333) 2024-06-04 01:45:37 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a54fa7cae6 fix: partial calc tactic would fail due to mdata or uninstantiated mvars (#4335)
Reported by Heather Macbeth.

Closes #4334

---------

Co-authored-by: Heather Macbeth <25316162+hrmacbeth@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-06-04 01:23:20 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f65e3ae985 feat: simp to still work even if one simp arg does not work (#4177)
this fixes a usability paper cut that just annoyed me. When editing a
larger simp proof, I usually want to see the goal state after the simp,
and this is what I see while the `simp` command is complete. But then,
when I start typing, and necessarily type incomplete lemma names, that
error makes `simp` do nothing again and I see the original goal state.
In fact, if a prefix of the simp theorem name I am typing is a valid
identifier, it jumps even more around.

With this PR, using `logException`, I still get the red squiggly lines
for the unknown identifer, but `simp` just ignores that argument and
still shows me the final goal. Much nicer.

I also demoted the message for `[-foo]` when `foo` isn’t `simp` to a
warning and gave it the correct `ref`.

See it in action here: (in the middle, when you suddenly see the
terminal,
I am switching lean versions.)


https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/assets/148037/8cb3c563-1354-4c2d-bcee-26dfa1005ae0
2024-06-03 14:21:31 +00:00
Siddharth
81f5b07215 feat: getLsb_sshiftRight (#4179)
In the course of the development, I grabbed facts about right shifting
over integers [from
`mathlib4`](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/blob/master/Mathlib/Data/Int/Bitwise.lean).

The core proof strategy is to perform a case analysis of the msb:
- If `msb = false`, then `sshiftRight = ushiftRight`.
- If `msb = true`. then `x >>>s i = ~~~(~~~(x >>>u i))`. The double
negation introduces the high `1` bits that one expects of the arithmetic
shift.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-06-01 16:43:11 +00:00
Siddharth
9a597aeb2e feat: getLsb_{rotateLeft, rotateRight} (#4257)
These will be used by LeanSAT for bitblasting rotations by constant
distances.

We first reduce the case when the rotation amount is larger than the
width to the case where the rotation amount is less than the width
(`x.rotateLeft/Right r = x.rotateLeft/Right (r%w)`).

Then, we case analyze on the low bits versus the high bits of the
rotation, where we prove equality by extensionality.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-06-01 16:42:10 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
ff116dae5f feat: add BitVec _assoc lemmas (#4299) 2024-06-01 16:24:18 +00:00
John Tristan
0dff5701af doc: updated build instructions for mac os X (#4317)
Edit to the platform specific setup for mac os X. The installation of
llvm does not accept the options --with-clang and --with-asan anymore.
2024-06-01 16:23:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
299cb9a806 chore: remove @[simp] from bind_eq_some (#4314) 2024-06-01 16:04:02 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b53a74d6fd fix: miscompilation in constant folding (#4311)
closes #4306
2024-05-31 04:24:45 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
007b423006 chore: update stage0 2024-05-30 09:57:02 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6c63c9c716 feat: quotations for parser aliases (#4307)
Another papercut towards incremental `have`
2024-05-30 09:22:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
8bbb015a97 chore: add namespace in Init/Data/Fin/Fold (#4304) 2024-05-29 16:40:55 +00:00
Alex Keizer
9133470243 feat: upstream BitVec.toFin_ofNat and BitVec.toFin_neg (#4298)
These lemmas are morally equivalent to Mathlib lemmas which are proposed
to be deleted from Mathlib in
[#13286](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/13286).

It is only morally equivalent, because the Mathlib lemmas are stated in
terms of Mathlib-defined things: `toFin_natCast` uses a coercion from
`Nat` to `Fin (2^w)` which relies on `NeZero` machinery available only
in Mathlib. Thus, I've rephrased the rhs in terms of the def-eq
`Fin.ofNat'` with an explicit proof that `2^w` is non-zero.

Similarly, the RHS of `toFin_neg` was phrased in terms of negation on
`Fin`s, which is only defined in Mathlib, so I've unfolded the
definition.
2024-05-29 08:25:51 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d07b316804 fix: incorrect docstring for named pattern syntax (#4294)
---
2024-05-29 08:23:15 +00:00
Wojciech Nawrocki
ec59e7a2c0 feat: widget messages (#4254)
Allows embedding user widgets in structured messages. Companion PR is
leanprover/vscode-lean4#449.

Some technical choices:
- The `MessageData.ofWidget` constructor might not be strictly necessary
as we already have `MessageData.ofFormatWithInfos`, and there is
`Info.ofUserWidget`. However, `.ofUserWidget` also requires a `Syntax`
object (as it is normally produced when widgets are saved at a piece of
syntax during elaboration) which we do not have in this case. More
generally, it continues to be a bit cursed that `Elab.Info` nodes are
used both for elaboration and delaboration (pretty-printing), so
entrenching that approach seems wrong. The better approach would be to
have a separate notion of pretty-printer annotation; but such a refactor
would not be clearly beneficial right now.
- To support non-JS-based environments such as
https://github.com/Julian/lean.nvim, `.ofWidget` requires also providing
another message which approximates the widget in a textual form.
However, in practice these environments might still want to support a
few specific user widgets such as "Try this".

---

Closes #2064.
2024-05-29 06:37:42 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
cc33c39cb0 chore: bootstrap fixes 2024-05-28 23:04:19 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
8c7364ee64 chore: update stage0 2024-05-28 23:04:19 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
26b6718422 chore: haveId node kind 2024-05-28 23:04:19 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
66777670e8 fix: stray tokens in tactic block should not inhibit incrementality (#4268) 2024-05-27 07:36:13 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f05a82799a chore: CI: restore macOS aarch64 install sufix 2024-05-26 14:29:56 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
8eee5ff27f fix: do not include internal match equational theorems at simp trace (#4274)
closes #4251
2024-05-25 17:16:19 +00:00
Mac Malone
fe17b82096 refactor: lake: ensure job actions can be lifted to FetchM (#4273)
In `v4.8.0-rc2`, due to additional build refactor changes, `JobM` no
longer cleanly lifts in `FetchM`. Generally, a `JobM` action should not
be run `FetchM` directly but spawned asynchronously as job (e.g., via
`Job.async`). However, there may be some edge cases were this is
necessary and it is a backwards compatibility break, so this change adds
back the lift. This change also includes an `example` definition to
ensure the lift works in order to prevent similar accidental breakages
in the future.

This breakage was first reported by Mario on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/v4.2E8.2E0-rc2.20discussion/near/440407037).
2024-05-25 02:20:04 +00:00
Mac Malone
def00d3920 refactor: lake: manifest semver & code cleanup (#4083)
Switches the manifest format to use `major.minor.patch` semantic
versions. Major version increments indicate breaking changes (e.g., new
required fields and semantic changes to existing fields). Minor version
increments (after `0.x`) indicate backwards-compatible extensions (e.g.,
adding optional fields, removing fields). This change is backwards
compatible. Lake will still successfully read old manifest with numeric
versions. It will treat the numeric version `N` as semantic version
`0.N.0`. Lake will also accept manifest versions with `-` suffixes
(e.g., `x.y.z-foo`) and then ignore the suffix.

This change also includes the general cleanup/refactoring of the
manifest code and data structures that was part of #3174.
2024-05-24 21:32:41 +00:00
Mac Malone
cd16975946 feat: lake pack / lake unpack (#4270)
Adds two new Lake commands, `lake pack` and `lake unpack`, which pack
and unpack, respectively, Lake build artifacts from an archive. If a
path argument is given, creates the archive specified, otherwise uses
the information in a package's `buildArchive` configuration as the
default.

The pack command will be used by Reservoir to prepare crate-style build
archives for packages. In the future, the command will also be
extensible through configuration file hooks.
2024-05-24 21:32:07 +00:00
Mac Malone
0448e3f4ea feat: lake test improvements & lake lint (#4261)
Extends the functionality of `lake test` and adds a parallel command in
`lake lint`.

* Rename `@[test_runner]` / `testRunner` to `@[test_driver]` /
`testDriver`. The old names are kept as deprecated aliases.
* Extend help page for `lake test` and adds one for `lake check-test`. 
* Add `lake lint` and its parallel tag `@[lint_driver]` , setting
`lintDriver`, and checker `lake check-lint`.
* Add support for specifying test / lint drivers from dependencies. 
* Add `testDriverArgs` / `lintDriverArgs` for fixing additional
arguments to the invocation of a driver script or executable.
* Add support for library test drivers (but not library lint drivers). 
* `lake check-test` / `lake check-lint` only load the package (without
dependencies), not the whole workspace.

Closes #4116. Closes #4121. Closes #4142.
2024-05-24 21:31:41 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d3ee0be908 feat: show signature elaboration errors on body parse error (#4267)
Fixes #3556

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-05-24 10:07:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d1a96f6d8f chore: CI: native-compile aarch64 macOS (#4265) 2024-05-24 08:18:49 +00:00
Kim Morrison
b0c1112471 chore: better omega error message if no facts found (#4264) 2024-05-24 05:15:15 +00:00
JovanGerb
e5e5a4d2e0 chore: fix the MonadStore type classes, with semiOutParam (#4205)
The type class `MonadStore1` and friends have an outParam, which should
not be an outParam, because there are multiple possible values for this
parameter. At this function
[fetchOrCreate](1382e9fbc4/src/lake/Lake/Load/Main.lean (L196C49-L196C63)),
there are multiple stacked `StateT` monad transformers that each give a
different instance to `MonadStore1`. It is an implementation detail of
type class synthesis which instance is found. This particular type class
synthesis fails when the unused instance
`Lake.instMonadStore1OfMonadDStoreOfFamilyOut` is set to a lower
priority, because then the synthesis order happens to go differently, so
the wrong instance is found.

Replacing the outParam with a semiOutParam solves this issue. Thus, we
make a new type class `MonadStore1Of`, which is the same, but with a
semiOutParam. This follows the design of `MonadState` and
`MonadStateOf`.

However, then it turns out that the instance cannot anymore be
synthesised.

There are two instances for `MonadStore1`:
```
instance [MonadDStore κ β m] : MonadStore1 k (β k) m
instance [MonadDStore κ β m] [FamilyOut β k α] : MonadStore1 k α m 
```
The first one is problematic during unification, especially when `β`
should be instantiated as a constant function. We make the second one
sufficient by adding an instance for the general type family:
```
/-- The general type family -/
instance (priority := low) : FamilyDef Fam a (Fam a) where
  family_key_eq_type := rfl
```
So then we can get rid of the first instance.
2024-05-24 02:09:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
e020f3d159 chore: CI: move some expensive checks from merge queue to releases (#4255) 2024-05-23 20:45:44 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
811bad16e1 fix: ensure incremental commands and tactics are reached only on supported paths (#4259)
Without this, it would not easy but perhaps be feasible to break
incrementality when editing command prefixes such as `set_option ... in
theorem` or also `theorem namesp.name ...` (which is a macro),
especially if at some later point we support incrementality in input
shifted by an edit. Explicit, sound support for these common cases will
be brought back soon.
2024-05-23 17:57:42 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
67338bac23 chore: replace registerBuiltinIncrementalTactic with @[builtin_incremental] 2024-05-23 17:53:58 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
ba629545cc chore: update stage0 2024-05-23 17:26:21 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
dfb496a271 fix: allow multiple declareBuiltin per declaration 2024-05-23 17:23:39 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
250994166c feat: [(builtin_)incremental] elab attribute 2024-05-23 17:23:39 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
73a0c73c7c chore: modernize build instructions (#4032)
Use `cmake --preset`, adjust and document parallelism settings
2024-05-23 10:55:07 +00:00
meow-sister
258cc28dfc fix: docstring in Attributes.lean (#4238)
Changing document string in `Attributes.lean`, in order to consistent
with code in `Lean.Parser.Attr`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-05-23 10:13:43 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f61a64d2ff chore: reset LEAN_VERSION_IS_RELEASE 2024-05-23 12:28:24 +02:00
Kyle Miller
d984030c6a chore: set up procedure for preparing release notes (#4247)
We are switching to a new system for preparing release notes.
* Release notes will be compiled when creating a release candidate from
all the commits that are part of that release.
* PRs can include suggestions for release notes in PR messages. Please
use language such as "release notes" and "breaking changes" to call
attention to the suggestions. Release notes are user-centric rather than
developer-centric.
* For more complicated release notes, these can be put into the
`releases_drafts` folder.

This solves an issue where PRs that include release notes can, when
merged, have those notes appear under the wrong Lean version, since they
might have been created before a release but not merged until after. It
also solves merge conflicts due to multiple PRs updating the release
notes.
2024-05-23 02:46:11 +00:00
FR
93758cc222 perf: faster Nat.testBit (#4188)
`1 &&& n` is faster than `n &&& 1` for big `n`.

---
2024-05-23 01:34:40 +00:00
Alex Keizer
4fa3b3c4a0 feat: bitblasting theorems for signed comparisons (#4201)
Prove theorems that relate `BitVec.slt` and `sle` to `carry`, so that
these signed comparisons may be bitblasted in LeanSAT.

This PR is stacked on top of #4200. For the diff without changes from
that PR, see:
https://github.com/opencompl/lean4/compare/opencompl:lean4:bitvec-toInt-iff-msb...bitvec-slt-blast

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-05-23 01:24:04 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2bc41d8f3a fix: case tactic in macros (#4252)
We must erase macro scopes for tags in `case` as we do in `cases .. with
..` and `induction .. with ..`.
2024-05-23 00:01:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f97a7d4234 feat: incremental elaboration of definition headers, bodies, and tactics (#3940)
Extends Lean's incremental reporting and reuse between commands into
various steps inside declarations:
* headers and bodies of each (mutual) definition/theorem
* `theorem ... := by` for each contained tactic step, including
recursively inside supported combinators currently consisting of
  * `·` (cdot), `case`, `next`
  * `induction`, `cases`
  * macros such as `next` unfolding to the above

![Recording 2024-05-10 at 11 07
32](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/assets/109126/c9d67b6f-c131-4bc3-a0de-7d63eaf1bfc9)

*Incremental reuse* means not recomputing any such steps if they are not
affected by a document change. *Incremental reporting* includes the
parts seen in the recording above: the progress bar and messages. Other
language server features such as hover etc. are *not yet* supported
incrementally, i.e. they are shown only when the declaration has been
fully processed as before.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-05-22 13:23:30 +00:00
Alex Keizer
23a202b6be feat: characterize BitVec.toInt in terms of BitVec.msb (#4200)
This PR extracts `msb_eq_false_iff_two_mul_lt` and
`msb_eq_true_iff_two_mul_ge` from #4179, and uses them to prove a
theorem that characterizes `BitVec.toInt` in terms of `BitVec.msb`. This
lemma will be useful to prove a bit-blasting theorem for `BitVec.slt`
and `BitVec.sle`.

Also cleans up an existing proof (`toInt_eq_toNat_cond `), which turns
out to be provable by `rfl`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-05-22 11:14:37 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ff37e5d512 feat: add grind core module (#4249) 2024-05-22 03:50:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c2b8a1e618 chore: fix implicitness in HashMap.ofList (#4248)
Reported at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Typeclass.20Inference.20Failure.20on.20HashMap/near/439842209
2024-05-22 03:04:37 +00:00
Mac Malone
8ca00918fb chore: lake: fix noRelease test when lean repo is tagged (#4244)
Fixes a bug with the Lake `noRelease` test where the test would fail if
the current revision of the Lean repository itself had a tag.
2024-05-21 22:51:33 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
6155513c60 chore: update stage0
Motivation: `[grind_cases]` at `Init`
2024-05-21 21:46:23 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
d6709eb157 feat: add [grind_cases] attribute 2024-05-21 21:46:23 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
e6be8b90f5 feat: add grind.injection (#4243) 2024-05-21 17:57:02 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
82401938cf fix: hovers on binders with metavariables (#4192)
this fixes #4078. It is an alternative fix to the one in #4137,
suggested
by @kmill.

Incidentially, it makes the unused variable linter better. My theory is
that
if we don’t reset the info when backtracking, the binder shows up more
than
once in the info tree, and then it is considered “used”, although there
are
just multiple binders.
2024-05-21 10:34:58 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3de60bb1f6 chore: Lake details & improve formatting in changelog (#4239)
This is #4207, but targeting `master`.

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-05-21 06:11:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8c03650359 feat: some Char, UInt, and Fin theorems (#4231)
for SSFT24 summer school: https://github.com/david-christiansen/ssft24

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-05-21 06:11:23 +00:00
Austin Letson
2faa81d41f doc: add docstrings and examples for String functions (#4166)
Add docstrings, usage examples, and doc tests for `String.prev`,
`.front`, `.back`, `.atEnd`.

Improve docstring examples for `String.next` based on discussion
examples for `String.prev`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
2024-05-21 04:27:40 +00:00
Siddharth
097a4d5b6b feat: define rotateLeft/Right with modulo (#4229)
This ensures that rotateLeft/Right behave correctly even when the
rotation amount is larger than the bitwidth.

This shall be followed up with `getLsb` theorems for rotations for
LeanSAT.

We choose to write `aux` definitions since it is cleaner to reason about
the `aux` theorems with the assumption that `rotation-amount <
bit-width`, followed by auxiliary lemmas that link the behavior of
rotation to the canonical case when `rotation-amount < bit-width`.

Proof strategy we will execute based on these definitions: [Link to
proof of
`getLsb_rotateLeft`](a0b18ec0f4/src/Init/Data/BitVec/Lemmas.lean (L1129-L1204))

---------

Co-authored-by: Tobias Grosser <github@grosser.es>
2024-05-21 03:49:09 +00:00
Mac Malone
f512826b9a chore: lake: spinner icon for computing step (#4236) 2024-05-21 03:48:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7c053259d3 feat: add grind.cases tactic (#4235) 2024-05-21 02:03:33 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f3ccd6b023 feat: some string simprocs (#4233)
For the SSFT24 summer school.
2024-05-20 22:53:10 +00:00
Mac Malone
7ece5d56e3 feat: lake: ANSI monitor: only display progress + running job info (#4232)
The ANSI mode build monitor now now longer displays built jobs (instead
only those that print info or failed). Also upgrades the progress ticker
with a spinner icon and information on the number of running jobs.
2024-05-20 20:29:21 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a7338c5ad8 feat: make frontend normalize line endings to LF (#3903)
To eliminate parsing differences between Windows and other platforms,
the frontend now normalizes all CRLF line endings to LF, like [in
Rust](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62865).

Effects:
- This makes Lake hashes be faithful to what Lean sees (Lake already
normalizes line endings before computing hashes).
- Docstrings now have normalized line endings. In particular, this fixes
`#guard_msgs` failing multiline tests for Windows users using CRLF.
- Now strings don't have different lengths depending on the platform.
Before this PR, the following theorem is true for LF and false for CRLF
files.
```lean
example : "
".length = 1 := rfl
```

Note: the normalization will take `\r\r\n` and turn it into `\r\n`. In
the elaborator, we reject loose `\r`'s that appear in whitespace. Rust
instead takes the approach of making the normalization routine fail.
They do this so that there's no downstream confusion about any `\r\n`
that appears.

Implementation note: the LSP maintains its own copy of a source file
that it updates when edit operations are applied. We are assuming that
edit operations never split or join CRLFs. If this assumption is not
correct, then the LSP copy of a source file can become slightly out of
sync. If this is an issue, there is some discussion
[here](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/3903#discussion_r1592930085).
2024-05-20 17:13:08 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b278f9dd30 fix: missing withIncRecDepth and unifyEqs? and add support for offsets at unifyEq? (#4224)
Given `h` with type `x + k = y + k'` (or `h : k = k')`, `cases h`
produced a proof of size linear in `min k k'`. `isDefEq` has support for
offset, but `unifyEq?` did not have it, and a stack overflow occurred
while processing the resulting proof. This PR fixes this issue.

closes #4219
2024-05-20 13:42:36 +00:00
Eric Wieser
f0471a519b doc: upstream the Lean4 pygments lexer (#3125)
An improved `lean4` lexer is now part of pygments.

This depends on https://github.com/pygments/pygments/pull/2618 (now
merged), and [a subsequent
release](https://github.com/pygments/pygments/milestone/23)
2024-05-20 11:40:24 +00:00
Alex Keizer
42215cc072 feat: Nat.shiftLeft_shiftRight (#4199)
Show that shifting a natural number left and then shifting right by the
same amount is a no-op.

I originally proved this in a different PR, ended up not needing the
fact after all, but it still seemed like a generally useful simp lemma
to have.
2024-05-20 06:50:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f53b778c0d feat: improve grind preprocessor (#4221) 2024-05-20 04:29:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
72b345c621 chore: remove #guard_msgs from tests that rely on pointer equality 2024-05-20 06:12:43 +02:00
Mac Malone
6171070deb chore: lake: cloud release build output fixes & related touchups (#4220)
Fixes two output bugs with cloud releases: (1) the fetch as part of an
`extraDep` was not properly isolated in a job, and (2) the release job
would be shown even if the release had already been successfully
fetched.

Also includes some related touchups, including the addition of show all
jobs on `-v` which helps with debugging job counts.
2024-05-20 03:28:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7c5249278e chore: move release notes about MessageData to v4.9.0 (#4222) 2024-05-20 01:42:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
239ade80dc chore: update stage0 2024-05-19 07:20:10 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
47c8e340d6 fix: move cdot and calc parsers to Lean namespace
closes #3168
2024-05-19 07:20:10 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
c8b72beb4d chore: update stage0 2024-05-19 07:20:10 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
9803c5dd63 chore: prepare to move cdot and calc parsers to Lean namespace
see issue #3618
2024-05-19 07:20:10 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
d66d00dece fix: missing occurs-check at delayed assignment (#4217)
closes #4144
2024-05-19 02:53:00 +00:00
JovanGerb
9fde33a09f fix: oversight in isReadOnlyOrSyntheticOpaque (#4206)
### Explanation
In the case that `assignSyntheticOpaque := true` and the given
metavariable is `syntheticOpaque` and the depth of the metavariable is
not the current depth, `isReadOnlyOrSyntheticOpaque` returns false, even
though the metavariable is read-only because of being declared at a
smaller depth. This causes the metavariable to (wrongly) be able to be
instantiated by `isDefEq`.

This bug was found at the proof of
[RingHom.PropertyIsLocal.sourceAffineLocally_of_source_openCover](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Mathlib/AlgebraicGeometry/Morphisms/RingHomProperties.html#RingHom.PropertyIsLocal.sourceAffineLocally_of_source_openCover),
which involves a type class synthesis for `CommRing ?m.2404`, and the
synthesis manages to instantiate this metavariable into different
values, even though `synthInstance?` increases the metavariable depth.
This synthesis fails after 1 second.

I found the bug while modifying the instance synthesis code: the
modified code spent several minutes on this failed synthesis.

### Test
The problem can be verified with the test:
```
run_meta do
  let m ← mkFreshExprMVar (Expr.sort levelOne) MetavarKind.syntheticOpaque
  withAssignableSyntheticOpaque do
  withNewMCtxDepth do
  let eq ← isDefEq m (.const ``Nat [])
  Lean.logInfo m! "{eq}"
```
this unification used to succeed, giving `true`, and this fix makes it
return `false`.

### Impact on Mathlib

This fix causes a change in the behaviour of `congr`, `convert` and
friends, which breaks a couple of proofs in mathlib. Most of these are
fixed by supplying more arguments.

I fixed these proofs, and
[benched](http://speed.lean-fro.org/mathlib4/compare/b821bfd9-3769-4930-b77f-0adc6f9d218f/to/e7b27246-a3e6-496a-b552-ff4b45c7236e?hash2=4f3c460cc1668820c9af8418a87a23db44c7acab)
mathlib. The result is that most files are unaffected, but some files
are significantly improved. This is most prominent in
Mathlib.RingTheory.Jacobson, where the number of instructions has
decreased by 28%. The overall improvement is a 0.3% reduction in
instructions.

[Zulip
message](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/Ways.20to.20speed.20up.20Mathlib/near/439218960)
2024-05-18 21:01:31 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b639d102d1 fix: use maxType when building expression in expression tree elaborator (#4215)
The expression tree elaborator computes a "maxType" that every leaf term
can be coerced to, but the elaborator was not ensuring that the entire
expression tree would have maxType as its type. This led to unexpected
errors in examples such as
```lean
example (a : Nat) (b : Int) :
  a = id (a * b^2) := sorry
```
where it would say it could not synthesize an `HMul Int Int Nat`
instance (the `Nat` would propagate from the `a` on the LHS of the
equality). The issue in this case is that `HPow` uses default instances,
so while the expression tree elaborator decides that `a * b^2` should be
referring to an `Int`, the actual elaborated type is temporarily a
metavariable. Then, when the binrel elaborator is looking at both sides
of the equality, it decides that `Nat` will work and coercions don't
need to be inserted.

The fix is to unify the type of the resulting elaborated expression with
the computed maxType. One wrinkle is that `hasUncomparable` being false
is a valid test only if there are no leaf terms with unknown types (if
they become known, it could change `hasUncomparable` to true), so this
unification is only performed if the leaf terms all have known types.

Fixes issue described by Floris van Doorn on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/elaboration.20issue.20involving.20powers.20and.20sums/near/439243587).
2024-05-18 20:59:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
02b6fb3f41 fix: canonInstances := true issue (#4216)
closes #4213
2024-05-18 18:13:41 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
9f6bbfa106 feat: apply’s error message should show implicit arguments as needed (#3929)
luckily the necessary functionality already exists in the form of
`addPPExplicitToExposeDiff`. But it is not cheap, and we should not run
this code
when the error message isn’t shown, so we should do this lazily.

We already had `MessageData.ofPPFormat` to assemble the error message
lazily, but it
was restricted to returning `FormatWithInfo`, a data type that doesn’t
admit a nice
API to compose more complex messages (like `Format` or `MessageData`
has; an attempt to
fix that is in #3926).

Therefore we split the functionality of `.ofPPFormat` into
`.ofFormatWithInfo` and `.ofLazy`,
and use `.ofLazy` to compute the more complex error message of `apply`.

Fixes #3232.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Wojciech Nawrocki <wjnawrocki@protonmail.com>
2024-05-18 06:25:43 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1ff0e7a2f2 fix: split at h when h has forward dependencies (#4211)
We use an approach similar to the one used in `simp`. 

closes #3731
2024-05-18 02:48:15 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3cb6eb0ae6 fix: ensure a local instance is not registered multiple times (#4210)
closes #4203
2024-05-18 02:30:12 +00:00
Alok Singh
489d2d11ec feat: lake: add readme to package templates (#4147)
Messaged @tydeu about adding a README.md to new lake projects. I decided
to add it with the help of GPT.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-05-18 02:02:36 +00:00
Mac Malone
7648bf255c feat: lake: build monitor improvements (#4127)
The new Lake build monitor is now more selective, accurate, and prettier
in what it prints.

**Key Changes:**
 
* Poll jobs at a fixed frequency (100ms), updating the caption and
finished job count.
* Add `action` field to jobs to record information about what jobs do.
It enables distinguishing between jobs which build something, fetch from
a store, or reload logs from the cache.
* At standard verbosity, print build captions only when a job is know to
build or fetch something (i.e., `action >= .fetch`).
* Add an icon and color to job captions based on their log-level / build
status. Also add color to levels in logs.
* Add `--ansi`/`--no-ansi` to toggle Lake's use of ANSI escape codes.
* Fix some `v4.8.0-rc1` bugs and `--old`.

Closes #2822.
2024-05-17 23:20:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4d2ff6fb04 feat: pretty print Array DiscrTree.Key (#4208) 2024-05-17 22:35:24 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ee0bcc8321 feat: add Simp.Config.index (#4202)
The `simp` tactic uses a discrimination tree to select candidate
theorems that will be used to rewrite an expression. This indexing data
structure minimizes the number of theorems that need to be tried and
improves performance. However, indexing modulo reducibility is
challenging, and a theorem that could be applied, when taking reduction
into account, may be missed. For example, suppose we have a `simp`
theorem `foo : forall x y, f x (x, y).2 = y`, and we are trying to
simplify the expression `f a b <= b`. `foo` will not be tried by `simp`
because the second argument of `f a b` is not a projection of a pair.
However, `f a b` is definitionally equal to `f a (a, b).2` since we can
reduce `(a, b).2`.

In Lean 3, we had a much simpler indexing data structure where only the
head symbol was taken into account. For the theorem `foo`, the head
symbol is `f`. Thus, the theorem would be considered by `simp`.

This commit adds the option `Simp.Config.index`. When `simp (config := {
index := false })`, only the head symbol is considered when retrieving
theorems, as in Lean 3. Moreover, if `set_option diagnostics true`,
`simp` will check whether every applied theorem would also have been
applied if `index := true`, and report them. This feature can help users
diagnose tricky issues in code that has been ported from libraries
developed using Lean 3 and then ported to Lean 4. In the following
example, it will report that `foo` is a problematic theorem.

```lean
opaque f : Nat → Nat → Nat

@[simp] theorem foo : f x (x, y).2 = y := by sorry

example : f a b ≤ b := by
  set_option diagnostics true in
  simp (config := { index := false })
```

In the example above, the following diagnostic message is produced.
```lean
[simp] theorems with bad keys
    foo, key: [f, *, Prod.1, Prod.mk, Nat, Nat, *, *]
```

With the information above, users can annotate theorems such as `foo`
using `no_index` for problematic subterms.
Example:
```lean
opaque f : Nat → Nat → Nat

@[simp] theorem foo : f x (no_index (x, y).2) = y := by sorry

example : f a b ≤ b := by
  simp -- `foo` is still applied
```

cc @semorrison 
cc @PatrickMassot
2024-05-17 21:14:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1382e9fbc4 feat: simprocs for applying shiftLeft_shiftLeft and shiftRight_shiftRight (#4194) 2024-05-16 19:34:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e8c4540f87 feat: simprocs for reducing x >>> i and x <<< i where i is a bittvector literal (#4193) 2024-05-16 18:16:52 +00:00
FR
f2a304e555 style: fix whitespace and remove duplicate docstring (#4189) 2024-05-16 06:46:39 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3a457e6ad6 chore: use #guard_msgs in run tests (#4175)
Many of our tests in `tests/lean/run/` produce output from `#eval` (or
`#check`) statements, that is then ignored.

This PR tries to capture all the useful output using `#guard_msgs`. I've
only done a cursory check that the output is still sane --- there is a
chance that some "unchecked" tests have already accumulated regressions
and this just cements them!

In the other direction, I did identify two rotten tests:
* a minor one in `setStructInstNotation.lean`, where a comment says `Set
Nat`, but `#check` actually prints `?_`. Weird?
* `CompilerProbe.lean` is generating empty output, apparently indicating
that something is broken, but I don't know the signficance of this file.

In any case, I'll ask about these elsewhere.

(This started by noticing that a recent `grind` test file had an
untested `trace_state`, and then got carried away.)
2024-05-16 00:38:31 +00:00
Alex Keizer
2a966b46f2 feat: bitblasting theorems about unsigned bitvector inequalities (#4178)
This PR adds theorems that relate unsigned bitvector comparisons
`BitVec.ult` and `BitVec.ule` to `BitVec.carry`. These lemmas are a
prerequisite to bit-blasting these comparisons in LeanSAT.
2024-05-16 00:01:31 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8204b79b3c fix: cleanup type annotations in congruence theorems (#4185) 2024-05-15 23:50:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f63616891f chore: fix bug in omega (#4184)
Fixes #4183
2024-05-15 22:21:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9a8e7a6411 feat: add cleanupAnnotations parameter to forallTelescope methods (#4180) 2024-05-15 22:19:07 +00:00
JovanGerb
c7741607fb fix: add missing registerTraceClass `Meta.synthInstance.instances (#4151)
The trace class Meta.synthInstance.answer isn't registered, so it can't
be used.

I set `inherited := true`, because I think it is a useful trace to have.
In particular it tells you when an instance has been found that has a
too large size. This is very useful information.
2024-05-15 18:59:01 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
82666e5e7c fix: make erased names in simp clickable (#4176)
as usually, just a matter of using the `WithInfo` variant.

Also simplifying the code a bit, it seems we can use
`realizeGlobalConstNoOverloadWithInfo` here.

(It's somehwatdubious API design that of all the functions in
the `{resolve/realise}GlobalConst{NoOverload,}{WithInfo,}` family
the one with the longest name is the one that should be used
unless one has a reason to use another one.)

Fixes: #4174
2024-05-15 14:12:15 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
aeea7fdf5d fix: List.length_pos no @[simp] (#4172)
in #4158 I was experimenting with a change to the simplifier that
affectes the order in which lemmas were tried, and of course it breaks
proofs all over the place whenever we have a non-confluent simp set.

Among the first breakages encountered, a large fraction was due to
`simp` rewriting with `List.length_pos  : 0 < length l ↔ l ≠ []`.

This does not strike me a as a good simp lemma: If `l` is a manifest
constructor, the simplifier will reduce `length` and solve it anyways,
and if it isn't then an inequality usually isn’t very simp friendly. It
is also highly non-confluent with any kind of `length`-lemma we might
have.

This therefore removes it from the standard simp set.
2024-05-15 13:28:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3035d2f8f6 feat: grind preprocessor skeleton (#4170) 2024-05-15 04:25:22 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3493d066e4 feat: add MVarId.ensureNoMVar (#4169) 2024-05-15 00:37:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d0e34aaed5 feat: add revertAll tactic for grind (#4167) 2024-05-14 23:22:54 +00:00
Siddharth
367b97885a chore: delete double namespace BitVec.BitVec (#4165)
Fixes double namespace introduced in #4148
2024-05-14 19:34:14 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f3538dbdfa feat: grind normalization theorems (#4164) 2024-05-14 19:19:38 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
770235855f chore: update stage0 2024-05-14 19:52:25 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
0a515e2ec9 feat: add grind_norm simp attribute for grind tactic 2024-05-14 19:52:25 +02:00
Kim Morrison
91244b2dd9 chore: add dates to @[deprecated] attributes (#3967) 2024-05-14 03:24:57 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
de5e039c83 fix: type class issues with maxSynthPendingDepth := 1 (#4119)
Summary:

- Take `synthPendingDepth` into account when caching TC results
- Add `maxSynthPendingDepth` option with default := 2.
- Add support for tracking `synthPending` failures when using
`set_option diagnostics true`

closes #2522
closes #3313
closes #3927

Identical to #4114  but with `maxSynthPendingDepth := 1`

closes #4114 

cc @semorrison
2024-05-14 03:03:32 +00:00
Mac Malone
61a84c96db refactor: lake: import errors, job captions, log grouping (#4115)
This improves job captions, the grouping of logs underneath them, and
the handling of import errors. It also adds a number of log-related
utilities to help achieve this.

**Key Changes:**

* Job captions for facets now include the name of the object (e.g.,
module, library, facet). A caption has also been added to the top-level
build of imports (e.g., for the server and `lake lean`).
 
* Stray I/O and errors outside the build job in a build function
captioned with `withRegisterJob` (e.g., user-defined targets) will now
be properly grouped under that caption instead of ending up under
"Computing build jobs". Stray I/O will be converted to a single
informational log entry.

* Builds no longer fail immediately on erroneous imports. Lake will now
attempt to recover as best as possible from any import errors.
Information on the import error will appear both in the build of the
erroneous import and in the files which transitive import it. For
example, uf `Lib.B` imports a missing module `Lib.A`, then the build of
`Lib.A` will mention that the file does not exist, and the build of
`Lib.B` will mention the bad import of `Lib.A`.

Closes #3351. Closes #3809.
2024-05-13 22:11:18 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
98b2681d0e perf: simplify canonicalizer (#4155) 2024-05-13 19:45:20 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
7c4284aa91 refactor: no need for simpMatchWF? (#4153)
Despite what it said in its docstring, `simpMatchWF?` seems to behave
like `simpMatch?`, so let’s just use that.
2024-05-13 19:33:23 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
842280321b refactor: let Nat.mod reduce more (#4145)
this refined upon #4098 and makes `Nat.mod` reduce on even more
literals. The key observation that I missed earlier is that `if m ≤ n`
reduces better than `if n < m`.

Also see discussion at

https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/12853#discussion_r1597798308
2024-05-13 16:41:09 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d833f82fe8 chore: rerun CI only when full-ci label is added or removed (#4136)
Previously, the CI would run upon every label addition, including things
like `builds-mathlib`
or `will-merge-soon`, possibly triggering a new PR release, new mathlib
builds etc. Very wasteful!

Unfortunately (but not surprisingly) Github does not offer a nice way of
saying
“this workflow depends on that label, please re-run if changed”. Not
enough
functional programmer or nix enthusiasts there, I guess…

So here is the next iteration trying to work with what we have from
Github:

A new workflow watches for (only) `full-ci` label addition or deletion,
and then re-runs
the CI job for the current PR.

Sounds simple? But remember, this is github!

* `github.event.pull_request.labels.*.name` is *not* updated when a job
is re-run.

(This is actually a reasonable step towards determinism, but doesn't
help us
   constructing this work-around.)
   
   Ok, so let’s use the API to fetch the current state of the label.

* There is no good way to say “find the latest run of workflow `"CI"` on
PR `$n`”.

The best approximation seems to search by branch and triggering event.
This can
probably go wrong if there are multiple PRs from different repos with
the same
head ref name (`patch-1` anyone?). Let’s hope that it doesn’t happen too
often.

* You cannot just rerun a workflow. You can only rerun a finished
workflow. So cancel
  it first. And `sleep` a bit…

So let’s see how well this will work. It’s plausibly an improvement.
2024-05-13 16:40:36 +00:00
Siddharth
a17c3f424c feat: BitVec.shiftLeft_shiftLeft, BitVec.shiftRight_shiftRight (#4148)
Closes two `sorry`s at
https://github.com/leanprover/leansat/pull/64/files.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-05-13 12:35:59 +00:00
Kim Morrison
799923d145 chore: move have to decreasing_by in substrEq.loop (#4143)
Currently this causes linter warnings downstream in proofs that unfold
substrEq.loop.
2024-05-13 06:18:44 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f74980ccee chore: incorrect lemma resolution in omega (#4141)
Fixes #4138.
2024-05-12 23:06:48 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b8f2f28e0d fix: check that funind-reserved names are available (#4135)
I did not introduce `inductTheoremSuffix` etc, it seems more direct to
just spell out the suffix here. If we ever change it there are many
occurrences where they need to be changed anyways, so the definition
doesn't seem to save much work or add that much robustness.
2024-05-12 20:39:14 +00:00
Marcus Rossel
0d9af1b777 fix: typo in Meta.unfoldProjInstWhenInstances? (#4139) 2024-05-12 16:45:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7db8e6482e fix: auto/option params should not break sorry (#4132)
closes #2649
2024-05-11 02:10:40 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
147aeaea45 test: for issue 2558 (#4133)
Issue has been fixed by another PR.

closes #2558
2024-05-11 00:47:33 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a875ae3acf feat: recover from runtime errors in tactics (#4130)
closes #3554
2024-05-11 00:07:13 +00:00
Mac Malone
25e94f916f feat: IO.TaskState (#4097)
Adds `IO.getTaskState` which returns the state of a `Task` in the Lean
runtime's task manager. The `TaskState` inductive has 3 constructors:
`waiting`, `running`, and `finished`. The `waiting` constructor
encompasses the waiting and queued states within the C task object
documentation, because the task object does not provide a low cost way
to distinguish these different forms of waiting. Furthermore, it seems
unlikely for consumers to wish to distinguish between these internal
states. The `running` constructor encompasses both the running and
promised states in C docs. While not ideal, the C implementation does
not provide a way to distinguish between a running `Task` and a waiting
`Promise.result` (they both have null closures).
2024-05-10 23:04:54 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a1be9ec850 chore: tidying up Lean.unresolveNameGlobal (#4091)
The main loop logic could be simplified, and `if let` could be used to
make control flow more obvious.

Also adds a check for macro scopes to prevent `unresolveNameGlobal` from
returning names with macro scopes in the event there's an alias with
one.

This is a follow up to #3946.
2024-05-10 22:37:34 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e237e12478 refactor: add tryCatchRuntimeEx combinator (#4129)
see #4079
2024-05-10 22:34:09 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a6d186a81d fix: add checkSystem and withIncRecDepth to withAutoBoundImplicit (#4128)
Fix stack overflow crash.

Closes #4117

The fix can be improved: we could try to avoid creating hundreds of auto
implicits before failing.
2024-05-10 21:55:26 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
6c6b56e7fc fix: revert "monadic generalization of FindExpr" (#4125)
This reverts commit 706a4cfd73 introduced
in #3970

As explained in #4124, `findM?` can become a footgun if used in monads
which induce side-effects such as caching. This PR removes that
function, and fixes the code introduced by #3398 for which the function
was first added.

cc @semorrison.
2024-05-10 20:36:08 +00:00
JovanGerb
228ff58f3a chore: remove duplicate check (#4126) 2024-05-10 20:35:21 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
dcdc3db3d4 chore: update stage0 2024-05-10 07:39:47 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
39286862e3 feat: well-founded definitions irreducible by default (#4061)
we keep running into examples where working with well-founded recursion
is slow because defeq checks (which are all over the place, including
failing ones that are back-tracked) unfold well-founded definitions.

The definition of a function defined by well-founded recursion should be
an implementation detail that should only be peeked inside by the
equation generator and the functional induction generator.

We now mark the mutual recursive function as irreducible (if the user
did not
set a flag explicitly), and use `withAtLeastTransparency .all` when
producing
the equations.

Proofs can be fixed by using rewriting, or – a bit blunt, but nice for
adjusting
existing proofs – using `unseal` (a.k.a. `attribute [local
semireducible]`).

Mathlib performance does not change a whole lot:

http://speed.lean-fro.org/mathlib4/compare/08b82265-75db-4a28-b12b-08751b9ad04a/to/16f46d5e-28b1-41c4-a107-a6f6594841f8
Build instructions -0.126 %, four modules with significant instructions
decrease.

To reduce impact, these definitions were changed:

* `Nat.mod`, to make `1 % n` reduce definitionally, so that `1` as a
`Fin 2` literal
works nicely. Theorems with larger `Fin` literals tend to need a `unseal
Nat.modCore`
   https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/4098
* `List.ofFn` rewritten to be structurally recursive and not go via
`Array.ofFn`:
   https://github.com/leanprover-community/batteries/pull/784

Alternative designs explored were

 * Making `WellFounded.fix` irreducible. 
 
One benefit is that recursive functions with equal definitions (possibly
after
instantiating fixed parameters) are defeq; this is used in mathlib to
relate

[`OrdinalApprox.gfpApprox`](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Mathlib/SetTheory/Ordinal/FixedPointApproximants.html#OrdinalApprox.gfpApprox)
with `.lfpApprox`.
   
   But the downside is that one cannot use `unseal` in a
targeted way, being explicit in which recursive function needs to be
reducible here.

And in cases where Lean does unwanted unfolding, we’d still unfold the
recursive
definition once to expose `WellFounded.fix`, leading to large terms for
often no good
   reason.

* Defining `WellFounded.fix` to unroll defintionally once before hitting
a irreducible
`WellFounded.fixF`. This was explored in #4002. It shares most of the
ups and downs
with the previous variant, with the additional neat benefit that
function calls that
do not lead to recursive cases (e.g. a `[]` base case) reduce nicely.
This means that
   the majority of existing `rfl` proofs continue to work.

Issue #4051, which demonstrates how badly things can go if wf recursive
functions can be
unrolled, showed that making the recursive function irreducible there
leads to noticeably
faster elaboration than making `WellFounded.fix` irreducible; this is
good evidence that
the present PR is the way to go. 

This fixes https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues/3988

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-05-10 06:45:21 +00:00
Mac Malone
ca6437df71 fix: lake: TOML key order bug in ppTable (#4104)
Fixes a bug in `Lake.Toml.ppTable` where root table keys could be
printed after a subtable header.

Closes #4099.
2024-05-10 05:12:19 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
3491c56c49 fix: segfault in old compiler due to noConfusion assumptions (#2903)
This fixes #2901, a bug in the old compiler which causes a segfault. The
issue is that when visiting `noConfusion` applications, it assumes that
each constructor case has `nfields` arguments, e.g. `head1 = head2 ->
tail1 = tail2 -> P` has two arguments because `List.cons` has 2 fields,
but in fact propositional fields are skipped by the noConfusion type
generator, so for example `Subtype.noConfusionType` is:
```lean
@[reducible] protected def Subtype.noConfusionType.{u_1, u} : {α : Sort u} →
  {p : α → Prop} → Sort u_1 → Subtype p → Subtype p → Sort u_1 :=
fun {α} {p} P v1 v2 ↦
  Subtype.casesOn v1 fun val property ↦ Subtype.casesOn v2 fun val_1 property ↦ 
    (val = val_1 → P) → P
```
where `val = val_1 → P` only has the one argument even though
`Subtype.mk` has two fields, presumably because it is useless to have an
equality of propositions. Unfortunately there isn't any easy cache or
getter to use here to get the number of non-propositional fields, so we
just calculate it on the spot.
2024-05-10 01:38:38 +00:00
Tobias Grosser
368adaf847 feat: add BitVec.[toInt_inj|toInt_ne] (#4075)
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-05-10 00:57:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
6a040ab068 feat: propagate maxHeartbeats to kernel (#4113)
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-05-09 17:44:19 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fe7b96d8a0 fix: generate deprecation warnings for dot notation (#3969)
Fixes #3270 by moving the deprecation check from
`Lean.Elab.Term.mkConsts` to `Lean.Elab.Term.mkConst`, so
`Lean.Elab.Term.mkBaseProjections`, `.elabAppLValsAux`, `.elabAppFn`,
and `.elabForIn` also hit the check. Not all of these really need to hit
the check, so I'll run `!bench` to see if it's a problem.
2024-05-09 04:52:09 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ec87283465 perf: use withSynthesize when elaborating let/have type (#4096)
closes #4051

cc @semorrison
2024-05-09 00:58:43 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d7c6920550 chore: remove dead functionpreprocessLevels (#4112) 2024-05-08 15:38:04 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
227e861719 refactor: make 1 % n reduce without well-founded recursion (#4098)
this is in preparation for #4061. Once that lands, `1 % 42 = 1` will no
longer hold definitionally (at least not without an ungly `unseal
Nat.modCore in` around). This affects mathlib in a few places,
essentially every time a `1 : Fin (n+1)` literal is written.

So this extends the existing special case for `0 % n = 0` to `1 % n`.
2024-05-08 15:12:47 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e9c302c17e chore: bug template: point to live.lean-lang.org (#4109)
https://live.lean-lang.org/#project=lean-nightly now allows users to
play around with the latest lean nightly, and it seems prudent to ask
them to test bug reports, if possible, there, and not just with whatever
release they use.

Also reformatted the descriptions to look well in a text area. Users
will not see this as rendered markdown, but as plain text.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-05-08 13:21:17 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
5814a45d44 fix: mainModuleName should use srcSearchPath (#4066)
As [reported on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/341532-lean4-dev/topic/Find.20references.20broken.20in.20lean.20core/near/437051935).
The `mainModuleName` was being set incorrectly when browsing lean core
sources, resulting in failure of cross-file server requests like "Find
References". Because the `srcSearchPath` is generated asynchronously, we
store it as a `Task Name` which is resolved some time before the header
is finished parsing. (I don't think the `.get` here will ever block,
because the srcSearchPath will be ready by the time the initial command
snap is requested.)

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-05-08 12:34:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
dcf74b0d89 chore: Std -> Batteries renaming (#4108) 2024-05-08 05:04:25 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a257767417 fix: make deriving handler for Repr be consistent about erasing types and proofs (#3944)
The deriving handler would use `_` for types and proofs for structures
but not for inductives.

Reported by Graham Leach-Krouse on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113489-new-members/topic/Deriving.20Repr.20for.20an.20inductive.20with.20proof.20parameters/near/434181985).
2024-05-07 23:55:52 +00:00
Austin Letson
b8e67d87a8 doc: add docstrings and usage examples in Init.Data.String.Basic (#4001)
Add docstrings and usage examples for `String.length`, `.push`,
`.append`, `.get?`, `.set`, `.modyify`, and `.next`. Update docstrings
and add usage examples for `String.toList`, `.get`, and `.get!`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-05-07 23:49:43 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2a5ca00ad6 perf: issue at binop% and binrel% elaborators (#4092)
This issue was affecting several Mathlib files.

@mattrobball @semorrison This is a different solution for the issue. The
comment at `Extra.lean` describes the new solution and documents the new
issues found with the previous one.

closes #4085
2024-05-07 23:31:05 +00:00
François G. Dorais
ec27b3760d fix: swap Nat.zero_or and Nat.or_zero (#4094)
Closes #4093
2024-05-07 23:29:38 +00:00
Siddharth
e5b7dc819b feat: bitvec lemma to turn negation into bitwise not+add (#4095)
Identity 2-2 (a) (Section: Addition Combined with Logical Operations)
from Hacker's Delight, 2nd edition.
2024-05-07 22:31:19 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
93c06c0552 feat: relaxed reset/reuse in the code generator (#4100)
closes #4089
2024-05-07 22:08:32 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
bb7e6e4769 chore: lake: tweak hovers for family_def et al (#4088)
This makes the `leanArts` in `library_data leanArts : BuildJob Unit` get
a hover for the generated axiom. It also simplifies the `quoteFrom`
function so that it delaborates properly by using a name literal (which
elaborates to `mkStr1`, `mkStr2` etc) instead of a `mkStr` application.
2024-05-07 15:14:09 +00:00
Kim Morrison
883a3e752d chore: allow omega to use classicality, in case Decidable instances are too big (#4073)
From bug report at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/omega.20regression.20in.204.2E8.2E0-rc1/near/437150155
2024-05-07 01:44:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
03040618b8 chore: test for issue #4064
closes #4064
2024-05-07 03:23:30 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
dfde4ee3aa chore: update stage0 2024-05-07 03:23:30 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
07c407ab82 feat: collect kernel diagnostic information (#4082)
We now also track which declarations have been unfolded by the kernel
when using
```lean
set_option diagnostics true
```
2024-05-06 21:53:16 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
00dceb9a9d fix: code duplication at liftCoreM and liftTermElabM at Command.lean (#4080)
This PR also fixes:

- Fields caching specific `Options` at `CoreM` are now properly set.
- `nextMacroScope` was not being propagated at `liftCoreM`.
2024-05-06 19:17:35 +00:00
Kim Morrison
35d9307df3 chore: move @[simp] attribute on length_eq_zero earlier (#4077)
Cleanup.
2024-05-06 11:14:18 +00:00
Kyle Miller
9e4c414f48 fix: remove Subtype.instInhabited (#4055)
It has had a long history going back [10
years](3afad10a72 (diff-4e22e2bb74f004d2ff7cdabcb5c01429abbc906e20befe2517679e257b4387e4R41)),
but its time has come to an end since this instance is never applicable.
2024-05-06 11:08:19 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
6d22793ddf refactor: Array.feraseIdx: avoid have in definition (#4074)
otherwise it remains in the equational theorem and may cause the
“unused have linter” to trigger. By moving the proof into
`decreasing_by`, the equational theorems are unencumbered by termination
arguments.

see also
https://github.com/leanprover/std4/pull/690#issuecomment-2095378609
2024-05-06 08:08:43 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
e0c1afd12d fix: occurence check in mkInjectiveTheoremTypeCore? (#3398)
Closes #3386

Currently, when generating the signature of an injectivity lemma for a
certain constructor `c : forall xs, Foo a_1 ... a_n`,
`mkInjectiveTheoremTypeCore?` will differentiate between variables which
are bound to stay the same between the two equal values (i.e inductive
indices), and non-fixed ones. To do that, the function currently checks
whether a variable `x ∈ xs` appears in the final co-domain `Foo a_1 ...
a_n` of the constructor. This condition isn't enough however. As shown
in the linked issue, the codomain may also depend on variables which
appears in the type of free vars contained in `Foo a_1 ... a_n`, but not
in the term itself. This PR fixes the issue by also checking the types
of any free variable occuring in the final codomain, so as to ensure
injectivity lemmas are well-typed.
2024-05-06 06:50:08 +00:00
Harun Khan
b1bedbe0d2 feat: equivalence of bit-vector negation and bitblasted negation (#3920) 2024-05-06 06:03:28 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
1ea92baa21 fix: Incorrect promotion from index to paramater (#3591)
Depends on #3590

Closes #3458
2024-05-06 05:58:15 +00:00
Peiran Wu
07be352ea7 feat: lemmas to simplify equalities with Option-typed dependent if-then-else (#4037)
Closes #4013.

Add `dite_some_none_eq_none` and `dite_some_none_eq_some`, analogous to
the existing `ite_some_none_eq_none` and `ite_some_none_eq_some`.
2024-05-06 05:51:52 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3c11cca3cb feat: upstream lemmas about basic List/Array operations (#4059)
This PR upstreams lemmas about List/Array operations already defined in
Lean from std/batteries.

Happy to take suggestions about increasing or decreasing scope.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-05-06 03:52:33 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3bd2a7419d fix: have app unexpanders be considered before field notation (#4071)
On
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Notation.20in.20namespace.20not.20showing.20in.20pp/near/437016468),
Peter Nelson reported that notations that could be pretty printed with
generalized field notation did not pretty print using the intended
notation.

This PR makes it so that app unexpanders are considered before
generalized field notation. The complexity before was that we wanted to
do parent projection collapse, and since we did the collapse before
pretty printing that argument, it meant it wasn't possible to do app
unexpanders when there was a field notation candidate. The new solution
is to collapse parent projections only when actually considering field
notation, which can be done because we can safely strip off projection
syntax in an expression-directed way.
2024-05-05 22:44:01 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
26a1b934c2 fix: rfl tactic error messsage when there are no goals (#4067)
fixes #4063
2024-05-05 10:42:41 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
93d7afb00a fix: bug in reduceLeDiff simproc proof term (#4065)
As [reported on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/348111-std4/topic/v4.2E8.2E0-rc1.20issue/near/437059527).
2024-05-05 07:44:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e362b50fa9 feat: add seal and unseal commands (#4053) 2024-05-03 13:44:58 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2df35360ee feat: validate reducibility attribute setting (#4052)
and new option `set_option allowUnsafeReductibility true` to override
validation.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-05-03 13:44:42 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
2db602c209 doc: layout algorithm (#3915)
The layout algorithm, while somewhat finicky, is (unfortunately)
necessary for C code to interface with lean structures. This adds a
(AFAIK) complete description of the layout algorithm, including a worked
example large enough to make it possible to reconstruct the whole
decision diagram.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-05-03 11:47:23 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
00cf5771f3 feat: support idents in auto tactics (#3328)
This is still experimental, but it implements identifier support in auto
tactics "in the obvious way". It also converts `quoteAutoTactic` to
generate Expr directly instead of going via syntax (this doesn't have
any effect other than increasing compile cost AFAICT).
2024-05-03 04:37:07 +00:00
Kim Morrison
51abb0d4c7 chore: begin development cycle for v4.9.0 (#4058) 2024-05-03 03:20:29 +00:00
Mac Malone
e733149134 feat: lake: require doc comments (#4057)
Lake now supports docstrings on `require` commands:

```lean
/-- This is a docstring for a require statement. -/
require std from ...
```

Closes #2898.
2024-05-03 01:08:18 +00:00
Mac Malone
ac08be695e chore: lake: cleanup tests (#4056)
Various tweaks and fixes to the Lake tests to make them cleaner and more
standardized.
2024-05-03 01:08:12 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1d17c7df2b chore: cleanup and remove unnecessary checkpointDefEq (#4029) 2024-05-02 17:58:03 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
092ca8530a chore: CI: disable large runner again 2024-05-02 17:46:29 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
92fac419e7 chore: CI: use large runners on Windows (#4050) 2024-05-02 14:28:17 +00:00
Mac Malone
e6160d7d4a feat: IO.Process.get/setCurrentDir (#4036)
Adds `IO.Process.getCurrentDir` and `IO.Process.setCurrentDir` for
retrieving and setting, respectively, the current working directory of a
process. The names of the functions are inspired by Rust (e.g.,
[`set_current_dir`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/env/fn.set_current_dir.html)).
2024-05-02 13:49:10 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
74adb0961c chore: add ./script/rebase-stage0.sh (#3984)
heavily based on an script by Kim.
2024-05-02 12:26:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4591747381 feat: trace.profiler.useHeartbeats (#3986)
Makes trace.profiler useful for debugging heartbeat timeouts etc.. Not
an exact science as enabling profiling consumes itself but close enough.
2024-05-02 12:09:19 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
bc23383194 feat: subst notation (heq ▸ h) tries both orientation (#4046)
even when rewriting the type of `h` becuase there is no expected type.

(When there is an expected type, it already tried both orientations.)

Also feeble attempt to include this information in the docstring without
writing half a manual chapter.
2024-05-02 07:02:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b470eb522b refactor: do not try rfl in mkEqnTypes in WF.mkEqns (#4047)
when dealing with well-founded recursive definitions, `tryURefl` isn't
going to be that useful and possibly slow. So disable that code path
when doing well-founded recursion.

(This is a variant of #4025 where I tried using `with_reducible` to
limit the impact of slow unfolding, but if we can get away with
disabling it complete, then even better.)
2024-05-02 06:17:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
e13613d633 chore: report used instances correctly in diagnostics (#4049) 2024-05-02 05:47:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5f1c4df07d feat: display diagnostic information at term and tactic set_option diagnostics true (#4048)
We don't need to include reduction info at `simp` diagnostic
information.
2024-05-01 22:47:57 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5f727699b0 doc: mention build doc source location (#4045) 2024-05-01 22:42:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e1b7984836 perf: improve simp cache behavior for well-behaved dischargers (#4044)
See comment at `Methods.wellBehavedDischarge`.
The default discharger is now well-behaved.
2024-05-01 19:57:44 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d9ea092585 feat: include congruence theorems at simp diagnostic information (#4043) 2024-05-01 17:22:24 +00:00
Kyle Miller
359f60003a fix: use correct expr positions when delaborating match patterns (#4034)
In the following, hovering over `true` in the infoview was showing
`Nat.succ y`.
```lean
#check fun (x : Nat) =>
  match h : x with
  | 0 => false
  | y + 1 => true
```
Now hovering over `true` shows `true`.

The issue was that SubExpr positions were not being tracked for
patterns, and the position for a pattern could coincide with the
position for a RHS, putting overwriting terminfo. Now the position given
to a pattern is correct and unique.

Refactors the `match` delaborator, makes it handle shadowing of `h :`
discriminant annotations correctly, and makes it use the standard
`withOverApp` combinator to handle overapplication.
2024-05-01 12:02:10 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
806e41151b chore: fix tests 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
527493c2a1 feat: in tried theorem section at simp diagnostics, indicate how many times is succeeded 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
a12e8221da feat: include counters for unfolded declarations at simp diagnostics 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
bcfad6e381 feat: report diagnostic information for simp at exception 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
283587987a feat: diagnostic information for simp 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
99e652ab1c feat: mention set_option diagnostics true at maximum recursion depth error message 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
c833afff11 feat: mention set_option diagnostics true at deterministic timeout message 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
c3714bdc6d feat: add structure to diagnostic information 2024-05-01 03:19:39 +02:00
Mac Malone
cc2ccf71d5 fix: lake: log refactor bugs (#4033)
Fixes some bugs with the log refactor (#3835). Namely, quiet mode
progress printing and missing string interpolation in the fetching cloud
release caption.
2024-04-30 23:25:32 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f8d2ebd47a chore: remove @[simp] from BitVec.of_length_zero (#4039) 2024-04-30 23:19:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
660eb9975a chore: restore #4006 (#4038) 2024-04-30 23:06:50 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5c3f6363cc fix: mismatch between TheoremVal in Lean and C++ (#4035) 2024-04-30 18:10:20 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6e731b4370 chore: delete interpreter copy constructor just to be safe 2024-04-30 10:36:40 +02:00
Sebastian Ullrich
18a69914da chore: fix asan linking 2024-04-30 10:36:19 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
83c139f750 feat: improve set_option diagnostics true (#4031) 2024-04-30 05:07:03 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
edbd7ce00d chore: rename set_option diag true to set_option diagnostics true (#4030) 2024-04-30 03:57:57 +00:00
Mac Malone
02925447bd refactor: lake: --wfail & track jobs & logs & simplify build monads (#3835)
This is a major refactor of Lake's build code.  The key changes:

* **Job Registration**: Significant build jobs are now registered by
build functions. The DSL inserts this registration automatically into
user-defined targets and facets, so this change should require no
end-user adaption. Registered jobs are incrementally awaited by the main
build function and the progress counter now indicates how many of these
jobs are completed and left-to-await. On the positive side, this means
the counter is now always accurate. On the negative side, this means
that jobs are displayed even if they are no-ops (i.e., if the target is
already up-to-date).

* **Log Retention**: Logs are now part of a Lake monad's state instead
of being eagerly printed. As a result, build jobs retain their logs.
Using this change, logs are are now always printed after their
associated caption (e.g., `[X/Y] Building Foo`) and are not arbitrarily
interleaved with the output of other jobs.

* **Simplify the build monad stack**: Previously, there was a lot of
confused mixing between the various build monads in the codebase (i.e.,
`JobM`, `ScedulerM`, `BuildM`, `RecBuildM`, and `IndexBuildM` ). This
refactor attempts to make there use more consistent and straightforward:
* `FetchM` (formerly `IndexBuildM`) is the top-level build monad used by
targets and facets and is now uniformly used in the codebase for all
top-level build functions.
* `JobM` is the monad of asynchronous build jobs. It is more limited
than `FetchM` due to the fact that the build cache can not be modified
asynchronously.
* `SpawnM` (formerly `SchedulerM`) is the monad used to spawn build
jobs. It lifts into `FetchM`.
* `RecBuildM` and `CoreBuildM` (formerly `BuildM`) have been relegated
to internal details of how `FetchM` / `JobM` are implemented / run and
are no longer used outside of that context.

* **Pretty progress.** Build progress (e.g., `[X/Y] Building Foo`) is
now updated on a single line via ANSI escape sequences when Lake is
outputting to a terminal. Redirected Lake output still sees progress on
separate lines.

* **Warnings-as-error option.** Adds a `--wfail` option to Lake that
will cause a build to fail if Lake logs any warnings doing a build.
Unlike some systems, this does not convert warnings into errors and it
does not abort jobs which log warnings. Instead, only the top-level
build fails.

* **Build log cache.** Logs from builds are now cached to a file and
replayed when the build is revisited. For example, this means multiple
runs of a `--wfail` Lean build (without changes) will still produce the
same warnings even though there is now an up-to-date `.olean` for the
module.

 Closes #2349. Closes #2764.
2024-04-30 01:55:20 +00:00
Mac Malone
a969d2702f chore: lake: error on package name mismatch + std special case (#3999)
Lake now errors instead of warns on a mismatch between a package name
and what is required as. This avoids sometimes confusing downstream
errors. Also, this change provides additional information for errors
that may be caused by the upcoming Std rename.
2024-04-30 01:32:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
27c79cb614 fix: double reset bug at ResetReuse (#4028)
We conjecture this is the cause for the segfaults when compiling Mathlib
with #4006
2024-04-29 23:26:07 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e2983e44ef perf: use with_reducible in special-purpose decreasing_trivial macros (#3991)
Because of the last-added-tried-first rule for macros, all the special
purpose `decreasing_trivial` rules are tried for most recursive
definitions out there, and because they use `apply` and `assumption`
with default transparency may cause some definitoins to be unfolded over
and over again.

A quick test with one of the functions in the leansat project shows that
elaboration time goes down from 600ms to 375ms when using
```
decreasing_by all_goals decreasing_with with_reducible decreasing_trivial
```
instead of
```
decreasing_by all_goals decreasing_with decreasing_trivial
```

This change uses `with_reducible` in most of these macros.

This means that these tactics will no longer work when the
relations/definitions they look for is hidden behind a definition.
This affected in particular `Array.sizeOf_get`, which now has a
companion `sizeOf_getElem`.

In addition, there were three tactics using `apply` to apply Nat-related
lemmas
that we now expect `omega` to solve. We still need them when building
`Init` modules
that don’t have access to `omega`, but they now live in
`decreasing_trivial_pre_omega`,
meant to be only used internally.
2024-04-29 15:12:27 +00:00
Kim Morrison
01573067f9 chore: typos (#4026) 2024-04-29 14:04:50 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f0b2621047 test: add guard_msgs to wfEqns tests (#4024)
otherwise we would not catch changes to the shape of these equational
lemmas.

Also, no need to manually trigger the generation of these lemmas.
2024-04-29 12:45:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4b88965363 chore: disable #4006 (#4021)
Mathlib is crashing with #4006. Here is the stacktrace produced by Kim:
```
* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = EXC_BAD_ACCESS (code=1, address=0x100000000000a)
  * frame #0: 0x00000001066db21c libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::eval_body(lean::object_ref const&) + 2816
    frame #1: 0x00000001066dd464 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::call(lean::name const&, lean::array_ref<lean::object_ref> const&) + 1360
    frame #2: 0x00000001066db394 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::eval_body(lean::object_ref const&) + 3192
    frame #3: 0x00000001066dd464 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::call(lean::name const&, lean::array_ref<lean::object_ref> const&) + 1360
    frame #4: 0x00000001066db394 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::eval_body(lean::object_ref const&) + 3192
    frame #5: 0x00000001066dd464 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::call(lean::name const&, lean::array_ref<lean::object_ref> const&) + 1360
    frame #6: 0x00000001066db394 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::eval_body(lean::object_ref const&) + 3192
    frame #7: 0x00000001066df288 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::stub_m(lean_object**) + 556
    frame #8: 0x00000001066d6ee0 libleanshared.dylib`lean_object* lean::ir::interpreter::with_interpreter<lean_object*>(lean::environment const&, lean::options const&, lean::name const&, std::__1::function<lean_object* (lean::ir::interpreter&)> const&) + 320
    frame #9: 0x00000001066dee84 libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::stub_m_aux(lean_object**) + 92
    frame #10: 0x00000001066deafc libleanshared.dylib`lean::ir::interpreter::stub_9_aux(lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*, lean_object*) + 60
    frame #11: 0x00000001066f52a0 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_6 + 1748
    frame #12: 0x00000001055d1ac8 libleanshared.dylib`l_Array_forInUnsafe_loop___at___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___spec__10___lambda__2 + 156
    frame #13: 0x00000001055d47e8 libleanshared.dylib`l_Array_forInUnsafe_loop___at___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___spec__10___lambda__2___boxed + 144
    frame #14: 0x00000001066f5bcc libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_7 + 1348
    frame #15: 0x00000001055ccccc libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_withInfoTreeContext___at___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___spec__4 + 528
    frame #16: 0x00000001066f5b6c libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_7 + 1252
    frame #17: 0x00000001055d1550 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_withLogging___at___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___spec__6 + 240
    frame #18: 0x00000001055d4cb4 libleanshared.dylib`l_Array_forInUnsafe_loop___at___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___spec__10 + 940
    frame #19: 0x00000001055d5394 libleanshared.dylib`l___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___lambda__1 + 60
    frame #20: 0x00000001055d5740 libleanshared.dylib`l___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore___lambda__1___boxed + 148
    frame #21: 0x00000001066f11f4 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_1 + 840
    frame #22: 0x0000000103bce27c libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_profileitIOUnsafe___rarg___lambda__1 + 24
    frame #23: 0x0000000103bce4ec libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_profileitIOUnsafe___rarg___lambda__1___boxed + 20
    frame #24: 0x00000001066f10bc libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_1 + 528
    frame #25: 0x0000000106644260 libleanshared.dylib`lean_profileit + 128
    frame #26: 0x0000000103bce3e0 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_profileitIOUnsafe___rarg + 112
    frame #27: 0x00000001055d564c libleanshared.dylib`l___private_Lean_Elab_Term_0__Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributesCore + 268
    frame #28: 0x00000001055d6264 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Term_applyAttributes + 52
    frame #29: 0x000000010597b840 libleanshared.dylib`l_Array_forInUnsafe_loop___at_Lean_Elab_Command_elabAttr___spec__6___lambda__1 + 740
    frame #30: 0x000000010597daf4 libleanshared.dylib`l_Array_forInUnsafe_loop___at_Lean_Elab_Command_elabAttr___spec__6___lambda__1___boxed + 124
    frame #31: 0x00000001066f65d8 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_8 + 1252
    frame #32: 0x00000001066f5b6c libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_7 + 1252
    frame #33: 0x0000000104f587b0 libleanshared.dylib`l___private_Lean_Elab_InfoTree_Main_0__Lean_Elab_withSavedPartialInfoContext___at_Lean_Elab_Command_liftTermElabM___spec__2___rarg___lambda__1 + 344
    frame #34: 0x0000000104f59ec4 libleanshared.dylib`l___private_Lean_Elab_InfoTree_Main_0__Lean_Elab_withSavedPartialInfoContext___at_Lean_Elab_Command_liftTermElabM___spec__2___rarg + 280
    frame #35: 0x0000000104f5af20 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Command_liftTermElabM___rarg___lambda__1 + 144
    frame #36: 0x00000001066f5ab8 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_7 + 1072
    frame #37: 0x0000000105636090 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Term_TermElabM_run___rarg + 844
    frame #38: 0x0000000104f5b8fc libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Command_liftTermElabM___rarg + 1696
    frame #39: 0x000000010597d67c libleanshared.dylib`l_Array_forInUnsafe_loop___at_Lean_Elab_Command_elabAttr___spec__6 + 928
    frame #40: 0x000000010597de60 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Command_elabAttr + 772
    frame #41: 0x000000010597e838 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Command_elabAttr___boxed + 20
    frame #42: 0x00000001066f2cd4 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_3 + 868
    frame #43: 0x0000000104f385f8 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_withInfoTreeContext___at___private_Lean_Elab_Command_0__Lean_Elab_Command_elabCommandUsing___spec__2 + 396
    frame #44: 0x0000000104f39e48 libleanshared.dylib`l___private_Lean_Elab_Command_0__Lean_Elab_Command_elabCommandUsing + 484
    frame #45: 0x00000001066f2cf0 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_3 + 896
    frame #46: 0x0000000104f341d4 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_withTraceNode___at_Lean_Elab_Command_runLinters___spec__11 + 788
    frame #47: 0x00000001066f2d54 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_3 + 996
    frame #48: 0x00000001066f2cf0 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_3 + 896
    frame #49: 0x0000000104f40e30 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_withLogging___at_Lean_Elab_Command_elabCommand___spec__2 + 104
    frame #50: 0x0000000104f4c51c libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Command_elabCommandTopLevel___lambda__1 + 432
    frame #51: 0x00000001066f10e8 libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_1 + 572
    frame #52: 0x0000000103bce27c libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_profileitIOUnsafe___rarg___lambda__1 + 24
    frame #53: 0x0000000103bce4ec libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_profileitIOUnsafe___rarg___lambda__1___boxed + 20
    frame #54: 0x00000001066f10bc libleanshared.dylib`lean_apply_1 + 528
    frame #55: 0x0000000106644260 libleanshared.dylib`lean_profileit + 128
    frame #56: 0x0000000103bce3e0 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_profileitIOUnsafe___rarg + 112
    frame #57: 0x0000000104f4fce0 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Command_elabCommandTopLevel + 1284
    frame #58: 0x00000001057d2f30 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Frontend_elabCommandAtFrontend + 1384
    frame #59: 0x00000001057d63b8 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Frontend_processCommand + 1332
    frame #60: 0x00000001057d6e48 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_Frontend_processCommands + 72
    frame #61: 0x00000001057d7248 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_IO_processCommands + 212
    frame #62: 0x00000001057d83d0 libleanshared.dylib`l_Lean_Elab_runFrontend___lambda__3 + 76
    frame #63: 0x00000001057d96d0 libleanshared.dylib`lean_run_frontend + 2436
    frame #64: 0x00000001065e72b4 libleanshared.dylib`lean::run_new_frontend(std::__1::basic_string<char, std::__1::char_traits<char>, std::__1::allocator<char>> const&, lean::options const&, std::__1::basic_string<char, std::__1::char_traits<char>, std::__1::allocator<char>> const&, lean::name const&, unsigned int, lean::optional<std::__1::basic_string<char, std::__1::char_traits<char>, std::__1::allocator<char>>> const&, unsigned char) + 244
    frame #65: 0x00000001065e9c8c libleanshared.dylib`lean_main + 8348
    frame #66: 0x0000000184f93f28 dyld`start + 2236
```

cc @Kha
2024-04-29 10:58:11 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
15cfe60640 test: for flexible reducibility attributes 2024-04-29 05:46:11 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
7294646eb9 chore: update stage0 2024-04-29 05:46:11 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
47a34316fc feat: flexible reducibility attributes
- We can set `[irreducible]`, `[semireducible]`, and `[reducible]` for
imported declarations.
- Support for `scoped` and `local` versions

TODO: discuss whether we need all this power after we add the module
system.
2024-04-29 05:46:11 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
5a5a77dd44 feat: set_option diag true tracks recursor reduction (#4020) 2024-04-29 02:06:14 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5e30638725 feat: set_option diag true tracks how many times an instance is used (#4019) 2024-04-29 01:05:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
dc442ec137 fix: theorems should never be marked as extern (#4018) 2024-04-29 00:01:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9d14c0456b feat: add set_option diag true for diagnostic counters (#4016)
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.
2024-04-28 22:14:08 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
bb1a373420 fix: subst notation (heq ▸ h) should fail if it does't subst (#3994)
The subst notation substitues in the expected type, if present, or in
the type of the argument, if no expected type is known.

If there is an expected type it already fails if it cannot find the
equations' left hand side or right hand side. But if the expected type
is not known and the equation's lhs is not present in the second
argument's type, it will happily do a no-op-substitution.

This is inconsistent and unlikely what the user intended to do, so we
now print an error message now.

This still only looks for the lhs; search for the rhs as well seems
prudent, but I’ll leave that for a separate PR, to better diagnose the
impact on mathlib.

This triggers a small number of pointless uses of subst in mathlib, see
https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/12451
2024-04-28 20:29:04 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f817d5a706 feat: use structural recursion in Fin.induction (#4010)
this should help with reducing mathlib's vector notation (`![a,b,c] 2`),
and reduce fallout from #4002
2024-04-28 20:28:41 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
adc4c6a7cf chore: add backward compatibility flags for recent isDefEq changes (#4012) 2024-04-28 17:30:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b8b6b219c3 chore: move trace.cpp to kernel (#4014)
Motivation: trace kernel `is_def_eq`
2024-04-28 17:24:48 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
63067d0d34 chore: code convention (#4009) 2024-04-28 15:49:55 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3be22538d2 chore: add backward compatibility option for TC optimization (#4008) 2024-04-28 06:04:06 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
99e8270d2d fix: proposition fields must be theorems (#4006)
closes #2575
2024-04-28 01:59:47 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8fa36c7730 fix: match_expr parser (#4007)
closes #3989
closes #3990
2024-04-27 23:56:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a359586a96 perf: isDefEqProj (#4004)
Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-04-27 23:30:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e3592e40cf chore: remove dead code at Structure.lean (#4005) 2024-04-27 23:10:28 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7b0d4610b0 chore: CI: pin macos-13 (#3992)
macos-latest changed to arm64. It should not be hard to switch our setup
to cross-compiling x64 instead of arm64 but let's get master green again
first.
2024-04-27 20:58:22 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
917a31f694 perf: consider at most one answer for type class resolution subgoals not containing metavariables
closes #3996
2024-04-27 21:12:19 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
34a788110f chore: code convention 2024-04-27 21:12:19 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
ce350f3481 perf: linearity issue 2024-04-27 21:12:19 +02:00
Leonardo de Moura
1630d9b803 feat: universe constraint approximations (#3981)
We add a new configuration flag for `isDefEq`:
`Meta.Config.univApprox`.
When it is true, we approximate the solution for universe constraints
such as
- `u =?= max u ?v`, we use `?v := u`, and ignore the solution `?v := 0`.
- `max u v =?= max u ?w`, we use `?w := v`, and ignore the solution `?w
:= max u v`.

We only apply these approximations when there the contraints cannot be
postponed anymore. These approximations prevent error messages such as
```
error: stuck at solving universe constraint
  max u ?u.3430 =?= u
```
This kind of error seems to appear in several Mathlib files.

We currently do not use these approximations while synthesizing type
class instances.
2024-04-24 20:27:51 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
605cecdde3 fix: show trace timings in infoview (#3985)
A regression introduced by #3801
2024-04-24 15:55:27 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a9db0d2e53 fix: use Name.appendCore instead of Name.append in unresolveNameGlobal (#3946)
`Name.append` has special handling of macro scopes, and it would cause
`unresolveNameGlobal` to panic. Using `Name.appendCore` to append name
parts is justified by the fact that it's being used to reassemble a
disassembled name.

Closes #2291
2024-04-24 15:07:18 +00:00
Kyle Miller
158979380e feat: make Level -> MessageData coercion respect pp.mvars (#3980)
Adds `ppLevel` to the `PPFns` extension so that the coercion can pass
the pretty printing context (including the `pp.mvars` option setting) to
the `Level` formatter.
2024-04-24 14:23:42 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f9f278266e chore: ci to set “changes-stage0” label (#3979)
Expands on #3971 to do something useful even before the PR enters the
queue:

If stage0 changes are detected in the PR, set the changes-stage0 label
(which
has a tooltip to explain what this entail), and also remove the label if
it no
longer applies.
2024-04-24 07:08:34 +00:00
Austin Letson
861a92a06d doc: docstrings for List.rotateRight/Left and example for List.partitionM (#3919)
Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-04-24 06:15:05 +00:00
Markus Himmel
f4ae6fc8aa fix: add instances to make ac_rfl work out of the box (#3942)
Previously the `ac_rfl` tactic was only really usable when depending on
mathlib. With these instances, `ac_rfl` can deal with the various
operations defined in Lean.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-04-24 06:12:36 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f2a54ec0eb feat: script to summarize issues (#3952) 2024-04-24 06:11:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
22a581f38d chore: update code owners 2024-04-24 10:16:16 +02:00
Kim Morrison
706a4cfd73 feat: monadic generalization of FindExpr (#3970)
Not certain this is a good idea. Motivated by code duplication
introduced in #3398.
2024-04-24 06:07:54 +00:00
Richard Copley
4fe0259354 feat: exact?%: do not report suggestions which do not close the goal (#3974)
This makes `exact?%` behave like `by exact?` rather than `by apply?`.

If the underlying function `librarySearch` finds a suggestion which
closes the goal, use it (and add a code action). Otherwise log an error
and use `sorry`. The error is either
```text
`exact?%` didn't find any relevant lemmas
```
or
```text
`exact?%` could not close the goal. Try `by apply` to see partial suggestions.
```

---


[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/287929-mathlib4/topic/Useful.20term.20elaborators/near/434863856)

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-04-24 06:07:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
41697dcf6c feat: improvements to test_extern command (#3075)
Two improvements
[suggested](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/2970#issuecomment-1853436906)
by @digama0 after the initial PR was merged.

* Allow testing `implemented_by` attributes as well.
* Use `DecidableEq` rather than `BEq` for stricter testing.
2024-04-24 03:56:16 +00:00
Kim Morrison
3990a9b3be chore: upstream Std material from Data/List|Array/Init (#3975)
See proposal on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/348111-std4/topic/upstreaming.20of.20List.2FArray.20material/near/434879041);
I won't merge this until there's a chance for discussion there.
2024-04-24 03:23:25 +00:00
François G. Dorais
05b68687c0 feat: #print command shows structure fields (#3768)
<!--
# Read this section before submitting

* Ensure your PR follows the [External Contribution
Guidelines](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md).
* Please make sure the PR has excellent documentation and tests. If we
label it `missing documentation` or `missing tests` then it needs
fixing!
* Include the link to your `RFC` or `bug` issue in the description.
* If the issue does not already have approval from a developer, submit
the PR as draft.
* The PR title/description will become the commit message. Keep it
up-to-date as the PR evolves.
* If you rebase your PR onto `nightly-with-mathlib` then CI will test
Mathlib against your PR.
* You can manage the `awaiting-review`, `awaiting-author`, and `WIP`
labels yourself, by writing a comment containing one of these labels on
its own line.
* Remove this section, up to and including the `---` before submitting.
-->
See RFC #3644 for a discussion of design choices.

Closes #3644
2024-04-24 03:18:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
94360a72b3 feat: make pp.mvars false pretty print universe mvars as _ (#3978)
Suggestion on
[Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/.23guard_msgs.20variant.3A.20don't.20care.20about.20whitespace/near/434906526)
2024-04-23 20:34:48 +00:00
Kim Morrison
fb135b8cfe fix: improve isDefEqProj (#3977)
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>
2024-04-23 18:09:26 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
4f664fb3b5 feat: improve @[deprecated] attr (#3968)
Complement to #3967 , adds a `(since := "<date>")` field to
`@[deprecated]` so that metaprogramming code has access to the
deprecation date for e.g. bulk removals. Also adds `@[deprecated
"deprecation message"]` to optionally replace the default text
"`{declName}` has been deprecated, use `{newName}` instead".
2024-04-23 17:00:32 +00:00
Mac Malone
7a076d0bd4 fix: lake: package duplication in workspace (#3957)
Fixes a bug where packages that appeared multiple times in the
dependency tree would be duplicated in the workspace (and in manifests).
Added a regression test for this to prevent this from happening again in
the future.

This was first reported in
l[eanprover/mathlib4#12250](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/12258#discussion_r1571834509).
2024-04-23 09:50:10 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f40c51f346 chore: prevent stage0 changes via the merge queue (#3971)
these need manual rebase merges by an admin, so lets prevent accidential
merges via the squashing merge queue.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-04-23 09:47:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b2de43ed88 fix: simp caching (#3972)
closes #3943

TODO: remove `cache` field from `Simp.Result`.
2024-04-22 21:22:42 +00:00
Mac Malone
d95e741824 feat: lean CLI option to print messages as JSON (#3939)
Adds a `--json` option to the `lean` CLI. When used, the Lean frontend
will print messages as JSON objects using the default `ToJson` encoding
for the `Message` structure. This allows consumers (such as Lake) to
handle Lean output in a more intelligent, well-structured way.

`Message` has been refactored into `BaseMessage`, `Message`, and
`SerialMessage` to enable deriving `ToJson`/ `FromJson` instances
automatically for `BaseMessage` / `SerialMessage`. `SerialMessage` is a
`Message` with its `MessageData` eagerly serialized to a `String`.
2024-04-22 15:45:32 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
70a23945bf feat: add model implementation for UTF8 enc/dec (#3961)
- [x] Depends on: #3958 
- [x] Depends on: #3960

This makes the UTF-8 encode and decode functions have lean definitions,
so that we can prove properties about them downstream.
2024-04-22 10:24:53 +00:00
Kim Morrison
7c34b736fc chore: deprecate Option.toBool in favour of Option.isSome (#3866) 2024-04-22 07:20:19 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7a65bde3e3 doc: Command.set_option (#3872)
Co-authored-by: Kim Morrison <kim@tqft.net>
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-04-22 07:18:17 +00:00
Kim Morrison
22ce2fea9b chore: fix Util.Heartbeats module-doc (#3954) 2024-04-22 07:02:58 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
ea23ab6fef refactor: make throwTacticEx parameter msg optional (#3951)
previously, the empty `MessageData` (`m!""`) was used to indicate “no
message”, and `throwTacticEx` would format the message differently then.
But the semantics of `MessageData.isEmpty` isn't entirely clear in the
presence of lazy message data (e.g. `.ofPPFormat`).

So to avoid wondering what `isEmpty` should do there, let's simply use
an optional argument to `throwTacticEx` and get rid of
`MessageData.isEmpty`.
2024-04-22 06:55:41 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
e437bfece9 chore: use compareLex in lexOrd (#3882)
This reduces the number of reimplemented functions which complicate
proofs. After inlining it ends up the same as before.

`ltOfOrd` is also changed to use `compare a b = .lt` instead of
`(compare a b == .lt) = true`, for consistency with the normal form in
std.
2024-04-22 06:48:44 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5e313e98d0 doc: Classical.choice (#3871)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-22 06:36:56 +00:00
Kyle Miller
46f42cc9ba doc: update norm_cast and push_cast documentation (#3908)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-22 05:28:25 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
7400a40116 doc: section/namespace/end (#3873)
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-22 05:23:00 +00:00
Kyle Miller
41d310ab39 fix: solveByElim would add symm hypotheses to local context and make impossible-to-elaborate terms (#3962)
Rather than adding symm hypotheses to the local context, it now adds
them to the list of hypotheses derived from the local context.

This is not ideal for performance reasons, but it at least closes #3922.

In the future, solveByElim could maintain its own cache of facts that it
updates whenever it does intro.
2024-04-22 04:13:22 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
6ad28ca446 feat: add inductive.autoPromoteIndices option (#3590)
This PR partly addresses #3458, by adding an option `autoPromoteIndices`
to turn off the promotion of fixed indices to parameters. The actual fix
for the issue is in a separate PR #3591.

Because nested inductive datatypes parameters cannot contain local
variables, it is often desirable for a fixed index to not be promoted,
as to allow free variables in that place. See example in `3458_1.lean`
2024-04-22 03:42:22 +00:00
Henrik Böving
263c93aac8 perf: ensure linearity in Parsec.many*Core (#3830) 2024-04-22 03:41:06 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e4daca8d6b chore: remove dead code at kernel compare (#3966) 2024-04-22 00:54:24 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3dd398a8a4 perf: improve isDefEq for contraints of the form t.i =?= s.i (#3965)
We now use lazy delta reduction at `t` and `s`.
See new test for motivation.
2024-04-22 00:41:34 +00:00
Kim Morrison
ac0f699775 perf: improve heuristic at isDefEq (#3837)
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>
2024-04-21 23:27:44 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
69202d9b73 fix: ReducibilityHints.lt (#3964) 2024-04-21 21:44:18 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
62cdb51ed5 feat: UTF-8 string validation (#3958)
Previously, there was a function `opaque fromUTF8Unchecked : ByteArray
-> String` which would convert a list of bytes into a string, but as the
name implies it does not validate that the string is UTF-8 before doing
so and as a result it produces unsound results in the compiler (because
the lean model of `String` indirectly asserts UTF-8 validity). This PR
replaces that function by
```lean
opaque validateUTF8 (a : @& ByteArray) : Bool

opaque fromUTF8 (a : @& ByteArray) (h : validateUTF8 a) : String
```
so that while the function is still "unchecked", we have a proof witness
that the string is valid. To recover the original, actually unchecked
version, use `lcProof` or other unsafe methods to produce the proof
witness.

Because this was the only `ByteArray -> String` conversion function, it
was used in several places in an unsound way (e.g. reading untrusted
input from IO and treating it as UTF-8). These have been replaced by
`fromUTF8?` or `fromUTF8!` as appropriate.
2024-04-20 18:36:37 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
5eb274d486 fix: don't use modulo for UInt upcasting (#3960)
This makes `(v : UInt8).toUInt16.toNat = (v : UInt8).toNat` a defeq,
which simplifies proofs.
2024-04-20 16:37:02 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
aeacb7b69e feat: String.Pos.isValid (#3959)
This adds a function that can be used to check whether a position is on
a UTF-8 byte boundary.
2024-04-20 14:57:35 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
291bb84c97 chore: update stage0 2024-04-19 14:31:23 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
3c36020d13 feat: @[builtin_doc] attribute (part 1) (#3953)
First part of #3918.
2024-04-19 12:21:10 +00:00
Kim Morrison
f23be4a964 feat: upstream false_or_by_contra tests (2nd attempt) (#3949) 2024-04-19 08:09:50 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c5ff671b8a chore: update Authors: line in BitVec files (#3948) 2024-04-19 08:07:25 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
9dcf07203e chore: update stage0 2024-04-19 08:22:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d6474135ba feat: upstream false_or_by_contra tests (#3947)
And fix broken `builtin_tactic` attribute.
2024-04-19 05:30:51 +00:00
Kim Morrison
d1a42aae2a chore: remove @ from rw? suggestions, and enable hover on constants in #check (#3911)
* Replaces the unused `Lean.PrettyPrinter.ppConst` with
`MessageData.ofConst` (which similarly avoids an unnecessary `@`) and
that further generates a hover for the constant

* Uses this in `TryThis.addRewriteSuggestion`, so that `rw?` suggestions
don't have unnecessary `@`s.

* Add `MessageData.signature`, as a wrapper around
`PrettyPrinter.signature`, using the same machinery to generate hovers
for constants, improving the hover behaviour in #check so that we get
second order pop-up for constants in the signature. (Not sure how to
write tests for second order hovers, so there is no test for this.)
2024-04-19 01:27:02 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
b6d77be6a5 feat: show diffs when #guard_msgs fails (#3912)
Adds the ability to show a diff when `guard_msgs` fails, using the
histogram diff algorithm pioneered in jgit. This algorithm tends to
produce more user-friendly diffs, but it can be quadratic in the worst
case. Empirically, the quadratic case of this implementation doesn't
seem to be slow enough to matter for messages smaller than hundreds of
megabytes, but if it's ever a problem, we can mitigate it the same way
jgit does by falling back to Myers diff.

See lean/run/guard_msgs.lean in the tests directory for some examples of
its output.
2024-04-18 15:09:44 +00:00
Mac Malone
0c9f9ab37a feat: isTty (#3930)
Adds `IO.FS.Handle.isTty` to check whether a handle is a Windows console
or Unix terminal. Also adds an `isTty` field to `IO.FS.Stream`, so that
this can be checked on, e.g., `stdout`.
2024-04-18 08:50:43 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
df1e6ba7fe fix: built-in parser attributes link to the wrong place (#3916)
Go-to-def on `@[builtin_term_parser]` should go to the line
```lean
builtin_initialize registerBuiltinParserAttribute `builtin_term_parser ``Category.term
```
not
```lean
/-- `term` is the builtin syntax category for terms. ... -/
def term : Category := {}
```
2024-04-18 08:28:16 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
faa4d16dc1 fix: semantic tokens performance (#3932)
While implementing #3925, I noticed that the performance of the
`textDocument/semanticTokens/full` request is *extremely* bad due to a
quadratic implementation. Specifically, on my machine, computing the
full semantic tokens for `Lean/Elab/Do.lean` took a full 5s. In
practice, this means that while elaborating the file, one core is
entirely busy with computing the semantic tokens for the file.

This PR fixes this performance bug by re-implementing the semantic token
handling, reducing the latency for `Lean/Elab/Do.lean` from 5s to 60ms.
As a result, the overly cautious refresh latency of 5s in #3925 can
easily be reduced to 2s again.

Since the previous semantic tokens implementation used a very brittle
hack to identify projections, this PR also changes the projection
notation elaboration to augment the `InfoTree` syntax for the field of a
projection with a special syntax node of kind
`Lean.Parser.Term.identProjKind`. With this syntax kind, projection
fields can now easily be identified in the `InfoTree`.
2024-04-18 07:48:44 +00:00
Henrik Böving
11ff00439e feat: make linter options more explicitly discoverable (#3938)
Closes #3937
2024-04-18 07:20:55 +00:00
Kyle Miller
319940da77 feat: make anonymous instance names not include proofs (#3934) 2024-04-17 19:41:34 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
11a9d2ee4b chore: update stage0 2024-04-17 19:26:22 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
504336822f perf: faster Nat.repr implementation in C (#3876)
`Nat.repr` was implemented by generating a list of `Chars`, each created
by a 10-way if-then-else. This can cause significant slow down in some
particular use cases.

Now `Nat.repr` is `implemented_by` a faster implementation that uses
C++’s `std::to_string` on small numbers (< USize.size) and maintains an
array of pre-allocated strings for the first 128 numbers.

The handling of big numbers (≥ USize.size) remains as before.
2024-04-17 18:11:05 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4f50544242 chore: Nat.repr microbenchmark (#3888) 2024-04-17 18:10:32 +00:00
Kyle Miller
627a0f308b fix: add unused variables ignore function for #guard_msgs (#3931)
The `#guard_msgs` command already runs linters by virtue of using
`elabCommandTopLevel`, so linters should *not* be run on `#guard_msgs`
itself. While we could use a more general solution, of the linters the
unused variables linter is the noisiest one, and it's easy enough to
make it not report messages for `#guard_msgs`.
2024-04-17 15:30:17 +00:00
Kyle Miller
89558a007b doc: docstrings on binder types, make sure hovers work (#3917)
Moved `ppGroup` inside the `leading_parser`s for all the binder types so
that hovering works. Improved the docstrings.
2024-04-17 14:21:34 +00:00
Kyle Miller
036b5381f0 fix: make tests be aware of new instance names (#3936)
#3089 caused the stage0 update to cause a number of tests to start
failing because they were using the old instance names.
2024-04-17 16:14:51 +02:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
88ee503f02 chore: update stage0 2024-04-17 09:21:10 +00:00
Markus Himmel
2397a870f2 feat: add lemma Int.add_bmod (#3890)
Just a lemma that we noticed is missing when working on #3880 at the
retreat. We also noticed that there are naming inconsistencies in the
lemmas for `bmod` and `emod`, we should fix that in the future.
2024-04-17 06:13:22 +00:00
Markus Himmel
d3e004932c chore: move docstrings for open, variable, universe, export from elaborator to parser (#3891)
During the documentation sprint we discussed that user-visible
documentation for syntax should generally go on the parser instead of
the elaborator.
2024-04-17 06:13:11 +00:00
Kim Morrison
cefba8abd2 chore: rename Option.toMonad and remove argument (#3865) 2024-04-17 04:58:54 +00:00
Kim Morrison
c6fbeaa721 doc: add doc-string for LawfulMonad/Applicative (#3859)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-17 04:54:36 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
85e7000666 doc: update release checklist based on experience with 4.7.0 (#3833)
@semorrison, does this include all the answers to the questions I asked
in our thread? I think so!

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-04-17 04:33:45 +00:00
Kyle Miller
75e68e7565 doc: fix docstring for Lean.Meta.mkEqOfHEq (#3921) 2024-04-16 16:33:12 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
c51e4f57bd fix: do not send as many semantic token refresh requests (#3925)
Fixes #3879.

Making semantic token requests fast is still in progress.
2024-04-16 16:32:57 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
ac4b5089a3 chore: bring back tactic cache while incrementality is in-development (#3924) 2024-04-16 15:42:30 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
784972462a feat: omega: more helpful error messages (#3847)
while trying to help a user who was facing an unhelpful
```
omega did not find a contradiction:
[0, 0, 0, 0, 1, -1] ∈ [1, ∞)
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1] ∈ [0, ∞)
[0, 0, 0, 0, 1] ∈ [0, ∞)
[1, -1] ∈ [1, ∞)
[0, 0, 0, 1] ∈ [0, ∞)
[0, 1] ∈ [0, ∞)
[1] ∈ [0, ∞)
[0, 0, 0, 1, 1] ∈ [-1, ∞)
```
I couldn’t resist and wrote a pretty-printer for these problem that
shows the linear combination as such, and includes the recognized atoms.
This is especially useful since oftem `omega` failures stem from failure
to recognize atoms as equal. In this case, we now get:

```
omega-failure.lean:19:2-19:7: error: omega could not prove the goal:
a possible counterexample may satisfy the constraints
  d - e ≥ 1
  e ≥ 0
  d ≥ 0
  a - b ≥ 1
  c ≥ 0
  b ≥ 0
  a ≥ 0
  c + d ≥ -1
where
 a := ↑(sizeOf xs)
 b := ↑(sizeOf x)
 c := ↑(sizeOf x.fst)
 d := ↑(sizeOf x.snd)
 e := ↑(sizeOf xs)
```
and this might help the user make progress (e.g. by using `case x`
first, and investingating why `sizeOf xs` shows up twice)
2024-04-16 15:11:51 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
535427ada4 feat: basic incrementality API (#3849)
The fundamentals of #3636
2024-04-16 12:26:28 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
c0fbcc76c4 feat: FunInd: reserve name .mutual_induct (#3898) 2024-04-16 11:59:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
ea910794fa doc: crosslink {realize,resolve}GlobalName[NoOverload]?[WithInfo]?, (#3897)
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-04-16 11:59:22 +00:00
Kim Morrison
a8df7d9d5c fix: find nightly-with-mathlib SHA (#3923) 2024-04-16 11:18:51 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
23aacdeac0 doc: instantiateMVars (#3862)
(unclear if the example is worth the hover space here)
2024-04-15 14:02:40 +00:00
Kim Morrison
62bb0f662b doc: add docstring to add_decl_doc (#3863)
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-04-15 12:51:38 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
822890ad27 doc: docstrings for Alternative (#3860)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-04-15 12:40:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
3b0c101792 doc: docstrings for List.head/tail/getLast variants (#3864)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-04-15 12:40:38 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
2dcd42f395 feat: trace.profiler export to Firefox Profiler (#3801)
Reusing the best profiling UI out there

Usage:
```
lean -Dtrace.profiler=true -Dtrace.profiler.output=profile.json foo.lean ...
```
then open `profile.json` in https://profiler.firefox.com/.

See also `script/collideProfiles.lean` for minimizing and merging
profiles.
2024-04-15 12:13:14 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6712913bfe chore: update cross-bench setup 2024-04-15 10:59:07 +02:00
Kyle Miller
1c20b53419 feat: shorten auto-generated instance names (#3089)
Implements a new method to generate instance names for anonymous
instances that uses a heuristic that tends to produce shorter names. A
design goal is to make them relatively unique within projects and
definitely unique across projects, while also using accessible names so
that they can be referred to as needed, both in Lean code and in
discussions.

The new method also takes into account binders provided to the instance,
and it adds project-based suffixes. Despite this, a median new name is
73% its original auto-generated length. (Compare: [old generated
names](https://gist.github.com/kmill/b72bb43f5b01dafef41eb1d2e57a8237)
and [new generated
names](https://gist.github.com/kmill/393acc82e7a8d67fc7387829f4ed547e).)

Some notes:
* The naming is sensitive to what is explicitly provided as a binder vs
what is provided via a `variable`. It does not make use of `variable`s
since, when names are generated, it is not yet known which variables are
used in the body of the instance.
* If the instance name refers to declarations in the current "project"
(given by the root module), then it does not add a suffix. Otherwise, it
adds the project name as a suffix to protect against cross-project
collisions.
* `set_option trace.Elab.instance.mkInstanceName true` can be used to
see what name the auto-generator would give, even if the instance
already has an explicit name.

There were a number of instances that were referred to explicitly in
meta code, and these have been given explicit names.

Removes the unused `Lean.Elab.mkFreshInstanceName` along with the
Command state's `nextInstIdx`.

Fixes #2343
2024-04-13 18:08:50 +00:00
Kyle Miller
40df539ef1 doc: update RELEASES for rcases using the custom Nat eliminator (#3902)
Note for #3747.
2024-04-13 17:56:06 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c4bfe25d18 feat: make rcases use the custom Nat eliminator (#3747)
As a special case, makes the `rcases` machinery use `Nat.casesAuxOn` so
that goal states see `0` and `n + 1` rather than `Nat.zero` and
`Nat.succ n`. This is a followup to enabling custom eliminators for
`cases` and `induction`.

This doesn't use custom eliminators in general since `rcases` uses
`Lean.MVarId.cases`, which is completely different from what `cases` and
`induction` use.
2024-04-13 16:55:48 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3d24c68347 doc: rephrase a couple RELEASES entries (#3900) 2024-04-13 16:54:57 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
b0a305f19f chore: update stage0 2024-04-13 09:49:19 +00:00
Kyle Miller
eef928b98d feat: whitespace and message ordering configurations for #guard_msgs (#3883)
Adds options to control whitespace normalization and message ordering in
`#guard_msgs`.

Examples:
1. `#guard_msgs (whitespace := lax)` ignores differences in whitespace
completely.
2. `#guard_msgs (whitespace := exact)` requires an exact match for
whitespace (after trimming).
3. `#guard_msgs (ordering := sorted)` sorts the list of messages, to
make it insensitive to message order.
2024-04-13 08:53:43 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
9eeecb6d32 doc: docstrings for List.mapM and friends (#3867)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-04-13 07:57:55 +00:00
Kim Morrison
62747bd293 doc: add docstring for Nat.gcd (#3857) 2024-04-13 07:56:15 +00:00
Kim Morrison
32b9bc47b7 chore: add doc-string for Prod.mk (#3856) 2024-04-13 07:55:20 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
864221d433 chore: rename fields of Subarray to follow Lean conventions (#3851)
Co-authored-by: Eric Wieser <wieser.eric@gmail.com>
2024-04-13 07:52:45 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
2e1ef2211c doc: docstrings for some Fin definitions (#3858)
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-13 07:52:32 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
fb82428f2d feat: hover / go-to-def for attribute cmd (#3896)
`attribute [attr] foo` was missing a hover on `foo`.
2024-04-13 07:13:25 +00:00
Kyle Miller
c24b419ee4 doc: fix simp configuration option default value for decide (#3894) 2024-04-12 22:02:08 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
ddbdfb954b chore: use Ordering.then in deriving Ord (#3893)
This should improve the performance of the deriving a bit since it
doesn't have to generate so many matchers. The main motivation though is
to make it easier to prove properties about the expression by using more
standard functions. The generated implementation should end up the same,
since `Ordering.then` is `@[macro_inline]`.
2024-04-12 21:09:27 +00:00
Kyle Miller
e59fad2955 doc: describe all simp configuration options (#3870)
Co-authored by Marc Huisinga, with input from Leo.
2024-04-12 16:38:43 +00:00
Henrik Böving
ecba8529cc doc: Leo-Henrik retreat doc (#3869)
Part of the retreat Hackathon.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-12 09:14:31 +00:00
Henrik Böving
723c340a8b perf: fix linearity in (HashSet|HashMap).erase (#3887)
Fixes linearity issues in HashSet/HashMap erase functions.

IR before patch:
```
def Lean.HashMapImp.erase._rarg (x_1 : obj) (x_2 : obj) (x_3 : obj) (x_4 : obj) : obj :=
  let x_5 : obj := proj[0] x_3;
  inc x_5;
  let x_6 : obj := proj[1] x_3;
  inc x_6;
  let x_7 : obj := Array.size  x_6;
  inc x_4;
  let x_8 : obj := app x_2 x_4;
  let x_9 : u64 := unbox x_8;
  dec x_8;
  let x_10 : usize := _private.Lean.Data.HashMap.0.Lean.HashMapImp.mkIdx x_7 x_9 ;
  let x_11 : obj := Array.uget  x_6 x_10 ;
  inc x_11;
  inc x_4;
  inc x_1;
  let x_12 : u8 := Lean.AssocList.contains._rarg x_1 x_4 x_11;
  case x_12 : u8 of
  Bool.false →
    dec x_11;
    dec x_6;
    dec x_5;
    dec x_4;
    dec x_1;
    ret x_3
  Bool.true →
    let x_13 : u8 := isShared x_3;
    case x_13 : u8 of
    Bool.false →
      let x_14 : obj := proj[1] x_3;
      dec x_14;
      let x_15 : obj := proj[0] x_3;
      dec x_15;
      let x_16 : obj := 1;
      let x_17 : obj := Nat.sub x_5 x_16;
      dec x_5;
      let x_18 : obj := Lean.AssocList.erase._rarg x_1 x_4 x_11;
      let x_19 : obj := Array.uset  x_6 x_10 x_18 ;
      set x_3[1] := x_19;
      set x_3[0] := x_17;
      ret x_3
    Bool.true →
      dec x_3;
      let x_20 : obj := 1;
      let x_21 : obj := Nat.sub x_5 x_20;
      dec x_5;
      let x_22 : obj := Lean.AssocList.erase._rarg x_1 x_4 x_11;
      let x_23 : obj := Array.uset  x_6 x_10 x_22 ;
      let x_24 : obj := ctor_0[Lean.HashMapImp.mk] x_21 x_23;
      ret x_24
```

IR after the patch:
```
def Lean.HashMapImp.erase._rarg (x_1 : obj) (x_2 : obj) (x_3 : obj) (x_4 : obj) : obj :=
  let x_5 : u8 := isShared x_3;
  case x_5 : u8 of
  Bool.false →
    let x_6 : obj := proj[0] x_3;
    let x_7 : obj := proj[1] x_3;
    let x_8 : obj := Array.size  x_7;
    inc x_4;
    let x_9 : obj := app x_2 x_4;
    let x_10 : u64 := unbox x_9;
    dec x_9;
    let x_11 : usize := _private.Lean.Data.HashMap.0.Lean.HashMapImp.mkIdx x_8 x_10 ;
    let x_12 : obj := Array.uget  x_7 x_11 ;
    inc x_12;
    inc x_4;
    inc x_1;
    let x_13 : u8 := Lean.AssocList.contains._rarg x_1 x_4 x_12;
    case x_13 : u8 of
    Bool.false →
      dec x_12;
      dec x_4;
      dec x_1;
      ret x_3
    Bool.true →
      let x_14 : obj := 1;
      let x_15 : obj := Nat.sub x_6 x_14;
      dec x_6;
      let x_16 : obj := Lean.AssocList.erase._rarg x_1 x_4 x_12;
      let x_17 : obj := Array.uset  x_7 x_11 x_16 ;
      set x_3[1] := x_17;
      set x_3[0] := x_15;
      ret x_3
  Bool.true →
    let x_18 : obj := proj[0] x_3;
    let x_19 : obj := proj[1] x_3;
    inc x_19;
    inc x_18;
    dec x_3;
    let x_20 : obj := Array.size  x_19;
    inc x_4;
    let x_21 : obj := app x_2 x_4;
    let x_22 : u64 := unbox x_21;
    dec x_21;
    let x_23 : usize := _private.Lean.Data.HashMap.0.Lean.HashMapImp.mkIdx x_20 x_22 ;
    let x_24 : obj := Array.uget  x_19 x_23 ;
    inc x_24;
    inc x_4;
    inc x_1;
    let x_25 : u8 := Lean.AssocList.contains._rarg x_1 x_4 x_24;
    case x_25 : u8 of
    Bool.false →
      dec x_24;
      dec x_4;
      dec x_1;
      let x_26 : obj := ctor_0[Lean.HashMapImp.mk] x_18 x_19;
      ret x_26
    Bool.true →
      let x_27 : obj := 1;
      let x_28 : obj := Nat.sub x_18 x_27;
      dec x_18;
      let x_29 : obj := Lean.AssocList.erase._rarg x_1 x_4 x_24;
      let x_30 : obj := Array.uset  x_19 x_23 x_29 ;
      let x_31 : obj := ctor_0[Lean.HashMapImp.mk] x_28 x_30;
      ret x_31
```

Previously `x_6` (the buckets array) always gets `inc`remented, now only
if the HashMap itself is shared.
2024-04-12 08:54:21 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
2e3d523332 chore: protect Std.BitVec (#3884)
This makes `Std.BitVec` a protected abbreviation so `open Std` doesn't
result in ambiguity errors.
2024-04-12 05:09:46 +00:00
Scott Morrison
cd02ad76f1 doc: doc-string for Ord and Ord.compare (#3861)
Hopefully one day we will be able to do a thorough refactor of the
computable order types in Lean... In the meantime, some doc-strings.
2024-04-11 16:02:33 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
2ba0a4549b feat: add BitVec Int add & mul lemmas (#3880)
This adds some basic lemmas to support commuting ofInt/toInt and
add/mul.

It also removes the simp annotation on `ofNat_add_ofNat` as in some
contexts the other direction or conversion to Int may be desired.
2024-04-11 15:26:45 +00:00
Henrik Böving
3ed2d9b3ad perf: fix linearity issue in insertIfNew (#3881)
This fixes a linearity isssue in `insertIfNew`. As `insertIfNew` is used
in `Lean.finalizeImport` we expect this to improve performance.
2024-04-11 15:12:10 +00:00
Scott Morrison
36f1398aaa doc: some doc-strings for Option (#3868) 2024-04-11 14:27:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
37938ecde1 doc: moduleDoc (#3874) 2024-04-11 14:21:03 +00:00
Scott Morrison
68e3982eed chore: update CODEOWNERS (#3878)
This adds @digama0 to the CODEOWNERS files for the tactics files which
have recently been upstreamed from Std.
2024-04-11 04:21:42 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
36db040722 refactor: Canonicalizer: run getFunInfo on expression, not key (#3875)
The Canonicalizer creates a “key” expression eliding certain information
(implicit parameters, levels), and `getFunInfo` can be
confused by these terms (in particular, wrong number of level
parameters).

By running `getFunInfo` on the original expression we avoid this, and
can just put `[]` as the level list in the key.
2024-04-10 20:41:15 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
280525f1fc fix: omega: ignore levels in canonicalizer (#3853)
fixes #3848
2024-04-10 08:46:07 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
892bfe2c5f fix: remove unused trace.Elab.syntax option (#3844) 2024-04-08 17:16:24 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
a82f0d9413 fix: offset typeclass checking in simp rules (#3838)
This changes how Nat typeclass checks in offset terms from syntactic
equality to definitional equality with "instances" transparency.

This may have a negative performance penalty in `isOffset?`, but it
should be small in common cases since the relevant instances are small
terms.

This closes #3836
2024-04-07 13:43:59 +00:00
thorimur
182270f8bf fix: typo in withSetOptionIn (#3806)
When using `withSetOptionIn` on syntax `set_option ... in <command>`,
recurse into command syntax (`stx[2]`) instead of the syntax `in`
(`stx[1]`).

---

Demonstration of `stx[1]` vs. `stx[2]`:
```lean
import Lean

def stx := (Lean.Unhygienic.run `(set_option trace.debug true in #print foo)).raw

#eval stx[1] -- Lean.Syntax.atom (Lean.SourceInfo.none) "in"
#eval stx[2] -- `#print` command syntax
```
2024-04-06 18:00:34 +00:00
Scott Morrison
0aa68312b6 chore: when setting up Mathlib CI, make sure nightly-with-mathlib branch has been fetched (#3834)
As reported on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/PR.20release.20failure/near/431281042).
2024-04-05 00:40:50 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
f31c395973 fix: replace unary Nat.succ simp rules with simprocs (#3808)
This removes simp attributes from `Nat.succ.injEq` and
`Nat.succ_sub_succ_eq_sub` to replace them with simprocs. This is
because any reductions involving `Nat.succ` has a high risk of leading
proof performance problems when dealing with even moderately large
numbers.

Here are a couple examples that will both report a maximum recursion
depth error currently. These examples are fixed by this PR.

```
example : (123456: Nat) = 12345667 := by
  simp

example (x : Nat) (p : x = 0) : 1000 - (x + 1000) = 0 := by
  simp
```
2024-04-04 23:15:26 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
485baa1b8c chore: update-stage0-commit cmake target (#3692)
Automate creating the commit
2024-04-04 13:35:53 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
e41cd310e9 fix: String.splitOn bug (#3832)
Fixes #3829. As reported on Zulip (both
[recently](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/current.20definition.20of.20.60String.2EsplitOn.60.20is.20incorrect/near/430930535)
and [a year
ago](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/should.20we.20redefine.20.60String.2EsplitOnAux.60.3F/near/365899332)),
`String.splitOn` has a bug when dealing with separators of more than one
character (which are luckily rare). The code change here is very small,
replacing a `i` with `i - j`, but it makes termination more complex so
that's where the rest of the line count goes.
2024-04-04 09:30:53 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d988849ce3 doc: profiler 2024-04-03 17:53:36 +02:00
Scott Morrison
f3121b0427 fix: omega works as a simp discharger (#3828)
Possibly the more principled fix is to not have `simp` invoke
dischargers under `withReducible`.

In the meantime, this ensures that `falseOrByContra` still succeeds with
`intro1` on a `Not` goal, which previously was breaking `omega` as a
simp discharger.

Closes #3805.
2024-04-03 03:00:00 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
ecf0459122 fix: don't use info nodes before cursor for completion (#3778)
This fixes an issue where the completion would use info nodes before the
cursor for computing completions.

Fixes https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues/3462.

ToDo:
- [x] Fix test failures for completions that previously worked by
accident (cc: @Kha)
- [x] stage0 update

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-04-02 08:49:24 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
eacb1790b3 feat: weight lazy discriminator tree results early matches (#3818)
The matches returned by the lazy discriminator tree are partially
constrained by a priority, but ties are broken by the order in which
keys are traversed and the order of declarations.

This PR changes the match key traversal to use an explicit stack rather
than recursion and implicitly changes the order in which results are
returned to favor left-matches first e.g., given the term `f a b` with
constants `f a b`, and a tree with patterns `f a x -> 1` `f x b -> 2`
that have the same priority, this will return `#[1, 2]` since the early
matches for the key `a` are returned before the match for `x` which has
a star.

This appears to address the [lower quality results mentioned on
zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/428973-nightly-testing/topic/Mathlib.20status.20updates/near/429955747).
2024-04-02 07:19:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c0027d3987 fix: simp only should break Char literals (#3824)
closes #3686
2024-04-02 03:11:40 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
82ae779218 fix: missing test at addDocString (#3823)
closes #3497
2024-04-02 02:29:14 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2dab6939e4 fix: missing withTacticInfoContext (#3822)
closes #3720
2024-04-02 02:15:38 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f35fc18c88 fix: simp usedSimps (#3821)
When `discharge?` failed, the `usedSimps` was being restored, but the
cache wasn't. This bug was exposed by issue #3710.

This PR makes the following changes:
- We restore the `cache` at `discharge?`. We use `SMap` to ensure the
operation is efficient.
- We don't need the field `dischargeDepth` anymore at `Simp.Result`.
- `UsedSimps` should use `PHashMap` since it is not used linearly.

closes #3710

---------

Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-04-02 00:50:06 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0684c95d35 fix: do not lift (<- ...) over pure if-then-else (#3820)
Now, only `(<- ...)`s occurring in the condition of a pure if-then-else
are lifted.
That is, `if (<- foo) then ... else ...` is ok, but `if ... then (<-
foo) else ...` is not. See #3713

closes #3713 

This PR also adjusts this repo. Note that some of the `(<- ...)` were
harmless since they were just accessing some
read-only state.
2024-04-01 21:33:59 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a440e63435 fix: loose bound variables at ACLt (#3819)
Closes #3705 

This PR also fixes a performance issue at `ACLt` also exposed by example
at #3705
2024-04-01 20:26:20 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4a317ae3f8 fix: .yesWithDeltaI behavior (#3816)
It should not increase the transparency level from `reducible` to
`instances`. See new test.
2024-04-01 02:36:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0ba21269e8 fix: matcher splitter is code (#3815)
It have to keep it as a private definition for now. We currently only
support duplicate theorems in different modules. Splitters are generated
on demand, and are also used to write code.
2024-04-01 02:14:14 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
e1cadcbfca chore: bump language server version (#3813)
This will allow us to add backwards compatibility in vscode-lean4 for
some recent changes more easily.
2024-03-31 12:47:45 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d8d64f1fc0 perf: isDefEq performance issue (#3807)
Fixes a performance problem found by @hargoniX while working on LeanSAT.
2024-03-30 02:15:48 +00:00
Mac Malone
fdd9d6f306 feat: lake lean (#3793)
Adds a `lake lean` CLI command that builds the imports of a Lean file
and then elaborates it via `lean` with the workspace's configuration
(i.e., adding the `moreLeanArgs` / `leanOptions` of the root `package`
and Lake's environment).
2024-03-29 22:54:31 +00:00
Kyle Miller
9cb114eb83 feat: add pp.mvars and pp.mvars.withType (#3798)
* Setting `pp.mvars` to false causes metavariables to pretty print as
`?_`.
* Setting `pp.mvars.withType` to true causes metavariables to pretty
print with type ascriptions.

Motivation: when making tests, it is inconvenient using `#guard_msgs`
when there are metavariables, since the unique numbering is subject to
change.

This feature does not use `⋯` omissions since a metavariable is already
in a sense an omitted term. If repeated metavariables do not appear in
an expression, there is a chance that a term pretty printed with
`pp.mvars` set to false can still elaborate to the correct term, unlike
for other omissions.

(In the future we could consider an option that pretty prints uniquely
numbered metavariables as `?m✝`, `?m✝¹`, `?m✝²`, etc. to be able to tell
them apart, at least in the same pretty printed expression. It would
take care to make sure that these names are stable across different
hovers.)

Closes #3781
2024-03-29 18:03:05 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b181fd83ef feat: in conv tactic, use try with_reducibe rfl (#3763)
The `conv` tactic tries to close “trivial” goals after itself. As of
now, it uses
`try rfl`, which means it can close goals that are only trivial after
reducing with
default transparency. This is suboptimal

* this can require a fair amount of unfolding, and possibly slow down
the proof
   a lot. And the user cannot even prevent it.
* it does not match what `rw` does, and a user might expect the two to
behave the
   same.

So this PR changes it to `with_reducible rfl`, matching `rw`’s behavior.

I considered `with_reducible eq_refl` to only solve trivial goals that
involve equality,
but not other relations (e.g. `Perm xs xs`), but a discussion on mathlib
pointed out
that it’s expected and desirable to solve more general reflexive goals:


https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Closing.20after.20.60rw.60.2C.20.60conv.60.3A.20.60eq_refl.60.20instead.20of.20.60rfl.60/near/429851605
2024-03-29 11:59:45 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
97e3257ffd chore: un-qualify .induct lemmas in tests (#3804)
now that #3803 is fixed.
2024-03-29 11:34:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
44ad3e2e34 feat: hovering over binders shows their types (#3797)
Modifies `withBindingBodyUnusedName` to annotate the syntax for the
variable with its corresponding fvar. Now, for example, you can hover
over the variables in `fun x y => ...` in the infoview to see their
types. This change affects notations such as `∃ n, n = 1`, where
hovering over `n` shows that `n : Nat`.

Also adds such annotations for the variables in `let` and `let_fun`.

Implementation note: the variables are annotated with fresh positions
using `nextExtraPos`.

Removes the unused and unnecessary
`Lean.PrettyPrinter.Delaborator.liftMetaM`.

Closes #1618, closes #2737
2024-03-29 03:52:00 +00:00
Mac Malone
ca1cbaa6e9 feat: lake test (#3779)
Adds a `lake test` CLI command that runs a `script` or `lean_exe` tagged
`@[test_runner]` in the workspace's root package.
2024-03-29 03:19:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
7a93a7b877 fix: reserved name resolution (#3803)
This PR includes the following fixes:

- Reserved name resolution inside namespaces
- Equation theorems for `match`er declarations are not private anymore
- Equation theorems for `match`er declarations are realizable
- `foo.match_<idx>.splitter` is now a reserved name
2024-03-29 02:56:48 +00:00
Mac Malone
e54a0d7b89 fix: lake: check normalized packages directory path before rename (#3795)
Normalize the relative packages directory paths in the pre-rename check
to avoid renames if the difference in paths is only in the path
separators. Also adds a log message on rename.
2024-03-29 01:15:59 +00:00
Kyle Miller
b15b971416 fix: require idents come in a column after the start of a command (#3799)
Commands that can optionally parse an `ident` or parse any number of
`ident`s generally should require that the `ident` use `colGt`. This
keeps typos in commands from being interpreted as identifiers.

For example, without this rule,
```
universe u
Open Lean
````
parses the same as `universe u Open Lean`. It would be better to get an
error on `Open`.

This PR adds `checkColGt` to `section`, `namespace`, `end`, `variable`,
and `universe`.

Closes #2684
2024-03-29 01:14:20 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9bdb37a9b0 chore: update stage0
Reason: new builtin environment extension
2024-03-28 17:58:33 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
dee074dcde fix: simp regression introduced by equation theorems for non-recursive definitions 2024-03-28 17:58:33 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
fe783cb778 feat: save whether a function has been defined by structural or well-founded recursion 2024-03-28 17:58:33 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
d1c0149e17 chore: fix simproc doc-string (#3800) 2024-03-28 17:54:52 +00:00
James Sully
8af34df2d2 doc: typo in rcases docs (#3796)
"alteration pattern" -> "alternation pattern"
2024-03-28 07:31:01 +00:00
Mac Malone
55b7b07c54 feat: lake: alternative TOML config (#3298)
Adds an alternative TOML configuration format to Lake. 

* Uses TOML v1.0.0 and is fully specification compliant (tested via
[toml-test v1.4.0](https://github.com/toml-lang/toml-test/tree/v1.4.0)).
* Supports package configuration options, Lean libraries, Lean
executables, and dependencies.
* TOML configurations can be generated for new projects via `lake
new|init <pkg> <template>.toml`.
* Supported configurations can be converted to/from TOML via `lake
translate-config <lang>`.
2024-03-28 02:35:02 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
0963f3476c chore: extend GetElem with getElem! and getElem? (#3694)
This makes changes to the `GetElem` class so that it does not lead to
unnecessary overhead in container like `RBMap`.

The changes are to:
1. Make `getElem?` and `getElem!` part of the `GetElem` class so they
can be overridden in instances.
2. Introduce a `LawfulGetElem` class that contains correctness theorems
for `getElem?` and `getElem!` using the original definitions.
3. Reorganize definitions (e.g, by moving `GetElem` out of
`Init.Prelude`) so that the `GetElem` changes are feasible.
4. Provide `LawfulGetElem` instances to complement all existing
`GetElem` instances in Lean core.

To reduce the size of the PR, this doesn't do the work of providing new
`GetElem` instances for `RBMap`, `HashMap` etc. That will be done in a
separate PR (#3688) that depends on this.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-03-28 01:42:00 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
7989f62f70 fix: remove unused try catch (#3794)
This fixes some placeholder code inadvertently contributed.
2024-03-28 01:39:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
4bacd70b3f feat: add option tactic.customEliminators to be able to turn off custom eliminators for induction and cases (#3655)
This was suggested by Scott Morrison to be able to help projects adjust
to `Nat` having built-in custom eliminators.
2024-03-28 01:14:17 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
775dabd4ce fix: toUInt64LE! and toUInt64BE! are swapped (#3660)
fixes #3657

These functions are mostly not used by lean itself, but it does affect
two occurrences of `ByteArray.toUInt64LE! <$> IO.getRandomBytes 8` which
I left as is instead of switching them to use `toUInt64BE!` to preserve
behavior; but they are random bytes anyway seeded by the OS so it's
unlikely any use of them depending on particular values was sound to
begin with.

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-03-28 01:13:42 +00:00
Kyle Miller
5167324cb8 doc: edit Lean.MVarId.withReverted (#3743)
When it was upstreamed, it lost the mention of "revert/intro pattern",
which is helpful for finding this function. Also extended the
description of the function and clarified some points.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-03-28 01:12:23 +00:00
Kyle Miller
520cd3f0d6 fix: make generalized field notation for abbreviation types handle optional parameters (#3746)
Closes #3745
2024-03-28 00:59:09 +00:00
Scott Morrison
5b7ec4434e chore: fix rebase suggestion for Mathlib CI (#3701)
Previously we were suggesting rebasing onto the most recently nightly in
the branches history, but that is incorrect and we should *always*
suggest rebasing on `origin/nightly-with-mathlib`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-03-27 23:46:06 +00:00
Kyle Miller
70924be89c feat: hovering over omission term shows reason for omission (#3751)
This avoids printing the entire docstring for `⋯` when hovering over it,
which is rather long, and instead it gives a brief reason for omission
and what option to set to pretty print the omitted term.
2024-03-27 15:10:20 +00:00
Scott Morrison
02c5700c63 feat: change apply_rfl tactic so that it does not operate on = (#3784)
Previously:

If the `rfl` macro was going to fail, it would:
1. expand to `eq_refl`, which is implemented by
`Lean.Elab.Tactic.evalRefl`, and call `Lean.MVarId.refl` which would:
* either try kernel defeq (if in `.default` or `.all` transparency mode)
  * otherwise try `IsDefEq`
  * then fail.
2. Next expand to the `apply_rfl` tactic, which is implemented by
`Lean.Elab.Tactic.Rfl.evalApplyRfl`, and call `Lean.MVarId.applyRefl`
which would look for lemmas labelled `@[refl]`, and unfortunately in
Mathlib find `Eq.refl`, so try applying that (resulting in another
`IsDefEq`)
3. Because of an accidental duplication, if `Lean.Elab.Tactic.Rfl` was
imported, it would *again* expand to `apply_rfl`.

Now:
1. Same behaviour in `eq_refl`.
2. The `@[refl]` attribute will reject `Eq.refl`, and `MVarId.applyRefl`
will fail when applied to equality goals.
3. The duplication has been removed.
2024-03-27 12:04:22 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3ee1cdf3de chore: CI: continue on test-summary failure 2024-03-27 14:03:10 +01:00
Scott Morrison
94d6286e5a chore: reorganising to reduce imports (#3790)
[Before](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/files/14772220/oi.pdf) and
[after](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/files/14772226/oi2.pdf).

This gets `ByteArray`, `String.Extra`, `ToString.Macro` and `RCases` out
of the imports of `omega`. I'd hoped to get `Array.Subarray` too, but
it's tangled up in the list literal syntax. Further progress could come
from make `split` use available `Decidable` instances, so we could pull
out `Classical` (and possibly some of `PropLemmas`).
2024-03-27 11:15:01 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
16fdca1cbd chore: test results as job summary (#3715)
Tired of scrolling through and parsing the test output myself
2024-03-27 10:14:33 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
c857d08be6 fix: remove derive_functional_induction (#3788)
this follows up on #3776 and the subsequent stage0 update, now relying
on the reserved name for the induction principles.
2024-03-27 10:08:13 +00:00
Scott Morrison
1a5d064d08 chore: upstream tail-recursive implementations of List operations, and @[csimp] lemmas (#3785) 2024-03-27 08:36:48 +00:00
Henrik Böving
2405fd605e feat: trace non-easy whnf invocations (#3774) 2024-03-27 08:35:22 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
63290babde chore: update stage0 2024-03-27 07:34:13 +00:00
Scott Morrison
b4caee80a3 chore: rw? uses MVarId.refl not MVarId.applyRfl (#3783)
I think this was in error in my original Mathlib implementation. We're
not interested in relations other than `=`, so there is no point uses
`MVarId.applyRfl`, which just looks up `@[refl]` tagged lemmas and tries
those.

In a separate PR, I will change `MVarId.applyRfl` so it has a flag to
control whether on `=` it should just hand-off to `MVarId.refl`, or
fail. Failure is appropriate in the version we call from the `rfl`
macro, to avoid doing a double `IsDefEq` check on every `rfl`!
2024-03-27 03:02:30 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
b17c47d852 fix: lemma selection improvements to to rw? and lazy discriminator tree (#3769)
This makes several changes to rw? and lazy discrimination trees based on
test failures in rewrite search.

Changes include:
1. Reverting to Mathlib function for candidate lemma priority in rw?
2. Introducing additional filters for auto-generated named in lazy
discriminator tree.
3. Refactoring lazy discriminator values to clarify what is stored.
4. Including star keys in calculation of match closeness in
prioritization.
5. Using more fields in current core context when initializing lazy
discriminator tree and avoiding max heartbeat issues.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-03-26 23:57:08 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
ab318dda2d feat: use reserved name infrastructure for functional induction (#3776)
no need to enter `derive_functional_induction` anymore.

(Will remove the support for `derive_functional_induction` after the
next stage0 update, since we are already using it in Init.)
2024-03-26 22:25:10 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
301dd7ba16 feat: failing macros to show error from first registered rule (#3771)
fixes #3770

Also start `rfl` with a `fail` message that is hopefully more helpful
than what we get now (see updated test output). This would be a cheaper
way to address #3302 without changing the implementation of rfl (as
tried in #3714).
2024-03-26 22:24:45 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
466ef74ccc feat: functional induction for structural recursion (#3738)
This extends `derive_functional_induction` to work with structural
recursion as well.

It produces the less general, more concrete induction rule where the
induction hypothesis is
specialized for every argument of the recursive call, not just the the
one that the function
is recursing on.

Care is taken so that the induction principle and it's motive take the
arguments in the same
order as the original function.

While I was it, also makes sure that the order of the cases in the
induction principle matches
the order of recursive calls in the function better.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-03-26 13:36:24 +00:00
Eric Wieser
e8a2786d6d fix: actually catch the error code from MoveFileEx (#3753)
A user on Zulip [reported seeing an error code of "no
error"](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/.60lake.20update.60.20broken.20on.20Windows.20.28.3F.29/near/429134334)
here.
2024-03-26 09:00:25 +00:00
Julien Michel
4c0106d757 refactor: simplify Array.findIdx? code (#3648)
This shortens `Array.findIdx?` code, by using termination_by (and
well-founded recursion) instead of a structural recursion trick, with
the intent to make it more proof friendly.

One motivation is that it makes it easier to write a proof that
`Array.findIdx?` and `List.findIdx?` are equivalent. Furthermore, this
will be useful to prove that more complex functions are equivalent.

Closes #3646
2024-03-26 05:11:59 +00:00
Austin Letson
83369f3d9f fix: update System.FilePath.parent to handle edge cases for absolute paths (#3645)
System.FilePath.parent did not return the correct parent path in the
case of absolute file paths

Example of previous behavior
```
(FilePath.mk "/foo").parent -> some (FilePath.mk "")

(System.FilePath.mk "/").parent -> some (FilePath.mk "")
```

The new behavior is based on rust's std::path::Path::parent function (as
previously described in comment in System.FilePath)

Example of updated behavior
```
(System.FilePath.mk "/foo").parent -> some (FilePath.mk "/")

(System.FilePath.mk "/").parent -> none
```

Behavior for relative file paths is unchanged

Closes #3618
2024-03-26 05:09:44 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
22b5c957e9 chore: rename automatically generated "unfold" theorems (#3767)
Given a definition `foo`, they were previously called `foo._unfold`
until 4.7.0. We tried to rename them to `foo.def`, but it created too
many issues in the Mathlib repo. We decided to rename it again to
`foo.eq_def`. The new name is also consistent with the `eq_<idx>`
theorems generated for different "cases". That is, `foo.eq_def` is the
equality theorem for the whole definition, and `foo.eq_<idx>` is the
equality theorem for case `<idx>`.

cc @semorrison
2024-03-25 21:41:26 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a0dac9f546 feat: ignore explicit proofs in canonicalizer (#3766) 2024-03-25 20:52:42 +00:00
Eric Wieser
d8047ddeb1 fix: change Quotient.sound to a theorem (#3765)
The result is a proof, so presumably this should not be a `def`.
2024-03-25 19:28:31 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
e0c6c5d226 fix: functional induction: preseve order of cases better (#3762)
by passing an explicit array of metavariable around, instead of relying
on `getMVarsNoDelayed`, which may return them in unexpected order.
2024-03-25 11:59:29 +00:00
Jon Eugster
3dd811f9ad chore: remove FileMap.lines and add FileMap.getLine (#3237)
`FileMap.lines` is an array that seems to be manually managed to have
the form `#[1, 2, ..., n-1, n-1]` with same length as
`FileMap.positions`. Remove this structure field in favour of
calculating the line number as `min(x+1, positions.size-1)` when needed.

Follow-up on #3221
2024-03-25 10:33:04 +00:00
Scott Morrison
1d245bcb82 chore: revert ToJson/FromJson Sum (#3759) (#3760)
Sorry, this was ill-considered, it doesn't round trip faithfully.
2024-03-25 09:09:44 +00:00
Scott Morrison
a943a79bd3 chore: ToJson/FromJson Sum (#3759) 2024-03-25 07:43:40 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
80d2455b64 fix: prune universe params in functional induction (#3754)
fixes #3752
2024-03-24 10:15:50 +00:00
Kyle Miller
655ec964f5 feat: flatten parent projections when pretty printing structure instance notation (#3749)
Given
```lean
structure A where
  x : Nat

structure B extends A where
  y : Nat
```
rather than pretty printing `{ x := 1, y := 2 : B }` as `{ toA := { x :=
1 }, y := 2 }`, it now pretty prints as `{ x := 1, y := 2 }`.

The option `pp.structureInstances.flatten` controls whether to flatten
structure instances like this.
2024-03-23 09:20:52 +00:00
Kyle Miller
925a6befd4 fix: do not pretty print theorems with generalized field notation (#3750)
For example, pretty print as `Nat.add_comm m n` rather than as
`m.add_comm n`.
2024-03-23 09:20:48 +00:00
Hongyu Ouyang
2ed777b2b4 doc: fix typo in docstring of left (#3748) 2024-03-23 07:39:36 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
6c8976abbe feat: upstream rw? tactic (#3719)
This updates the rw? tactic from Mathlib to use lazy discriminator trees
and upstreams it.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-03-23 05:01:35 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d39b0415f0 feat: enable pp.fieldNotation.generalized globally (#3744)
Sets the default value to `pp.fieldNotation.generalized` to `true`.
Updates tests, and fixes some minor flaws in the implementation of the
generalized field notation pretty printer.

Now generalized field notation won't be used for any function that has a
`motive` argument. This is intended to prevent recursors from pretty
printing using it as (1) recursors are more like control flow structures
than actual functions and (2) generalized field notation tends to cause
elaboration problems for recursors.

Note: be sure functions that have an `@[app_unexpander]` use
`@[pp_nodot]` if applicable. For example, `List.toArray` needs
`@[pp_nodot]` to ensure the unexpander prints it using `#[...]`
notation.
2024-03-23 02:38:09 +00:00
Kyle Miller
8ce98e62ac fix: typos in release notes (#3742) 2024-03-22 18:25:44 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
027b2bc38d chore: update stage0 2024-03-22 18:09:36 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
3f8f2b09af chore: more generic import out of date diagnostic (#3739)
The concrete dependency that is stale isn't really actionable
information for users (ideally we'd like something like "amount of
dependencies that will be rebuilt when you restart file"). This also
makes the diagnostic an "information" diagnostic so that non-infoview
users can still see it.

Since we are moving away from using notifications for stale dependency
information, we don't need to provide an ID anymore, either.
2024-03-22 13:13:20 +00:00
Kyle Miller
1f4dea8582 feat: add pp.fieldNotation.generalized for generalized field notation, add @[pp_nodot] attribute (#3737)
Refactors app delaborator, merging in the projection delaborator, to
support pretty printing with generalized field notation.

Renames option `pp.structureProjections` to `pp.fieldNotation` and adds
sub-option `pp.fieldNotation.generalized` to enable/disable generalized
field notation. Adds `@[pp_nodot]` attribute to permanently disable
using field notation for a given declaration.

For now, the default value of `pp.fieldNotation.generalized` is false
since we need a stage0 update to add `@[pp_nodot]` to some core
definitions (such as `List.toArray`) before updating the tests.

[Zulip
discussion](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.60pp.2EgeneralizedFieldNotation.60/near/425856054)
2024-03-22 08:55:02 +00:00
Scott Morrison
d5a1dce0ae chore: omega notices that 0 ≤ (x : Int) % (y : Int) (#3736) 2024-03-22 02:49:24 +00:00
Kyle Miller
acb188f11c feat: apply pp_using_anonymous_constructor attribute (#3735)
This attribute, which was implemented in #3640, is applied to the
following structures: `Sigma`, `PSigma`, `PProd`, `And`, `Subtype`, and
`Fin`. These were given this attribute in Lean 3.
2024-03-22 00:30:36 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
d884a946c8 chore: update stage0 2024-03-22 01:16:40 +00:00
Kyle Miller
980e73c368 feat: make in Infoview hovers show docstring (#3663)
The docstring for `⋯` gives information about why the omission term
might appear in an expression, and it helps with discoverability to give
documentation right in the hover.

This was mentioned by Patrick Massot [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Deep.20terms.20ellipses/near/426133597)
as being an issue.
2024-03-22 00:00:23 +00:00
Scott Morrison
67c7729f96 doc: fix HDiv and HMod doc-strings (#3734)
As reported by @loefflerd on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/wrong.20docstring.20for.20integer.20division.3F/near/428076692).
2024-03-21 23:46:41 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
966fa800f8 chore: remove the coercion from String to Name (#3589)
This coercion caused difficult-to-diagnose bugs sometimes. Because there
are some situations where converting a string to a name should be done
by parsing the string, and others where it should not, an explicit
choice seems better here.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-03-21 23:46:03 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
d5701fc912 chore: update stage0 2024-03-22 00:00:55 +00:00
Kyle Miller
ff7a0db099 feat: add pp_using_anonymous_constructor attribute (#3640)
Implements a Lean 3 pretty printer feature. Structures with the
`@[pp_using_anonymous_constructor]` attribute pretty using anonymous
constructor notation (`⟨x, y, z⟩`) rather than structure instance
notation (`{a := x, b := y, c := z}`).

[Zulip
discussion](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/.60pp_using_anonymous_constructor.60/near/425705445)
2024-03-21 23:01:10 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
085d01942d fix: restore default of stderrAsMessages (#3733)
Puts trace.compiler back in the info view. Apparently an unintended
change in #3014.
2024-03-21 17:43:29 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
31767aa835 fix: use sticky diags in getInteractiveDiagnostics (#3730)
I forgot to use the sticky diagnostics in `getInteractiveDiagnostics` in
#3247, leading to them not consistently showing up in the "Messages"
panel of the InfoView.
2024-03-21 14:34:22 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
902668dc38 fix: use correct positions for header errors (#3728)
This lead to incorrect diagnostic spans in the editor and resulted in
header errors that did not show up under "Messages" everywhere in the
file because the `fullRange?` property was missing.

Also changes the "Import out of date" warning diagnostic severity to
"Hint" so that it doesn't show up in the "Problems" view.
2024-03-21 14:19:45 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
2867b93d51 chore: replace shell.nix with a devShell in flake.nix (#3717)
as a side effect this pins the “old nixpkgs” revision used by CI for
release builds.
(Not that that old branch is likely to change a lot…)
2024-03-21 13:24:01 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
49f66dc485 perf: rewrite UnusedVariables lint (#3186)
This is a rewrite of the `UnusedVariables` lint to inline and simplify
many of the dependent functions to try to improve the performance of
this lint, which quite often shows up in perf reports.

* The mvar assignment scanning is one of the most expensive parts of the
process, so we do two things to improve this:
  * Lazily perform the scan only if we need it
* Use an object-pointer hashmap to ensure that we don't have quadratic
behavior when there are many mvar assignments with slight differences.
* The dependency on `Lean.Server` is removed, meaning we don't need to
do the LSP conversion stuff anymore. The main logic of reference finding
is inlined.
* We take `fvarAliases` into account, and union together fvars which are
aliases of a base fvar. (It would be great if we had `UnionFind` here.)

More docs will be added once we confirm an actual perf improvement.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-03-21 12:28:57 +00:00
Scott Morrison
164689f00f feat: more BitVec lemmas (#3729) 2024-03-21 11:56:24 +00:00
Arthur Adjedj
bf8b66c6a5 fix: ignore unused alternatives in Ord derive handler (#3725)
Closes #3706

This derive handler's implementation is very similar to `BEq`'s, which
already ignores unused alternative so as to work correctly on indexed
inductive types. This PR simply implements the same solution as the one
present in
[`BEq.lean`](2c15cdda04/src/Lean/Elab/Deriving/BEq.lean (L94)).

After some tests, it doesn't seem like any other derive handler present
in Core suffers from the same issue (though some handlers don't work on
indexed inductives for other reasons).
2024-03-21 10:29:22 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4d4e467392 feat: MonadAlwaysExcept for MonadCacheT (#3726) 2024-03-21 09:01:13 +00:00
Scott Morrison
2c15cdda04 feat: BitVec.ofBoolListLE and theorems (#3721)
Requested by Jeremy Avigad on
[zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/217875-Is-there-code-for-X.3F/topic/explicit.20bitvectors/near/427841343).

---------

Co-authored-by: Mario Carneiro <di.gama@gmail.com>
2024-03-21 04:48:29 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
4391bc2977 chore: update stage0 2024-03-20 22:45:34 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
40b5282ec2 fix: use correct module name in references (#3722)
#3656 used the wrong name in `RefIdent`, which lead to "Find References"
being broken. I really need to set up some tests for this functionality
...
2024-03-20 20:28:01 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
afbf8759e1 fix: deadlock in IO.Promise.resolve (#3693) 2024-03-20 12:47:52 +00:00
Leni Aniva
3ab1c23500 fix: Build failure of nix build . on macOS (#3712)
Closes bug #3711 

Now we have
```
$ nix build .#stage0
$ ls result/lib/lean/
libInit_shared.dylib* libleanshared.dylib*
```
2024-03-18 21:39:39 +00:00
Scott Morrison
846300038f fix: make attribute based rfl tactic builtin (#3708) 2024-03-18 11:39:59 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
01432ffc5a chore: update stage0 2024-03-18 12:20:03 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
3c82f9ae12 feat: diagnostics for stale dependencies (#3247)
Sends a diagnostic informing the user to run Restart File when a file
dependency is saved.

Based on #3014 because this feature was easier to implement with the new
architecture.

ToDo:
- [x] Adjust vscode-lean4 to display a notification when this diagnostic
appears in a non-annoying way
(https://github.com/leanprover/vscode-lean4/pull/393)
- [x] Use a file watcher to identify changes to files not tracked by VS
Code
- [x] Rebase onto master when #3014 is merged
2024-03-18 10:38:38 +00:00
Kitamado
7abc1fdaac doc: fix docstring of List.span (#3707)
see
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113488-general/topic/docstring.20of.20.60List.2Espan.60.20is.20wrong
2024-03-18 10:26:47 +00:00
Liu Yuxi
2d18eff544 doc: lake: fix typo (#3704)
Closes #3703
2024-03-17 18:23:21 +00:00
Scott Morrison
66541b00a6 feat: upstream Std's rfl tactic (#3671)
This allows tagging lemmas with `@[refl]`, that will then by used by
`rfl`.

This is preparatory to upstreaming Mathlib's `convert` tactic.
2024-03-17 07:06:13 +00:00
Scott Morrison
f1f9b57df9 feat: upstream apply helper tactics from Mathlib (#3670)
These are used in Mathlib's `congr!` and `convert` tactics, which will
be upstreamed soon.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kyle Miller <kmill31415@gmail.com>
2024-03-17 06:47:56 +00:00
Scott Morrison
88b1751b54 chore: fix namespaces in recently upstreamed tactics (#3672) 2024-03-17 06:41:40 +00:00
Timo Carlin-Burns
8e96d7ba1d refactor: clean up public API around Array.eraseIdx (#3676)
- Removes the public definitions `Array.eraseIdxAux` and
`Array.eraseIdxSzAux` which were implementation details.
- Motivation: `Array.eraseIdxAux` and `Array.eraseIdxSzAux` were clearly
not intended to remain public, but simply making them private would make
it inconvenient to unfold them when writing proofs in Std.
- Adds documentation comments to the public `Array.eraseIdx`-related
definitions which remain.
- Removes `Array.eraseIdx'` which was just `Array.feraseIdx` wrapped in
a subtype and adds `Array.size_feraseIdx` to prove the subtype property
as a standalone theorem.

Co-Authored-By: Daniel Windham <daniel@atlascomputing.org>
2024-03-17 06:25:10 +00:00
Scott Morrison
9ee10aa3eb chore: in combined CI, check for required Std tag, then Mathlib (#3702) 2024-03-17 01:29:47 +00:00
Scott Morrison
811bedfa76 chore: fix combined CI for mathlib (#3700)
Previously, if there was a `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` tag at Std, but
not Mathlib, we were erroneously proceeding with Mathlib CI, and hence
using a probably-broken version of Mathlib.
2024-03-16 23:42:45 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
0b01ceb3bb fix: substVars in functional inductions removed valuable information (#3695)
using the `substVars` tactic on the goal can remove too much
information, as it does not take into account that the `motive` may
depend on the fixed parameters.

This is fixed by etracting `substVar` from `subst` which expects the
`x`, not the `h : x = rhs`, and then using this tactic on the local
declarations _after_ the `motive` exclusively.
2024-03-16 14:55:31 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4c57da4b0f feat: infer termination arguments like xs.size - i (#3666)
a common pattern for recursive functions is
```
def countUp (n i acc : Nat) : Nat :=
  if i < n then
    countUp n (i+1) (acc + i)
  else
    acc
```
where we increase a value `i` until it hits an upper bound. This is
particularly common with array processing functions:
```
$ git grep 'termination_by.*size.*-' src/|wc -l
26
```

GuessLex now recognizes this pattern. The general approach is:

For every recursive call, check if the context contains hypotheses of
the form `e₁ < e₂` (or similar comparisions), and then consider `e₂ -
e₁` as a termination argument.

Currently, this only fires when `e₁` and `e₂` only depend on the
functions parameters, but not local let-bindings or variables bound in
local pattern matches.

Duplicates are removed.

In the table showing the termination argument failures, long termination
arguments are now given a number and abbreviated as e.g. `#4` in the
table headers.

More examples in the test file, here as some highlights:
```
def distinct (xs : Array Nat) : Bool :=
  let rec loop (i j : Nat) : Bool :=
    if _ : i < xs.size then
      if _ : j < i then
        if xs[j] = xs[i] then
          false
        else
          loop i (j+1)
      else
        loop (i+1) 0
    else
      true
  loop 0 0
```
infers
```
termination_by (Array.size xs - i, i - j)
```
and the weird functions where `i` goes up or down
```
def weird (xs : Array Nat) (i : Nat) : Bool :=
  if _ : i < xs.size then
    if _ : 0 < i then
      if xs[i] = 42 then
        weird xs.pop (i - 1)
      else
        weird xs (i+1)
    else
      weird xs (i+1)
  else
    true
decreasing_by all_goals simp_wf; omega
```
infers
```
termination_by (Array.size xs - i, i)
```
but unfortunately needs `decreasing_by` pending the “big
decreasing_tactic refactor” that
I expect we’ll want to do at some point.
2024-03-16 12:27:35 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f0ff01ae28 refactor: pass Measures around as Expr in GuessLex (#3665)
this refactor prepares GuessLex to be able to infer more complex
termination arguments.

As a side-effect it fixes an (obscure) bug where `sizeOf` would be
applied to a term of the wrong type and thus a wrong `SizeOf` instance
could be inferred.
2024-03-16 10:25:55 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
0ec8862103 chore: migrate find functionality into LazyDiscrTree (#3685)
This migrates some lookup functionality from library_search to a more
generic version in LazyDiscrTree.

It is a step towards `rw?` in core.
2024-03-16 01:01:53 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
f70895ede5 chore: update stage0 2024-03-15 16:30:21 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
557777dd37 chore: CI: mark "Build matrix complete" as cancelled if builds cancelled (#3690) 2024-03-15 12:30:48 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
e47d8ca5cd fix: periodically refresh semantic tokens (#3691)
Based on #3619 that was reverted because of nondeterministic test
failures. This PR should resolve those.
2024-03-15 11:58:50 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3b4b2cc89d fix: do not dllexport symbols in core static libraries (#3601)
On Windows, we now compile all core `.o`s twice, once with and without
`dllexport`, for use in the shipped dynamic and static libraries,
respectively. On other platforms, we export always as before to avoid
the duplicate work.

---------

Co-authored-by: tydeu <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-03-15 11:58:34 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
14654d802d chore: revert periodically refresh semantic tokens (#3619) (#3689)
This reverts commit 4e3a8468c3 for PR
#3619. It looks like the CI in that commit didn't inform me that a test
was broken by the PR, so I managed to commit it despite the broken test.
2024-03-15 09:17:53 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
173b956961 feat: reserved names (#3675)
- Add support for reserved declaration names. We use them for theorems
generated on demand.
- Equation theorems are not private declarations anymore.
- Generate equation theorems on demand when resolving symbols.
- Prevent users from creating declarations using reserved names. Users
can bypass it using meta-programming.

See next test for examples.
2024-03-15 00:33:22 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
022b2e4d96 refactor: termination arguments as Expr, not Syntax (#3658)
Before, the termination argument as inferred by `GuessLex` was passed
further
on as `Syntax`, to be elaborated later in `WF.Rel`.

This didn’t feel quite right anymore. In particular if we want to teach
`GuessLex` about guessing more complex termination arguments like
`xs.size -
i`, using `Expr` here is more natural.

So this introduces `TerminationArgument` based on an `Expr` to be used
here.

A side-effect of how the termination arguments are elaborated is that
the unused
variables linter will now look at `termination_by` variables, and that
parameters
past the colon are not even invisibly in scope, so `‹_›` will not find
them
See https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/11370/files
for examples
of fixing these changes.
2024-03-14 23:51:53 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
4e3a8468c3 fix: periodically refresh semantic tokens (#3619)
This PR fixes an issue where the file worker would not provide the
client with semantic tokens until the file had been elaborated
completely. The file worker now also tells the client to refresh its
semantic tokens after running "Restart File". This PR is based on #3271.
2024-03-14 17:10:04 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
78a72741c6 fix: jump to correct definition when names overlap (#3656)
Fixes #1170.

This PR adds the module name to `RefIdent` in order to distinguish
conflicting names from different files. This also fixes related issues
in find-references or the call hierarchy feature.
It also adds some docstrings and stylistically refactors a bunch of
code.
2024-03-14 16:21:19 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
795e332fb3 feat: server -> client requests (#3271)
This PR adds support for requests from the server to the client in the
language server. It is based on #3014 and was developed during an
experiment for #3247 that unfortunately did not go anywhere.
2024-03-14 16:00:32 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
1151d73a55 fix: use builtin_initialize in library_search (#3677)
This replaces a few uses of initialize with builtin_initialize, and
removes some unneeded functionality added when it was unclear if lazy
discriminator trees would be efficient enough.
2024-03-14 15:28:00 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
fb2ec54b60 chore: build Lean .os in parallel to rest of core (#3682)
Previously, we only did `Init/*.{o,olean}+Lean/*.olean` in parallel
2024-03-14 15:14:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
f89ed40618 refactor: ArgsPacker (#3621)
This introduces the `ArgsPacker` module and abstraction, to replace the
exising `PackDomain`/`PackMutual` code. The motivation was that we now
have more uses besides `Fix.lean` (`GuessLex` and `FunInd`), and the
code was spread in various places.

The goals are

* consistent function naming withing the the `PSigma` handling, the
`PSum` handling, and the combined interface
* avoid taking a type apart just based on the `PSigma`/`PSum` nesting,
to be robust in case the user happens to be using `PSigma`/`PSum`
somewhere. Therefore, always pass an `arity` or `numFuncs` or `varNames`
around.
* keep all the `PSigma`/`PSum` encoding logic contained within one
module (`ArgsPacker`), and keep that module independent of its users (so
no `EqnInfos` visible here).
 * pick good variable names when matching on a packed argument
* the unary function now is either called `fun1._unary` or
`fun1._mutual`, never `fun1._unary._mutual`.

This file has less heavy dependencies than `PackMutual` had, so build
parallelism is improved as well.
2024-03-14 14:59:40 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
68eaf33e86 feat: snapshot trees and language processors (#3014)
This is the foundation for work on making processing in the language
server both more fine-grained (incremental tactics) as well as parallel.
2024-03-14 13:40:08 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0959bc45d2 chore: CI: temporarily disable fsanitize build 2024-03-14 15:36:28 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
995726f75f chore: fix tests 2024-03-13 21:15:48 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
214179b6b9 chore: update stage0 2024-03-13 21:15:48 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
9ee1ff2435 chore: remove bootstrapping workaround 2024-03-13 21:15:48 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
653eb5f66e chore: update stage0 2024-03-13 21:15:48 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
2c8fd7fb95 chore: avoid reserved name
TODO: update state0 and cleanup
2024-03-13 21:15:48 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
8d2adf521d feat: allow duplicate theorems to be imported 2024-03-13 12:57:41 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
612d97440b chore: incorrectly annotated theorems 2024-03-13 12:37:58 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
0f19332618 chore: update stage0 2024-03-13 12:37:58 -07:00
Leonardo de Moura
84b0919a11 feat: type of theorems must be propositions 2024-03-13 12:37:58 -07:00
Hongyu Ouyang
e61d082a95 doc: fix typo in USize.size docstring (#3664) 2024-03-13 10:51:24 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
600412838c fix: auxiliary definition nested in theorem should be def if its type is not a proposition (#3662) 2024-03-13 09:38:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
a81205c290 feat: conv => calc (#3659)
`calc` is great for explicit rewriting, `conv` is great to say where to
rewrite, so it's natural to want `calc` as a `conv` tactic.

Zulip disucssion at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/idiom.20for.20using.20calc.20to.20rewrite.20the.20goal/near/424269608

Fixes #3557.
2024-03-13 09:03:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2003814085 chore: rename automatically generated equational theorems (#3661)
cc @nomeata
2024-03-13 07:56:27 +00:00
Scott Morrison
317adf42e9 chore: add @[simp] to Nat.succ_eq_add_one, and cleanup downstream (#3579) 2024-03-13 05:35:52 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5aca09abca fix: add Canonicalizer.lean and use it to canonicalize terms in omega (#3639) 2024-03-12 23:18:56 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
07dac67847 feat: guard_msgs to escapes trailing newlines (#3617)
This makes trailing whitespace visible and protectes them against
trimming by the editor, by appending the symbol ⏎ to such a line (and
also to any line that ends with such a symbol, to avoid ambiguities in
the case the message already had that symbol).

(Only the code action output / docstring parsing is affected; the error
message as sent
to the InfoView is unaffected.)

Fixes #3571
2024-03-12 16:35:14 +00:00
thorimur
5cf4db7fbf fix: make dsimp? use and report simprocs (#3654)
Modifies `dsimpLocation'` (which implements `dsimp?`) to take a
`simprocs : SimprocsArray` argument, like `simpLocation` and
`dsimpLocation`. This ensures that the behavior of `dsimp` matches
`dsimp?`.

---

Closes #3653
2024-03-12 05:17:58 +00:00
Mac Malone
b2ae4bd5c1 feat: allow noncomputable unsafe definitions (#3647)
Enables the combination of `noncomputable unsafe` to be used for
definitions. Outside of pure theory, `noncomputable` is also useful to
prevent Lean from compiling a definition which will be implemented with
external code later. Such definitions may also wish to be marked
`unsafe` if they perform morally impure or memory-unsafe functions.
2024-03-12 02:46:42 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
c43a6b5341 chore: upstream Std.Data.Int (#3635)
This depends on #3634.
2024-03-11 21:40:48 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
1388f6bc83 chore: update stage0 2024-03-11 17:22:37 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d9b6794e2f refactor: termination_by parser to use binderIdent (#3652)
this way we should be able to use `elabBinders` to parse the binders.
2024-03-11 16:29:56 +00:00
Mac Malone
ebefee0b7d chore: response file to avoid arg limits in lean static lib build (#3612) 2024-03-11 16:14:24 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
32dcc6eb89 feat: GuessLex: avoid writing sizeOf in termination argument when not needed (#3630)
this makes `termination_by?` even slicker.

The heuristics is agressive in the non-mutual case (will omit `sizeOf`
if the argument is non-dependent and the `WellFoundedRelation` relation
is via `sizeOfWFRel`.

In the mutual case we'd also have to check the arguments, as they line
up in the termination argument, have the same types. I did not bother at
this point; in the mutual case we omit `sizeOf` only if the argument
type is `Nat`.

As a drive-by fix, `termination_by?` now also works on functions that
have only one plausible measure.
2024-03-10 22:57:10 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
1d3ef577c2 chore: disable some tests on Windows (#3642)
This is a temporary workaround for a limitation on Windows shared
libraries. We are getting errors of the form:
```
ld.lld: error: too many exported symbols (got 65572, max 65535)
```
2024-03-09 23:48:41 +00:00
Kyle Miller
45fccc5906 feat: custom eliminators for induction and cases tactics, and beautiful eliminators for Nat (#3629)
Replaces `@[eliminator]` with two attributes `@[induction_eliminator]`
and `@[cases_eliminator]` for defining custom eliminators for the
`induction` and `cases` tactics, respectively.

Adds `Nat.recAux` and `Nat.casesAuxOn`, which are eliminators that are
defeq to `Nat.rec` and `Nat.casesOn`, but these use `0` and `n + 1`
rather than `Nat.zero` and `Nat.succ n`.

For example, using `induction` to prove that the factorial function is
positive now has the following goal states (thanks also to #3616 for the
goal state after unfolding).
```lean
example : 0 < fact x := by
  induction x with
  | zero => decide
  | succ x ih =>
    /-
    x : Nat
    ih : 0 < fact x
    ⊢ 0 < fact (x + 1)
    -/
    unfold fact
    /-
    ...
    ⊢ 0 < (x + 1) * fact x
    -/
    simpa using ih
```

Thanks to @adamtopaz for initial work on splitting the `@[eliminator]`
attribute.
2024-03-09 15:31:51 +00:00
Kyle Miller
3acd77a154 fix: make elabTermEnsuringType respect errToSorry when there is a type mismatch (#3633)
Floris van Doorn [reported on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/have.20tactic.20error.20recovery/near/425283053)
that it is confusing that the `have : T := e` tactic completely fails if
the body `e` is not of type `T`. This is in contrast to `have : T := by
exact e`, which does not completely fail when `e` is not of type `T`.

This ends up being caused by `elabTermEnsuringType` throwing an error
when it fails to insert a coercion. Now, it detects this case, and it
checks the `errToSorry` flag to decide whether to throw the error or to
log the error and insert a `sorry`.

This is justified by `elabTermEnsuringType` being a frontend to
`elabTerm`, which inserts `sorry` on error.

An alternative would be to make `ensureType` respect `errToSorry`, but
there exists code that expects being able to catch when `ensureType`
fails. Making such code manipulate `errToSorry` seems error prone, and
this function is not a main entry point to the term elaborator, unlike
`elabTermEnsuringType`.
2024-03-09 15:30:47 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
b39042b32c fix: eta-expanded instances at SynthInstance.lean (#3638)
Remark: this commit removes the `jason1.lean` test. Motivation: It
breaks all the time due to changes we make, and it is not clear anymore
what it is testing.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-03-08 20:37:38 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
6dd4f4b423 chore: upstream Std.Data.Nat (#3634)
This migrates lemmas about Nat `compare`, `min`, `max`, `dvd`, `gcd`,
`lcm` and `div`/`mod` from Std to Lean itself.

Std still has some additional recursors, `CoPrime` and a few additional
definitions that might merit further discussion prior to upstreaming.
2024-03-08 17:00:46 +00:00
Mac Malone
123dcb964c feat: lake: LEAN_GITHASH override (#3609)
If the `LEAN_GITHASH` environment variable is set, Lake will now use it
instead of the detected Lean's githash when computing traces for builds
and the elaborated Lake configuration. This override allows one to
replace the Lean version used by a library
(e.g., Mathlib) without completely rebuilding it, which is useful for
testing custom builds of Lean.
2024-03-08 15:03:07 +00:00
Patrick Massot
ccac989dda doc: expand an error message about compacting closures (#3627)
Provide a hint of where the error message may come from.
2024-03-07 20:02:23 +00:00
Kyle Miller
f336525f31 fix: make delabConstWithSignature avoid using inaccessible names (#3625)
The `delabConstWithSignature` delaborator is responsible for pretty
printing constants with a declaration-like signature, with binders, a
colon, and a type. This is used by the `#check` command when it is given
just an identifier.

It used to accumulate binders from pi types indiscriminately, but this
led to unfriendly behavior. For example, `#check String.append` would
give
```
String.append (a✝ : String) (a✝¹ : String) : String
```
with inaccessible names. These appear because `String.append` is defined
using patterns, so it never names these parameters.

Now the delaborator stops accumulating binders once it reaches an
inaccessible name, and for example `#check String.append` now gives
```
String.append : String → String → String
```
We do not synthesize names for the sake of enabling binder syntax
because the binder names are part of the API of a function — one can use
`(arg := ...)` syntax to pass arguments by name. The delaborator also
now stops accumulating binders once it reaches a parameter with a name
already seen before — we then rely on the main delaborator to provide
that parameter with a fresh name when pretty printing the pi type.

As a special case, instance parameters with inaccessible names are
included as binders, pretty printing like `[LT α]`, rather than
relegating them (and all the remaining parameters) to after the colon.
It would be more accurate to pretty print this as `[inst✝ : LT α]`, but
we make the simplifying assumption that such instance parameters are
generally used via typeclass inference. Likely `inst✝` would not
directly appear in pretty printer output, and even if it appears in a
hover, users can likely figure out what is going on. (We may consider
making such `inst✝` variables pretty print as `‹LT α›` or
`infer_instance` in the future, to make this more consistent.)

Something we note here is that we do not do anything to make sure
parameters that can be used as named arguments actually appear named
after the colon (nor do we assure that the names are the correct names).
For example, one sees `foo : String → String → String` rather than `foo
: String → (baz : String) → String`. We can investigate this later if it
is wanted.

We also give `delabConstWithSignature` a `universes` flag to enable
turning off pretty printing universe levels parameters.

Closes #2846
2024-03-07 18:14:06 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3921257ece feat: thread initialization for reverse FFI (#3632)
Makes it possible to properly allocate and free thread-local runtime
resources for threads not started by Lean itself
2024-03-07 17:02:47 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
6af7a01af6 fix: stray dbgTraceVal in trace children elision (#3622) 2024-03-07 09:44:25 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
611b174689 fix: ofScientific at simp (#3628)
closes #2159
2024-03-07 00:11:31 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d731854d5a chore: update stage0 2024-03-06 15:29:04 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
3218b25974 doc: for issue #2835 2024-03-06 15:29:04 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
ef33882e2f test: issue #2835
closes #2835
2024-03-06 15:29:04 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
4208c44939 chore: update stage0 2024-03-06 15:29:04 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
423fed79a9 feat: simplify .arrow ctor at DiscrTree.lean 2024-03-06 15:29:04 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
5302b7889a fix: fold raw Nat literals at dsimp (#3624)
closes #2916

Remark: this PR also renames `Expr.natLit?` ==> `Expr.rawNatLit?`.
Motivation: consistent naming convention: `Expr.isRawNatLit`.
2024-03-06 18:29:20 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
46cc00d5db chore: add example to explanation cond_decide is not simp (#3615)
This just adds a concrete example to the `cond_decide` lemma to explain
why it is not a simp rule.
2024-03-06 16:58:12 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
0072d13bd4 feat: MatcherApp.transform: Try to preserve alt’s variable name (#3620)
this makes the ugly `fst`/`snd` variable names in the functional
induction principles go away.

Ironically I thought in order to fix these name, I should touch the
mutual/n-ary argument packing code used for well-founded recursion, and
embarked on a big refactor/rewrite of that code, only to find that at
least this particular instance of the issue was somewhere else. Hence
breaking this into its own PR; the refactoring will follow (and will
also improve some other variable names.)
2024-03-06 15:56:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
09bc477016 feat: better support for reducing Nat.rec (#3616)
closes #3022

With this commit, given the declaration
```
def foo : Nat → Nat
  | 0 => 2
  | n + 1 => foo n
```
when we unfold `foo (n+1)`, we now obtain `foo n` instead of `foo
(Nat.add n 0)`.
2024-03-06 13:28:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f0a762ea4d chore: CI: temporarily disable test binary check on Windows 2024-03-06 09:00:38 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
30a61a57c3 chore: disable compiler tests on Windows 2024-03-05 20:24:01 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
794228a982 refactor: Offset.lean and related files (#3614)
Motivation: avoid the unfold and check idiom.
This commit also minimize dependencies at `Offset.lean`.

closes #2615
2024-03-05 19:40:15 -08:00
Joe Hendrix
6cf82c3763 fix: update LazyDiscrTree to not reuse names when caching (#3610)
This fixes an issue discovered in Mathlib with the meta cache being
poisoned by using a name generator. It is difficult to reproduce due to
the name collisions being rare, but here is a minimal module with
definitions that result in an error:

```lean
prelude
universe u

inductive Unit2 : Type where
  | unit : Unit2

inductive Eq2 {α : Sort u} : α → α → Prop where
  | refl (a : α) : Eq2 a a

structure Subtype2 {α : Sort u} (p : α → Prop) where
  val : α

def End (α) := α → α
theorem end_app_eq (α : Type u) (f : End α) (a : α) : Eq2 (f a) (f a) := Eq2.refl _
theorem Set.coe_eq_subtype {α : Type u} (s : α → Prop) : Eq2 (Subtype2 s) (Subtype2 s) := Eq2.refl _
def succAboveCases {_ : Unit2} {α : Unit2 → Sort u} (i : Unit2) (v : α i) : α i := v
theorem succAbove_cases_eq_insertNth : Eq2 @succAboveCases.{u + 1} @succAboveCases.{u + 1} := Eq2.refl _
```

Removing any of thee last 5 definitions avoids the error. Testing
against Mathlib shows this PR fixes the issue.
2024-03-06 02:32:22 +00:00
Scott Morrison
01f0fedef8 feat: further shaking of Nat/Int/Omega (#3613) 2024-03-05 23:43:36 +00:00
Scott Morrison
b8ff951cd1 feat: restore Bool.and_xor_distrib_(left|right) (#3604)
I think these were dropped in #3508, and Mathlib needs them.
2024-03-05 22:22:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
da869a470b chore: update stage0 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
acdb0054d5 feat: use dsimprocs at dsimp 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
63b068a77c chore: remove auxiliary functions used for bootstrapping 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
a4143ded64 chore: update stage0 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
02efb19aad chore: prepare to remove auxiliary functions used for bootstrapping 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
74c1ce1386 chore: use builtin_dsimproc when appropriate 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
1da65558d0 chore: update stage0 2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
b24fbf44f3 feat: dsimproc command
Simplification procedures that produce definitionally equal results.

WIP
2024-03-05 14:42:05 -08:00
Marc Huisinga
f986f69a32 fix: getInteractiveDiagnostics off-by-one error (#3608)
This bug is the real cause of leanprover/vscode-lean4#392. 
At the end of a tactic state, the client calls
`getInteractiveDiagnostics` with a range `[last line of proof, last line
of proof + 1)`. The `fullRange` span of the `unresolved goals` error
however is something like `[(first line of proof, start character),
(last line of proof, nonzero end character)).
Since it operates on line numbers, `getInteractiveDiagnostics` would
then check whether `[last line of proof, last line of proof + 1)` and
`[first line of proof, last line of proof)` intersect, which is false
because of the excluded upper bound on the latter interval, despite the
fact that the end character in the last line may be nonzero.

This fix adjusts the intersection logic to use `[first line of proof,
last line of proof]` if the end character is nonzero.

Closes leanprover/vscode-lean4#392.
2024-03-05 17:21:10 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
436d7befa5 fix: dsimp should reduce kernel projections (#3607)
closes #3395
2024-03-05 14:56:27 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
414f0eb19b fix: bug at Result.mkEqSymm (#3606)
`cache` and `dischargeDepth` fields were being reset.
2024-03-05 14:37:09 +00:00
Scott Morrison
bf6d9295a4 chore: shaking imports in Init.Data.Nat/Int (#3605) 2024-03-05 13:29:35 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
06f4963069 feat: partial words import completion (#3602)
This PR enables import auto-completion to complete partial words in
imports.

Other inconsistencies that I've found in import completion already seem
to be fixed by #3014. Since it will be merged soon, there is no need to
invest time to fix these issues on master.
2024-03-05 13:20:07 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
8038604d3e feat: functional induction (#3432)
This adds the concept of **functional induction** to lean.

Derived from the definition of a (possibly mutually) recursive function,
a **functional
induction principle** is tailored to proofs about that function. For
example from:

```
def ackermann : Nat → Nat → Nat
  | 0, m => m + 1
  | n+1, 0 => ackermann n 1
  | n+1, m+1 => ackermann n (ackermann (n + 1) m)
derive_functional_induction ackermann
```
we get
```
ackermann.induct (motive : Nat → Nat → Prop) (case1 : ∀ (m : Nat), motive 0 m)
  (case2 : ∀ (n : Nat), motive n 1 → motive (Nat.succ n) 0)
  (case3 : ∀ (n m : Nat), motive (n + 1) m → motive n (ackermann (n + 1) m) → motive (Nat.succ n) (Nat.succ m))
  (x x : Nat) : motive x x
```

At the moment, the user has to ask for the functional induction
principle explicitly using
```
derive_functional_induction ackermann
```

The module docstring of `Lean/Meta/Tactic/FunInd.lean` contains more
details on the
design and implementation of this command.

More convenience around this (e.g. a `functional induction` tactic) will
follow eventually.


This PR includes a bunch of `PSum`/`PSigma` related functions in the
`Lean.Tactic.FunInd`
namespace. I plan to move these to `PackArgs`/`PackMutual` afterwards,
and do some cleaning
up as I do that.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-03-05 13:02:05 +00:00
Scott Morrison
ce77518ef5 feat: restore Bool.and_xor_distrib_(left|right) 2024-03-05 23:49:47 +11:00
Joachim Breitner
fbd9c076c0 chore: run nix-ci whenever we run ci (#3600)
this unifies the `on` settings between nix-ci and ci, less confusion
when adding a label doesn’t trigger all the CI stuff.
2024-03-05 09:11:19 +00:00
Scott Morrison
ae492265fe chore: cleanup a bitblast proof (#3598) 2024-03-05 04:59:58 +00:00
Scott Morrison
c4a784d6a3 feat: more BitVec lemmas (#3597) 2024-03-05 04:47:53 +00:00
Scott Morrison
def564183c feat: checklist for release process (#3536)
This is still WIP: the checklist for release candidates will get
finished as I do the release of `v4.7.0-rc1`.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-03-05 02:55:17 +00:00
Alex Keizer
46bf4b69b6 feat: add lemmas about BitVec.concat and bitwise ops (#3487)
Show how the various bitwise ops (`and`, `or`, `not`, and `xor`)
distribute over `concat`.
2024-03-05 02:48:10 +00:00
Scott Morrison
89ec60befe feat: lemmas about BitVec (#3593)
Basic API lemmas for BitVec, motivated by thinking about bitblasting.
2024-03-05 02:41:47 +00:00
Scott Morrison
f48079eb90 chore: begin development cycle for v4.8.0 (#3596) 2024-03-05 02:15:37 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
01104cc81e chore: bool and prop lemmas for Mathlib compatibility and improved confluence (#3508)
This adds a number of lemmas for simplification of `Bool` and `Prop`
terms. It pulls lemmas from Mathlib and adds additional lemmas where
confluence or consistency suggested they are needed.

It has been tested against Mathlib using some automated test
infrastructure.

That testing module is not yet included in this PR, but will be included
as part of this.

Note. There are currently some comments saying the origin of the simp
rule. These will be removed prior to merging, but are added to clarify
where the rule came from during review.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-03-04 23:56:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
37450d47e2 fix: bug at elimOptParam (#3595)
`let_expr` uses `cleanupAnnotations` which consumes `optParam` type
annotations.

cc @nomeata
2024-03-04 23:56:00 +00:00
Scott Morrison
e814fc859e chore: cherry-picking v4.6.1 release notes (#3592) 2024-03-04 12:59:00 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
093e1cf22a test: add language server startup benchmark (#3558)
Benchmark to catch future regressions as the one fixed in #3552.
2024-03-04 09:01:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e6d6855a85 chore: missing double backticks (#3587) 2024-03-04 03:02:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
bba4ef3728 feat: simprocs for folding numeric literals (#3586)
This PR folds exposed `BitVec` (`Fin`, `UInt??`, and `Int`) ground
literals.
cc @shigoel
2024-03-04 02:51:04 +00:00
Scott Morrison
3ad078fec9 chore: updates to RELEASES.md (#3585) 2024-03-04 02:32:30 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8689a56a5d feat: #print equations <decl-name> command (#3584) 2024-03-04 02:32:20 +00:00
Scott Morrison
870c6d0dc4 chore: replacing proofs in Init/Data/Nat/Bitwise/Lemmas with omega (#3576)
Replaces some tedious proofs with `omega`, and take advantage of `omega`
powerups to remove some preparatory steps.
2024-03-04 02:19:31 +00:00
Scott Morrison
ad901498fa chore: add release notes for #3507 and #3509 (#3583) 2024-03-04 00:55:53 +00:00
Kyle Miller
acb1b09fbf fix: expression tree elaborator for relations now localizes error messages to the LHS or RHS (#3442)
Added `withRef` when processing the LHS or RHS. Without this, in an
expression such as `true = ()` the entire expression would be
highlighted with "type mismatch, `()` has type `Unit` but is expected to
have type `Bool`". Now the error is localized to `()`.

This behavior was pointed out [on
Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/error.20location.20bug/near/422665805).
2024-03-04 00:53:32 +00:00
Scott Morrison
791142a7ff feat: Nat.mul_mod (#3582)
Proves
`Nat.mod_mul : x % (a * b) = x % a + a * (x / a % b)` and
`Nat.mod_pow_succ : x % b ^ (k + 1) = x % b ^ k + b ^ k * ((x / b ^ k) %
b)`, helpful for bitblasting.
2024-03-03 23:31:07 +00:00
Scott Morrison
015af6d108 chore: use match_expr in omega (#3577) 2024-03-03 22:22:28 +00:00
Kyle Miller
04385b7fb9 doc: small improvements to docstrings for let and have tactics (#3560) 2024-03-03 22:00:32 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
2510808ebf chore: add unicode directory name to gitignore (#3565)
fixes #3358

---------

Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
2024-03-03 20:19:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9f305fb31f fix: rename_i in macro (#3581)
closes #3553

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-03-03 19:05:37 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
380dd9e6e7 fix: free threadpool threads before process exit 2024-03-03 20:12:46 +01:00
Sebastian Ullrich
908b98dad8 fix: task_manager termination under Emscripten 2024-03-03 20:12:46 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
a4d41beab1 perf: match_expr join points (#3580)
We use `let_delayed` to elaborate `match_expr` join points, which
elaborate the body of the `let` before its value. Thus, there is a
difference between:
- `let_delayed f (x : Expr) := <val>; <body>`
- `let_delayed f := fun (x : Expr) => <val>; <body>`

In the latter, when `<body>` is elaborated, the elaborator does not know
that `f` takes an argument of type `Expr`, and that `f` is a function.
Before this commit ensures the former representation is used.
2024-03-03 18:15:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
95f28be088 fix: generalize excessive resource usage (#3575)
closes #3524
2024-03-03 17:58:11 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c66c5bb45b fix: simp? suggests generated equations lemma names (#3573)
closes #3547

---------

Co-authored-by: Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
2024-03-02 23:59:35 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
870de4322c fix: missing atomic at match_expr parser (#3572) 2024-03-02 21:55:07 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
4fdc243179 refactor: simplify some nomatch with nofun (#3564)
and also don’t wrap `nomatch` with `False.elim`; it is not necessary, as
`nomatch` already inhabits any type.
2024-03-02 20:43:31 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
8a3c9cafb9 chore: update stage0 2024-03-02 10:07:15 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
826f0580a6 fix: propagate expected type at do-match_expr 2024-03-02 10:07:15 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
0359ff753b chore: use __do_jp workaround, and "implementation detail" variables at match_expr macro 2024-03-02 10:07:15 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
8b2710c8b3 chore: use let_expr to cleanup code 2024-03-02 10:07:15 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
0199228784 chore: update stage0 2024-03-02 08:16:18 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
17e498c11f feat: expand let_expr macros 2024-03-02 08:16:18 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
54ff38aa5f chore: update stage0 2024-03-02 08:16:18 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
ecfaf8f3e7 feat: add let_expr notation 2024-03-02 08:16:18 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
3c0e575fe0 feat: add matchExprPat parser 2024-03-02 08:16:18 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
49f41a6224 chore: update stage0 2024-03-01 22:33:14 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
7a27b04d50 feat: monadic match_expr 2024-03-01 22:33:14 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
f777e0cc85 feat: macro expander for match_expr terms 2024-03-01 22:33:14 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
64adb0627a feat: add auxiliary functions for compiling match_expr 2024-03-01 22:33:14 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
ea9a417371 chore: update stage0 2024-03-01 22:33:14 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
70d9106644 feat: match_expr parsers 2024-03-01 22:33:14 -08:00
Marc Huisinga
9cf3fc50c7 doc: update RELEASES.md for #3552 (#3561) 2024-03-02 00:27:21 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
78726c936f chore: add library_search and #check_tactic to 4.7 RELEASES.md (#3549)
Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-03-02 00:13:08 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
7e944c1a30 fix: load references asynchronously (#3552)
In v4.6.0, there was a significant regression in initial server startup
performance because the .ilean files got bigger in #3082 and we load the
information stored in all .ilean files synchronously when the server
starts up.

This PR makes this loading asynchronous. The trade-off is that requests
that are issued right after the initial server start when the references
are not fully loaded yet may yield incomplete results.

Benchmark for this in a separate PR soon after this one.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-03-01 13:57:52 +00:00
Scott Morrison
18306db396 chore: protect Int.add_right_inj et al (#3551)
Reducing some name conflicts in Mathlib.
2024-03-01 13:01:39 +00:00
Scott Morrison
570b50dddd chore: correct statement of Int.pow_zero, and protected theorems (#3550) 2024-03-01 12:38:02 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
43d6eb144e chore: add error recovery to RELEASES.md (#3540)
Adds the missing RELEASES.md from #3413. Apologies for the oversight!
2024-03-01 05:38:18 +00:00
Siddharth
ed02262941 feat: generalize msb_eq_decide to also handle the zero width case (#3480)
Note that this is a strict generalization of the previous statemens of
`getLsb_last` and `msb_eq_decide` that worked for bitwidths `>= 1`.
2024-02-29 22:46:32 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
c0dfe2e439 feat: BitVec int lemmas (#3474)
This introduces lemma support for BitVec.ofInt/BitVec.toInt as well as
lemmas upstreamed from Std and Mathlib for reasoning about emod and
bmod.
2024-02-29 20:48:57 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
61fba365f2 fix: revert shared library split on non-Windows platforms (#3529)
Avoids the performance hit and fixes #3528.
2024-02-29 19:15:01 +00:00
Marcus Rossel
0362fcea69 chore: remove redundant 'generalizing' (#3544) 2024-02-29 13:24:14 +00:00
Marcus Rossel
60d056ffdf doc: fix typos (#3543)
The doc comment on
[Lean.Meta.viewSubexpr](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Lean/Meta/ExprLens.html#Lean.Meta.viewSubexpr)
also seems broken, but I don't know how to fix it.
2024-02-29 13:23:19 +00:00
Marcus Rossel
dc0f026e64 chore: remove redundant '..' pattern in match of 'Level.zero' (#3545) 2024-02-29 13:22:04 +00:00
Kyle Miller
67c9498892 doc: update RELEASES.md for #3495 (#3518) 2024-02-29 11:34:00 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
dc0f771561 doc: fix markdown indentation in RELEASES.md (#3542)
and while at it, unify how to style links (include “RFC”, “issue” in the
link)
2024-02-29 10:52:26 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
970b6e59b1 doc: update RELEASES.md for #3460 and #3482 (#3527) 2024-02-29 10:42:54 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
b9f9ce874d chore: have library search drop star only symbols (#3534)
Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-02-29 07:09:02 +00:00
Scott Morrison
5a33091732 chore: restore %$tk 2024-02-29 17:34:15 +11:00
Scott Morrison
b762567174 chore: update stage0 2024-02-29 17:34:15 +11:00
Scott Morrison
819a32a9eb chore: upstream show_term
add missing prelude
2024-02-29 17:34:15 +11:00
Scott Morrison
755de48ff3 chore: upstream orphaned tests from Std (#3539) 2024-02-29 04:12:52 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
37cd4cc996 fix: match-expression when patterns cover all cases of a BitVec finite type (#3538) 2024-02-29 02:24:47 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e53ae5d89e chore: remove leftovers (#3537) 2024-02-29 02:12:08 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
69e33efa2f chore: One sided BitVec.toNat equality lemmas (#3533) 2024-02-29 00:25:40 +00:00
Scott Morrison
973cbb186b chore: begin moving orphaned tests from Std (#3535) 2024-02-29 00:09:51 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
9afca1c3a9 feat: port check_tactic commands from Std and add test cases (#3532)
This also adds several Array lemmas from std after cleaning up proofs
2024-02-28 23:32:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e1acdcd339 fix: get_elem_tactic_trivial regression (#3531) 2024-02-28 23:14:15 +00:00
Scott Morrison
dc4c2b14d3 chore: begin moving orphaned tests from Std 2024-02-29 10:54:19 +11:00
Joe Hendrix
2312c15ac6 chore: port librarySearch tests from std (#3530)
Needed List.partitionMap for test to complete, so ported it too.
2024-02-28 17:24:17 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
fa058ed228 fix: include let bindings when determining altParamNums for eliminators (#3505)
Else the `case` will now allow introducing all necessary variables.

Induction principles with `let` in the types of the cases will be more
common with #3432.

This implementation no longer reduces the type as it goes, but really
only counts
manifest foralls and lets. I find this more sensible and predictable: If
you have
```
theorem induction₂_symm {P : EReal → EReal → Prop} (symm : Symmetric P) …
```
then previously, writing
```
case symm => 
```
would actually bring a fresh `x` and `y` and variable `h : P x y` into
scope and produce a
goal of `P y x`, because `Symmetric P` happens to be
```
def Symmetric := ∀ ⦃x y⦄, x ≺ y → y ≺ x
```

After this change, after `case symm =>` will leave `Symmetric P` as the
goal.

This gives more control to the author of the induction hypothesis about
the actual
goal of the cases. This shows up in mathlib in two places; fixes in
https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/pull/11023.
I consider these improvements.
2024-02-28 13:14:34 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
17b8880983 chore: update stage0 2024-02-28 11:50:07 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b9c4a7e51d feat: termination_by? (#3514)
the user can now write `termination_by?` to see the termination argument
inferred by GuessLex, and turn it into `termination_by …` using the “Try
this” widget or a code action.

To be done later, maybe: Avoid writing `sizeOf` if it's not necessary.
2024-02-28 10:53:17 +00:00
Kyle Miller
08e149de15 fix: make omission syntax be a builtin syntax (part 2)
Re-enables `⋯` processing that was disabled during the move to a builtin.
Adds tests.
2024-02-28 09:23:17 +01:00
Kyle Miller
37fd128f9f chore: update stage0 2024-02-28 09:23:17 +01:00
Kyle Miller
a3226d4fe4 fix: make omission syntax be a builtin syntax
When editing core Lean, the `pp.proofs` feature causes goal states to fail to display in the Infoview, instead showing only "error when printing message: unknown constant '«term⋯»'". This PR moves the `⋯` syntax from Init.NotationExtra to Lean.Elab.BuiltinTerm

It also makes it so that `⋯` elaborates as `_` while logging a warning, rather than throwing an error, which should be somewhat more friendly when copy/pasting from the Infoview.

Closes #3476
2024-02-28 09:23:17 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
a23292f049 feat: add option tactic.skipAssignedInstances := true for backward compatibilty (#3526)
When using `set_option tactic.skipAssignedInstances false`, `simp` and
`rw` will synthesize instance implicit arguments even if they have
assigned by unification. If the synthesized argument does not match the
assigned one the rewrite is not performed. This option has been added
for backward compatibility.
2024-02-28 05:52:29 +00:00
Siddharth
d683643755 feat: add intMax (#3492) 2024-02-28 05:43:22 +00:00
Scott Morrison
7cce64ee70 feat: omega doesn't check for defeq atoms (#3525)
```
example (a : Nat) :
    (((a + (2 ^ 64 - 1)) % 2 ^ 64 + 1) * 8 - 1 - (a + (2 ^ 64 - 1)) % 2 ^ 64 * 8 + 1) = 8 := by
  omega
```
used to time out, and now is fast.

(We will probably make separate changes later so the defeq checks would
be fast in any case here.)
2024-02-28 05:41:29 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
86ca8e32c6 feat: improve simp discharge trace messages (#3523) 2024-02-28 04:39:57 +00:00
Mac Malone
a179469061 fix: lake: detection of custom Lake build dir (#3506)
During the switch to `.lake`, I overlooked updating the paths in
`LakeInstall`. This fixes that and helps prevent further mistakes by
using the same default definitions as the package configuration itself.
2024-02-28 00:34:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
aed29525ab fix: simp trace issues (#3522) 2024-02-27 23:19:25 +00:00
Kyle Miller
6e24a08907 feat: improve error messages and docstring for decide tactic (#3422)
The `decide` tactic produces error messages that users find to be
obscure. Now:
1. If the `Decidable` instance reduces to `isFalse`, it reports that
`decide` failed because the proposition is false.
2. If the `Decidable` instance fails to reduce, it explains what
proposition it failed for, and it shows the reduced `Decidable` instance
rather than the `Decidable.decide` expression. That expression tends to
be less useful since it shows the unreduced `Decidable` argument (plus
it's a lot longer!)

Examples:
```lean
example : 1 ≠ 1 := by decide
/-
tactic 'decide' proved that the proposition
  1 ≠ 1
is false
-/

opaque unknownProp : Prop

open scoped Classical in
example : unknownProp := by decide
/-
tactic 'decide' failed for proposition
  unknownProp
since its 'Decidable' instance reduced to
  Classical.choice ⋯
rather than to the 'isTrue' constructor.
-/
```

When reporting the error, `decide` only shows the whnf of the
`Decidable` instance. In the future we could consider having it reduce
all decidable instances present in the term, which can help with
determining the cause of failure (this was explored in
8cede580690faa5ce18683f168838b08b372bacb).
2024-02-27 23:07:38 +00:00
Kyle Miller
321ef5b956 fix: make Lean.Internal.liftCoeM and Lean.Internal.coeM unfold (#3404)
The elaboration function `Lean.Meta.coerceMonadLift?` inserts these
coercion helper functions into a term and tries to unfolded them with
`expandCoe`, but because that function only unfolds up to
reducible-and-instance transparency, these functions were not being
unfolded. The fix here is to give them the `@[reducible]` attribute.
2024-02-27 22:17:46 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
9c00a59339 feat: use omega in default decreasing_trivial (#3503)
with this, more functions will be proven terminating automatically,
namely those where after `simp_wf`, lexicographic order handling,
possibly `subst_vars` the remaining goal can be solved by `omega`.

Note that `simp_wf` already does simplification of the goal, so
this adds `omega`, not `(try simp) <;> omega` here.

There are certainly cases where `(try simp) <;> omega` will solve more 
goals (e.g. due to the `subst_vars` in `decreasing_with`), and
`(try simp at *) <;> omega` even more. This PR errs on the side of
taking
smaller steps.

Just appending `<;> omega` to the existing
`simp (config := { arith := true, failIfUnchanged := false })` call
doesn’t work nicely, as that leaves forms like `Nat.sub` in the goal
that
`omega` does not seem to recognize.

This does *not* remove any of the existing ad-hoc `decreasing_trivial`
rules based on `apply` and `assumption`, to not regress over the status
quo (these rules may apply in cases where `omega` wouldn't “see”
everything, but `apply` due to defeq works).

Additionally, just extending makes bootstrapping easier; early in `Init`
where
`omega` does not work yet these other tactics can still be used.

(Using a single `omega`-based tactic was tried in #3478 but isn’t quite
possible yet, and will be postponed until we have better automation
including forward reasoning.)
2024-02-27 18:53:36 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d7ee5ba1cb feat: use omega in the get_elem tactic (#3515)
with this, hopefully more obvious array accesses will be handled
automatically.

Just like #3503, this PR does not investiate which of the exitsting
tactics in `get_elem_tactic_trivial` are subsumed now and could be
dropped without (too much) breakage.
2024-02-27 18:52:04 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
850bfe521c doc: split interface/implementation docs on ite (#3517)
The second part is an implementation notice, as evidenced by the
reference to "users".
2024-02-27 18:50:31 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
855fbed024 fix: regression on match expressions with builtin literals (#3521) 2024-02-27 18:49:44 +00:00
Scott Morrison
2e4557dbd0 chore: default for librarySearch tactic argument (#3495)
There's a downstream tactic in Mathlib that calls `librarySearch`, and
it's easier it is has a default provided.
2024-02-27 14:53:25 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
7d5b6cf097 chore: update stage0 2024-02-27 10:00:46 +00:00
Kyle Miller
6e408ee402 feat: apply app unexpanders for all prefixes of an application (#3375)
Before, app unexpanders would only be applied to entire applications.
However, some notations produce functions, and these functions can be
given additional arguments. The solution so far has been to write app
unexpanders so that they can take an arbitrary number of additional
arguments. However, as reported in [this Zulip
thread](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/pretty.20printer.20bug/near/420662236),
this leads to misleading hover information in the Infoview. For example,
while `HAdd.hAdd f g 1` pretty prints as `(f + g) 1`, hovering over `f +
g` shows `f`. There is no way to fix the situation from within an app
unexpander; the expression position for `HAdd.hAdd f g` is absent, and
app unexpanders cannot register TermInfo.

This commit changes the app delaborator to try running app unexpanders
on every prefix of an application, from longest to shortest prefix. For
efficiency, it is careful to only try this when app delaborators do in
fact exist for the head constant, and it also ensures arguments are only
delaborated once. Then, in `(f + g) 1`, the `f + g` gets TermInfo
registered for that subexpression, making it properly hoverable.

The app delaborator is also refactored, and there are some bug fixes:
- app unexpanders only run when `pp.explicit` is false
- trailing parameters in under-applied applications are now only
considered up to reducible & instance transparency, which lets, for
example, optional arguments for `IO`-valued functions to be omitted.
(`IO` is a reader monad, so it's hiding a pi type)
- app unexpanders will no longer run for delaborators that use
`withOverApp`
- auto parameters now always pretty print, since we are not verifying
that the provided argument equals the result of evaluating the tactic

Furthermore, the `notation` command has been modified to generate an app
unexpander that relies on the app delaborator's new behavior.

The change to app unexpanders is reverse-compatible, but it's
recommended to update `@[app_unexpander]`s in downstream projects so
that they no longer handle overapplication themselves.
2024-02-27 07:04:17 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
c5fd88f5e1 feat: set literal unexpander (#3513) 2024-02-27 03:02:41 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d6df1ec32f fix: register builtin rpc methods (#3512) 2024-02-27 00:15:21 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5e101cf983 feat: use attribute command to add and erase simprocs (#3511) 2024-02-26 23:41:49 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
bb0695b017 fix: simp? should track unfolded let-decls (#3510)
closes #3501
2024-02-26 20:49:24 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
4a14ea3a5c fix: rewrite tactic should not try to synthesize instances that have been inferred by unification (#3509) 2024-02-26 20:18:07 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
f0b4902f7a fix: simp should not try to synthesize instance implicit arguments that have been inferred by unification (#3507) 2024-02-26 20:17:55 +00:00
Mac Malone
e73495e5a6 fix: lake: warn on fetch cloud release failure (#3401)
If Lake fails to download a cloud release, it will now print a warning
indicating that it is falling back to a local build. For example:

```
[0/2] Downloading cloud_test cloud release
[0/2] Building CloudTest
error: > curl -s -f -o [...] -L [...]
error: external command `curl` exited with code 22
warning: fetching cloud release failed; falling back to local build
```
2024-02-26 13:55:19 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
17fb8664f8 fix: issue when matching Int literals (#3504) 2024-02-26 13:09:07 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
992000a672 fix: C++ exceptions across shared libraries on Linux (#3500)
Server interruptions in C++ started to fail after #3421
2024-02-26 10:35:11 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
eb48e6908b feat: sorted call hierarchy items & no private prefix (#3482)
Sorts call hierarchy items and strips the private prefix to make the
call hierarchy more readable.
2024-02-26 09:43:47 +00:00
Marc Huisinga
a929c0176d fix: auto-completion bugs and performance (#3460)
This PR addresses several performance issues in the auto-completion
implementation. It also fixes a number of smaller bugs related to
auto-completion.

In a file with `import Mathlib`, the performance of various kinds of
completions has improved as follows:
- Completing `C`: 49000ms -> 1400ms
- Completing `Cat`: 14300ms -> 1000ms
- Completing `x.` for `x : Nat`: 3700ms -> 220ms
- Completing `.` for an expected type of `Nat`: 11000ms -> 180ms

The following bugs have been fixed as well:
- VS Code never used our custom completion order. Now, the server fuzzy
completion score decides the order that completions appear in.
- Dot auto-completion for private types did not work at all. It does
now.
- Completing `.<identifier>` (where the expected type is used to infer
the namespace) did not filter by the expected type and instead displayed
all matching constants in the respective namespace. Now, it uses the
expected type for filtering. Note that this is not perfect because
sub-namespaces are technically correct completions as well (e.g.
`.Foo.foobar`). Implementing this is future work.
- Completing `.` was often not possible at all. Now, as long as the `.`
is not used in a bracket (where it may be used for the anonymous lambda
feature, e.g. `(. + 1)`), it triggers the correct completion.
-  Fixes #3228.
- The auto-completion in `#check` commands would always try to complete
identifiers using the full declaration name (including namespaces) if it
could be resolved. Now it simply uses the identifier itself in case
users want to complete this identifier to another identifier.

## Details

Regarding completion performance, I have more ideas on how to improve it
further in the future.

Other changes:
- The feature that completions with a matching expected type are sorted
to the top of the server-side ordering was removed. This was never
enabled in VS Code because it would use its own completion item order
and when testing it I found it to be more confusing than useful.
- In the server-side ordering, we would always display keywords at the
top of the list. They are now displayed according to their fuzzy match
score as well.

The following approaches have been used to improve performance:
- Pretty-printing the type for every single completion made up a
significant amount of the time needed to compute the completions. We now
do not pretty-print the type for every single completion that is offered
to the user anymore. Instead, the language server now supports
`completionItem/resolve` requests to compute the type lazily when the
user selects a completion item.
- Note that we need to keep the amount of properties that we compute in
a resolve request to a minimum. When the server receives the resolve
request, the document state may have changed from the state it was in
when the initial auto-completion request was received. LSP doesn't tell
us when it will stop sending resolve requests, so we cannot keep this
state around, as we would have to keep it around forever.
LSP's solution for this dilemma is to have servers send all the state
they need to compute a response to a resolve request to the client as
part of the initial auto completion response (which then sends it back
as part of the resolve request), but this is clearly infeasible for all
real language servers where the amount of state needed to resolve a
request is massive.
This means that the only practical solution is to use the current state
to compute a response to the resolve request, which may yield an
incorrect result. This scenario can especially occur when using
LiveShare where the document is edited by another person while cycling
through available completions.
- Request handlers can now specify a "header caching handler" that is
called after elaborating the header of a file. Request handlers can use
this caching handler to compute caches for information stored in the
header. The auto-completion uses this to pre-compute non-blacklisted
imported declarations, which in turn allow us to iterate only over
non-blacklisted imported declarations where we would before iterate over
all declarations in the environment. This is significant because
blacklisted declarations make up about 4/5 of all declarations.
- Dot completion now looks up names modulo private prefixes to figure
out whether a declaration is in the namespace of the type to the left of
the dot instead of first stripping the private prefix from the name and
then comparing it. This has the benefit that we do not need to scan the
full name in most cases.

This PR also adds a couple of regression tests for fixed bugs, but *no
benchmarks*. We will add these in the future when we add proper support
for benchmarking server interaction sessions to our benchmarking
architecture.

All tests that were broken by producing different completion output
(empty `detail` field, added `sortText?` and `data?` fields) have been
manually checked by me to be still correct before replacing their
expected output.
2024-02-26 09:43:19 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
88fbe2e531 chore: missing prelude 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
b9b7f97d42 chore: update stage0 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
c96f815137 fix: command_code_action initialization 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
bc8511ccbf chore: builtin_command_code_action for #guard_msgs 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
bfb981d465 chore: update stage0 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
48a9a99a97 feat: add builtin_command_code_action attribute 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
365243e9a3 chore: code_action_provider => builtin_code_action_provider 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
ade3256625 chore: remove workaround 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
02e4fe0b1c chore: update stage0 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
5514b8f1fd chore: move command_code_action attribute syntax to Init 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
2edde7b376 chore: initialize => builtin_initialize 2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Scott Morrison
3dd10654e1 chore: upstream Std.CodeAction.*
Remove tactic_code_action

rearrange

oops

.

add tests

import file

Update src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/GuardMsgs.lean

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>

Update src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/GuardMsgs.lean

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>

fix namespace

move GuardMsgs

cleanup
2024-02-25 11:44:42 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
72d233d181 fix: match patterns containing int values and constructors (#3496) 2024-02-25 17:44:08 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
9e5e0e23b2 perf: mkSplitterProof 2024-02-24 16:08:07 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
33bc46d1a7 fix: complete Fin match 2024-02-24 16:08:07 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
056cb75ee0 fix: match literal pattern support
The equation lemmas were not using the standard representation for literals.
2024-02-24 16:08:07 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
66be8b9d4c fix: ToExpr instance for Fin 2024-02-24 16:08:07 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
6d569aa7b5 refactor: use LitValue.lean to implement simprocs 2024-02-24 16:08:07 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
335fef4396 feat: add helper functions for recognizing builtin literals 2024-02-24 16:08:07 -08:00
Sebastian Ullrich
a3596d953d fix: clean build after update-stage0 (#3491) 2024-02-24 15:54:50 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
5b15e1a9f3 fix: disable USize simprocs (#3488) 2024-02-24 02:37:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d179d6c8d7 perf: bitvector literals in match patterns (#3485) 2024-02-24 00:38:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
3ead33bd13 chore: isNatLit => isRawNatLit 2024-02-23 15:18:30 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
51fe66b9eb test: toExpr tests 2024-02-23 15:16:12 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
c48d020255 feat: add ToExpr instances for UInt?? types 2024-02-23 15:16:12 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
f7e74320df feat: add ToExpr instance for BitVec 2024-02-23 15:16:12 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
72f90bff9d feat: add ToExpr instance for Fin 2024-02-23 15:16:12 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
2defc58159 chore: rename isNatLit => isRawNatLit
Motivation: consistency with `mkRawNatLit`
2024-02-23 15:16:12 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
338aa5aa7c fix: Std.BitVec occurrences at OmegaM.lean 2024-02-23 15:15:57 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
4d4b79757d chore: move BitVec to top level namespace
Motivation: `Nat`, `Int`, `Fin`, `UInt??` are already in the top level
namespace. We will eventually define `UInt??` and `Int??` using `BitVec`.
2024-02-23 15:15:57 -08:00
Joe Hendrix
710c3ae9e8 chore: upstream exact? and apply? from Std (#3447)
This is still a draft PR, but includes the core exact? and apply?
tactics.

Still need to convert to builtin syntax and test on Std.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-02-23 21:55:24 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
87e7c666e2 refactor: drop sizeOf_get_lt, duplicate of sizeOf_get (#3481) 2024-02-23 18:43:28 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
60f30a46cf chore: CI: typo 2024-02-23 18:23:00 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
6c828ee9eb doc: fix references to Std.Tactic.Omega in comments (#3479) 2024-02-23 16:05:32 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4d94147643 chore: build Lean in parallel to Init (#3455)
A, for now, less problematic subset of #3103
2024-02-23 10:44:58 +00:00
Wojciech Nawrocki
9dfb93bbe9 fix: unnecessary map (#3470)
This came up while looking into cancelling RPC requests. It turns out
that `IO.cancel (Task.map t f)` does *not* cancel `t` (see
[here](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Should.20cancelling.20a.20purely.20mapped.20task.20cancel.20the.20original.3F)),
so it is important to avoid mapping here. It also turns out that the
`map` is completely unnecessary: it lifts from `Except` to `Except`. So
while from the cancellation perspective this is perhaps more of a
bandaid than a solution, it at least doesn't hurt.
2024-02-23 09:27:57 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
8bf9d398af chore: CI: flag Lean modules not using prelude (#3463)
Co-authored-by: Henrik Böving <hargonix@gmail.com>
2024-02-23 08:06:55 +00:00
Scott Morrison
5a32473f66 feat: replace ToExpr Int (#3472)
The current `ToExpr Int` instance produces `@Int.ofNat (@OfNat.ofNat Nat
i ...)` for nonnegative `i` and `@Int.negSucc (@OfNat.ofNat Nat (-i+1)
...)` for negative `i`.

However it should be producing `@OfNat.ofNat Int i ...` for nonnegative
`i`, and `@Neg.neg ... (@OfNat.ofNat Int (-i) ...)` for negative `i`.
2024-02-23 02:30:05 +00:00
Alex Keizer
b9b4d8f41d feat: add BitVec.toNat_concat (#3471)
Make `x.toNat * 2 + b.toNat` the simp normal form of `(concat x
b).toNat`.

The choice for multiplication and addition was inspired by `Nat.bit_val`
from Mathlib.
Also, because we have considerably more lemmas about multiplication and
`_ + 1` than about shifts and `_ ||| 1`.
2024-02-23 02:16:01 +00:00
Scott Morrison
4e87d7f173 chore: rename Bool.toNat_le_one (#3469)
To merge after #3457.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
2024-02-23 02:07:18 +00:00
Siddharth
e17e0d36a7 feat: omega uses b^(e+1) = b^e*b when b constant (#3450)
This is very helpful when dealing with bitvectors, where a case analysis
on the bitwidth leaves one with hypotheses of the form `x<2^(Nat.succ
w)`.

Design decisions I am unsure about:
- Is creating a helper `succ?` the correct way to match on the exponent
`e+1`?
- I'm not certain why the prior call to `Int.ofNat_pow` also checked
that the exponent was a ground natural. I removed this, since we now
explicitly handle cases where the exponent is a term of the form `e+1`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joe Hendrix <joe@lean-fro.org>
Co-authored-by: Alex Keizer <alex@keizer.dev>
2024-02-23 01:17:03 +00:00
Alex Keizer
8bf6475e10 feat: add BitVec.getLsb_concat (#3457)
First (baby)-step to a `concat`-based `bitblast`: a characterization of
`concat` in terms of `getLsb`.

The proof might benefit slightly from a `toNat_concat` lemma, but I
wasn't sure what the normal form there should be, so I avoided it.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
2024-02-23 00:58:27 +00:00
Scott Morrison
7f7d9bdaaf chore: cleanup in BitVec/Bitblast.lean (#3468) 2024-02-23 00:47:30 +00:00
Scott Morrison
0824442a6f chore: remove @[simp] from some new BitVec lemmas (#3466) 2024-02-23 00:26:06 +00:00
Alex Keizer
815200eaad refactor: make BitVec.carry take bitvector arguments (#3461)
Every usage of `carry` followed the pattern: `carry _ x.toNat y.toNat`,
so we've refactorod `carry` to take the `BitVec`s as arguments, and made
the `toNat` part of its definition.
2024-02-22 19:25:01 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
8193af33e3 fix: split libInit_shared out of libleanshared (#3421)
Avoids hitting the Windows limit on symbols per shared library soon
2024-02-22 19:16:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
53146db620 fix: zetaDelta := false regression (#3459)
See new test. It is a mwe for an issue blocking Mathlib.
2024-02-22 19:10:02 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
23d3ac4760 refactor: reduced unsed imports (#3464) 2024-02-22 18:12:57 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
5bbc54429f fix: improve error message when termination argument is too dependent (#3414)
this may help users when they face #2260

fixes #2260
2024-02-22 16:39:26 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
b27ab5e25d refactor: module MatcherApp.Transform (#3439)
PR #3432 will introduce more operations on `MatcherApp`, including somet
that have more dependencies.

This change prepares by introducing `Lean.Meta.Match.MatcherApp.Basic`
for the basic definition, and `Lean.Meta.MatcherApp.Transform` for the
transformations, currently `addArg` and `refineThrough`, but more to
come.
2024-02-22 16:16:26 +00:00
Scott Morrison
47595540bb chore: more List lemmas for auto (#3454) 2024-02-22 06:23:50 -08:00
Scott Morrison
aa0f43e9a1 chore: namespacing in solve_by_elim (#3453) 2024-02-22 06:23:50 -08:00
Alex Keizer
997ae402da feat: show basic properties of BitVec multiplication (#3445)
Show that multiplication of bitvectors is associative and commutative,
and show that it has 1#w as identity (both on the left and right).
2024-02-22 06:23:50 -08:00
Joe Hendrix
61c22c88d7 chore: address copyright inconsistencies (#3448) 2024-02-22 06:23:50 -08:00
Scott Morrison
629b7d0fdd chore: add bv_toNat attributes 2024-02-22 06:23:38 -08:00
Scott Morrison
46df6142a6 chore: update stage0 2024-02-22 06:23:26 -08:00
Scott Morrison
2b1a0371c6 feat: add bv_omega tactic 2024-02-22 06:23:13 -08:00
Siddharth
b6ed97bb3d feat: setup simp lemmas: 'msb -> getLsb -> decide ...' (#3436)
This is a follow up to 'https://github.com/leanprover/std4/pull/645',
where the simp lemmas were requested:
https://github.com/leanprover/std4/pull/645#issuecomment-1944862251

---

Note that @semorrison asked to use `(Fin.last _)` to index. Now that we
use a `Nat` to index `msb` , the pattern `(Fin.last _)` would not have
the width be automatically inferred. Therefore, I've changed the
definitions to use `Nat` for indexing.

---------

Co-authored-by: Siddharth Bhat Mala <sb2743@cl.cam.ac.uk>
Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-02-22 00:07:14 +00:00
Phil de Joux
9a970611ca doc: correct typo "can calls" (#3446)
Fixes a minor typo.
2024-02-21 22:31:02 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
6e821de11a chore: update stage0 2024-02-21 21:58:54 +01:00
Joe Hendrix
db3c1d4e7e chore: make server completion predicate not private 2024-02-21 21:58:54 +01:00
Leonardo de Moura
4d0c0e2328 fix: allow users to disable builtin simprocs in simp args (#3441) 2024-02-21 20:01:11 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
e5d2cbceaa fix: structural equation proof generator (#3444)
See new test.
2024-02-21 19:42:39 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ddd6342737 fix: support for Fin and BitVec literal normalization (#3443) 2024-02-21 19:05:47 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
75272cb157 feat: BitVec.ofNatLt and updates to use it (#3430)
This PR is an effort to improve reasoning at the Nat level about
bitvectors and reduce of Fin and Nat.

It slightly tightens some proofs, but is generally aimed at reducing
inconsistencies between definitions at the Nat and Fin types in favor of
more consistently using Nat operations.

This ports leanprover/std4#664 to Lean core.

Here was the rational I provided in the discussion for
leanprover/std4#664:

It's mostly about consistency. If we use the same types and style in
definitions and proofs, there is less surprise when unfolding or
otherwise using definitions. We use some Nat based operations that
haven't been extended to Fin such as the bitwise operations, and I don't
want to pay the overhead of introducing a Fin version of every Bitvector
operation.
So this basically means Nat is preferred.

One argument potentially in favor of Fin is that we could reuse results
proven there, but that doesn't really seem to be the case so far.

A second argument is that we want to simplify expression to use more
canonical forms and we currently can pretty-print those operations
better using ofNat than ofFin. We could define the notations using ofFin
of course though, but that's additional operators that will show up in
expressions.
2024-02-21 18:02:56 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
d55bab41bb feat: Int.toNat simproc (#3440) 2024-02-21 17:12:14 +00:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
71cfbb26de chore: update stage0 2024-02-21 15:19:07 +00:00
David Thrane Christiansen
74e7886ce7 feat: custom error recovery in parser (#3413)
Adds a simple error-recovery mechanism to Lean's parser, similar to
those used in other combinator parsing libraries.

Lean itself isn't very amenable to error recovery with this mechanism,
as it requires global knowledge of the grammar in question to write
recovery rules that don't break backtracking or `<|>`. I only found a
few opportunities.

But for DSLs, this is really important. In particular, Verso parse
errors interacted very badly with Lean parse errors in a way that
required frequent "restart file" commands, but this mechanism allows me
to both recover from Verso parse errors and to have Lean skip the rest
of the file rather than repeatedly trying to parse it as Lean commands.
2024-02-21 14:29:54 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
0fb936158b chore: explicit DecidableEq instance for BitVec (#3438) 2024-02-21 13:37:00 +00:00
Scott Morrison
cc8adfb2a5 feat: support for Fin in omega (#3427) 2024-02-21 13:09:38 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a0089d4667 fix: match pattern missing test 2024-02-21 05:14:26 -08:00
Scott Morrison
29b589a867 chore: add @[simp] to BitVec.toNat_mul (#3434) 2024-02-21 11:57:12 +00:00
Scott Morrison
f76bb2495b feat: omega handles shift operators, and normalises ground term exponentials (#3433)
This is a preliminary to a BitVec frontend for `omega`.
2024-02-21 11:55:58 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
89490f648a fix: address symm and label bugs from #3408 (#3429)
#3408 was somewhat large and didn't properly test the symm and label
attribute code after edits to the builtin versions.

This migrates the code for generating labeled attributes from Init back
to Lean so that the required definitions are in scope.

This also addresses a mistake in the symm elaborator that prevented symm
without location information from elaborating.

Both fixes have been tested on the Std test suite and successfully
passed.
2024-02-21 07:21:07 +00:00
Scott Morrison
6719af350f chore: remove mkAppN macro in omega (#3428) 2024-02-21 05:11:37 +00:00
Scott Morrison
3d8f73380e chore: simplify decide (b = true) and variants (#3426)
```
@[simp] theorem decide_eq_true {b : Bool} : decide (b = true) = b := by cases b <;> simp
@[simp] theorem decide_eq_false {b : Bool} : decide (b = false) = !b := by cases b <;> simp
@[simp] theorem decide_true_eq {b : Bool} : decide (true = b) = b := by cases b <;> simp
@[simp] theorem decide_false_eq {b : Bool} : decide (false = b) = !b := by cases b <;> simp
```
2024-02-21 04:30:25 +00:00
Scott Morrison
959ad98861 fix: bug in omega's elimination selection (#3425)
Silly bug that was resulting in unnecessary inexact eliminations. I'm
surprised this hasn't already been biting users.
2024-02-21 01:46:08 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
29244f32f6 chore: upstream solve_by_elim (#3408)
This upstreams the solve_by_elim tactic from Std.

It is a key tactic needed by library_search.
2024-02-21 01:16:04 +00:00
Scott Morrison
09cfcefb25 chore: upstream List.get?_append (#3424)
This suffices to get `lean-auto` off Std. (At least, `lake build` works.
Their test suite is [not
automated](https://github.com/leanprover-community/lean-auto/issues/21)?)
2024-02-20 23:53:41 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
c9aea32d3e chore: speedcenter: count max symbols in shared libraries (#3418) 2024-02-20 19:25:24 +00:00
Eric Wieser
07f490513c doc: fix confusing language in Expr.isProp (#3420)
`True` "is *a* `Prop`", but this function actually returns whether
something *is* `Prop`.
2024-02-20 16:08:28 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
928f3e434e chore: add norm_cast_add_elim ne_eq
Recall that `add_elim` was a local command in Std
2024-02-20 07:00:47 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
855a762bcb chore: update stage0 2024-02-20 07:00:47 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
e1c176543a feat: add command norm_cast_add_elim 2024-02-20 07:00:47 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
15be8fc2a6 fix: builtin_initialize at pushCastExt 2024-02-20 07:00:47 -08:00
Scott Morrison
28a02a8688 chore: upstream norm_cast attributes and tests 2024-02-20 07:00:47 -08:00
Adrien Champion
a898aa18f3 chore: add documentation for the String.iterator API (#3300)
Adds documentation to the `String.Iterator` API, mentored by
@eric-wieser and @david-christiansen

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
2024-02-20 13:31:27 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
263629d140 chore: pr-release to suggest a git rebase command (#3417) 2024-02-20 13:06:06 +00:00
Henrik Böving
b598c0fea9 doc: prelude convention in Lean (#3416) 2024-02-20 12:11:57 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
d0fb48b4e4 fix: use builtin code action for "try this" 2024-02-20 12:48:19 +01:00
Sebastian Ullrich
79a9f6759a chore: update stage0 2024-02-20 12:48:19 +01:00
Sebastian Ullrich
f1a3169424 fix: [builtin_code_action_provider] 2024-02-20 12:48:19 +01:00
Scott Morrison
4a7c1ea439 chore: upstream simp? 2024-02-20 12:48:19 +01:00
Scott Morrison
15cbcae7b2 chore: typo (#3415) 2024-02-20 10:40:59 +00:00
Scott Morrison
ea665de453 chore: CI checks for copyright headers (#3412)
Hopefully this will fail until #3411 is merged.
2024-02-20 07:02:50 +00:00
Scott Morrison
8b8e001794 chore: add missing copyright headers (#3411) 2024-02-20 01:49:55 +00:00
Scott Morrison
35e374350c chore: upstream norm_cast tactic (#3322)
This is a quite substantial tactic.

It also includes the infamour `NatCast` typeclass (which I've equipped
with a module-doc). I wasn't at all sure where that should live, so it
is currently randomly in `Lean/Elan/Tactic/NatCast.lean`: presumably if
we're doing this it will go somewhere in `Init`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-02-19 17:49:17 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
9e27e92eea chore: set literal notation (#3348)
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-02-19 23:22:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
489f2da711 feat: add simproc for BitVec.signExtend (#3409) 2024-02-19 15:15:37 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
75d7bc0ef1 chore: disable test to fix build failure on Windows (#3410) 2024-02-19 15:15:26 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
5d9552d66c feat: simprocs for BitVec (#3407) 2024-02-19 14:01:00 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
067913bc36 chore: remove sorry 2024-02-19 13:01:44 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
c23a35c472 chore: quick temporary fix 2024-02-19 12:53:25 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
f64d14ea54 chore: update stage0 2024-02-19 12:47:04 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
90b5a0011d feat: assume function application arguments occurring in local simp theorems have been annotated with no_index (#3406)
closes #2670
2024-02-19 12:43:34 -08:00
Scott Morrison
ca941249b9 chore: upstream Std.BitVec.* (#3400)
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-02-19 12:43:34 -08:00
Sebastian Ullrich
94a9ab45ff chore: Nix CI: stop pushing to cachix (#3402) 2024-02-19 16:41:20 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
e2b3b34d14 feat: introduce native functions for Int.ediv / Int.emod (#3376)
These still need tests, but I thought I'd upstream so I can use
benchmarking and check for build errors.
2024-02-19 15:04:51 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
204b408df7 chore: remove noisy root code owners 2024-02-19 17:30:21 +01:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
7545b85512 chore: update stage0 2024-02-19 15:51:18 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
1d66c32d5f fix: weaken builtin widget collision check 2024-02-19 15:45:01 +00:00
Scott Morrison
7f08975176 chore: upstream simpa (#3396) 2024-02-19 13:37:34 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
0e0ed9ccaf fix: broken trace tree on elab runtime exception (#3371) 2024-02-19 11:15:23 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
59bf220934 chore: update stage0 2024-02-19 12:37:19 +01:00
Sebastian Ullrich
032a2ecaa1 chore: update builtin_widget_module registration code 2024-02-19 12:33:23 +01:00
Joachim Breitner
da24708ba5 refactor: use isAppOfArity (#3394) 2024-02-19 09:24:11 +00:00
Scott Morrison
16757bb256 chore: upstream Std.Data.Fin.Iterate (#3392) 2024-02-19 04:29:45 +00:00
Scott Morrison
3f548edcd7 chore: upstream (most of) Std.Data.Nat.Lemmas (#3391)
When updating Std, be careful that not every lemma has been upstreamed,
so we need to be careful to only delete things that have already been
declared.
2024-02-19 03:47:49 +00:00
Scott Morrison
8758c0adf5 chore: upstream Std.Data.Bool (#3389) 2024-02-19 02:44:07 +00:00
Scott Morrison
b41499cec1 chore: upstream Std.Data.Fin.Basic (#3390) 2024-02-19 02:16:17 +00:00
Scott Morrison
88deb34ddb chore: upstream omega (#3367)
Co-authored-by: Joe Hendrix <joe@lean-fro.org>
2024-02-19 00:19:55 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
5e5bdfba1a fix: savePanelWidgetInfo on @[builtin_widget_module] (#3329) 2024-02-18 22:47:30 +00:00
Henrik Böving
23e49eb519 perf: add prelude to all Lean modules 2024-02-18 14:55:17 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
5ce20ba160 chore: add link to issue 2024-02-18 14:19:01 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
aa42fc07d3 test: for issue #2843
closes #2843
2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
bc74e6eb38 chore: update RELEASES.md 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
52f1fcc498 chore: remove workaround 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
a6cdc333d5 chore: fix tests 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
58ed6b9630 chore: update stage0 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
cd9648a61e fix: dsimp zeta bug
Before the `zeta` / `zetaDelta` split, `dsimp` was performing `zeta`
by going inside of a `let`-expression, performing `zetaDelta`, and
then removing the unused `let`-expression.
2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
55ce5d570c chore: add temporary workaround 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
ead14987bc chore: set zetaDelta := true at simp_wf 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
834b515592 chore: update stage0 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
9fe72c5f95 chore: set zetaDelta := false by default in the simplifier 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
77de817960 chore: update stage0 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
457d33d660 feat: configuration options zeta and zetaDelta
TODO: bootstrapping issues, set `zetaDelta := false` in the simplifier.
2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
b882ebcf4a chore: update stage0 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
602b1a0d15 feat: add zetaDelta configuration option 2024-02-18 14:14:55 -08:00
Joachim Breitner
17c7cb0e1c feat: conv => fun (#3240)
Given a target
```
| f a b
```
the new conv tactic
```
conv => fun
```
turns it into
```
| f a
```
and `arg 0` turns it into
```
| f
```

Fixes #3239
2024-02-18 12:02:25 +00:00
Scott Morrison
e206e53f4e chore: add @[simp] to Nat.sub_add_cancel (#3378) 2024-02-18 06:48:10 +00:00
Kyle Miller
d569ed4e5f feat: make loose fvars pretty print as _fvar.123 instead of _uniq.123 (#3380)
Loose fvars are never supposed to be pretty printed, but having them
print with "fvar" in the name can help with debugging broken tactics and
elaborators.

Metaprogramming users often do not realize at first that `_uniq.???` in
pretty printing output refers to fvars not in the current local context.
2024-02-18 01:53:37 +00:00
Kyle Miller
433c4d22c2 fix: exposeRelevantUniverses was inserting the whole expression into itself
This bug appeared in c9db8619f1
2024-02-17 17:53:19 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
6383af0595 chore: update stage0 2024-02-17 17:51:24 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
c8236ccd47 chore: basic simprocs for String 2024-02-17 17:51:24 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
559a18874c chore: simprocs for Eq 2024-02-17 17:51:24 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
3dcc8cab3e feat: simprocs for Char.val, default char, and Char.ofNatAux 2024-02-17 17:51:24 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
fb18ef3688 feat: simprocs for UInt??.ofNatCore and UInt??.toNat 2024-02-17 17:51:24 -08:00
Leonardo de Moura
3e5695e07e feat: simprocs for Char (#3382) 2024-02-17 20:36:51 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
61a76a814f feat: delaborator for Char literals (#3381) 2024-02-17 12:19:40 -08:00
Arthur Adjedj
0c92d17792 fix: instantiate the types of inductives with the right parameters (#3246)
Closes #3242
2024-02-17 16:52:28 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
d536534c4d refactor: drop CasesOnApp, use MatcherApp (#3369)
in all uses of `CasesOnApp`, we treat `MatcherApp`s the same way,
dupliating a fair amount of relatively hairy code (and there is more to
come).

However, the `MatcherApp` abstraction is perfectly capable of
also representing `casesOn` applications, at least for the use cases
encountered so far.

So lets just (optionally) include `casesOn` applications when looking
for matchers,
and remove the `CasesOnApp` abstraction completely.
2024-02-17 15:25:32 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
97e7e668d6 chore: pp.proofs.withType is now false by default (#3379)
`pp.proofs.withType := true` often produces too much noise in the info
view.
2024-02-17 15:09:24 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
dda88c9926 feat: infoview.maxTraceChildren (#3370)
Incrementally unveil trace children for excessively large nodes to
improve infoview rendering time, adjust particularly chatty
`simp.ground` trace to make use of it.
2024-02-17 14:04:46 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
ef9a6bb839 fix: an equation lemma with autoParam arguments fails to rewrite (#3316)
closes #2243
2024-02-17 13:42:34 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
baa9fe5932 fix: simp gets stuck on autoParam (#3315)
closes #2862
2024-02-17 13:42:19 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
368326fb48 fix: simp fails when custom discharger makes no progress (#3317)
closes #2634
2024-02-17 13:42:04 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
678797b67b fix: simp fails to discharge autoParam premises even when it can reduce them to True (#3314)
closes #3257
2024-02-17 13:41:48 +00:00
Mac Malone
496a8d578e fix: lake: open config trace as read-only first & avoid deadlock (#3254)
Lake previously opened the configuration trace as read-write even if it
does not update the configuration. This meant it failed if the trace was
read-only. With this change, it now first acquires a read-only handle
and then, if and only if it determines the need for a reconfigure, does
it re-open the file with a read-write handle. Also, this change fixes a
potential deadlock (Lake will error instead) and generally clarifies the
trace locking code.
2024-02-17 04:20:14 +00:00
Mac Malone
3fb7262fe0 fix: cloud release trace & lake build :release errors (#3248)
Fixes a bug with Lake cloud releases where a cloud release would produce
a different trace if the package was the root of the workspace versus a
dependency. Also, an explicit fetch of a cloud release (e.g., via `lake
build :release`) will now error out with a non-zero exit code if it
fails to find, download, and unpack a release.
2024-02-17 00:18:10 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
8f010a6115 fix: liasolver benchmark bug introduced by #3364 (#3372)
This fixes a rounded division/mod bug introduced by the change in
semantics from Int.div to Int.mod in #3364.
2024-02-16 23:39:26 +00:00
Joachim Breitner
089cd50d00 refactor: let MatcherApp.addArg? check if argument was refined (#3368)
Previously, `CasesOn.addArg?` would do that check inline, while
`MatcherApp.addArg?` would do it after the fact.

Now `MatcherApp.addArg?` uses the same idiom.

Also, makes both `addArg?` always fail if the argument was not refined.

The work on functional induction principles calls for more unification
between the handling of `CasesOnApp` and `MatcherApp`, so this is a step
in that direction.
2024-02-16 15:35:19 +00:00
Scott Morrison
18afefda96 chore: upstream basic statements about inequalities (#3366) 2024-02-16 05:42:38 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
06e21faecd chore: upstream Std.Data.Int.Init modules (#3364)
This is pretty big PR that upstreams all of Std.Data.Int.Init in one go.

So far lemmas have seen minimal changes needed to adapt to Lean core
environment.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-02-16 03:58:23 +00:00
Scott Morrison
c9f27c36a0 chore: upstream false_or_by_contra tactic (#3363)
Changes the goal to `False`, retaining as much information as possible:

* If the goal is `False`, do nothing.
* If the goal is an implication or a function type, introduce the
argument and restart.
  (In particular, if the goal is `x ≠ y`, introduce `x = y`.)
* Otherwise, for a propositional goal `P`, replace it with `¬ ¬ P`
(attempting to find a `Decidable` instance, but otherwise falling back
to working classically)
  and introduce `¬ P`.
* For a non-propositional goal use `False.elim`.
2024-02-16 03:58:10 +00:00
Scott Morrison
c9cba33f57 chore: upstream Expr.nat? and int? for recognising 'normal form' numerals (#3360)
`nat?` checks if an expression is a "natural number in normal form",
i.e. of the form `OfNat n`, where `n` matches `.lit (.natVal n)` for
some `n`.
and if so returns `n`.
2024-02-16 03:31:22 +00:00
Scott Morrison
84bd563cff chore: upstream Std's material on Ord and Ordering (#3365) 2024-02-16 02:57:47 +00:00
Scott Morrison
73524e37ae chore: upstream exfalso (#3361) 2024-02-16 02:21:32 +00:00
Scott Morrison
229f16f421 chore: upstream MVarId.applyConst (#3362)
Helper function for applying a constant to the goal, with fresh universe
metavariables.
2024-02-16 02:08:47 +00:00
Scott Morrison
eaf44d74ae chore: upstream Option material from Std (#3356) 2024-02-16 02:05:18 +00:00
Scott Morrison
6fc3ea7790 chore: upstream Expr.getAppFnArgs (#3359)
This is a widely used helper function in Std/Mathlib when matching on
expressions.

I've reordered some definitions to keep things together. This
introduces:
```
/-- Return the function (name) and arguments of an application. -/
def getAppFnArgs (e : Expr) : Name × Array Expr :=
  withApp e λ e a => (e.constName, a)
```
and 
```
/-- If the expression is a constant, return that name. Otherwise return `Name.anonymous`. -/
def constName (e : Expr) : Name :=
  e.constName?.getD Name.anonymous
```
2024-02-16 01:51:59 +00:00
Scott Morrison
a4e27d3090 chore: upstream HashSet.merge (#3357) 2024-02-16 01:38:16 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
1d9074c524 chore: upstream NatCast and IntCast (#3347)
This upstreams NatCast and IntCast alone independent of norm_cast in
#3322.

This will allow more efficiently upstreaming parts of Std.Data.Int
relevant for omega.

---------

Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-02-16 00:54:22 +00:00
Kyle Miller
e29d75a961 feat: have pp.proofs use for omission (#3241)
By having the `pp.proofs` feature use `⋯` when omitting proofs, when
users copy/paste terms from the InfoView the elaborator can give an
error message explaining why the term cannot be elaborated.

Also adds `pp.proofs.threshold` option to allow users to pretty print
shallow proof terms. By default, only atomic proof terms are pretty
printed.

This adjustment was suggested in PR #3201, which added `⋯` and the
related `pp.deepTerms` option.
2024-02-15 21:49:41 +00:00
Kyle Miller
8aab74e65d fix: make withOverApp annotate the expression position and register TermInfo (#3327)
This makes it so that when `withOverApp` is handling overapplied
functions, the term produced by the supplied delaborator is hoverable in
the Infoview.
2024-02-15 17:40:54 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
4e58b428e9 doc: add Kyle Miller as delaborator code owner 2024-02-15 17:42:57 +01:00
Lean stage0 autoupdater
271ae5b8e5 chore: update stage0 2024-02-15 12:32:00 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
a14bbbffb2 chore: add [ext] basic theorems, add test 2024-02-15 13:26:01 +01:00
Scott Morrison
5a95f91fae chore: update stage0 2024-02-15 13:26:01 +01:00
Scott Morrison
11727a415b chore: upstream ext
and_intros and subst_eqs are not builtin

clarify failure modes

Clarify docString of extCore

clarify

chore: builtin `subst_eqs` tactic

chore: builtin `ext`
2024-02-15 13:26:01 +01:00
Sebastian Ullrich
90a516de09 chore: avoid libleanshared symbol limit (#3346) 2024-02-15 11:39:44 +00:00
Scott Morrison
ae524d465f chore: a missing List lemma in Init (#3344) 2024-02-15 08:55:48 +00:00
Scott Morrison
9a3f0f1909 chore: upstream Std.Data.Array.Init.Lemmas (#3343) 2024-02-15 17:50:07 +11:00
Scott Morrison
fae5b2e87c chore: upstream Std.Data.List.Init.Lemmas (#3341) 2024-02-15 03:19:23 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
2bd187044f chore: builtin haveI and letI 2024-02-15 14:33:36 +11:00
Scott Morrison
144c1bbbaf chore: update stage0 2024-02-15 14:33:36 +11:00
Scott Morrison
98085661c7 chore: upstream haveI tactic
chore: `haveI` and `letI` builtin parsers
2024-02-15 14:33:36 +11:00
Scott Morrison
9cea1a503e chore: upstream Std.Data.Prod.Lex (#3338) 2024-02-15 02:47:08 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
25147accc8 chore: upstream set notation (#3339)
This upstream Std Set notation except for [set
literals](1b4e6926f0/Std/Classes/SetNotation.lean (L115-L131)).
2024-02-15 02:08:45 +00:00
Scott Morrison
6048ba9832 chore: upstream Std.Classes.LawfulMonad (except SatisfiesM) (#3340) 2024-02-15 01:52:02 +00:00
Scott Morrison
33bb87cd1d chore: upstream Std.Data.Fin.Init.Lemmas (#3337) 2024-02-15 01:50:47 +00:00
Scott Morrison
4aa62a6a9c chore: upstream Std.Data.List.Init.Basic (#3335) 2024-02-15 01:50:33 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
eebdfdf87a chore: upstream of Std.Data.Nat.Init (#3331) 2024-02-15 00:18:41 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
01c9f4c783 fix: run_meta macro (#3334) 2024-02-15 00:12:45 +00:00
Kyle Miller
a706c3b89a feat: delaboration collapses parent projections (#3326)
When projection functions are delaborated, intermediate parent
projections are no longer printed. For example, rather than pretty
printing as `o.toB.toA.x` with these `toB` and `toA` parent projections,
it pretty prints as `o.x`.

This feature is being upstreamed from mathlib.
2024-02-14 23:44:48 +00:00
Scott Morrison
329e00661a chore: upstream Std.Util.ExtendedBinders (#3320)
This is not a complete upstreaming of that file (it also supports `∀ᵉ (x
< 2) (y < 3), p x y` as shorthand for `∀ x < 2, ∀ y < 3, p x y`, but I
don't think we need this; it is used in Mathlib).

Syntaxes still need to be made built-in.

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-02-14 11:36:00 +00:00
Joe Hendrix
8b0dd2e835 chore: upstream Std.Logic (#3312)
This will collect definitions from Std.Logic

---------

Co-authored-by: David Thrane Christiansen <david@davidchristiansen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-02-14 09:40:55 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
88a5d27d65 chore: upstream run_cmd and fixes bugs (#3324)
Co-authored-by: Scott Morrison <scott.morrison@gmail.com>
2024-02-14 04:15:28 +00:00
Scott Morrison
232b2b6300 chore: upstream replace tactic (#3321)
Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-02-14 01:53:25 +00:00
Scott Morrison
fdc64def1b feat: upstream 'Try this:' widgets (#3266)
There is a test file in Std that should later be reunited with this
code.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>
2024-02-13 21:58:36 +00:00
Leonardo de Moura
644d4263f1 fix: #eval command was leaking auxiliary declarations into the environment (#3323) 2024-02-13 21:44:52 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
56d703db8e fix: trailing whitespace in location formatter (#3318)
This causes problems when used in conjunction with `#guard_msgs` (which
checks whitespace) and trailing whitespace removal. Discovered by
@PatrickMassot in verbose-lean4.
2024-02-13 15:53:29 +00:00
Henrik Böving
50d661610d perf: LLVM backend, put all allocas in the first BB to enable mem2reg (#3244)
Again co-developed with @bollu.

Based on top of: #3225 

While hunting down the performance discrepancy on qsort.lean between C
and LLVM we noticed there was a single, trivially optimizeable, alloca
(LLVM's stack memory allocation instruction) that had load/stores in the
hot code path. We then found:
https://groups.google.com/g/llvm-dev/c/e90HiFcFF7Y.

TLDR: `mem2reg`, the pass responsible for getting rid of allocas if
possible, only triggers on an alloca if it is in the first BB. The
allocas of the current implementation get put right at the location
where they are needed -> they are ignored by mem2reg.

Thus we decided to add functionality that allows us to push all allocas
up into the first BB.
We initially wanted to write `buildPrologueAlloca` in a `withReader`
style so:
1. get the current position of the builder
2. jump to first BB and do the thing
3. revert position to the original

However the LLVM C API does not expose an option to obtain the current
position of an IR builder. Thus we ended up at the current
implementation which resets the builder position to the end of the BB
that the function was called from. This is valid because we never
operate anywhere but the end of the current BB in the LLVM emitter.

The numbers on the qsort benchmark got improved by the change as
expected, however we are not fully there yet:
```
C:
Benchmark 1: ./qsort.lean.out 400
  Time (mean ± σ):      2.005 s ±  0.013 s    [User: 1.996 s, System: 0.003 s]
  Range (min … max):    1.993 s …  2.036 s    10 runs

LLVM before aligning the types
Benchmark 1: ./qsort.lean.out 400
  Time (mean ± σ):      2.151 s ±  0.007 s    [User: 2.146 s, System: 0.001 s]
  Range (min … max):    2.142 s …  2.161 s    10 runs

LLVM after aligning the types
Benchmark 1: ./qsort.lean.out 400
  Time (mean ± σ):      2.073 s ±  0.011 s    [User: 2.067 s, System: 0.002 s]
  Range (min … max):    2.060 s …  2.097 s    10 runs

LLVM after this
Benchmark 1: ./qsort.lean.out 400
  Time (mean ± σ):      2.038 s ±  0.009 s    [User: 2.032 s, System: 0.001 s]
  Range (min … max):    2.027 s …  2.052 s    10 runs
```

Note: If you wish to merge this PR independently from its predecessor,
there is no technical dependency between the two, I'm merely stacking
them so we can see the performance impacts of each more clearly.
2024-02-13 14:54:40 +00:00
Eric Wieser
0554ab39aa doc: Add a docstring to Simp.Result and its fields (#3319) 2024-02-13 13:57:24 +00:00
Scott Morrison
3a6ebd88bb chore: upstream repeat/split_ands/subst_eqs (#3305)
Small tactics used in the implementation of `ext`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo de Moura <leomoura@amazon.com>
2024-02-13 12:21:14 +00:00
Henrik Böving
06f73d621b fix: type mismatches in the LLVM backend (#3225)
Debugged and authored in collaboration with @bollu.

This PR fixes several performance regressions of the LLVM backend
compared to the C backend
as described in #3192. We are now at the point where some benchmarks
from `tests/bench` achieve consistently equal and sometimes ever so
slightly better performance when using LLVM instead of C. However there
are still a few testcases where we are lacking behind ever so slightly.

The PR contains two changes:
1. Using the same types for `lean.h` runtime functions in the LLVM
backend as in `lean.h` it turns out that:
a) LLVM does not throw an error if we declare a function with a
different type than it actually has. This happened on multiple occasions
here, in particular when the function used `unsigned`, as it was
wrongfully assumed to be `size_t` sized.
b) Refuses to inline a function to the call site if such a type mismatch
occurs. This means that we did not inline important functionality such
as `lean_ctor_set` and were thus slowed down compared to the C backend
which did this correctly.
2. While developing this change we noticed that LLVM does treat the
following as invalid: Having a function declared with a certain type but
called with integers of a different type. However this will manifest in
completely nonsensical errors upon optimizing the bitcode file through
`leanc` such as:
```
error: Invalid record (Producer: 'LLVM15.0.7' Reader: 'LLVM 15.0.7')
```
Presumably because the generate .bc file is invalid in the first place.
Thus we added a call to `LLVMVerifyModule` before serializing the module
into a bitcode file. This ended producing the expected type errors from
LLVM an aborting the bitcode file generation as expected.

We manually checked each function in `lean.h` that is mentioned in
`EmitLLVM.lean` to make sure that all of their types align correctly
now.

Quick overview of the fast benchmarks as measured on my machine, 2 runs
of LLVM and 2 runs of C to get a feeling for how far the averages move:
- binarytrees: basically equal performance
- binarytrees.st: basically equal performance
- const_fold: equal if not slightly better for LLVM
- deriv: LLVM has 8% more instructions than C but same wall clock time
- liasolver: basically equal performance
- qsort: LLVM is slower by 7% instructions, 4% time. We have identified
why the generated code is slower (there is a store/load in a hot loop in
LLVM that is not in C) but not figured out why that happens/how to
address it.
- rbmap: LLVM has 3% less instructions and 13% less wall-clock time than
C (woop woop)
- rbmap_1 and rbmap_10 show similar behavior
- rbmap_fbip: LLVM has 2% more instructions but 2% better wall time
- rbmap_library: equal if not slightly better for LLVM
- unionfind: LLVM has 5% more instructions but 4% better wall time

Leaving out benchmarks related to the compiler itself as I was too lazy
to keep recompiling it from scratch until we are on a level with C.

Summing things up, it appears that LLVM has now caught up or surpassed
the C backend in the microbenchmarks for the most part. Next steps from
our side are:
- trying to win the qsort benchmark
- figuring out why/how LLVM runs more instructions for less wall-clock
time. My current guesses would be measurement noise and/or better use of
micro architecture?
- measuring the larger benchmarks as well
2024-02-13 10:57:35 +00:00
5344 changed files with 233925 additions and 34687 deletions

View File

@@ -9,9 +9,15 @@ assignees: ''
### Prerequisites
* [ ] Put an X between the brackets on this line if you have done all of the following:
* Check that your issue is not already [filed](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues).
* Reduce the issue to a minimal, self-contained, reproducible test case. Avoid dependencies to mathlib4 or std4.
Please put an X between the brackets as you perform the following steps:
* [ ] Check that your issue is not already filed:
https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/issues
* [ ] Reduce the issue to a minimal, self-contained, reproducible test case.
Avoid dependencies to Mathlib or Batteries.
* [ ] Test your test case against the latest nightly release, for example on
https://live.lean-lang.org/#project=lean-nightly
(You can also use the settings there to switch to “Lean nightly”)
### Description
@@ -19,7 +25,7 @@ assignees: ''
### Context
[Broader context that the issue occured in. If there was any prior discussion on [the Lean Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com), link it here as well.]
[Broader context that the issue occurred in. If there was any prior discussion on [the Lean Zulip](https://leanprover.zulipchat.com), link it here as well.]
### Steps to Reproduce
@@ -33,8 +39,8 @@ assignees: ''
### Versions
[Output of `#eval Lean.versionString` or of `lean --version` in the folder that the issue occured in]
[OS version]
[Output of `#version` or `#eval Lean.versionString`]
[OS version, if not using live.lean-lang.org.]
### Additional Information

View File

@@ -5,10 +5,17 @@
* Include the link to your `RFC` or `bug` issue in the description.
* If the issue does not already have approval from a developer, submit the PR as draft.
* The PR title/description will become the commit message. Keep it up-to-date as the PR evolves.
* For `feat/fix` PRs, the first paragraph starting with "This PR" must be present and will become a
changelog entry unless the PR is labeled with `no-changelog`. If the PR does not have this label,
it must instead be categorized with one of the `changelog-*` labels (which will be done by a
reviewer for external PRs).
* A toolchain of the form `leanprover/lean4-pr-releases:pr-release-NNNN` for Linux and M-series Macs will be generated upon build. To generate binaries for Windows and Intel-based Macs as well, write a comment containing `release-ci` on its own line.
* If you rebase your PR onto `nightly-with-mathlib` then CI will test Mathlib against your PR.
* You can manage the `awaiting-review`, `awaiting-author`, and `WIP` labels yourself, by writing a comment containing one of these labels on its own line.
* Remove this section, up to and including the `---` before submitting.
---
Closes #0000 (`RFC` or `bug` issue number fixed by this PR, if any)
This PR <short changelog summary for feat/fix, see above>.
Closes <`RFC` or `bug` issue number fixed by this PR, if any>

8
.github/dependabot.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
version: 2
updates:
- package-ecosystem: "github-actions"
directory: "/"
schedule:
interval: "monthly"
commit-message:
prefix: "chore: CI"

View File

@@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: actionlint
uses: raven-actions/actionlint@v1
uses: raven-actions/actionlint@v2
with:
pyflakes: false # we do not use python scripts

29
.github/workflows/check-prelude.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
name: Check for modules that should use `prelude`
on: [pull_request]
jobs:
check-prelude:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
# the default is to use a virtual merge commit between the PR and master: just use the PR
ref: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
sparse-checkout: |
src/Lean
src/Std
src/lake/Lake
- name: Check Prelude
run: |
failed_files=""
while IFS= read -r -d '' file; do
if ! grep -q "^prelude$" "$file"; then
failed_files="$failed_files$file\n"
fi
done < <(find src/Lean src/Std src/lake/Lake -name '*.lean' -print0)
if [ -n "$failed_files" ]; then
echo -e "The following files should use 'prelude':\n$failed_files"
exit 1
fi

57
.github/workflows/check-stage0.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
name: Check for stage0 changes
on:
merge_group:
pull_request:
jobs:
check-stage0-on-queue:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
ref: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
filter: blob:none
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Find base commit
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
run: echo "BASE=$(git merge-base origin/${{ github.base_ref }} HEAD)" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
- name: Identify stage0 changes
run: |
git diff "${BASE:-HEAD^}..HEAD" --name-only -- stage0 |
grep -v -x -F $'stage0/src/stdlib_flags.h\nstage0/src/lean.mk.in' \
> "$RUNNER_TEMP/stage0" || true
if test -s "$RUNNER_TEMP/stage0"
then
echo "CHANGES=yes" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
else
echo "CHANGES=no" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
fi
shell: bash
- if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
name: Set label
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const { owner, repo, number: issue_number } = context.issue;
if (process.env.CHANGES == 'yes') {
await github.rest.issues.addLabels({ owner, repo, issue_number, labels: ['changes-stage0'] }).catch(() => {});
} else {
await github.rest.issues.removeLabel({ owner, repo, issue_number, name: 'changes-stage0' }).catch(() => {});
}
- if: env.CHANGES == 'yes'
name: Report changes
run: |
echo "Found changes to stage0/, please do not merge using the merge queue." | tee "$GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY"
# shellcheck disable=SC2129
echo '```' >> "$GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY"
cat "$RUNNER_TEMP/stage0" >> "$GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY"
echo '```' >> "$GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY"
- if: github.event_name == 'merge_group' && env.CHANGES == 'yes'
name: Fail when on the merge queue
run: exit 1

View File

@@ -6,10 +6,20 @@ on:
tags:
- '*'
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize, reopened, labeled]
merge_group:
schedule:
- cron: '0 7 * * *' # 8AM CET/11PM PT
# for manual re-release of a nightly
workflow_dispatch:
inputs:
action:
description: 'Action'
required: true
default: 'release nightly'
type: choice
options:
- release nightly
concurrency:
group: ${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.ref }}-${{ github.event_name }}
@@ -21,8 +31,10 @@ jobs:
configure:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
outputs:
# Should we run only a quick CI? Yes on a pull request without the full-ci label
quick: ${{ steps.set-quick.outputs.quick }}
# 0: PRs without special label
# 1: PRs with `merge-ci` label, merge queue checks, master commits
# 2: PRs with `release-ci` label, releases (incl. nightlies)
check-level: ${{ steps.set-level.outputs.check-level }}
# The build matrix, dynamically generated here
matrix: ${{ steps.set-matrix.outputs.result }}
# Should we make a nightly release? If so, this output contains the lean version string, else it is empty
@@ -39,163 +51,12 @@ jobs:
RELEASE_TAG: ${{ steps.set-release.outputs.RELEASE_TAG }}
steps:
- name: Run quick CI?
id: set-quick
env:
quick: ${{
github.event_name == 'pull_request' && !contains( github.event.pull_request.labels.*.name, 'full-ci')
}}
run: |
echo "quick=${{env.quick}}" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
- name: Configure build matrix
id: set-matrix
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const quick = ${{ steps.set-quick.outputs.quick }};
console.log(`quick: ${quick}`)
let matrix = [
{
// portable release build: use channel with older glibc (2.27)
"name": "Linux LLVM",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"release": false,
"quick": false,
"shell": "nix-shell --arg pkgsDist \"import (fetchTarball \\\"channel:nixos-19.03\\\") {{}}\" --run \"bash -euxo pipefail {0}\"",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-linux.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "ldd -v",
// foreign code may be linked against more recent glibc
// reverse-ffi needs to be updated to link to LLVM libraries
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'foreign|leanlaketest_reverse-ffi'",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DLLVM=ON -DLLVM_CONFIG=${GITHUB_WORKSPACE}/build/llvm-host/bin/llvm-config"
},
{
"name": "Linux release",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"release": true,
"quick": true,
"shell": "nix-shell --arg pkgsDist \"import (fetchTarball \\\"channel:nixos-19.03\\\") {{}}\" --run \"bash -euxo pipefail {0}\"",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-linux.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "ldd -v",
// foreign code may be linked against more recent glibc
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'foreign'"
},
{
"name": "Linux",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"check-stage3": true,
"test-speedcenter": true,
"quick": false,
},
{
"name": "Linux Debug",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"quick": false,
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug",
// exclude seriously slow tests
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'interactivetest|leanpkgtest|laketest|benchtest'"
},
{
"name": "Linux fsanitize",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"quick": false,
// turn off custom allocator & symbolic functions to make LSAN do its magic
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DLEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS=-fsanitize=address,undefined -DLEANC_EXTRA_FLAGS='-fsanitize=address,undefined -fsanitize-link-c++-runtime' -DSMALL_ALLOCATOR=OFF -DBSYMBOLIC=OFF",
// exclude seriously slow/problematic tests (laketests crash)
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'interactivetest|leanpkgtest|laketest|benchtest'"
},
{
"name": "macOS",
"os": "macos-latest",
"release": true,
"quick": false,
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-macos.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "otool -L",
"tar": "gtar" // https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/2619
},
{
"name": "macOS aarch64",
"os": "macos-latest",
"release": true,
"quick": false,
"cross": true,
"cross_target": "aarch64-apple-darwin",
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DUSE_GMP=OFF -DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-darwin_aarch64",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-aarch64-apple-darwin.tar.zst https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-macos.sh lean-llvm-aarch64-* lean-llvm-x86_64-*",
"binary-check": "otool -L",
"tar": "gtar" // https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/2619
},
{
"name": "Windows",
"os": "windows-2022",
"release": true,
"quick": false,
"shell": "msys2 {0}",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-G \"Unix Makefiles\" -DUSE_GMP=OFF",
// for reasons unknown, interactivetests are flaky on Windows
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "--repeat until-pass:2",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-w64-windows-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-mingw.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "ldd"
},
{
"name": "Linux aarch64",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DUSE_GMP=OFF -DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-linux_aarch64",
"release": true,
"quick": false,
"cross": true,
"cross_target": "aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu",
"shell": "nix-shell --arg pkgsDist \"import (fetchTarball \\\"channel:nixos-19.03\\\") {{ localSystem.config = \\\"aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu\\\"; }}\" --run \"bash -euxo pipefail {0}\"",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.zst https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-linux.sh lean-llvm-aarch64-* lean-llvm-x86_64-*"
},
{
"name": "Linux 32bit",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
// Use 32bit on stage0 and stage1 to keep oleans compatible
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DSTAGE0_USE_GMP=OFF -DSTAGE0_LEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_LEANC_OPTS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_MMAP=OFF -DUSE_GMP=OFF -DLEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS='-m32' -DLEANC_OPTS='-m32' -DMMAP=OFF -DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-linux_x86",
"cmultilib": true,
"release": true,
"quick": false,
"cross": true,
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}"
},
{
"name": "Web Assembly",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
// Build a native 32bit binary in stage0 and use it to compile the oleans and the wasm build
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DCMAKE_C_COMPILER_WORKS=1 -DSTAGE0_USE_GMP=OFF -DSTAGE0_LEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_LEANC_OPTS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX=\"\" -DUSE_GMP=OFF -DMMAP=OFF -DSTAGE0_MMAP=OFF -DCMAKE_AR=../emsdk/emsdk-main/upstream/emscripten/emar -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../emsdk/emsdk-main/upstream/emscripten/cmake/Modules/Platform/Emscripten.cmake -DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-linux_wasm32",
"wasm": true,
"cmultilib": true,
"release": true,
"quick": false,
"cross": true,
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
// Just a few selected tests because wasm is slow
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-R \"leantest_1007\\.lean|leantest_Format\\.lean|leanruntest\\_1037.lean|leanruntest_ac_rfl\\.lean\""
}
];
console.log(`matrix:\n${JSON.stringify(matrix, null, 2)}`)
if (quick) {
return matrix.filter((job) => job.quick)
} else {
return matrix
}
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@v4
# don't schedule nightlies on forks
if: github.event_name == 'schedule' && github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4'
if: github.event_name == 'schedule' && github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4' || inputs.action == 'release nightly'
- name: Set Nightly
if: github.event_name == 'schedule' && github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4'
if: github.event_name == 'schedule' && github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4' || inputs.action == 'release nightly'
id: set-nightly
run: |
if [[ -n '${{ secrets.PUSH_NIGHTLY_TOKEN }}' ]]; then
@@ -240,6 +101,168 @@ jobs:
echo "Tag ${TAG_NAME} did not match SemVer regex."
fi
- name: Set check level
id: set-level
# We do not use github.event.pull_request.labels.*.name here because
# re-running a run does not update that list, and we do want to be able to
# rerun the workflow run after setting the `release-ci`/`merge-ci` labels.
run: |
check_level=0
if [[ -n "${{ steps.set-nightly.outputs.nightly }}" || -n "${{ steps.set-release.outputs.RELEASE_TAG }}" ]]; then
check_level=2
elif [[ "${{ github.event_name }}" != "pull_request" ]]; then
check_level=1
else
labels="$(gh api repos/${{ github.repository_owner }}/${{ github.event.repository.name }}/pulls/${{ github.event.pull_request.number }} --jq '.labels')"
if echo "$labels" | grep -q "release-ci"; then
check_level=2
elif echo "$labels" | grep -q "merge-ci"; then
check_level=1
fi
fi
echo "check-level=$check_level" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
env:
GH_TOKEN: ${{ github.token }}
- name: Configure build matrix
id: set-matrix
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const level = ${{ steps.set-level.outputs.check-level }};
console.log(`level: ${level}`);
// use large runners where available (original repo)
let large = ${{ github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4' }};
let matrix = [
{
// portable release build: use channel with older glibc (2.27)
"name": "Linux LLVM",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"release": false,
"check-level": 2,
"shell": "nix develop .#oldGlibc -c bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-linux.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "ldd -v",
// foreign code may be linked against more recent glibc
// reverse-ffi needs to be updated to link to LLVM libraries
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'foreign|leanlaketest_reverse-ffi'",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DLLVM=ON -DLLVM_CONFIG=${GITHUB_WORKSPACE}/build/llvm-host/bin/llvm-config"
},
{
"name": "Linux release",
"os": large ? "nscloud-ubuntu-22.04-amd64-4x8" : "ubuntu-latest",
"release": true,
"check-level": 0,
"shell": "nix develop .#oldGlibc -c bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-linux.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "ldd -v",
// foreign code may be linked against more recent glibc
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'foreign'"
},
{
"name": "Linux",
"os": large ? "nscloud-ubuntu-22.04-amd64-4x8" : "ubuntu-latest",
"check-stage3": level >= 2,
"test-speedcenter": level >= 2,
"check-level": 1,
},
{
"name": "Linux Debug",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"check-level": 2,
"CMAKE_PRESET": "debug",
// exclude seriously slow tests
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'interactivetest|leanpkgtest|laketest|benchtest|bv_bitblast_stress'"
},
// TODO: suddenly started failing in CI
/*{
"name": "Linux fsanitize",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
"check-level": 2,
// turn off custom allocator & symbolic functions to make LSAN do its magic
"CMAKE_PRESET": "sanitize",
// exclude seriously slow/problematic tests (laketests crash)
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "-E 'interactivetest|leanpkgtest|laketest|benchtest'"
},*/
{
"name": "macOS",
"os": "macos-13",
"release": true,
"check-level": 2,
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-macos.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "otool -L",
"tar": "gtar" // https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/2619
},
{
"name": "macOS aarch64",
"os": "macos-14",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-darwin_aarch64",
"release": true,
"check-level": 0,
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-aarch64-apple-darwin.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-macos.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "otool -L",
"tar": "gtar" // https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/2619
},
{
"name": "Windows",
"os": "windows-2022",
"release": true,
"check-level": 2,
"shell": "msys2 {0}",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-G \"Unix Makefiles\"",
// for reasons unknown, interactivetests are flaky on Windows
"CTEST_OPTIONS": "--repeat until-pass:2",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-x86_64-w64-windows-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-mingw.sh lean-llvm*",
"binary-check": "ldd"
},
{
"name": "Linux aarch64",
"os": "nscloud-ubuntu-22.04-arm64-4x8",
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-linux_aarch64",
"release": true,
"check-level": 2,
"shell": "nix develop .#oldGlibcAArch -c bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
"llvm-url": "https://github.com/leanprover/lean-llvm/releases/download/15.0.1/lean-llvm-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.zst",
"prepare-llvm": "../script/prepare-llvm-linux.sh lean-llvm*"
},
{
"name": "Linux 32bit",
"os": "ubuntu-latest",
// Use 32bit on stage0 and stage1 to keep oleans compatible
"CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DSTAGE0_USE_GMP=OFF -DSTAGE0_LEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_LEANC_OPTS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_MMAP=OFF -DUSE_GMP=OFF -DLEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS='-m32' -DLEANC_OPTS='-m32' -DMMAP=OFF -DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-linux_x86 -DCMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/",
"cmultilib": true,
"release": true,
"check-level": 2,
"cross": true,
"shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}"
}
// {
// "name": "Web Assembly",
// "os": "ubuntu-latest",
// // Build a native 32bit binary in stage0 and use it to compile the oleans and the wasm build
// "CMAKE_OPTIONS": "-DCMAKE_C_COMPILER_WORKS=1 -DSTAGE0_USE_GMP=OFF -DSTAGE0_LEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_LEANC_OPTS='-m32' -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX=\"\" -DUSE_GMP=OFF -DMMAP=OFF -DSTAGE0_MMAP=OFF -DCMAKE_AR=../emsdk/emsdk-main/upstream/emscripten/emar -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../emsdk/emsdk-main/upstream/emscripten/cmake/Modules/Platform/Emscripten.cmake -DLEAN_INSTALL_SUFFIX=-linux_wasm32 -DSTAGE0_CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/",
// "wasm": true,
// "cmultilib": true,
// "release": true,
// "check-level": 2,
// "cross": true,
// "shell": "bash -euxo pipefail {0}",
// // Just a few selected tests because wasm is slow
// "CTEST_OPTIONS": "-R \"leantest_1007\\.lean|leantest_Format\\.lean|leanruntest\\_1037.lean|leanruntest_ac_rfl\\.lean|leanruntest_tempfile.lean\\.|leanruntest_libuv\\.lean\""
// }
];
console.log(`matrix:\n${JSON.stringify(matrix, null, 2)}`)
return matrix.filter((job) => level >= job["check-level"])
build:
needs: [configure]
if: github.event_name != 'schedule' || github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4'
@@ -251,7 +274,7 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
defaults:
run:
shell: ${{ matrix.shell || 'nix-shell --run "bash -euxo pipefail {0}"' }}
shell: ${{ matrix.shell || 'nix develop -c bash -euxo pipefail {0}' }}
name: ${{ matrix.name }}
env:
# must be inside workspace
@@ -266,63 +289,67 @@ jobs:
CXX: c++
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET: 10.15
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
with:
submodules: true
# the default is to use a virtual merge commit between the PR and master: just use the PR
ref: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
- name: Install Nix
uses: cachix/install-nix-action@v18
with:
install_url: https://releases.nixos.org/nix/nix-2.12.0/install
if: matrix.os == 'ubuntu-latest' && !matrix.cmultilib
uses: DeterminateSystems/nix-installer-action@main
if: runner.os == 'Linux' && !matrix.cmultilib
- name: Install MSYS2
uses: msys2/setup-msys2@v2
with:
msystem: clang64
# `:p` means prefix with appropriate msystem prefix
pacboy: "make python cmake:p clang:p ccache:p gmp:p git zip unzip diffutils binutils tree zstd:p tar"
if: matrix.os == 'windows-2022'
# `:` means do not prefix with msystem
pacboy: "make: python: cmake clang ccache gmp libuv git: zip: unzip: diffutils: binutils: tree: zstd tar:"
if: runner.os == 'Windows'
- name: Install Brew Packages
run: |
brew install ccache tree zstd coreutils gmp
if: matrix.os == 'macos-latest'
brew install ccache tree zstd coreutils gmp libuv
if: runner.os == 'macOS'
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
# the default is to use a virtual merge commit between the PR and master: just use the PR
ref: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
# Do check out some CI-relevant files from virtual merge commit to accommodate CI changes on
# master (as the workflow files themselves are always taken from the merge)
# (needs to be after "Install *" to use the right shell)
- name: CI Merge Checkout
run: |
git fetch --depth=1 origin ${{ github.sha }}
git checkout FETCH_HEAD flake.nix flake.lock
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
# (needs to be after "Checkout" so files don't get overridden)
- name: Setup emsdk
uses: mymindstorm/setup-emsdk@v12
uses: mymindstorm/setup-emsdk@v14
with:
version: 3.1.44
actions-cache-folder: emsdk
if: matrix.wasm
- name: Install 32bit c libs
run: |
sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y gcc-multilib g++-multilib ccache
sudo apt-get install -y gcc-multilib g++-multilib ccache libuv1-dev:i386
if: matrix.cmultilib
- name: Cache
uses: actions/cache@v3
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: .ccache
key: ${{ matrix.name }}-build-v3-${{ github.sha }}
key: ${{ matrix.name }}-build-v3-${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
# fall back to (latest) previous cache
restore-keys: |
${{ matrix.name }}-build-v3
save-always: true
# open nix-shell once for initial setup
- name: Setup
run: |
# open nix-shell once for initial setup
true
if: matrix.os == 'ubuntu-latest'
- name: Set up core dumps
ccache --zero-stats
if: runner.os == 'Linux'
- name: Set up NPROC
run: |
mkdir -p $PWD/coredumps
# store in current directory, for easy uploading together with binary
echo $PWD/coredumps/%e.%p.%t | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
if: matrix.os == 'ubuntu-latest'
echo "NPROC=$(nproc 2>/dev/null || sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu 2>/dev/null || echo 4)" >> $GITHUB_ENV
- name: Build
run: |
mkdir build
cd build
ulimit -c unlimited # coredumps
# arguments passed to `cmake`
# this also enables githash embedding into stage 1 library
OPTIONS=(-DCHECK_OLEAN_VERSION=ON)
@@ -348,11 +375,19 @@ jobs:
OPTIONS+=(-DLEAN_SPECIAL_VERSION_DESC=${{ needs.configure.outputs.LEAN_SPECIAL_VERSION_DESC }})
fi
# contortion to support empty OPTIONS with old macOS bash
cmake .. ${{ matrix.CMAKE_OPTIONS }} ${OPTIONS[@]+"${OPTIONS[@]}"} -DLEAN_INSTALL_PREFIX=$PWD/..
make -j4
make install
cmake .. --preset ${{ matrix.CMAKE_PRESET || 'release' }} -B . ${{ matrix.CMAKE_OPTIONS }} ${OPTIONS[@]+"${OPTIONS[@]}"} -DLEAN_INSTALL_PREFIX=$PWD/..
time make -j$NPROC
- name: Install
run: |
make -C build install
- name: Check Binaries
run: ${{ matrix.binary-check }} lean-*/bin/* || true
- name: Count binary symbols
run: |
for f in lean-*/bin/*; do
echo "$f: $(nm $f | grep " T " | wc -l) exported symbols"
done
if: matrix.name == 'Windows'
- name: List Install Tree
run: |
# omit contents of Init/, ...
@@ -368,7 +403,7 @@ jobs:
else
${{ matrix.tar || 'tar' }} cf - $dir | zstd -T0 --no-progress -o pack/$dir.tar.zst
fi
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
if: matrix.release
with:
name: build-${{ matrix.name }}
@@ -378,78 +413,72 @@ jobs:
build/stage1/bin/lean --stats src/Lean.lean
if: ${{ !matrix.cross }}
- name: Test
id: test
run: |
cd build/stage1
ulimit -c unlimited # coredumps
# exclude nonreproducible test
ctest -j4 --output-on-failure ${{ matrix.CTEST_OPTIONS }} < /dev/null
if: (matrix.wasm || !matrix.cross) && needs.configure.outputs.quick == 'false'
time ctest --preset ${{ matrix.CMAKE_PRESET || 'release' }} --test-dir build/stage1 -j$NPROC --output-junit test-results.xml ${{ matrix.CTEST_OPTIONS }}
if: (matrix.wasm || !matrix.cross) && needs.configure.outputs.check-level >= 1
- name: Test Summary
uses: test-summary/action@v2
with:
paths: build/stage1/test-results.xml
# prefix `if` above with `always` so it's run even if tests failed
if: always() && steps.test.conclusion != 'skipped'
- name: Check Test Binary
run: ${{ matrix.binary-check }} tests/compiler/534.lean.out
if: ${{ !matrix.cross && needs.configure.outputs.quick == 'false' }}
if: (!matrix.cross) && steps.test.conclusion != 'skipped'
- name: Build Stage 2
run: |
cd build
ulimit -c unlimited # coredumps
make -j4 stage2
make -C build -j$NPROC stage2
if: matrix.test-speedcenter
- name: Check Stage 3
run: |
cd build
ulimit -c unlimited # coredumps
make -j4 check-stage3
make -C build -j$NPROC check-stage3
if: matrix.test-speedcenter
- name: Test Speedcenter Benchmarks
run: |
echo -1 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/perf_event_paranoid
# Necessary for some timing metrics but does not work on Namespace runners
# and we just want to test that the benchmarks run at all here
#echo -1 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/perf_event_paranoid
export BUILD=$PWD/build PATH=$PWD/build/stage1/bin:$PATH
cd tests/bench
nix shell .#temci -c temci exec --config speedcenter.yaml --included_blocks fast --runs 1
if: matrix.test-speedcenter
- name: Check rebootstrap
run: |
cd build
ulimit -c unlimited # coredumps
make update-stage0 && make -j4
if: matrix.name == 'Linux' && needs.configure.outputs.quick == 'false'
# clean rebuild in case of Makefile changes
make -C build update-stage0 && rm -rf build/stage* && make -C build -j$NPROC
if: matrix.name == 'Linux' && needs.configure.outputs.check-level >= 1
- name: CCache stats
run: ccache -s
- name: Show stacktrace for coredumps
if: ${{ failure() && matrix.os == 'ubuntu-latest' }}
run: |
for c in coredumps/*; do
progbin="$(file $c | sed "s/.*execfn: '\([^']*\)'.*/\1/")"
echo bt | $GDB/bin/gdb -q $progbin $c || true
done
- name: Upload coredumps
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
if: ${{ failure() && matrix.os == 'ubuntu-latest' }}
with:
name: coredumps-${{ matrix.name }}
path: |
./coredumps
./build/stage0/bin/lean
./build/stage0/lib/lean/libleanshared.so
./build/stage1/bin/lean
./build/stage1/lib/lean/libleanshared.so
./build/stage2/bin/lean
./build/stage2/lib/lean/libleanshared.so
# This job collects results from all the matrix jobs
# This can be made the required job, instead of listing each
# This can be made the "required" job, instead of listing each
# matrix job separately
all-done:
name: Build matrix complete
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: build
if: ${{ always() }}
# mark as merely cancelled not failed if builds are cancelled
if: ${{ !cancelled() }}
steps:
- if: contains(needs.*.result, 'failure') || contains(needs.*.result, 'cancelled')
- if: ${{ contains(needs.*.result, 'failure') && github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4' && github.ref_name == 'master' }}
uses: zulip/github-actions-zulip/send-message@v1
with:
api-key: ${{ secrets.ZULIP_BOT_KEY }}
email: "github-actions-bot@lean-fro.zulipchat.com"
organization-url: "https://lean-fro.zulipchat.com"
to: "infrastructure"
topic: "Github actions"
type: "stream"
content: |
A build of `${{ github.ref_name }}`, triggered by event `${{ github.event_name }}`, [failed](https://github.com/${{ github.repository }}/actions/runs/${{ github.run_id }}).
- if: contains(needs.*.result, 'failure')
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
core.setFailed('Some jobs failed')
# This job creates releases from tags
# (whether they are "unofficial" releases for experiments, or official releases when the tag is "v" followed by a semver string.)
# We do not attempt to automatically construct a changelog here:
@@ -459,16 +488,22 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
needs: build
steps:
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v4
with:
path: artifacts
- name: Release
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v1
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v2
with:
files: artifacts/*/*
fail_on_unmatched_files: true
prerelease: ${{ !startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/tags/v') || contains(github.ref, '-rc') }}
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Update release.lean-lang.org
run: |
gh workflow -R leanprover/release-index run update-index.yml
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.RELEASE_INDEX_TOKEN }}
# This job creates nightly releases during the cron job.
# It is responsible for creating the tag, and automatically generating a changelog.
@@ -478,12 +513,12 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
# needed for tagging
fetch-depth: 0
token: ${{ secrets.PUSH_NIGHTLY_TOKEN }}
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v4
with:
path: artifacts
- name: Prepare Nightly Release
@@ -501,7 +536,7 @@ jobs:
echo -e "\n*Full commit log*\n" >> diff.md
git log --oneline "$last_tag"..HEAD | sed 's/^/* /' >> diff.md
- name: Release Nightly
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v1
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v2
with:
body_path: diff.md
prerelease: true
@@ -511,3 +546,13 @@ jobs:
repository: ${{ github.repository_owner }}/lean4-nightly
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.PUSH_NIGHTLY_TOKEN }}
- name: Update release.lean-lang.org
run: |
gh workflow -R leanprover/release-index run update-index.yml
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.RELEASE_INDEX_TOKEN }}
- name: Update toolchain on mathlib4's nightly-testing branch
run: |
gh workflow -R leanprover-community/mathlib4 run nightly_bump_toolchain.yml
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_BOT }}

20
.github/workflows/copyright-header.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
name: Check for copyright header
on: [pull_request]
jobs:
check-lean-files:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Verify .lean files start with a copyright header.
run: |
FILES=$(find ./src -type d \( -path "./src/lake/examples" -o -path "./src/lake/tests" \) -prune -o -type f -name "*.lean" -exec perl -ne 'BEGIN { $/ = undef; } print "$ARGV\n" if !m{\A/-\nCopyright}; exit;' {} \;)
if [ -n "$FILES" ]; then
echo "Found .lean files which do not have a copyright header:"
echo "$FILES"
exit 1
else
echo "All copyright headers present."
fi

34
.github/workflows/jira.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
name: Jira sync
on:
issues:
types: [closed]
jobs:
jira-sync:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Move Jira issue to Done
env:
JIRA_API_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.JIRA_API_TOKEN }}
JIRA_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.JIRA_USERNAME }}
JIRA_BASE_URL: ${{ secrets.JIRA_BASE_URL }}
run: |
issue_number=${{ github.event.issue.number }}
jira_issue_key=$(curl -s -u "${JIRA_USERNAME}:${JIRA_API_TOKEN}" \
-X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
"${JIRA_BASE_URL}/rest/api/2/search?jql=summary~\"${issue_number}\"" | \
jq -r '.issues[0].key')
if [ -z "$jira_issue_key" ]; then
exit
fi
curl -s -u "${JIRA_USERNAME}:${JIRA_API_TOKEN}" \
-X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data "{\"transition\": {\"id\": \"41\"}}" \
"${JIRA_BASE_URL}/rest/api/2/issue/${jira_issue_key}/transitions"
echo "Moved Jira issue ${jira_issue_key} to Done"

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# This workflow allows any user to add one of the `awaiting-review`, `awaiting-author`, or `WIP` labels,
# by commenting on the PR or issue.
# Other labels from this set are removed automatically at the same time.
# This workflow allows any user to add one of the `awaiting-review`, `awaiting-author`, `WIP`,
# `release-ci`, or a `changelog-XXX` label by commenting on the PR or issue.
# If any labels from the set {`awaiting-review`, `awaiting-author`, `WIP`} are added, other labels
# from that set are removed automatically at the same time.
# Similarly, if any `changelog-XXX` label is added, other `changelog-YYY` labels are removed.
name: Label PR based on Comment
@@ -10,7 +12,7 @@ on:
jobs:
update-label:
if: github.event.issue.pull_request != null && (contains(github.event.comment.body, 'awaiting-review') || contains(github.event.comment.body, 'awaiting-author') || contains(github.event.comment.body, 'WIP'))
if: github.event.issue.pull_request != null && (contains(github.event.comment.body, 'awaiting-review') || contains(github.event.comment.body, 'awaiting-author') || contains(github.event.comment.body, 'WIP') || contains(github.event.comment.body, 'release-ci') || contains(github.event.comment.body, 'changelog-'))
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
@@ -19,12 +21,14 @@ jobs:
with:
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
script: |
const { owner, repo, number: issue_number } = context.issue;
const { owner, repo, number: issue_number } = context.issue;
const commentLines = context.payload.comment.body.split('\r\n');
const awaitingReview = commentLines.includes('awaiting-review');
const awaitingAuthor = commentLines.includes('awaiting-author');
const wip = commentLines.includes('WIP');
const releaseCI = commentLines.includes('release-ci');
const changelogMatch = commentLines.find(line => line.startsWith('changelog-'));
if (awaitingReview || awaitingAuthor || wip) {
await github.rest.issues.removeLabel({ owner, repo, issue_number, name: 'awaiting-review' }).catch(() => {});
@@ -41,3 +45,23 @@ jobs:
if (wip) {
await github.rest.issues.addLabels({ owner, repo, issue_number, labels: ['WIP'] });
}
if (releaseCI) {
await github.rest.issues.addLabels({ owner, repo, issue_number, labels: ['release-ci'] });
}
if (changelogMatch) {
const changelogLabel = changelogMatch.trim();
const { data: existingLabels } = await github.rest.issues.listLabelsOnIssue({ owner, repo, issue_number });
const changelogLabels = existingLabels.filter(label => label.name.startsWith('changelog-'));
// Remove all other changelog labels
for (const label of changelogLabels) {
if (label.name !== changelogLabel) {
await github.rest.issues.removeLabel({ owner, repo, issue_number, name: label.name }).catch(() => {});
}
}
// Add the new changelog label
await github.rest.issues.addLabels({ owner, repo, issue_number, labels: [changelogLabel] });
}

View File

@@ -13,18 +13,36 @@ concurrency:
cancel-in-progress: true
jobs:
# see ci.yml
configure:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
outputs:
matrix: ${{ steps.set-matrix.outputs.result }}
steps:
- name: Configure build matrix
id: set-matrix
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
let large = ${{ github.repository == 'leanprover/lean4' }};
let matrix = [
{
"name": "Nix Linux",
"os": large ? "nscloud-ubuntu-22.04-amd64-8x8" : "ubuntu-latest",
}
];
console.log(`matrix:\n${JSON.stringify(matrix, null, 2)}`);
return matrix;
Build:
needs: [configure]
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
defaults:
run:
shell: nix run .#ciShell -- bash -euxo pipefail {0}
strategy:
matrix:
include:
- name: Nix Linux
os: ubuntu-latest
#- name: Nix macOS
# os: macos-latest
include: ${{fromJson(needs.configure.outputs.matrix)}}
# complete all jobs
fail-fast: false
name: ${{ matrix.name }}
@@ -32,18 +50,19 @@ jobs:
NIX_BUILD_ARGS: --print-build-logs --fallback
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
# the default is to use a virtual merge commit between the PR and master: just use the PR
ref: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
- name: Set Up Nix Cache
uses: actions/cache@v3
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: nix-store-cache
key: ${{ matrix.name }}-nix-store-cache-${{ github.sha }}
# fall back to (latest) previous cache
restore-keys: |
${{ matrix.name }}-nix-store-cache
save-always: true
- name: Further Set Up Nix Cache
shell: bash -euxo pipefail {0}
run: |
@@ -60,47 +79,37 @@ jobs:
sudo mkdir -m0770 -p /nix/var/cache/ccache
sudo chown -R $USER /nix/var/cache/ccache
- name: Setup CCache Cache
uses: actions/cache@v3
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: /nix/var/cache/ccache
key: ${{ matrix.name }}-nix-ccache-${{ github.sha }}
# fall back to (latest) previous cache
restore-keys: |
${{ matrix.name }}-nix-ccache
save-always: true
- name: Further Set Up CCache Cache
run: |
sudo chown -R root:nixbld /nix/var/cache
sudo chmod -R 770 /nix/var/cache
- name: Install Cachix
uses: cachix/cachix-action@v12
with:
name: lean4
authToken: '${{ secrets.CACHIX_AUTH_TOKEN }}'
skipPush: true # we push specific outputs only
- name: Build
run: |
nix build $NIX_BUILD_ARGS .#cacheRoots -o push-build
- name: Test
run: |
nix build $NIX_BUILD_ARGS .#test -o push-test
nix build --keep-failed $NIX_BUILD_ARGS .#test -o push-test || (ln -s /tmp/nix-build-*/build/source/src/build ./push-test; false)
- name: Test Summary
uses: test-summary/action@v2
with:
paths: push-test/test-results.xml
if: always()
continue-on-error: true
- name: Build manual
run: |
nix build $NIX_BUILD_ARGS --update-input lean --no-write-lock-file ./doc#{lean-mdbook,leanInk,alectryon,test,inked} -o push-doc
nix build $NIX_BUILD_ARGS --update-input lean --no-write-lock-file ./doc#{lean-mdbook,leanInk,alectryon,inked} -o push-doc
nix build $NIX_BUILD_ARGS --update-input lean --no-write-lock-file ./doc
# https://github.com/netlify/cli/issues/1809
cp -r --dereference ./result ./dist
if: matrix.name == 'Nix Linux'
- name: Check manual for broken links
id: lychee
uses: lycheeverse/lychee-action@v1.9.0
with:
fail: false # report errors but do not block CI on temporary failures
# gmplib.org consistently times out from GH actions
# the GitHub token is to avoid rate limiting
args: --base './dist' --no-progress --github-token ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} --exclude 'gmplib.org' './dist/**/*.html'
- name: Push to Cachix
run: |
[ -z "${{ secrets.CACHIX_AUTH_TOKEN }}" ] || cachix push -j4 lean4 ./push-* || true
- name: Rebuild Nix Store Cache
run: |
rm -rf nix-store-cache || true
@@ -112,7 +121,7 @@ jobs:
python3 -c 'import base64; print("alias="+base64.urlsafe_b64encode(bytes.fromhex("${{github.sha}}")).decode("utf-8").rstrip("="))' >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
echo "message=`git log -1 --pretty=format:"%s"`" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
- name: Publish manual to Netlify
uses: nwtgck/actions-netlify@v2.0
uses: nwtgck/actions-netlify@v3.0
id: publish-manual
with:
publish-dir: ./dist
@@ -131,5 +140,3 @@ jobs:
- name: Fixup CCache Cache
run: |
sudo chown -R $USER /nix/var/cache
- name: CCache stats
run: CCACHE_DIR=/nix/var/cache/ccache nix run .#nixpkgs.ccache -- -s

25
.github/workflows/pr-body.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
name: Check PR body for changelog convention
on:
merge_group:
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize, reopened, edited, labeled, converted_to_draft, ready_for_review]
jobs:
check-pr-body:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Check PR body
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const { title, body, labels, draft } = context.payload.pull_request;
if (!draft && /^(feat|fix):/.test(title) && !labels.some(label => label.name == "changelog-no")) {
if (!labels.some(label => label.name.startsWith("changelog-"))) {
core.setFailed('feat/fix PR must have a `changelog-*` label');
}
if (!/^This PR [^<]/.test(body)) {
core.setFailed('feat/fix PR must have changelog summary starting with "This PR ..." as first line.');
}
}

View File

@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Download artifact from the previous workflow.
if: ${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' }}
id: download-artifact
uses: dawidd6/action-download-artifact@v2 # https://github.com/marketplace/actions/download-workflow-artifact
uses: dawidd6/action-download-artifact@v7 # https://github.com/marketplace/actions/download-workflow-artifact
with:
run_id: ${{ github.event.workflow_run.id }}
path: artifacts
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ jobs:
GH_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.PR_RELEASES_TOKEN }}
- name: Release
if: ${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' }}
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v1
uses: softprops/action-gh-release@v2
with:
name: Release for PR ${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}
# There are coredumps files here as well, but all in deeper subdirectories.
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Report release status
if: ${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' }}
uses: actions/github-script@v6
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
await github.rest.repos.createCommitStatus({
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ jobs:
- name: 'Setup jq'
if: ${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' }}
uses: dcarbone/install-jq-action@v1.0.1
uses: dcarbone/install-jq-action@v3.0.1
# Check that the most recently nightly coincides with 'git merge-base HEAD master'
- name: Check merge-base and nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD
@@ -126,24 +126,22 @@ jobs:
if [ "$NIGHTLY_SHA" = "$MERGE_BASE_SHA" ]; then
echo "The merge base of this PR coincides with the nightly release"
BATTERIES_REMOTE_TAGS="$(git ls-remote https://github.com/leanprover-community/batteries.git nightly-testing-"$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY")"
MATHLIB_REMOTE_TAGS="$(git ls-remote https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4.git nightly-testing-"$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY")"
if [[ -n "$MATHLIB_REMOTE_TAGS" ]]; then
echo "... and Mathlib has a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
if [[ -n "$BATTERIES_REMOTE_TAGS" ]]; then
echo "... and Batteries has a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
MESSAGE=""
else
echo "... but Mathlib does not yet have a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
MESSAGE="- ❗ Mathlib CI can not be attempted yet, as the \`nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY\` tag does not exist there yet. We will retry when you push more commits. If you rebase your branch onto \`nightly-with-mathlib\`, Mathlib CI should run now."
fi
STD_REMOTE_TAGS="$(git ls-remote https://github.com/leanprover/std4.git nightly-testing-"$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY")"
if [[ -n "$STD_REMOTE_TAGS" ]]; then
echo "... and Std has a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
MESSAGE=""
if [[ -n "$MATHLIB_REMOTE_TAGS" ]]; then
echo "... and Mathlib has a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
else
echo "... but Mathlib does not yet have a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
MESSAGE="- ❗ Mathlib CI can not be attempted yet, as the \`nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY\` tag does not exist there yet. We will retry when you push more commits. If you rebase your branch onto \`nightly-with-mathlib\`, Mathlib CI should run now."
fi
else
echo "... but Std does not yet have a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
MESSAGE="- ❗ Std CI can not be attempted yet, as the \`nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY\` tag does not exist there yet. We will retry when you push more commits. If you rebase your branch onto \`nightly-with-mathlib\`, Std CI should run now."
echo "... but Batteries does not yet have a 'nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY' tag."
MESSAGE="- ❗ Batteries CI can not be attempted yet, as the \`nightly-testing-$MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY\` tag does not exist there yet. We will retry when you push more commits. If you rebase your branch onto \`nightly-with-mathlib\`, Batteries CI should run now."
fi
else
@@ -151,7 +149,9 @@ jobs:
echo "but 'git merge-base origin/master HEAD' reported: $MERGE_BASE_SHA"
git -C lean4.git log -10 origin/master
MESSAGE="- ❗ Std/Mathlib CI will not be attempted unless your PR branches off the \`nightly-with-mathlib\` branch."
git -C lean4.git fetch origin nightly-with-mathlib
NIGHTLY_WITH_MATHLIB_SHA="$(git -C lean4.git rev-parse "origin/nightly-with-mathlib")"
MESSAGE="- ❗ Batteries/Mathlib CI will not be attempted unless your PR branches off the \`nightly-with-mathlib\` branch. Try \`git rebase $MERGE_BASE_SHA --onto $NIGHTLY_WITH_MATHLIB_SHA\`."
fi
if [[ -n "$MESSAGE" ]]; then
@@ -163,10 +163,11 @@ jobs:
# so keep in sync
# Use GitHub API to check if a comment already exists
existing_comment="$(curl -L -s -H "Authorization: token ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_BOT }}" \
existing_comment="$(curl --retry 3 --location --silent \
-H "Authorization: token ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_COMMENT_BOT }}" \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
"https://api.github.com/repos/leanprover/lean4/issues/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}/comments" \
| jq 'first(.[] | select(.body | test("^- . Mathlib") or startswith("Mathlib CI status")) | select(.user.login == "leanprover-community-mathlib4-bot"))')"
| jq 'first(.[] | select(.body | test("^- . Mathlib") or startswith("Mathlib CI status")) | select(.user.login == "leanprover-community-bot"))')"
existing_comment_id="$(echo "$existing_comment" | jq -r .id)"
existing_comment_body="$(echo "$existing_comment" | jq -r .body)"
@@ -176,14 +177,14 @@ jobs:
echo "Posting message to the comments: $MESSAGE"
# Append new result to the existing comment or post a new comment
# It's essential we use the MATHLIB4_BOT token here, so that Mathlib CI can subsequently edit the comment.
# It's essential we use the MATHLIB4_COMMENT_BOT token here, so that Mathlib CI can subsequently edit the comment.
if [ -z "$existing_comment_id" ]; then
INTRO="Mathlib CI status ([docs](https://leanprover-community.github.io/contribute/tags_and_branches.html)):"
# Post new comment with a bullet point
echo "Posting as new comment at leanprover/lean4/issues/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}/comments"
curl -L -s \
-X POST \
-H "Authorization: token ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_BOT }}" \
-H "Authorization: token ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_COMMENT_BOT }}" \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
-d "$(jq --null-input --arg intro "$INTRO" --arg val "$MESSAGE" '{"body":($intro + "\n" + $val)}')" \
"https://api.github.com/repos/leanprover/lean4/issues/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}/comments"
@@ -192,7 +193,7 @@ jobs:
echo "Appending to existing comment at leanprover/lean4/issues/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}/comments"
curl -L -s \
-X PATCH \
-H "Authorization: token ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_BOT }}" \
-H "Authorization: token ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_COMMENT_BOT }}" \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
-d "$(jq --null-input --arg existing "$existing_comment_body" --arg message "$MESSAGE" '{"body":($existing + "\n" + $message)}')" \
"https://api.github.com/repos/leanprover/lean4/issues/comments/$existing_comment_id"
@@ -207,7 +208,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Report mathlib base
if: ${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' && steps.ready.outputs.mathlib_ready == 'true' }}
uses: actions/github-script@v6
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const description =
@@ -223,27 +224,27 @@ jobs:
description: description,
});
# We next automatically create a Std branch using this toolchain.
# Std doesn't itself have a mechanism to report results of CI from this branch back to Lean
# Instead this is taken care of by Mathlib CI, which will fail if Std fails.
# We next automatically create a Batteries branch using this toolchain.
# Batteries doesn't itself have a mechanism to report results of CI from this branch back to Lean
# Instead this is taken care of by Mathlib CI, which will fail if Batteries fails.
- name: Cleanup workspace
if: steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' && steps.ready.outputs.mathlib_ready == 'true'
run: |
sudo rm -rf ./*
# Checkout the Std repository with all branches
- name: Checkout Std repository
# Checkout the Batteries repository with all branches
- name: Checkout Batteries repository
if: steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' && steps.ready.outputs.mathlib_ready == 'true'
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
repository: leanprover/std4
repository: leanprover-community/batteries
token: ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_BOT }}
ref: nightly-testing
fetch-depth: 0 # This ensures we check out all tags and branches.
- name: Check if tag exists
if: steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' && steps.ready.outputs.mathlib_ready == 'true'
id: check_std_tag
id: check_batteries_tag
run: |
git config user.name "leanprover-community-mathlib4-bot"
git config user.email "leanprover-community-mathlib4-bot@users.noreply.github.com"
@@ -251,7 +252,7 @@ jobs:
if git ls-remote --heads --tags --exit-code origin "nightly-testing-${MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY}" >/dev/null; then
BASE="nightly-testing-${MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY}"
else
echo "This shouldn't be possible: couldn't find a 'nightly-testing-${MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY}' tag at Std. Falling back to 'nightly-testing'."
echo "This shouldn't be possible: couldn't find a 'nightly-testing-${MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY}' tag at Batteries. Falling back to 'nightly-testing'."
BASE=nightly-testing
fi
@@ -268,7 +269,7 @@ jobs:
else
echo "Branch already exists, pushing an empty commit."
git switch lean-pr-testing-${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}
# The Std `nightly-testing` or `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` branch may have moved since this branch was created, so merge their changes.
# The Batteries `nightly-testing` or `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` branch may have moved since this branch was created, so merge their changes.
# (This should no longer be possible once `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` is a tag, but it is still safe to merge.)
git merge "$BASE" --strategy-option ours --no-commit --allow-unrelated-histories
git commit --allow-empty -m "Trigger CI for https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}"
@@ -291,13 +292,20 @@ jobs:
# Checkout the mathlib4 repository with all branches
- name: Checkout mathlib4 repository
if: steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' && steps.ready.outputs.mathlib_ready == 'true'
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
repository: leanprover-community/mathlib4
token: ${{ secrets.MATHLIB4_BOT }}
ref: nightly-testing
fetch-depth: 0 # This ensures we check out all tags and branches.
- name: install elan
run: |
set -o pipefail
curl -sSfL https://github.com/leanprover/elan/releases/download/v3.0.0/elan-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.gz | tar xz
./elan-init -y --default-toolchain none
echo "$HOME/.elan/bin" >> "${GITHUB_PATH}"
- name: Check if tag exists
if: steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber != '' && steps.ready.outputs.mathlib_ready == 'true'
id: check_mathlib_tag
@@ -321,15 +329,18 @@ jobs:
git switch -c lean-pr-testing-${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }} "$BASE"
echo "leanprover/lean4-pr-releases:pr-release-${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}" > lean-toolchain
git add lean-toolchain
sed -i "s/require std from git \"https:\/\/github.com\/leanprover\/std4\" @ \".\+\"/require std from git \"https:\/\/github.com\/leanprover\/std4\" @ \"nightly-testing-${MOST_RECENT_NIGHTLY}\"/" lakefile.lean
git add lakefile.lean
sed -i 's,require "leanprover-community" / "batteries" @ git ".\+",require "leanprover-community" / "batteries" @ git "lean-pr-testing-${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}",' lakefile.lean
lake update batteries
git add lakefile.lean lake-manifest.json
git commit -m "Update lean-toolchain for testing https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}"
else
echo "Branch already exists, pushing an empty commit."
echo "Branch already exists, merging $BASE and bumping Batteries."
git switch lean-pr-testing-${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}
# The Mathlib `nightly-testing` branch or `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` tag may have moved since this branch was created, so merge their changes.
# (This should no longer be possible once `nightly-testing-YYYY-MM-DD` is a tag, but it is still safe to merge.)
git merge "$BASE" --strategy-option ours --no-commit --allow-unrelated-histories
lake update batteries
git add lake-manifest.json
git commit --allow-empty -m "Trigger CI for https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/pull/${{ steps.workflow-info.outputs.pullRequestNumber }}"
fi

35
.github/workflows/restart-on-label.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
name: Restart by label
on:
pull_request_target:
types:
- unlabeled
- labeled
jobs:
restart-on-label:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: contains(github.event.label.name, 'merge-ci') || contains(github.event.label.name, 'release-ci')
steps:
- run: |
# Finding latest CI workflow run on current pull request
# (unfortunately cannot search by PR number, only base branch,
# and that is't even unique given PRs from forks, but the risk
# of confusion is low and the danger is mild)
echo "Trying to find a run with branch $head_ref and commit $head_sha"
run_id="$(gh run list -e pull_request -b "$head_ref" -c "$head_sha" \
--workflow 'CI' --limit 1 --json databaseId --jq '.[0].databaseId')"
echo "Run id: ${run_id}"
gh run view "$run_id"
echo "Cancelling (just in case)"
gh run cancel "$run_id" || echo "(failed)"
echo "Waiting for 30s"
sleep 30
gh run view "$run_id"
echo "Rerunning"
gh run rerun "$run_id"
gh run view "$run_id"
shell: bash
env:
head_ref: ${{ github.head_ref }}
head_sha: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
GH_TOKEN: ${{ github.token }}
GH_REPO: ${{ github.repository }}

View File

@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ jobs:
stale:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/stale@v8
- uses: actions/stale@v9
with:
days-before-stale: -1
days-before-pr-stale: 30

View File

@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ jobs:
# This action should push to an otherwise protected branch, so it
# uses a deploy key with write permissions, as suggested at
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/76135647/946226
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
ssh-key: ${{secrets.STAGE0_SSH_KEY}}
- run: echo "should_update_stage0=yes" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
@@ -40,18 +40,32 @@ jobs:
run: |
git config --global user.name "Lean stage0 autoupdater"
git config --global user.email "<>"
- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'
uses: DeterminateSystems/nix-installer-action@main
# Would be nice, but does not work yet:
# https://github.com/DeterminateSystems/magic-nix-cache/issues/39
# This action does not run that often and building runs in a few minutes, so ok for now
#- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'
# uses: DeterminateSystems/magic-nix-cache-action@v2
- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'
name: Install Cachix
uses: cachix/cachix-action@v12
name: Restore Build Cache
uses: actions/cache/restore@v4
with:
name: lean4
path: nix-store-cache
key: Nix Linux-nix-store-cache-${{ github.sha }}
# fall back to (latest) previous cache
restore-keys: |
Nix Linux-nix-store-cache
- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'
name: Further Set Up Nix Cache
shell: bash -euxo pipefail {0}
run: |
# Nix seems to mutate the cache, so make a copy
cp -r nix-store-cache nix-store-cache-copy || true
- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'
name: Install Nix
uses: DeterminateSystems/nix-installer-action@main
with:
extra-conf: |
substituters = file://${{ github.workspace }}/nix-store-cache-copy?priority=10&trusted=true https://cache.nixos.org
- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'
run: nix run .#update-stage0-commit
- if: env.should_update_stage0 == 'yes'

6
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -4,8 +4,10 @@
*.lock
.lake
lake-manifest.json
build
!/src/lake/Lake/Build
/build
/src/lakefile.toml
/tests/lakefile.toml
/lakefile.toml
GPATH
GRTAGS
GSYMS

14
.gitpod.Dockerfile vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
# You can find the new timestamped tags here: https://hub.docker.com/r/gitpod/workspace-full/tags
FROM gitpod/workspace-full
USER root
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install git libgmp-dev libuv1-dev cmake ccache clang -y && apt-get clean
USER gitpod
# Install and configure elan
RUN curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/leanprover/elan/master/elan-init.sh -sSf | sh -s -- -y --default-toolchain none
ENV PATH="/home/gitpod/.elan/bin:${PATH}"
# Create a dummy toolchain so that we can pre-register it with elan
RUN mkdir -p /workspace/lean4/build/release/stage1/bin && touch /workspace/lean4/build/release/stage1/bin/lean && elan toolchain link lean4 /workspace/lean4/build/release/stage1
RUN mkdir -p /workspace/lean4/build/release/stage0/bin && touch /workspace/lean4/build/release/stage0/bin/lean && elan toolchain link lean4-stage0 /workspace/lean4/build/release/stage0

11
.gitpod.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
image:
file: .gitpod.Dockerfile
vscode:
extensions:
- leanprover.lean4
tasks:
- name: Release build
init: cmake --preset release
command: make -C build/release -j$(nproc || sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu)

View File

@@ -30,6 +30,35 @@ if(NOT (DEFINED STAGE0_CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX))
set(STAGE0_CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX "${CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX}")
endif()
# Don't do anything with cadical on wasm
if (NOT ${CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME} MATCHES "Emscripten")
# On CI Linux, we source cadical from Nix instead; see flake.nix
find_program(CADICAL cadical)
if(NOT CADICAL)
set(CADICAL_CXX c++)
find_program(CCACHE ccache)
if(CCACHE)
set(CADICAL_CXX "${CCACHE} ${CADICAL_CXX}")
endif()
# missing stdio locking API on Windows
if(${CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME} MATCHES "Windows")
string(APPEND CADICAL_CXXFLAGS " -DNUNLOCKED")
endif()
ExternalProject_add(cadical
PREFIX cadical
GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/arminbiere/cadical
GIT_TAG rel-1.9.5
CONFIGURE_COMMAND ""
# https://github.com/arminbiere/cadical/blob/master/BUILD.md#manual-build
BUILD_COMMAND $(MAKE) -f ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/src/cadical.mk CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX=${CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX} CXX=${CADICAL_CXX} CXXFLAGS=${CADICAL_CXXFLAGS}
BUILD_IN_SOURCE ON
INSTALL_COMMAND "")
set(CADICAL ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/cadical/cadical${CMAKE_EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX} CACHE FILEPATH "path to cadical binary" FORCE)
set(EXTRA_DEPENDS "cadical")
endif()
list(APPEND CL_ARGS -DCADICAL=${CADICAL})
endif()
ExternalProject_add(stage0
SOURCE_DIR "${LEAN_SOURCE_DIR}/stage0"
SOURCE_SUBDIR src
@@ -78,6 +107,10 @@ add_custom_target(update-stage0
COMMAND $(MAKE) -C stage1 update-stage0
DEPENDS stage1)
add_custom_target(update-stage0-commit
COMMAND $(MAKE) -C stage1 update-stage0-commit
DEPENDS stage1)
add_custom_target(test
COMMAND $(MAKE) -C stage1 test
DEPENDS stage1)

83
CMakePresets.json Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
{
"version": 2,
"cmakeMinimumRequired": {
"major": 3,
"minor": 10,
"patch": 0
},
"configurePresets": [
{
"name": "release",
"displayName": "Default development optimized build config",
"generator": "Unix Makefiles",
"binaryDir": "${sourceDir}/build/release"
},
{
"name": "debug",
"displayName": "Debug build config",
"cacheVariables": {
"CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE": "Debug"
},
"generator": "Unix Makefiles",
"binaryDir": "${sourceDir}/build/debug"
},
{
"name": "sanitize",
"displayName": "Sanitize build config",
"cacheVariables": {
"LEAN_EXTRA_CXX_FLAGS": "-fsanitize=address,undefined",
"LEANC_EXTRA_FLAGS": "-fsanitize=address,undefined -fsanitize-link-c++-runtime",
"SMALL_ALLOCATOR": "OFF",
"BSYMBOLIC": "OFF"
},
"generator": "Unix Makefiles",
"binaryDir": "${sourceDir}/build/sanitize"
},
{
"name": "sandebug",
"inherits": ["debug", "sanitize"],
"displayName": "Sanitize+debug build config",
"binaryDir": "${sourceDir}/build/sandebug"
}
],
"buildPresets": [
{
"name": "release",
"configurePreset": "release"
},
{
"name": "debug",
"configurePreset": "debug"
},
{
"name": "sanitize",
"configurePreset": "sanitize"
},
{
"name": "sandebug",
"configurePreset": "sandebug"
}
],
"testPresets": [
{
"name": "release",
"configurePreset": "release",
"output": {"outputOnFailure": true, "shortProgress": true}
},
{
"name": "debug",
"configurePreset": "debug",
"inherits": "release"
},
{
"name": "sanitize",
"configurePreset": "sanitize",
"inherits": "release"
},
{
"name": "sandebug",
"configurePreset": "sandebug",
"inherits": "release"
}
]
}

View File

@@ -4,19 +4,43 @@
# Listed persons will automatically be asked by GitHub to review a PR touching these paths.
# If multiple names are listed, a review by any of them is considered sufficient by default.
/.github/ @Kha @semorrison
/RELEASES.md @semorrison
/src/ @leodemoura @Kha
/src/Init/IO.lean @joehendrix
/.github/ @kim-em
/RELEASES.md @kim-em
/src/kernel/ @leodemoura
/src/lake/ @tydeu
/src/Lean/Compiler/ @leodemoura
/src/Lean/Data/Lsp/ @mhuisi
/src/Lean/Elab/Deriving/ @semorrison
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/ @semorrison
/src/Lean/Elab/Deriving/ @kim-em
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/ @kim-em
/src/Lean/Language/ @Kha
/src/Lean/Meta/Tactic/ @leodemoura
/src/Lean/Parser/ @Kha
/src/Lean/PrettyPrinter/ @Kha
/src/Lean/PrettyPrinter/ @kmill
/src/Lean/Server/ @mhuisi
/src/Lean/Widget/ @Vtec234
/src/runtime/io.cpp @joehendrix
/src/Init/Data/ @kim-em
/src/Init/Data/Array/Lemmas.lean @digama0
/src/Init/Data/List/Lemmas.lean @digama0
/src/Init/Data/List/BasicAux.lean @digama0
/src/Init/Data/Array/Subarray.lean @david-christiansen
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/RCases.lean @digama0
/src/Init/RCases.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Ext.lean @digama0
/src/Init/Ext.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Simpa.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/NormCast.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Meta/Tactic/NormCast.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Meta/Tactic/TryThis.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/SimpTrace.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/NoMatch.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/ShowTerm.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Repeat.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Meta/Tactic/Repeat.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Meta/CoeAttr.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/GuardMsgs.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Guard.lean @digama0
/src/Init/Guard.lean @digama0
/src/Lean/Server/CodeActions/ @digama0
/src/Std/ @TwoFX
/src/Std/Tactic/BVDecide/ @hargoniX
/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/BVDecide/ @hargoniX
/src/Std/Sat/ @hargoniX

View File

@@ -63,6 +63,20 @@ Because the change will be squashed, there is no need to polish the commit messa
Reviews and Feedback:
----
The lean4 repo is managed by the Lean FRO's *triage team* that aims to provide initial feedback on new bug reports, PRs, and RFCs weekly.
This feedback generally consists of prioritizing the ticket using one of the following categories:
* label `P-high`: We will work on this issue
* label `P-medium`: We may work on this issue if we find the time
* label `P-low`: We are not planning to work on this issue
* *closed*: This issue is already fixed, it is not an issue, or is not sufficiently compatible with our roadmap for the project and we will not work on it nor accept external contributions on it
For *bug reports*, the listed priority reflects our commitment to fixing the issue.
It is generally indicative but not necessarily identical to the priority an external contribution addressing this bug would receive.
For *PRs* and *RFCs*, the priority reflects our commitment to reviewing them and getting them to an acceptable state.
Accepted RFCs are marked with the label `RFC accepted` and afterwards assigned a new "implementation" priority as with bug reports.
General guidelines for interacting with reviews and feedback:
**Be Patient**: Given the limited number of full-time maintainers and the volume of PRs, reviews may take some time.
**Engage Constructively**: Always approach feedback positively and constructively. Remember, reviews are about ensuring the best quality for the project, not personal criticism.

View File

@@ -1341,3 +1341,33 @@ whether future versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall
apply, that proxy's public statement of acceptance of any version is
permanent authorization for you to choose that version for the
Library.
==============================================================================
CaDiCaL is under the MIT License:
==============================================================================
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2016-2021 Armin Biere, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
Copyright (c) 2020-2021 Mathias Fleury, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
Copyright (c) 2020-2021 Nils Froleyks, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
Copyright (c) 2022-2024 Katalin Fazekas, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Copyright (c) 2021-2024 Armin Biere, University of Freiburg, Germany
Copyright (c) 2021-2024 Mathias Fleury, University of Freiburg, Germany
Copyright (c) 2023-2024 Florian Pollitt, University of Freiburg, Germany
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,8 @@ This is the repository for **Lean 4**.
- [Homepage](https://lean-lang.org)
- [Theorem Proving Tutorial](https://lean-lang.org/theorem_proving_in_lean4/)
- [Functional Programming in Lean](https://lean-lang.org/functional_programming_in_lean/)
- [Manual](https://lean-lang.org/lean4/doc/)
- [Documentation Overview](https://lean-lang.org/lean4/doc/)
- [Language Reference](https://lean-lang.org/doc/reference/latest/)
- [Release notes](RELEASES.md) starting at v4.0.0-m3
- [Examples](https://lean-lang.org/lean4/doc/examples.html)
- [External Contribution Guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md)
@@ -22,4 +23,4 @@ Please read our [Contribution Guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md) first.
# Building from Source
See [Building Lean](https://lean-lang.org/lean4/doc/make/index.html).
See [Building Lean](https://lean-lang.org/lean4/doc/make/index.html) (documentation source: [doc/make/index.md](doc/make/index.md)).

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
# used for `nix-shell https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/archive/master.tar.gz -A nix`
{ nix = (import ./shell.nix {}).nix; } //
(import (
fetchTarball {
url = "https://github.com/edolstra/flake-compat/archive/c75e76f80c57784a6734356315b306140646ee84.tar.gz";
sha256 = "071aal00zp2m9knnhddgr2wqzlx6i6qa1263lv1y7bdn2w20h10h"; }
) {
src = ./.;
}).defaultNix

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
open Std
open Batteries
open Lean
inductive BoolExpr where

View File

@@ -13,61 +13,13 @@
- [The Well-Typed Interpreter](examples/interp.lean.md)
- [Dependent de Bruijn Indices](examples/deBruijn.lean.md)
- [Parametric Higher-Order Abstract Syntax](examples/phoas.lean.md)
# Language Manual
<!-- - [Using Lean](./using_lean.md) -->
<!-- - [Lexical Structure](./lexical_structure.md) -->
<!-- - [Expressions](./expressions.md) -->
<!-- - [Declarations](./declarations.md) -->
- [Organizational features](./organization.md)
- [Sections](./sections.md)
- [Namespaces](./namespaces.md)
- [Implicit Arguments](./implicit.md)
- [Auto Bound Implicit Arguments](./autobound.md)
<!-- - [Dependent Types](./deptypes.md) -->
<!-- - [Simple Type Theory](./simptypes.md) -->
<!-- - [Types as objects](./typeobjs.md) -->
<!-- - [Function Abstraction and Evaluation](./funabst.md) -->
<!-- - [Introducing Definitions](./introdef.md) -->
<!-- - [What makes dependent type theory dependent?](./dep.md) -->
<!-- - [Tactics](./tactics.md) -->
- [Syntax Extensions](./syntax.md)
- [The `do` Notation](./do.md)
- [String Interpolation](./stringinterp.md)
- [User-Defined Notation](./notation.md)
- [Macro Overview](./macro_overview.md)
- [Elaborators](./elaborators.md)
- [Examples](./syntax_examples.md)
- [Syntax Examples](./syntax_examples.md)
- [Balanced Parentheses](./syntax_example.md)
- [Arithmetic DSL](./metaprogramming-arith.md)
- [Declaring New Types](./decltypes.md)
- [Enumerated Types](./enum.md)
- [Inductive Types](./inductive.md)
- [Structures](./struct.md)
- [Type classes](./typeclass.md)
- [Unification Hints](./unifhint.md)
- [Builtin Types](./builtintypes.md)
- [Natural number](./nat.md)
- [Integer](./int.md)
- [Fixed precision unsigned integer](./uint.md)
- [Float](./float.md)
- [Array](./array.md)
- [List](./list.md)
- [Character](./char.md)
- [String](./string.md)
- [Option](./option.md)
- [Thunk](./thunk.md)
- [Task and Thread](./task.md)
- [Functions](./functions.md)
- [Monads](./monads/intro.md)
- [Functor](./monads/functors.lean.md)
- [Applicative](./monads/applicatives.lean.md)
- [Monad](./monads/monads.lean.md)
- [Reader](./monads/readers.lean.md)
- [State](./monads/states.lean.md)
- [Except](./monads/except.lean.md)
- [Transformers](./monads/transformers.lean.md)
- [Laws](./monads/laws.lean.md)
# Language Manual
- [The Lean Reference Manual](./reference.md)
# Other
@@ -89,5 +41,6 @@
- [Testing](./dev/testing.md)
- [Debugging](./dev/debugging.md)
- [Commit Convention](./dev/commit_convention.md)
- [Release checklist](./dev/release_checklist.md)
- [Building This Manual](./dev/mdbook.md)
- [Foreign Function Interface](./dev/ffi.md)

View File

@@ -1,77 +0,0 @@
# Arrays
The `Array` type implements a *dynamic* (aka growable) array.
It is defined as
```lean
# namespace hidden
structure Array (α : Type u) where
data : List α
# end hidden
```
but its execution time representation is optimized, and it is similar to C++ `std::vector<T>` and Rust `Vec<T>`.
The Lean type checker has no special support for reducing `Array`s.
You can create arrays in several ways. You can create a small array by listing consecutive values between
`#[` and `]` and separated by commas, as shown in the following examples.
```lean
#check #[1, 2, 3] -- Array Nat
#check #[] -- Array ?m
```
The type of the array elements is inferred from the literals used and must be consistent.
```lean
#check #["hello", "world"] -- Array String
-- The following is not valid
#check_failure #[10, "hello"]
```
Recall that the command `#check_failure <term>` only succeeds when the given term is not type correct.
To create an array of size `n` in which all the elements are initialized to some value `a`, use `mkArray`.
```lean
#eval mkArray 5 'a'
-- #['a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a']
```
## Accessing elements
You can access array elements by using brackets (`[` and `]`).
```lean
def f (a : Array Nat) (i : Fin a.size) :=
a[i] + a[i]
```
Note that the index `i` has type `Fin a.size`, i.e., it is natural number less than `a.size`.
You can also write
```lean
def f (a : Array Nat) (i : Nat) (h : i < a.size) :=
a[i] + a[i]
```
The bracket operator is whitespace sensitive.
```lean
def f (xs : List Nat) : List Nat :=
xs ++ xs
def as : Array Nat :=
#[1, 2, 3, 4]
def idx : Fin 4 :=
2
#eval f [1, 2, 3] -- This is a function application
#eval as[idx] -- This is an array access
```
The notation `a[i]` has two variants: `a[i]!` and `a[i]?`. In both cases, `i` has type `Nat`. The first one
produces a panic error message if the index `i` is out of bounds. The latter returns an `Option` type.
```lean
#eval #['a', 'b', 'c'][1]?
-- some 'b'
#eval #['a', 'b', 'c'][5]?
-- none
#eval #['a', 'b', 'c'][1]!
-- 'b!
```

View File

@@ -1,47 +0,0 @@
## Auto Bound Implicit Arguments
In the previous section, we have shown how implicit arguments make functions more convenient to use.
However, functions such as `compose` are still quite verbose to define. Note that the universe
polymorphic `compose` is even more verbose than the one previously defined.
```lean
universe u v w
def compose {α : Type u} {β : Type v} {γ : Type w}
(g : β γ) (f : α β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
```
You can avoid the `universe` command by providing the universe parameters when defining `compose`.
```lean
def compose.{u, v, w}
{α : Type u} {β : Type v} {γ : Type w}
(g : β γ) (f : α β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
```
Lean 4 supports a new feature called *auto bound implicit arguments*. It makes functions such as
`compose` much more convenient to write. When Lean processes the header of a declaration,
any unbound identifier is automatically added as an implicit argument *if* it is a single lower case or
greek letter. With this feature, we can write `compose` as
```lean
def compose (g : β γ) (f : α β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
#check @compose
-- {β : Sort u_1} → {γ : Sort u_2} → {α : Sort u_3} → (β → γ) → (α → β) → αγ
```
Note that, Lean inferred a more general type using `Sort` instead of `Type`.
Although we love this feature and use it extensively when implementing Lean,
we realize some users may feel uncomfortable with it. Thus, you can disable it using
the command `set_option autoImplicit false`.
```lean
set_option autoImplicit false
/- The following definition produces `unknown identifier` errors -/
-- def compose (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (x : α) : γ :=
-- g (f x)
```
The Lean language server provides [semantic highlighting](./semantic_highlighting.md) information to editors, and it provides
visual feedback whether an identifier has been interpreted as an auto bound implicit argument.

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ authors = ["Leonardo de Moura", "Sebastian Ullrich"]
language = "en"
multilingual = false
src = "."
title = "Lean Manual"
title = "Lean Documentation Overview"
[build]
build-dir = "out"

View File

@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
# Builtin Types
## Numeric Operations
Lean supports the basic mathematical operations youd expect for all of the number types: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and remainder.
The following code shows how youd use each one in a `def` commands:
```lean
-- addition
def sum := 5 + 10
-- subtraction
def difference := 95.5 - 4.3
-- multiplication
def product := 4 * 30
-- division
def quotient := 53.7 / 32.2
-- remainder/modulo
def modulo := 43 % 5
```
Each expression in these statements uses a mathematical operator and evaluates to a single value.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
# Characters

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@@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
# Declaring New Types
In Lean's library, every concrete type other than the universes and every type constructor other than the dependent function type is
an instance of a general family of type constructions known as *inductive types*. It is remarkable that it is possible to develop
complex programs and formalize mathematics based on nothing more than the type universes, dependent function types,
and inductive types; everything else follows from those.
Intuitively, an inductive type is built up from a specified list of constructors. In Lean, the basic syntax for specifying such a type is as follows:
```
inductive NewType where
| constructor_1 : ... → NewType
| constructor_2 : ... → NewType
...
| constructor_n : ... → NewType
```
The intuition is that each constructor specifies a way of building new objects of ``NewType``, possibly from previously constructed values.
The type ``NewType`` consists of nothing more than the objects that are constructed in this way.
We will see below that the arguments to the constructors can include objects of type ``NewType``,
subject to a certain "positivity" constraint, which guarantees that elements of ``NewType`` are built
from the bottom up. Roughly speaking, each ``...`` can be any function type constructed from ``NewType``
and previously defined types, in which ``NewType`` appears, if at all, only as the "target" of the function type.
We will provide a number of examples of inductive types. We will also consider slight generalizations of the scheme above,
to mutually defined inductive types, and so-called *inductive families*.
Every inductive type comes with constructors, which show how to construct an element of the type, and elimination rules,
which show how to "use" an element of the type in another construction.

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@@ -73,38 +73,51 @@ update the archived C source code of the stage 0 compiler in `stage0/src`.
The github repository will automatically update stage0 on `master` once
`src/stdlib_flags.h` and `stage0/src/stdlib_flags.h` are out of sync.
If you have write access to the lean4 repository, you can also also manually
If you have write access to the lean4 repository, you can also manually
trigger that process, for example to be able to use new features in the compiler itself.
You can do that on <https://github.com/nomeata/lean4/actions/workflows/update-stage0.yml>
You can do that on <https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/actions/workflows/update-stage0.yml>
or using Github CLI with
```
gh workflow run update-stage0.yml
```
Leaving stage0 updates to the CI automation is preferrable, but should you need
to do it locally, you can use `make update-stage0` in `build/release`, to
update `stage0` from `stage1`, `make -C stageN update-stage0` to update from
another stage, or `nix run .#update-stage0-commit` to update using nix.
Leaving stage0 updates to the CI automation is preferable, but should you need
to do it locally, you can use `make update-stage0-commit` in `build/release` to
update `stage0` from `stage1` or `make -C stageN update-stage0-commit` to
update from another stage. This command will automatically stage the updated files
and introduce a commit,so make sure to commit your work before that.
If you rebased the branch (either onto a newer version of `master`, or fixing
up some commits prior to the stage0 update, recreate the stage0 update commits.
The script `script/rebase-stage0.sh` can be used for that.
The CI should prevent PRs with changes to stage0 (besides `stdlib_flags.h`)
from entering `master` through the (squashing!) merge queue, and label such PRs
with the `changes-stage0` label. Such PRs should have a cleaned up history,
with separate stage0 update commits; then coordinate with the admins to merge
your PR using rebase merge, bypassing the merge queue.
Updates to `stage0` should be their own commits in the Git history. So should
you have to include the stage0 update in your PR (rather than using above
automation after merging changes), commit your work before running `make
update-stage0`, commit the updated `stage0` compiler code with the commit
message:
```
chore: update stage0
```
and coordinate with the admins to not squash your PR.
## Further Bootstrapping Complications
As written above, changes in meta code in the current stage usually will only
affect later stages. This is an issue in two specific cases.
* For the special case of *quotations*, it is desirable to have changes in builtin parsers affect them immediately: when the changes in the parser become active in the next stage, builtin macros implemented via quotations should generate syntax trees compatible with the new parser, and quotation patterns in builtin macros and elaborators should be able to match syntax created by the new parser and macros.
Since quotations capture the syntax tree structure during execution of the current stage and turn it into code for the next stage, we need to run the current stage's builtin parsers in quotations via the interpreter for this to work.
Caveats:
* We activate this behavior by default when building stage 1 by setting `-Dinternal.parseQuotWithCurrentStage=true`.
We force-disable it inside `macro/macro_rules/elab/elab_rules` via `suppressInsideQuot` as they are guaranteed not to run in the next stage and may need to be run in the current one, so the stage 0 parser is the correct one to use for them.
It may be necessary to extend this disabling to functions that contain quotations and are (exclusively) used by one of the mentioned commands. A function using quotations should never be used by both builtin and non-builtin macros/elaborators. Example: https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/blob/f70b7e5722da6101572869d87832494e2f8534b7/src/Lean/Elab/Tactic/Config.lean#L118-L122
* The parser needs to be reachable via an `import` statement, otherwise the version of the previous stage will silently be used.
* Only the parser code (`Parser.fn`) is affected; all metadata such as leading tokens is taken from the previous stage.
For an example, see https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/commit/f9dcbbddc48ccab22c7674ba20c5f409823b4cc1#diff-371387aed38bb02bf7761084fd9460e4168ae16d1ffe5de041b47d3ad2d22422R13
* For *non-builtin* meta code such as `notation`s or `macro`s in
`Notation.lean`, we expect changes to affect the current file and all later
files of the same stage immediately, just like outside the stdlib. To ensure
this, we need to build the stage using `-Dinterpreter.prefer_native=false` -
this, we build stage 1 using `-Dinterpreter.prefer_native=false` -
otherwise, when executing a macro, the interpreter would notice that there is
already a native symbol available for this function and run it instead of the
new IR, but the symbol is from the previous stage!
@@ -122,26 +135,11 @@ affect later stages. This is an issue in two specific cases.
further stages (e.g. after an `update-stage0`) will then need to be compiled
with the flag set to `false` again since they will expect the new signature.
For an example, see https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/commit/da4c46370d85add64ef7ca5e7cc4638b62823fbb.
When enabling `prefer_native`, we usually want to *disable* `parseQuotWithCurrentStage` as it would otherwise make quotations use the interpreter after all.
However, there is a specific case where we want to set both options to `true`: when we make changes to a non-builtin parser like `simp` that has a builtin elaborator, we cannot have the new parser be active outside of quotations in stage 1 as the builtin elaborator from stage 0 would not understand them; on the other hand, we need quotations in e.g. the builtin `simp` elaborator to produce the new syntax in the next stage.
As this issue usually affects only tactics, enabling `debug.byAsSorry` instead of `prefer_native` can be a simpler solution.
* For the special case of *quotations*, it is desirable to have changes in
built-in parsers affect them immediately: when the changes in the parser
become active in the next stage, macros implemented via quotations should
generate syntax trees compatible with the new parser, and quotation patterns
in macro and elaborators should be able to match syntax created by the new
parser and macros. Since quotations capture the syntax tree structure during
execution of the current stage and turn it into code for the next stage, we
need to run the current stage's built-in parsers in quotation via the
interpreter for this to work. Caveats:
* Since interpreting full parsers is not nearly as cheap and we rarely change
built-in syntax, this needs to be opted in using `-Dinternal.parseQuotWithCurrentStage=true`.
* The parser needs to be reachable via an `import` statement, otherwise the
version of the previous stage will silently be used.
* Only the parser code (`Parser.fn`) is affected; all metadata such as leading
tokens is taken from the previous stage.
For an example, see https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/commit/f9dcbbddc48ccab22c7674ba20c5f409823b4cc1#diff-371387aed38bb02bf7761084fd9460e4168ae16d1ffe5de041b47d3ad2d22422
(from before the flag defaulted to `false`).
For a `prefer_native` example, see https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/commit/da4c46370d85add64ef7ca5e7cc4638b62823fbb.
To modify either of these flags both for building and editing the stdlib, adjust
the code in `stage0/src/stdlib_flags.h`. The flags will automatically be reset

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ Some notes on how to debug Lean, which may also be applicable to debugging Lean
## Tracing
In `CoreM` and derived monads, we use `trace![traceCls] "msg with {interpolations}"` to fill the structured trace viewable with `set_option trace.traceCls true`.
In `CoreM` and derived monads, we use `trace[traceCls] "msg with {interpolations}"` to fill the structured trace viewable with `set_option trace.traceCls true`.
New trace classes have to be registered using `registerTraceClass` first.
Notable trace classes:
@@ -22,7 +22,9 @@ Notable trace classes:
In pure contexts or when execution is aborted before the messages are finally printed, one can instead use the term `dbg_trace "msg with {interpolations}"; val` (`;` can also be replaced by a newline), which will print the message to stderr before evaluating `val`. `dbgTraceVal val` can be used as a shorthand for `dbg_trace "{val}"; val`.
Note that if the return value is not actually used, the trace code is silently dropped as well.
In the language server, stderr output is buffered and shown as messages after a command has been elaborated, unless the option `server.stderrAsMessages` is deactivated.
By default, such stderr output is buffered and shown as messages after a command has been elaborated, which is necessary to ensure deterministic ordering of messages under parallelism.
If Lean aborts the process before it can finish the command or takes too long to do that, using `-DstderrAsMessages=false` avoids this buffering and shows `dbg_trace` output (but not `trace`s or other diagnostics) immediately.
## Debuggers

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@@ -49,14 +49,64 @@ In the case of `@[extern]` all *irrelevant* types are removed first; see next se
is represented by the representation of that parameter's type.
For example, `{ x : α // p }`, the `Subtype` structure of a value of type `α` and an irrelevant proof, is represented by the representation of `α`.
* `Nat` is represented by `lean_object *`.
Its runtime value is either a pointer to an opaque bignum object or, if the lowest bit of the "pointer" is 1 (`lean_is_scalar`), an encoded unboxed natural number (`lean_box`/`lean_unbox`).
Similarly, the signed integer types `Int8`, ..., `Int64`, `ISize` are also represented by the unsigned C types `uint8_t`, ..., `uint64_t`, `size_t`, respectively, because they have a trivial structure.
* `Nat` and `Int` are represented by `lean_object *`.
Their runtime values is either a pointer to an opaque bignum object or, if the lowest bit of the "pointer" is 1 (`lean_is_scalar`), an encoded unboxed natural number or integer (`lean_box`/`lean_unbox`).
* A universe `Sort u`, type constructor `... → Sort u`, or proposition `p : Prop` is *irrelevant* and is either statically erased (see above) or represented as a `lean_object *` with the runtime value `lean_box(0)`
* Any other type is represented by `lean_object *`.
Its runtime value is a pointer to an object of a subtype of `lean_object` (see respective declarations in `lean.h`) or the unboxed value `lean_box(cidx)` for the `cidx`th constructor of an inductive type if this constructor does not have any relevant parameters.
Its runtime value is a pointer to an object of a subtype of `lean_object` (see the "Inductive types" section below) or the unboxed value `lean_box(cidx)` for the `cidx`th constructor of an inductive type if this constructor does not have any relevant parameters.
Example: the runtime value of `u : Unit` is always `lean_box(0)`.
#### Inductive types
For inductive types which are in the fallback `lean_object *` case above and not trivial constructors, the type is stored as a `lean_ctor_object`, and `lean_is_ctor` will return true. A `lean_ctor_object` stores the constructor index in the header, and the fields are stored in the `m_objs` portion of the object.
The memory order of the fields is derived from the types and order of the fields in the declaration. They are ordered as follows:
* Non-scalar fields stored as `lean_object *`
* Fields of type `USize`
* Other scalar fields, in decreasing order by size
Within each group the fields are ordered in declaration order. **Warning**: Trivial wrapper types still count toward a field being treated as non-scalar for this purpose.
* To access fields of the first kind, use `lean_ctor_get(val, i)` to get the `i`th non-scalar field.
* To access `USize` fields, use `lean_ctor_get_usize(val, n+i)` to get the `i`th usize field and `n` is the total number of fields of the first kind.
* To access other scalar fields, use `lean_ctor_get_uintN(val, off)` or `lean_ctor_get_usize(val, off)` as appropriate. Here `off` is the byte offset of the field in the structure, starting at `n*sizeof(void*)` where `n` is the number of fields of the first two kinds.
For example, a structure such as
```lean
structure S where
ptr_1 : Array Nat
usize_1 : USize
sc64_1 : UInt64
ptr_2 : { x : UInt64 // x > 0 } -- wrappers don't count as scalars
sc64_2 : Float -- `Float` is 64 bit
sc8_1 : Bool
sc16_1 : UInt16
sc8_2 : UInt8
sc64_3 : UInt64
usize_2 : USize
ptr_3 : Char -- trivial wrapper around `UInt32`
sc32_1 : UInt32
sc16_2 : UInt16
```
would get re-sorted into the following memory order:
* `S.ptr_1` - `lean_ctor_get(val, 0)`
* `S.ptr_2` - `lean_ctor_get(val, 1)`
* `S.ptr_3` - `lean_ctor_get(val, 2)`
* `S.usize_1` - `lean_ctor_get_usize(val, 3)`
* `S.usize_2` - `lean_ctor_get_usize(val, 4)`
* `S.sc64_1` - `lean_ctor_get_uint64(val, sizeof(void*)*5)`
* `S.sc64_2` - `lean_ctor_get_float(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 8)`
* `S.sc64_3` - `lean_ctor_get_uint64(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 16)`
* `S.sc32_1` - `lean_ctor_get_uint32(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 24)`
* `S.sc16_1` - `lean_ctor_get_uint16(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 28)`
* `S.sc16_2` - `lean_ctor_get_uint16(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 30)`
* `S.sc8_1` - `lean_ctor_get_uint8(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 32)`
* `S.sc8_2` - `lean_ctor_get_uint8(val, sizeof(void*)*5 + 33)`
### Borrowing
By default, all `lean_object *` parameters of an `@[extern]` function are considered *owned*, i.e. the external code is passed a "virtual RC token" and is responsible for passing this token along to another consuming function (exactly once) or freeing it via `lean_dec`.
@@ -111,6 +161,15 @@ if (lean_io_result_is_ok(res)) {
lean_io_mark_end_initialization();
```
In addition, any other thread not spawned by the Lean runtime itself must be initialized for Lean use by calling
```c
void lean_initialize_thread();
```
and should be finalized in order to free all thread-local resources by calling
```c
void lean_finalize_thread();
```
## `@[extern]` in the Interpreter
The interpreter can run Lean declarations for which symbols are available in loaded shared libraries, which includes `@[extern]` declarations.

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@@ -74,3 +74,9 @@ Lean's build process uses [`ccache`](https://ccache.dev/) if it is
installed to speed up recompilation of the generated C code. Without
`ccache`, you'll likely spend more time than necessary waiting on
rebuilds - it's a good idea to make sure it's installed.
### `prelude`
Unlike most Lean projects, all submodules of the `Lean` module begin with the
`prelude` keyword. This disables the automated import of `Init`, meaning that
developers need to figure out their own subset of `Init` to import. This is done
such that changing files in `Init` doesn't force a full rebuild of `Lean`.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,261 @@
# Releasing a stable version
This checklist walks you through releasing a stable version.
See below for the checklist for release candidates.
We'll use `v4.6.0` as the intended release version as a running example.
- `git checkout releases/v4.6.0`
(This branch should already exist, from the release candidates.)
- `git pull`
- In `src/CMakeLists.txt`, verify you see
- `set(LEAN_VERSION_MINOR 6)` (for whichever `6` is appropriate)
- `set(LEAN_VERSION_IS_RELEASE 1)`
- (both of these should already be in place from the release candidates)
- `git tag v4.6.0`
- `git push $REMOTE v4.6.0`, where `$REMOTE` is the upstream Lean repository (e.g., `origin`, `upstream`)
- Now wait, while CI runs.
- You can monitor this at `https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/actions/workflows/ci.yml`,
looking for the `v4.6.0` tag.
- This step can take up to an hour.
- If you are intending to cut the next release candidate on the same day,
you may want to start on the release candidate checklist now.
- Go to https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/releases and verify that the `v4.6.0` release appears.
- Edit the release notes on Github to select the "Set as the latest release".
- Follow the instructions in creating a release candidate for the "GitHub release notes" step,
now that we have a written `RELEASES.md` section.
Do a quick sanity check.
- Next, we will move a curated list of downstream repos to the latest stable release.
- For each of the repositories listed below:
- Make a PR to `master`/`main` changing the toolchain to `v4.6.0`
- Update the toolchain file
- In the Lakefile, if there are dependencies on specific version tags of dependencies that you've already pushed as part of this process, update them to the new tag.
If they depend on `main` or `master`, don't change this; you've just updated the dependency, so it will work and be saved in the manifest
- Run `lake update`
- The PR title should be "chore: bump toolchain to v4.6.0".
- Merge the PR once CI completes.
- Create the tag `v4.6.0` from `master`/`main` and push it.
- Merge the tag `v4.6.0` into the `stable` branch and push it.
- We do this for the repositories:
- [Batteries](https://github.com/leanprover-community/batteries)
- No dependencies
- Toolchain bump PR
- Create and push the tag
- Merge the tag into `stable`
- [lean4checker](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4checker)
- No dependencies
- Toolchain bump PR
- Create and push the tag
- Merge the tag into `stable`
- [doc-gen4](https://github.com/leanprover/doc-gen4)
- Dependencies: exist, but they're not part of the release workflow
- Toolchain bump PR including updated Lake manifest
- Create and push the tag
- There is no `stable` branch; skip this step
- [Verso](https://github.com/leanprover/verso)
- Dependencies: exist, but they're not part of the release workflow
- The `SubVerso` dependency should be compatible with _every_ Lean release simultaneously, rather than following this workflow
- Toolchain bump PR including updated Lake manifest
- Create and push the tag
- There is no `stable` branch; skip this step
- [Cli](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4-cli)
- No dependencies
- Toolchain bump PR
- Create and push the tag
- There is no `stable` branch; skip this step
- [ProofWidgets4](https://github.com/leanprover-community/ProofWidgets4)
- Dependencies: `Batteries`
- Note on versions and branches:
- `ProofWidgets` uses a sequential version tagging scheme, e.g. `v0.0.29`,
which does not refer to the toolchain being used.
- Make a new release in this sequence after merging the toolchain bump PR.
- `ProofWidgets` does not maintain a `stable` branch.
- Toolchain bump PR
- Create and push the tag, following the version convention of the repository
- [Aesop](https://github.com/leanprover-community/aesop)
- Dependencies: `Batteries`
- Toolchain bump PR including updated Lake manifest
- Create and push the tag
- Merge the tag into `stable`
- [import-graph](https://github.com/leanprover-community/import-graph)
- Toolchain bump PR including updated Lake manifest
- Create and push the tag
- There is no `stable` branch; skip this step
- [plausible](https://github.com/leanprover-community/plausible)
- Toolchain bump PR including updated Lake manifest
- Create and push the tag
- There is no `stable` branch; skip this step
- [Mathlib](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4)
- Dependencies: `Aesop`, `ProofWidgets4`, `lean4checker`, `Batteries`, `doc-gen4`, `import-graph`
- Toolchain bump PR notes:
- In addition to updating the `lean-toolchain` and `lakefile.lean`,
in `.github/workflows/lean4checker.yml` update the line
`git checkout v4.6.0` to the appropriate tag.
- Push the PR branch to the main Mathlib repository rather than a fork, or CI may not work reliably
- Create and push the tag
- Create a new branch from the tag, push it, and open a pull request against `stable`.
Coordinate with a Mathlib maintainer to get this merged.
- [REPL](https://github.com/leanprover-community/repl)
- Dependencies: `Mathlib` (for test code)
- Note that there are two copies of `lean-toolchain`/`lakefile.lean`:
in the root, and in `test/Mathlib/`. Edit both, and run `lake update` in both directories.
- Toolchain bump PR including updated Lake manifest
- Create and push the tag
- Merge the tag into `stable`
- Run `scripts/release_checklist.py v4.6.0` to check that everything is in order.
- The `v4.6.0` section of `RELEASES.md` is out of sync between
`releases/v4.6.0` and `master`. This should be reconciled:
- Replace the `v4.6.0` section on `master` with the `v4.6.0` section on `releases/v4.6.0`
and commit this to `master`.
- Merge the release announcement PR for the Lean website - it will be deployed automatically
- Finally, make an announcement!
This should go in https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113486-announce, with topic `v4.6.0`.
Please see previous announcements for suggested language.
You will want a few bullet points for main topics from the release notes.
Link to the blog post from the Zulip announcement.
- Make sure that whoever is handling social media knows the release is out.
## Optimistic(?) time estimates:
- Initial checks and push the tag: 30 minutes.
- Waiting for the release: 60 minutes.
- Fixing release notes: 10 minutes.
- Bumping toolchains in downstream repositories, up to creating the Mathlib PR: 30 minutes.
- Waiting for Mathlib CI and bors: 120 minutes.
- Finalizing Mathlib tags and stable branch, and updating REPL: 15 minutes.
- Posting announcement and/or blog post: 20 minutes.
# Creating a release candidate.
This checklist walks you through creating the first release candidate for a version of Lean.
We'll use `v4.7.0-rc1` as the intended release version in this example.
- Decide which nightly release you want to turn into a release candidate.
We will use `nightly-2024-02-29` in this example.
- It is essential that Batteries and Mathlib already have reviewed branches compatible with this nightly.
- Check that both Batteries and Mathlib's `bump/v4.7.0` branch contain `nightly-2024-02-29`
in their `lean-toolchain`.
- The steps required to reach that state are beyond the scope of this checklist, but see below!
- Create the release branch from this nightly tag:
```
git remote add nightly https://github.com/leanprover/lean4-nightly.git
git fetch nightly tag nightly-2024-02-29
git checkout nightly-2024-02-29
git checkout -b releases/v4.7.0
```
- In `RELEASES.md` replace `Development in progress` in the `v4.7.0` section with `Release notes to be written.`
- It is essential to choose the nightly that will become the release candidate as early as possible, to avoid confusion.
- In `src/CMakeLists.txt`,
- verify that you see `set(LEAN_VERSION_MINOR 7)` (for whichever `7` is appropriate); this should already have been updated when the development cycle began.
- `set(LEAN_VERSION_IS_RELEASE 1)` (this should be a change; on `master` and nightly releases it is always `0`).
- Commit your changes to `src/CMakeLists.txt`, and push.
- `git tag v4.7.0-rc1`
- `git push origin v4.7.0-rc1`
- Now wait, while CI runs.
- You can monitor this at `https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/actions/workflows/ci.yml`, looking for the `v4.7.0-rc1` tag.
- This step can take up to an hour.
- (GitHub release notes) Once the release appears at https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/releases/
- Verify that the release is marked as a prerelease (this should have been done automatically by the CI release job).
- In the "previous tag" dropdown, select `v4.6.0`, and click "Generate release notes".
This will add a list of all the commits since the last stable version.
- Delete "update stage0" commits, and anything with a completely inscrutable commit message.
- Next, we will move a curated list of downstream repos to the release candidate.
- This assumes that for each repository either:
* There is already a *reviewed* branch `bump/v4.7.0` containing the required adaptations.
The preparation of this branch is beyond the scope of this document.
* The repository does not need any changes to move to the new version.
- For each of the target repositories:
- If the repository does not need any changes (i.e. `bump/v4.7.0` does not exist) then create
a new PR updating `lean-toolchain` to `leanprover/lean4:v4.7.0-rc1` and running `lake update`.
- Otherwise:
- Checkout the `bump/v4.7.0` branch.
- Verify that the `lean-toolchain` is set to the nightly from which the release candidate was created.
- `git merge origin/master`
- Change the `lean-toolchain` to `leanprover/lean4:v4.7.0-rc1`
- In `lakefile.lean`, change any dependencies which were using `nightly-testing` or `bump/v4.7.0` branches
back to `master` or `main`, and run `lake update` for those dependencies.
- Run `lake build` to ensure that dependencies are found (but it's okay to stop it after a moment).
- `git commit`
- `git push`
- Open a PR from `bump/v4.7.0` to `master`, and either merge it yourself after CI, if appropriate,
or notify the maintainers that it is ready to go.
- Once the PR has been merged, tag `master` with `v4.7.0-rc1` and push this tag.
- We do this for the same list of repositories as for stable releases, see above.
As above, there are dependencies between these, and so the process above is iterative.
It greatly helps if you can merge the `bump/v4.7.0` PRs yourself!
It is essential for Mathlib CI that you then create the next `bump/v4.8.0` branch
for the next development cycle.
Set the `lean-toolchain` file on this branch to same `nightly` you used for this release.
- For Batteries/Aesop/Mathlib, which maintain a `nightly-testing` branch, make sure there is a tag
`nightly-testing-2024-02-29` with date corresponding to the nightly used for the release
(create it if not), and then on the `nightly-testing` branch `git reset --hard master`, and force push.
- Make an announcement!
This should go in https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/113486-announce, with topic `v4.7.0-rc1`.
Please see previous announcements for suggested language.
You will want a few bullet points for main topics from the release notes.
Please also make sure that whoever is handling social media knows the release is out.
- Begin the next development cycle (i.e. for `v4.8.0`) on the Lean repository, by making a PR that:
- Updates `src/CMakeLists.txt` to say `set(LEAN_VERSION_MINOR 8)`
- Replaces the "release notes will be copied" text in the `v4.6.0` section of `RELEASES.md` with the
finalized release notes from the `releases/v4.6.0` branch.
- Replaces the "development in progress" in the `v4.7.0` section of `RELEASES.md` with
```
Release candidate, release notes will be copied from the branch `releases/v4.7.0` once completed.
```
and inserts the following section before that section:
```
v4.8.0
----------
Development in progress.
```
- Removes all the entries from the `./releases_drafts/` folder.
- Titled "chore: begin development cycle for v4.8.0"
## Time estimates:
Slightly longer than the corresponding steps for a stable release.
Similar process, but more things go wrong.
In particular, updating the downstream repositories is significantly more work
(because we need to merge existing `bump/v4.7.0` branches, not just update a toolchain).
# Preparing `bump/v4.7.0` branches
While not part of the release process per se,
this is a brief summary of the work that goes into updating Batteries/Aesop/Mathlib to new versions.
Please read https://leanprover-community.github.io/contribute/tags_and_branches.html
* Each repo has an unreviewed `nightly-testing` branch that
receives commits automatically from `master`, and
has its toolchain updated automatically for every nightly.
(Note: the aesop branch is not automated, and is updated on an as needed basis.)
As a consequence this branch is often broken.
A bot posts in the (private!) "Mathlib reviewers" stream on Zulip about the status of these branches.
* We fix the breakages by committing directly to `nightly-testing`: there is no PR process.
* This can either be done by the person managing this process directly,
or by soliciting assistance from authors of files, or generally helpful people on Zulip!
* Each repo has a `bump/v4.7.0` which accumulates reviewed changes adapting to new versions.
* Once `nightly-testing` is working on a given nightly, say `nightly-2024-02-15`, we will create a PR to `bump/v4.7.0`.
* For Mathlib, there is a script in `scripts/create-adaptation-pr.sh` that automates this process.
* For Batteries and Aesop it is currently manual.
* For all of these repositories, the process is the same:
* Make sure `bump/v4.7.0` is up to date with `master` (by merging `master`, no PR necessary)
* Create from `bump/v4.7.0` a `bump/nightly-2024-02-15` branch.
* In that branch, `git merge nightly-testing` to bring across changes from `nightly-testing`.
* Sanity check changes, commit, and make a PR to `bump/v4.7.0` from the `bump/nightly-2024-02-15` branch.
* Solicit review, merge the PR into `bump/v4.7.0`.
* It is always okay to merge in the following directions:
`master` -> `bump/v4.7.0` -> `bump/nightly-2024-02-15` -> `nightly-testing`.
Please remember to push any merges you make to intermediate steps!
# Writing the release notes
Release notes are automatically generated from the commit history, using `script/release_notes.py`.
Run this as `script/release_notes.py v4.6.0`, where `v4.6.0` is the *previous* release version. This will generate output
for all commits since that tag. Note that there is output on both stderr, which should be manually reviewed,
and on stdout, which should be manually copied to `RELEASES.md`.
There can also be pre-written entries in `./releases_drafts`, which should be all incorporated in the release notes and then deleted from the branch.
See `./releases_drafts/README.md` for more information.

417
doc/do.md
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@@ -1,417 +0,0 @@
# The `do` notation
Lean is a pure functional programming language, but you can write effectful code using the `do` embedded domain specific language (DSL). The following simple program prints two strings "hello" and "world" in the standard output and terminates with exit code 0. Note that the type of the program is `IO UInt32`. You can read this type as the type of values that perform input-output effects and produce a value of type `UInt32`.
```lean
def main : IO UInt32 := do
IO.println "hello"
IO.println "world"
return 0
```
The type of `IO.println` is `String → IO Unit`. That is, it is a function from `String` to `IO Unit` which indicates it may perform input-output effects and produce a value of type `Unit`. We often say that functions that may perform effects are *methods*.
We also say a method application, such as `IO.println "hello"` is an *action*.
Note that the examples above also demonstrates that braceless `do` blocks are whitespace sensitive.
If you like `;`s and curly braces, you can write the example above as
```lean
def main : IO UInt32 := do {
IO.println "hello";
IO.println "world";
return 0;
}
```
Semicolons can be used even when curly braces are not used. They are particularly useful when you want to "pack" more than one action in a single line.
```lean
def main : IO UInt32 := do
IO.println "hello"; IO.println "world"
return 0
```
Whitespace sensitivity in programming languages is a controversial topic
among programmers. You should use your own style. We, the Lean developers, **love** the
braceless and semicolon-free style.
We believe it is clean and beautiful.
The `do` DSL expands into the core Lean language. Let's inspect the different components using the commands `#print` and `#check`.
```lean
# def main : IO UInt32 := do
# IO.println "hello"
# IO.println "world"
# return 0
#check IO.println "hello"
-- IO Unit
#print main
-- Output contains the infix operator `>>=` and `pure`
-- The following `set_option` disables notation such as `>>=` in the output
set_option pp.notation false in
#print main
-- Output contains `bind` and `pure`
#print bind
-- bind : {m : Type u → Type v} → [self : Bind m] → {α β : Type u} →
-- m α → (α → m β) → m β
#print pure
-- pure : {m : Type u → Type v} → [self : Pure m] → {α : Type u} →
-- α → m α
-- IO implements the type classes `Bind` and `Pure`.
#check (inferInstance : Bind IO)
#check (inferInstance : Pure IO)
```
The types of `bind` and `pure` may look daunting at first sight.
They both have many implicit arguments. Let's focus first on the explicit arguments.
`bind` has two explicit arguments `m α` and `α → m β`. The first one should
be viewed as an action with effects `m` and producing a value of type `α`.
The second is a function that takes a value of type `α` and produces an action
with effects `m` and a value of type `β`. The result is `m β`. The method `bind` is composing
these two actions. We often say `bind` is an abstract semicolon. The method `pure` converts
a value `α` into an action that produces an action `m α`.
Here is the same function being defined using `bind` and `pure` without the `do` DSL.
```lean
def main : IO UInt32 :=
bind (IO.println "hello") fun _ =>
bind (IO.println "world") fun _ =>
pure 0
```
The notations `let x <- action1; action2` and `let x ← action1; action2` are just syntax sugar for `bind action1 fun x => action2`.
Here is a small example using it.
```lean
def isGreaterThan0 (x : Nat) : IO Bool := do
IO.println s!"value: {x}"
return x > 0
def f (x : Nat) : IO Unit := do
let c <- isGreaterThan0 x
if c then
IO.println s!"{x} is greater than 0"
else
pure ()
#eval f 10
-- value: 10
-- 10 is greater than 0
```
## Nested actions
Note that we cannot write `if isGreaterThan0 x then ... else ...` because the condition in a `if-then-else` is a **pure** value without effects, but `isGreaterThan0 x` has type `IO Bool`. You can use the nested action notation to avoid this annoyance. Here is an equivalent definition for `f` using a nested action.
```lean
# def isGreaterThan0 (x : Nat) : IO Bool := do
# IO.println s!"x: {x}"
# return x > 0
def f (x : Nat) : IO Unit := do
if (<- isGreaterThan0 x) then
IO.println s!"{x} is greater than 0"
else
pure ()
#print f
```
Lean "lifts" the nested actions and introduces the `bind` for us.
Here is an example with two nested actions. Note that both actions are executed
even if `x = 0`.
```lean
# def isGreaterThan0 (x : Nat) : IO Bool := do
# IO.println s!"x: {x}"
# return x > 0
def f (x y : Nat) : IO Unit := do
if (<- isGreaterThan0 x) && (<- isGreaterThan0 y) then
IO.println s!"{x} and {y} are greater than 0"
else
pure ()
#eval f 0 10
-- value: 0
-- value: 10
-- The function `f` above is equivalent to
def g (x y : Nat) : IO Unit := do
let c1 <- isGreaterThan0 x
let c2 <- isGreaterThan0 y
if c1 && c2 then
IO.println s!"{x} and {y} are greater than 0"
else
pure ()
theorem fgEqual : f = g :=
rfl -- proof by reflexivity
```
Here are two ways to achieve the short-circuit semantics in the example above
```lean
# def isGreaterThan0 (x : Nat) : IO Bool := do
# IO.println s!"x: {x}"
# return x > 0
def f1 (x y : Nat) : IO Unit := do
if (<- isGreaterThan0 x <&&> isGreaterThan0 y) then
IO.println s!"{x} and {y} are greater than 0"
else
pure ()
-- `<&&>` is the effectful version of `&&`
-- Given `x y : IO Bool`, `x <&&> y` : m Bool`
-- It only executes `y` if `x` returns `true`.
#eval f1 0 10
-- value: 0
#eval f1 1 10
-- value: 1
-- value: 10
-- 1 and 10 are greater than 0
def f2 (x y : Nat) : IO Unit := do
if (<- isGreaterThan0 x) then
if (<- isGreaterThan0 y) then
IO.println s!"{x} and {y} are greater than 0"
else
pure ()
else
pure ()
```
## `if-then` notation
In the `do` DSL, we can write `if c then action` as a shorthand for `if c then action else pure ()`. Here is the method `f2` using this shorthand.
```lean
# def isGreaterThan0 (x : Nat) : IO Bool := do
# IO.println s!"x: {x}"
# return x > 0
def f2 (x y : Nat) : IO Unit := do
if (<- isGreaterThan0 x) then
if (<- isGreaterThan0 y) then
IO.println s!"{x} and {y} are greater than 0"
```
## Reassignments
When writing effectful code, it is natural to think imperatively.
For example, suppose we want to create an empty array `xs`,
add `0` if some condition holds, add `1` if another condition holds,
and then print it. In the following example, we use variable
"shadowing" to simulate this kind of "update".
```lean
def f (b1 b2 : Bool) : IO Unit := do
let xs := #[]
let xs := if b1 then xs.push 0 else xs
let xs := if b2 then xs.push 1 else xs
IO.println xs
#eval f true true
-- #[0, 1]
#eval f false true
-- #[1]
#eval f true false
-- #[0]
#eval f false false
-- #[]
```
We can use tuples to simulate updates on multiple variables.
```lean
def f (b1 b2 : Bool) : IO Unit := do
let xs := #[]
let ys := #[]
let (xs, ys) := if b1 then (xs.push 0, ys) else (xs, ys.push 0)
let (xs, ys) := if b2 then (xs.push 1, ys) else (xs, ys.push 1)
IO.println s!"xs: {xs}, ys: {ys}"
#eval f true false
-- xs: #[0], ys: #[1]
```
We can also simulate the control-flow above using *join-points*.
A join-point is a `let` that is always tail called and fully applied.
The Lean compiler implements them using `goto`s.
Here is the same example using join-points.
```lean
def f (b1 b2 : Bool) : IO Unit := do
let jp1 xs ys := IO.println s!"xs: {xs}, ys: {ys}"
let jp2 xs ys := if b2 then jp1 (xs.push 1) ys else jp1 xs (ys.push 1)
let xs := #[]
let ys := #[]
if b1 then jp2 (xs.push 0) ys else jp2 xs (ys.push 0)
#eval f true false
-- xs: #[0], ys: #[1]
```
You can capture complex control-flow using join-points.
The `do` DSL offers the variable reassignment feature to make this kind of code more comfortable to write. In the following example, the `mut` modifier at `let mut xs := #[]` indicates that variable `xs` can be reassigned. The example contains two reassignments `xs := xs.push 0` and `xs := xs.push 1`. The reassignments are compiled using join-points. There is no hidden state being updated.
```lean
def f (b1 b2 : Bool) : IO Unit := do
let mut xs := #[]
if b1 then xs := xs.push 0
if b2 then xs := xs.push 1
IO.println xs
#eval f true true
-- #[0, 1]
```
The notation `x <- action` reassigns `x` with the value produced by the action. It is equivalent to `x := (<- action)`
## Iteration
The `do` DSL provides a unified notation for iterating over datastructures. Here are a few examples.
```lean
def sum (xs : Array Nat) : IO Nat := do
let mut s := 0
for x in xs do
IO.println s!"x: {x}"
s := s + x
return s
#eval sum #[1, 2, 3]
-- x: 1
-- x: 2
-- x: 3
-- 6
-- We can write pure code using the `Id.run <| do` DSL too.
def sum' (xs : Array Nat) : Nat := Id.run <| do
let mut s := 0
for x in xs do
s := s + x
return s
#eval sum' #[1, 2, 3]
-- 6
def sumEven (xs : Array Nat) : IO Nat := do
let mut s := 0
for x in xs do
if x % 2 == 0 then
IO.println s!"x: {x}"
s := s + x
return s
#eval sumEven #[1, 2, 3, 6]
-- x: 2
-- x: 6
-- 8
def splitEvenOdd (xs : List Nat) : IO Unit := do
let mut evens := #[]
let mut odds := #[]
for x in xs do
if x % 2 == 0 then
evens := evens.push x
else
odds := odds.push x
IO.println s!"evens: {evens}, odds: {odds}"
#eval splitEvenOdd [1, 2, 3, 4]
-- evens: #[2, 4], odds: #[1, 3]
def findNatLessThan (x : Nat) (p : Nat Bool) : IO Nat := do
-- [:x] is notation for the range [0, x)
for i in [:x] do
if p i then
return i -- `return` from the `do` block
throw (IO.userError "value not found")
#eval findNatLessThan 10 (fun x => x > 5 && x % 4 == 0)
-- 8
def sumOddUpTo (xs : List Nat) (threshold : Nat) : IO Nat := do
let mut s := 0
for x in xs do
if x % 2 == 0 then
continue -- it behaves like the `continue` statement in imperative languages
IO.println s!"x: {x}"
s := s + x
if s > threshold then
break -- it behaves like the `break` statement in imperative languages
IO.println s!"result: {s}"
return s
#eval sumOddUpTo [2, 3, 4, 11, 20, 31, 41, 51, 107] 40
-- x: 3
-- x: 11
-- x: 31
-- result: 45
-- 45
```
TODO: describe `forIn`
## Try-catch
TODO
## Returning early from a failed match
Inside a `do` block, the pattern `let _ ← <success> | <fail>` will continue with the rest of the block if the match on the left hand side succeeds, but will execute the right hand side and exit the block on failure:
```lean
def showUserInfo (getUsername getFavoriteColor : IO (Option String)) : IO Unit := do
let some n getUsername | IO.println "no username!"
IO.println s!"username: {n}"
let some c getFavoriteColor | IO.println "user didn't provide a favorite color!"
IO.println s!"favorite color: {c}"
-- username: JohnDoe
-- favorite color: red
#eval showUserInfo (pure <| some "JohnDoe") (pure <| some "red")
-- no username
#eval showUserInfo (pure none) (pure <| some "purple")
-- username: JaneDoe
-- user didn't provide a favorite color
#eval showUserInfo (pure <| some "JaneDoe") (pure none)
```
## If-let
Inside a `do` block, users can employ the `if let` pattern to destructure actions:
```lean
def tryIncrement (getInput : IO (Option Nat)) : IO (Except String Nat) := do
if let some n getInput
then return Except.ok n.succ
else return Except.error "argument was `none`"
-- Except.ok 2
#eval tryIncrement (pure <| some 1)
-- Except.error "argument was `none`"
#eval tryIncrement (pure <| none)
```
## Pattern matching
TODO
## Monads
TODO
## ReaderT
TODO
## StateT
TODO
## StateRefT
TODO
## ExceptT
TODO
## MonadLift and automatic lifting
TODO

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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
## Elaborators
TODO. See [Lean Together 2021: Metaprogramming in Lean
4](https://youtu.be/hxQ1vvhYN_U) for an overview as well [the
continuation](https://youtu.be/vy4JWIiiXSY) about tactic programming.
For more information on antiquotations, see also §4.1 of [Beyond
Notations: Hygienic Macro Expansion for Theorem Proving
Languages](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2001.10490.pdf#page=11).

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@@ -1,190 +0,0 @@
# Enumerated Types
The simplest kind of inductive type is simply a type with a finite, enumerated list of elements.
The following command declares the enumerated type `Weekday`.
```lean
inductive Weekday where
| sunday : Weekday
| monday : Weekday
| tuesday : Weekday
| wednesday : Weekday
| thursday : Weekday
| friday : Weekday
| saturday : Weekday
```
The `Weekday` type has 7 constructors/elements. The constructors live in the `Weekday` namespace
Think of `sunday`, `monday`, …, `saturday` as being distinct elements of `Weekday`,
with no other distinguishing properties.
```lean
# inductive Weekday where
# | sunday : Weekday
# | monday : Weekday
# | tuesday : Weekday
# | wednesday : Weekday
# | thursday : Weekday
# | friday : Weekday
# | saturday : Weekday
#check Weekday.sunday -- Weekday
#check Weekday.monday -- Weekday
```
You can define functions by pattern matching.
The following function converts a `Weekday` into a natural number.
```lean
# inductive Weekday where
# | sunday : Weekday
# | monday : Weekday
# | tuesday : Weekday
# | wednesday : Weekday
# | thursday : Weekday
# | friday : Weekday
# | saturday : Weekday
def natOfWeekday (d : Weekday) : Nat :=
match d with
| Weekday.sunday => 1
| Weekday.monday => 2
| Weekday.tuesday => 3
| Weekday.wednesday => 4
| Weekday.thursday => 5
| Weekday.friday => 6
| Weekday.saturday => 7
#eval natOfWeekday Weekday.tuesday -- 3
```
It is often useful to group definitions related to a type in a namespace with the same name.
For example, we can put the function above into the ``Weekday`` namespace.
We are then allowed to use the shorter name when we open the namespace.
In the following example, we define functions from ``Weekday`` to ``Weekday`` in the namespace `Weekday`.
```lean
# inductive Weekday where
# | sunday : Weekday
# | monday : Weekday
# | tuesday : Weekday
# | wednesday : Weekday
# | thursday : Weekday
# | friday : Weekday
# | saturday : Weekday
namespace Weekday
def next (d : Weekday) : Weekday :=
match d with
| sunday => monday
| monday => tuesday
| tuesday => wednesday
| wednesday => thursday
| thursday => friday
| friday => saturday
| saturday => sunday
end Weekday
```
It is so common to start a definition with a `match` in Lean, that Lean provides a syntax sugar for it.
```lean
# inductive Weekday where
# | sunday : Weekday
# | monday : Weekday
# | tuesday : Weekday
# | wednesday : Weekday
# | thursday : Weekday
# | friday : Weekday
# | saturday : Weekday
# namespace Weekday
def previous : Weekday -> Weekday
| sunday => saturday
| monday => sunday
| tuesday => monday
| wednesday => tuesday
| thursday => wednesday
| friday => thursday
| saturday => friday
# end Weekday
```
We can use the command `#eval` to test our definitions.
```lean
# inductive Weekday where
# | sunday : Weekday
# | monday : Weekday
# | tuesday : Weekday
# | wednesday : Weekday
# | thursday : Weekday
# | friday : Weekday
# | saturday : Weekday
# namespace Weekday
# def next (d : Weekday) : Weekday :=
# match d with
# | sunday => monday
# | monday => tuesday
# | tuesday => wednesday
# | wednesday => thursday
# | thursday => friday
# | friday => saturday
# | saturday => sunday
# def previous : Weekday -> Weekday
# | sunday => saturday
# | monday => sunday
# | tuesday => monday
# | wednesday => tuesday
# | thursday => wednesday
# | friday => thursday
# | saturday => friday
def toString : Weekday -> String
| sunday => "Sunday"
| monday => "Monday"
| tuesday => "Tuesday"
| wednesday => "Wednesday"
| thursday => "Thursday"
| friday => "Friday"
| saturday => "Saturday"
#eval toString (next sunday) -- "Monday"
#eval toString (next tuesday) -- "Wednesday"
#eval toString (previous wednesday) -- "Tuesday"
#eval toString (next (previous sunday)) -- "Sunday"
#eval toString (next (previous monday)) -- "Monday"
-- ..
# end Weekday
```
We can now prove the general theorem that ``next (previous d) = d`` for any weekday ``d``.
The idea is to perform a proof by cases using `match`, and rely on the fact for each constructor both
sides of the equality reduce to the same term.
```lean
# inductive Weekday where
# | sunday : Weekday
# | monday : Weekday
# | tuesday : Weekday
# | wednesday : Weekday
# | thursday : Weekday
# | friday : Weekday
# | saturday : Weekday
# namespace Weekday
# def next (d : Weekday) : Weekday :=
# match d with
# | sunday => monday
# | monday => tuesday
# | tuesday => wednesday
# | wednesday => thursday
# | thursday => friday
# | friday => saturday
# | saturday => sunday
# def previous : Weekday -> Weekday
# | sunday => saturday
# | monday => sunday
# | tuesday => monday
# | wednesday => tuesday
# | thursday => wednesday
# | friday => thursday
# | saturday => friday
theorem nextOfPrevious (d : Weekday) : next (previous d) = d :=
match d with
| sunday => rfl
| monday => rfl
| tuesday => rfl
| wednesday => rfl
| thursday => rfl
| friday => rfl
| saturday => rfl
# end Weekday
```

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@@ -4,16 +4,16 @@ def ack : Nat → Nat → Nat
| 0, y => y+1
| x+1, 0 => ack x 1
| x+1, y+1 => ack x (ack (x+1) y)
termination_by ack x y => (x, y)
termination_by x y => (x, y)
def sum (a : Array Int) : Int :=
let rec go (i : Nat) :=
if i < a.size then
if _ : i < a.size then
a[i] + go (i+1)
else
0
termination_by a.size - i
go 0
termination_by go i => a.size - i
set_option pp.proofs true
#print sum.go

View File

@@ -4,43 +4,42 @@ open Lean Meta
def ctor (mvarId : MVarId) (idx : Nat) : MetaM (List MVarId) := do
/- Set `MetaM` context using `mvarId` -/
withMVarContext mvarId do
mvarId.withContext do
/- Fail if the metavariable is already assigned. -/
checkNotAssigned mvarId `ctor
mvarId.checkNotAssigned `ctor
/- Retrieve the target type, instantiateMVars, and use `whnf`. -/
let target getMVarType' mvarId
let target mvarId.getType'
let .const declName us := target.getAppFn
| throwTacticEx `ctor mvarId "target is not an inductive datatype"
let .inductInfo { ctors, .. } getConstInfo declName
| throwTacticEx `ctor mvarId "target is not an inductive datatype"
if idx = 0 then
throwTacticEx `ctor mvarId "invalid index, it must be > 0"
throwTacticEx `ctor mvarId "invalid index, it must be > 0"
else if h : idx - 1 < ctors.length then
apply mvarId (.const ctors[idx - 1] us)
mvarId.apply (.const ctors[idx - 1] us)
else
throwTacticEx `ctor mvarId "invalid index, inductive datatype has only {ctors.length} contructors"
throwTacticEx `ctor mvarId "invalid index, inductive datatype has only {ctors.length} constructors"
open Elab Tactic
elab "ctor" idx:num : tactic =>
elab "ctor" idx:num : tactic =>
liftMetaTactic (ctor · idx.getNat)
example (p : Prop) : p := by
example (p : Prop) : p := by
ctor 1 -- Error
example (h : q) : p q := by
example (h : q) : p q := by
ctor 0 -- Error
exact h
example (h : q) : p q := by
example (h : q) : p q := by
ctor 3 -- Error
exact h
example (h : q) : p q := by
example (h : q) : p q := by
ctor 2
exact h
example (h : q) : p q := by
example (h : q) : p q := by
ctor 1
exact h -- Error
exact h -- Error

View File

@@ -5,15 +5,15 @@ open Lean Meta
def ex1 (declName : Name) : MetaM Unit := do
let info getConstInfo declName
IO.println s!"{declName} : {← ppExpr info.type}"
if let some val := info.value? then
if let some val := info.value? then
IO.println s!"{declName} : {← ppExpr val}"
#eval ex1 ``Nat
def ex2 (declName : Name) : MetaM Unit := do
let info getConstInfo declName
trace[Meta.debug] "{declName} : {info.type}"
if let some val := info.value? then
if let some val := info.value? then
trace[Meta.debug] "{declName} : {val}"
#eval ex2 ``Add.add
@@ -29,10 +29,10 @@ def ex3 (declName : Name) : MetaM Unit := do
for x in xs do
trace[Meta.debug] "{x} : {← inferType x}"
def myMin [LT α] [DecidableRel (α := α) (·<·)] (a b : α) : α :=
if a < b then
def myMin [LT α] [DecidableLT α] (a b : α) : α :=
if a < b then
a
else
else
b
set_option trace.Meta.debug true in
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ set_option trace.Meta.debug true in
def ex4 : MetaM Unit := do
let nat := mkConst ``Nat
withLocalDeclD `a nat fun a =>
withLocalDeclD `a nat fun a =>
withLocalDeclD `b nat fun b => do
let e mkAppM ``HAdd.hAdd #[a, b]
trace[Meta.debug] "{e} : {← inferType e}"
@@ -66,15 +66,17 @@ open Elab Term
def ex5 : TermElabM Unit := do
let nat := Lean.mkConst ``Nat
withLocalDeclD `a nat fun a => do
withLocalDeclD `a nat fun a => do
withLocalDeclD `b nat fun b => do
let ab mkAppM ``HAdd.hAdd #[a, b]
let stx `(fun x => if x < 10 then $( exprToSyntax ab) + x else x + $( exprToSyntax a))
let abStx exprToSyntax ab
let aStx exprToSyntax a
let stx `(fun x => if x < 10 then $abStx + x else x + $aStx)
let e elabTerm stx none
trace[Meta.debug] "{e} : {← inferType e}"
let e := mkApp e (mkNatLit 5)
let e whnf e
trace[Meta.debug] "{e}"
set_option trace.Meta.debug true in
#eval ex5

View File

@@ -4,16 +4,16 @@ def ack : Nat → Nat → Nat
| 0, y => y+1
| x+1, 0 => ack x 1
| x+1, y+1 => ack x (ack (x+1) y)
termination_by ack x y => (x, y)
termination_by x y => (x, y)
def sum (a : Array Int) : Int :=
let rec go (i : Nat) :=
if i < a.size then
if _ : i < a.size then
a[i] + go (i+1)
else
0
termination_by a.size - i
go 0
termination_by go i => a.size - i
set_option pp.proofs true
#print sum.go

View File

@@ -277,14 +277,13 @@ theorem BinTree.find_insert (b : BinTree β) (k : Nat) (v : β)
. by_cases' key < k
cases h; apply ihr; assumption
theorem BinTree.find_insert_of_ne (b : BinTree β) (h : k k') (v : β)
theorem BinTree.find_insert_of_ne (b : BinTree β) (ne : k k') (v : β)
: (b.insert k v).find? k' = b.find? k' := by
let t, h := b; simp
induction t with simp
| leaf =>
split <;> (try simp) <;> split <;> (try simp)
have_eq k k'
contradiction
intros le
exact Nat.lt_of_le_of_ne le ne
| node left key value right ihl ihr =>
let .node hl hr bl br := h
specialize ihl bl

1
doc/examples/compiler/.gitignore vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1 @@
build

View File

@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ We now define the constant folding optimization that traverses a term if replace
/-!
The correctness of the `Term.constFold` is proved using induction, case-analysis, and the term simplifier.
We prove all cases but the one for `plus` using `simp [*]`. This tactic instructs the term simplifier to
use hypotheses such as `a = b` as rewriting/simplications rules.
use hypotheses such as `a = b` as rewriting/simplifications rules.
We use the `split` to break the nested `match` expression in the `plus` case into two cases.
The local variables `iha` and `ihb` are the induction hypotheses for `a` and `b`.
The modifier `←` in a term simplifier argument instructs the term simplifier to use the equation as a rewriting rule in

View File

@@ -12,17 +12,17 @@ Remark: this example is based on an example found in the Idris manual.
Vectors
--------
A `Vector` is a list of size `n` whose elements belong to a type `α`.
A `Vec` is a list of size `n` whose elements belong to a type `α`.
-/
inductive Vector (α : Type u) : Nat Type u
| nil : Vector α 0
| cons : α Vector α n Vector α (n+1)
inductive Vec (α : Type u) : Nat Type u
| nil : Vec α 0
| cons : α Vec α n Vec α (n+1)
/-!
We can overload the `List.cons` notation `::` and use it to create `Vector`s.
We can overload the `List.cons` notation `::` and use it to create `Vec`s.
-/
infix:67 " :: " => Vector.cons
infix:67 " :: " => Vec.cons
/-!
Now, we define the types of our simple functional language.
@@ -50,11 +50,11 @@ the builtin instance for `Add Int` as the solution.
/-!
Expressions are indexed by the types of the local variables, and the type of the expression itself.
-/
inductive HasType : Fin n Vector Ty n Ty Type where
inductive HasType : Fin n Vec Ty n Ty Type where
| stop : HasType 0 (ty :: ctx) ty
| pop : HasType k ctx ty HasType k.succ (u :: ctx) ty
inductive Expr : Vector Ty n Ty Type where
inductive Expr : Vec Ty n Ty Type where
| var : HasType i ctx ty Expr ctx ty
| val : Int Expr ctx Ty.int
| lam : Expr (a :: ctx) ty Expr ctx (Ty.fn a ty)
@@ -102,8 +102,8 @@ indexed over the types in scope. Since an environment is just another form of li
to the vector of local variable types, we overload again the notation `::` so that we can use the usual list syntax.
Given a proof that a variable is defined in the context, we can then produce a value from the environment.
-/
inductive Env : Vector Ty n Type where
| nil : Env Vector.nil
inductive Env : Vec Ty n Type where
| nil : Env Vec.nil
| cons : Ty.interp a Env ctx Env (a :: ctx)
infix:67 " :: " => Env.cons
@@ -149,4 +149,4 @@ def fact : Expr ctx (Ty.fn Ty.int Ty.int) :=
(op (·*·) (delay fun _ => app fact (op (·-·) (var stop) (val 1))) (var stop)))
decreasing_by sorry
#eval fact.interp Env.nil 10
#eval! fact.interp Env.nil 10

View File

@@ -225,7 +225,7 @@ We now define the constant folding optimization that traverses a term if replace
/-!
The correctness of the `constFold` is proved using induction, case-analysis, and the term simplifier.
We prove all cases but the one for `plus` using `simp [*]`. This tactic instructs the term simplifier to
use hypotheses such as `a = b` as rewriting/simplications rules.
use hypotheses such as `a = b` as rewriting/simplifications rules.
We use the `split` to break the nested `match` expression in the `plus` case into two cases.
The local variables `iha` and `ihb` are the induction hypotheses for `a` and `b`.
The modifier `←` in a term simplifier argument instructs the term simplifier to use the equation as a rewriting rule in

View File

@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ inductive HasType : Expr → Ty → Prop
/-!
We can easily show that if `e` has type `t₁` and type `t₂`, then `t₁` and `t₂` must be equal
by using the the `cases` tactic. This tactic creates a new subgoal for every constructor,
by using the `cases` tactic. This tactic creates a new subgoal for every constructor,
and automatically discharges unreachable cases. The tactic combinator `tac₁ <;> tac₂` applies
`tac₂` to each subgoal produced by `tac₁`. Then, the tactic `rfl` is used to close all produced
goals using reflexivity.
@@ -82,9 +82,7 @@ theorem Expr.typeCheck_correct (h₁ : HasType e ty) (h₂ : e.typeCheck ≠ .un
/-!
Now, we prove that if `Expr.typeCheck e` returns `Maybe.unknown`, then forall `ty`, `HasType e ty` does not hold.
The notation `e.typeCheck` is sugar for `Expr.typeCheck e`. Lean can infer this because we explicitly said that `e` has type `Expr`.
The proof is by induction on `e` and case analysis. The tactic `rename_i` is used to to rename "inaccessible" variables.
We say a variable is inaccessible if it is introduced by a tactic (e.g., `cases`) or has been shadowed by another variable introduced
by the user. Note that the tactic `simp [typeCheck]` is applied to all goal generated by the `induction` tactic, and closes
The proof is by induction on `e` and case analysis. Note that the tactic `simp [typeCheck]` is applied to all goal generated by the `induction` tactic, and closes
the cases corresponding to the constructors `Expr.nat` and `Expr.bool`.
-/
theorem Expr.typeCheck_complete {e : Expr} : e.typeCheck = .unknown ¬ HasType e ty := by

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
source ../../tests/common.sh
exec_check lean -j 0 -Dlinter.all=false "$f"
exec_check_raw lean -Dlinter.all=false "$f"

View File

@@ -4,15 +4,18 @@ open Lean Widget
/-!
# The user-widgets system
Proving and programming are inherently interactive tasks. Lots of mathematical objects and data
structures are visual in nature. *User widgets* let you associate custom interactive UIs with
sections of a Lean document. User widgets are rendered in the Lean infoview.
Proving and programming are inherently interactive tasks.
Lots of mathematical objects and data structures are visual in nature.
*User widgets* let you associate custom interactive UIs
with sections of a Lean document.
User widgets are rendered in the Lean infoview.
![Rubik's cube](../images/widgets_rubiks.png)
## Trying it out
To try it out, simply type in the following code and place your cursor over the `#widget` command.
To try it out, type in the following code and place your cursor over the `#widget` command.
You can also [view this manual entry in the online editor](https://live.lean-lang.org/#url=https%3A%2F%2Fraw.githubusercontent.com%2Fleanprover%2Flean4%2Fmaster%2Fdoc%2Fexamples%2Fwidgets.lean).
-/
@[widget_module]
@@ -21,38 +24,37 @@ def helloWidget : Widget.Module where
import * as React from 'react';
export default function(props) {
const name = props.name || 'world'
return React.createElement('p', {}, name + '!')
return React.createElement('p', {}, 'Hello ' + name + '!')
}"
#widget helloWidget
/-!
If you want to dive into a full sample right away, check out
[`RubiksCube`](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4-samples/blob/main/RubiksCube/).
[`Rubiks`](https://github.com/leanprover-community/ProofWidgets4/blob/main/ProofWidgets/Demos/Rubiks.lean).
This sample uses higher-level widget components from the ProofWidgets library.
Below, we'll explain the system piece by piece.
⚠️ WARNING: All of the user widget APIs are **unstable** and subject to breaking changes.
## Widget sources and instances
## Widget modules and instances
A *widget source* is a valid JavaScript [ESModule](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Modules)
which exports a [React component](https://reactjs.org/docs/components-and-props.html). To access
React, the module must use `import * as React from 'react'`. Our first example of a widget source
is of course the value of `helloWidget.javascript`.
A [widget module](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Lean/Widget/UserWidget.html#Lean.Widget.Module)
is a valid JavaScript [ESModule](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Modules)
that can execute in the Lean infoview.
Most widget modules export a [React component](https://reactjs.org/docs/components-and-props.html)
as the piece of user interface to be rendered.
To access React, the module can use `import * as React from 'react'`.
Our first example of a widget module is `helloWidget` above.
Widget modules must be registered with the `@[widget_module]` attribute.
We can register a widget source with the `@[widget]` attribute, giving it a friendlier name
in the `name` field. This is bundled together in a `UserWidgetDefinition`.
A *widget instance* is then the identifier of a `UserWidgetDefinition` (so `` `helloWidget ``,
not `"Hello"`) associated with a range of positions in the Lean source code. Widget instances
are stored in the *infotree* in the same manner as other information about the source file
such as the type of every expression. In our example, the `#widget` command stores a widget instance
with the entire line as its range. We can think of a widget instance as an instruction for the
infoview: "when the user places their cursor here, please render the following widget".
Every widget instance also contains a `props : Json` value. This value is passed as an argument
to the React component. In our first invocation of `#widget`, we set it to `.null`. Try out what
happens when you type in:
A [widget instance](https://leanprover-community.github.io/mathlib4_docs/Lean/Widget/Types.html#Lean.Widget.WidgetInstance)
is then the identifier of a widget module (e.g. `` `helloWidget ``)
bundled with a value for its props.
This value is passed as the argument to the React component.
In our first invocation of `#widget`, we set it to `.null`.
Try out what happens when you type in:
-/
structure HelloWidgetProps where
@@ -62,21 +64,37 @@ structure HelloWidgetProps where
#widget helloWidget with { name? := "<your name here>" : HelloWidgetProps }
/-!
💡 NOTE: The RPC system presented below does not depend on JavaScript. However the primary use case
is the web-based infoview in VSCode.
Under the hood, widget instances are associated with a range of positions in the source file.
Widget instances are stored in the *infotree*
in the same manner as other information about the source file
such as the type of every expression.
In our example, the `#widget` command stores a widget instance
with the entire line as its range.
One can think of the infotree entry as an instruction for the infoview:
"when the user places their cursor here, please render the following widget".
-/
/-!
## Querying the Lean server
Besides enabling us to create cool client-side visualizations, user widgets come with the ability
to communicate with the Lean server. Thanks to this, they have the same metaprogramming capabilities
as custom elaborators or the tactic framework. To see this in action, let's implement a `#check`
command as a web input form. This example assumes some familiarity with React.
💡 NOTE: The RPC system presented below does not depend on JavaScript.
However, the primary use case is the web-based infoview in VSCode.
The first thing we'll need is to create an *RPC method*. Meaning "Remote Procedure Call", this
is basically a Lean function callable from widget code (possibly remotely over the internet).
Besides enabling us to create cool client-side visualizations,
user widgets have the ability to communicate with the Lean server.
Thanks to this, they have the same metaprogramming capabilities
as custom elaborators or the tactic framework.
To see this in action, let's implement a `#check` command as a web input form.
This example assumes some familiarity with React.
The first thing we'll need is to create an *RPC method*.
Meaning "Remote Procedure Call",this is a Lean function callable from widget code
(possibly remotely over the internet).
Our method will take in the `name : Name` of a constant in the environment and return its type.
By convention, we represent the input data as a `structure`. Since it will be sent over from JavaScript,
we need `FromJson` and `ToJson`. We'll see below why the position field is needed.
By convention, we represent the input data as a `structure`.
Since it will be sent over from JavaScript,
we need `FromJson` and `ToJson` instance.
We'll see why the position field is needed later.
-/
structure GetTypeParams where
@@ -87,25 +105,33 @@ structure GetTypeParams where
deriving FromJson, ToJson
/-!
After its arguments, we define the `getType` method. Every RPC method executes in the `RequestM`
monad and must return a `RequestTask α` where `α` is its "actual" return type. The `Task` is so
that requests can be handled concurrently. A first guess for `α` might be `Expr`. However,
expressions in general can be large objects which depend on an `Environment` and `LocalContext`.
Thus we cannot directly serialize an `Expr` and send it to the widget. Instead, there are two
options:
- One is to send a *reference* which points to an object residing on the server. From JavaScript's
point of view, references are entirely opaque, but they can be sent back to other RPC methods for
further processing.
- Two is to pretty-print the expression and send its textual representation called `CodeWithInfos`.
This representation contains extra data which the infoview uses for interactivity. We take this
strategy here.
After its argument structure, we define the `getType` method.
RPCs method execute in the `RequestM` monad and must return a `RequestTask α`
where `α` is the "actual" return type.
The `Task` is so that requests can be handled concurrently.
As a first guess, we'd use `Expr` as `α`.
However, expressions in general can be large objects
which depend on an `Environment` and `LocalContext`.
Thus we cannot directly serialize an `Expr` and send it to JavaScript.
Instead, there are two options:
RPC methods execute in the context of a file, but not any particular `Environment` so they don't
know about the available `def`initions and `theorem`s. Thus, we need to pass in a position at which
we want to use the local `Environment`. This is why we store it in `GetTypeParams`. The `withWaitFindSnapAtPos`
method launches a concurrent computation whose job is to find such an `Environment` and a bit
more information for us, in the form of a `snap : Snapshot`. With this in hand, we can call
`MetaM` procedures to find out the type of `name` and pretty-print it.
- One is to send a *reference* which points to an object residing on the server.
From JavaScript's point of view, references are entirely opaque,
but they can be sent back to other RPC methods for further processing.
- The other is to pretty-print the expression and send its textual representation called `CodeWithInfos`.
This representation contains extra data which the infoview uses for interactivity.
We take this strategy here.
RPC methods execute in the context of a file,
but not of any particular `Environment`,
so they don't know about the available `def`initions and `theorem`s.
Thus, we need to pass in a position at which we want to use the local `Environment`.
This is why we store it in `GetTypeParams`.
The `withWaitFindSnapAtPos` method launches a concurrent computation
whose job is to find such an `Environment` for us,
in the form of a `snap : Snapshot`.
With this in hand, we can call `MetaM` procedures
to find out the type of `name` and pretty-print it.
-/
open Server RequestM in
@@ -121,18 +147,22 @@ def getType (params : GetTypeParams) : RequestM (RequestTask CodeWithInfos) :=
/-!
## Using infoview components
Now that we have all we need on the server side, let's write the widget source. By importing
`@leanprover/infoview`, widgets can render UI components used to implement the infoview itself.
For example, the `<InteractiveCode>` component displays expressions with `term : type` tooltips
as seen in the goal view. We will use it to implement our custom `#check` display.
Now that we have all we need on the server side, let's write the widget module.
By importing `@leanprover/infoview`, widgets can render UI components used to implement the infoview itself.
For example, the `<InteractiveCode>` component displays expressions
with `term : type` tooltips as seen in the goal view.
We will use it to implement our custom `#check` display.
⚠️ WARNING: Like the other widget APIs, the infoview JS API is **unstable** and subject to breaking changes.
The code below demonstrates useful parts of the API. To make RPC method calls, we use the `RpcContext`.
The `useAsync` helper packs the results of a call into an `AsyncState` structure which indicates
whether the call has resolved successfully, has returned an error, or is still in-flight. Based
on this we either display an `InteractiveCode` with the type, `mapRpcError` the error in order
to turn it into a readable message, or show a `Loading..` message, respectively.
The code below demonstrates useful parts of the API.
To make RPC method calls, we invoke the `useRpcSession` hook.
The `useAsync` helper packs the results of an RPC call into an `AsyncState` structure
which indicates whether the call has resolved successfully,
has returned an error, or is still in-flight.
Based on this we either display an `InteractiveCode` component with the result,
`mapRpcError` the error in order to turn it into a readable message,
or show a `Loading..` message, respectively.
-/
@[widget_module]
@@ -140,10 +170,10 @@ def checkWidget : Widget.Module where
javascript := "
import * as React from 'react';
const e = React.createElement;
import { RpcContext, InteractiveCode, useAsync, mapRpcError } from '@leanprover/infoview';
import { useRpcSession, InteractiveCode, useAsync, mapRpcError } from '@leanprover/infoview';
export default function(props) {
const rs = React.useContext(RpcContext)
const rs = useRpcSession()
const [name, setName] = React.useState('getType')
const st = useAsync(() =>
@@ -159,7 +189,7 @@ export default function(props) {
"
/-!
Finally we can try out the widget.
We can now try out the widget.
-/
#widget checkWidget
@@ -169,30 +199,31 @@ Finally we can try out the widget.
## Building widget sources
While typing JavaScript inline is fine for a simple example, for real developments we want to use
packages from NPM, a proper build system, and JSX. Thus, most actual widget sources are built with
Lake and NPM. They consist of multiple files and may import libraries which don't work as ESModules
by default. On the other hand a widget source must be a single, self-contained ESModule in the form
of a string. Readers familiar with web development may already have guessed that to obtain such a
string, we need a *bundler*. Two popular choices are [`rollup.js`](https://rollupjs.org/guide/en/)
and [`esbuild`](https://esbuild.github.io/). If we go with `rollup.js`, to make a widget work with
the infoview we need to:
While typing JavaScript inline is fine for a simple example,
for real developments we want to use packages from NPM, a proper build system, and JSX.
Thus, most actual widget sources are built with Lake and NPM.
They consist of multiple files and may import libraries which don't work as ESModules by default.
On the other hand a widget module must be a single, self-contained ESModule in the form of a string.
Readers familiar with web development may already have guessed that to obtain such a string, we need a *bundler*.
Two popular choices are [`rollup.js`](https://rollupjs.org/guide/en/)
and [`esbuild`](https://esbuild.github.io/).
If we go with `rollup.js`, to make a widget work with the infoview we need to:
- Set [`output.format`](https://rollupjs.org/guide/en/#outputformat) to `'es'`.
- [Externalize](https://rollupjs.org/guide/en/#external) `react`, `react-dom`, `@leanprover/infoview`.
These libraries are already loaded by the infoview so they should not be bundled.
In the RubiksCube sample, we provide a working `rollup.js` build configuration in
[rollup.config.js](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4-samples/blob/main/RubiksCube/widget/rollup.config.js).
ProofWidgets provides a working `rollup.js` build configuration in
[rollup.config.js](https://github.com/leanprover-community/ProofWidgets4/blob/main/widget/rollup.config.js).
## Inserting text
We can also instruct the editor to insert text, copy text to the clipboard, or
reveal a certain location in the document.
To do this, use the `React.useContext(EditorContext)` React context.
This will return an `EditorConnection` whose `api` field contains a number of methods to
interact with the text editor.
Besides making RPC calls, widgets can instruct the editor to carry out certain actions.
We can insert text, copy text to the clipboard, or highlight a certain location in the document.
To do this, use the `EditorContext` React context.
This will return an `EditorConnection`
whose `api` field contains a number of methods that interact with the editor.
You can see the full API for this [here](https://github.com/leanprover/vscode-lean4/blob/master/lean4-infoview-api/src/infoviewApi.ts#L52)
The full API can be viewed [here](https://github.com/leanprover/vscode-lean4/blob/master/lean4-infoview-api/src/infoviewApi.ts#L52).
-/
@[widget_module]
@@ -212,6 +243,4 @@ export default function(props) {
}
"
/-! Finally, we can try this out: -/
#widget insertTextWidget

View File

@@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ Every expression in Lean has a natural computational interpretation, unless it i
* *β-reduction* : An expression ``(λ x, t) s`` β-reduces to ``t[s/x]``, that is, the result of replacing ``x`` by ``s`` in ``t``.
* *ζ-reduction* : An expression ``let x := s in t`` ζ-reduces to ``t[s/x]``.
* *δ-reduction* : If ``c`` is a defined constant with definition ``t``, then ``c`` δ-reduces to to ``t``.
* *δ-reduction* : If ``c`` is a defined constant with definition ``t``, then ``c`` δ-reduces to ``t``.
* *ι-reduction* : When a function defined by recursion on an inductive type is applied to an element given by an explicit constructor, the result ι-reduces to the specified function value, as described in [Inductive Types](inductive.md).
The reduction relation is transitive, which is to say, is ``s`` reduces to ``s'`` and ``t`` reduces to ``t'``, then ``s t`` reduces to ``s' t'``, ``λ x, s`` reduces to ``λ x, s'``, and so on. If ``s`` and ``t`` reduce to a common term, they are said to be *definitionally equal*. Definitional equality is defined to be the smallest equivalence relation that satisfies all these properties and also includes α-equivalence and the following two relations:

138
doc/flake.lock generated
View File

@@ -18,12 +18,15 @@
}
},
"flake-utils": {
"inputs": {
"systems": "systems"
},
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1656928814,
"narHash": "sha256-RIFfgBuKz6Hp89yRr7+NR5tzIAbn52h8vT6vXkYjZoM=",
"lastModified": 1710146030,
"narHash": "sha256-SZ5L6eA7HJ/nmkzGG7/ISclqe6oZdOZTNoesiInkXPQ=",
"owner": "numtide",
"repo": "flake-utils",
"rev": "7e2a3b3dfd9af950a856d66b0a7d01e3c18aa249",
"rev": "b1d9ab70662946ef0850d488da1c9019f3a9752a",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
@@ -35,13 +38,12 @@
"lean": {
"inputs": {
"flake-utils": "flake-utils",
"lean4-mode": "lean4-mode",
"nix": "nix",
"nixpkgs": "nixpkgs_2"
"nixpkgs": "nixpkgs",
"nixpkgs-old": "nixpkgs-old"
},
"locked": {
"lastModified": 0,
"narHash": "sha256-YnYbmG0oou1Q/GE4JbMNb8/yqUVXBPIvcdQQJHBqtPk=",
"narHash": "sha256-saRAtQ6VautVXKDw1XH35qwP0KEBKTKZbg/TRa4N9Vw=",
"path": "../.",
"type": "path"
},
@@ -50,22 +52,6 @@
"type": "path"
}
},
"lean4-mode": {
"flake": false,
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1659020985,
"narHash": "sha256-+dRaXB7uvN/weSZiKcfSKWhcdJVNg9Vg8k0pJkDNjpc=",
"owner": "leanprover",
"repo": "lean4-mode",
"rev": "37d5c99b7b29c80ab78321edd6773200deb0bca6",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "leanprover",
"repo": "lean4-mode",
"type": "github"
}
},
"leanInk": {
"flake": false,
"locked": {
@@ -83,22 +69,6 @@
"type": "github"
}
},
"lowdown-src": {
"flake": false,
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1633514407,
"narHash": "sha256-Dw32tiMjdK9t3ETl5fzGrutQTzh2rufgZV4A/BbxuD4=",
"owner": "kristapsdz",
"repo": "lowdown",
"rev": "d2c2b44ff6c27b936ec27358a2653caaef8f73b8",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "kristapsdz",
"repo": "lowdown",
"type": "github"
}
},
"mdBook": {
"flake": false,
"locked": {
@@ -115,65 +85,13 @@
"type": "github"
}
},
"nix": {
"inputs": {
"lowdown-src": "lowdown-src",
"nixpkgs": "nixpkgs",
"nixpkgs-regression": "nixpkgs-regression"
},
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1657097207,
"narHash": "sha256-SmeGmjWM3fEed3kQjqIAO8VpGmkC2sL1aPE7kKpK650=",
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nix",
"rev": "f6316b49a0c37172bca87ede6ea8144d7d89832f",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nix",
"type": "github"
}
},
"nixpkgs": {
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1653988320,
"narHash": "sha256-ZaqFFsSDipZ6KVqriwM34T739+KLYJvNmCWzErjAg7c=",
"lastModified": 1710889954,
"narHash": "sha256-Pr6F5Pmd7JnNEMHHmspZ0qVqIBVxyZ13ik1pJtm2QXk=",
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "2fa57ed190fd6c7c746319444f34b5917666e5c1",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "NixOS",
"ref": "nixos-22.05-small",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"type": "github"
}
},
"nixpkgs-regression": {
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1643052045,
"narHash": "sha256-uGJ0VXIhWKGXxkeNnq4TvV3CIOkUJ3PAoLZ3HMzNVMw=",
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "215d4d0fd80ca5163643b03a33fde804a29cc1e2",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "215d4d0fd80ca5163643b03a33fde804a29cc1e2",
"type": "github"
}
},
"nixpkgs_2": {
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1657208011,
"narHash": "sha256-BlIFwopAykvdy1DYayEkj6ZZdkn+cVgPNX98QVLc0jM=",
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "2770cc0b1e8faa0e20eb2c6aea64c256a706d4f2",
"rev": "7872526e9c5332274ea5932a0c3270d6e4724f3b",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
@@ -183,6 +101,23 @@
"type": "github"
}
},
"nixpkgs-old": {
"flake": false,
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1581379743,
"narHash": "sha256-i1XCn9rKuLjvCdu2UeXKzGLF6IuQePQKFt4hEKRU5oc=",
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "34c7eb7545d155cc5b6f499b23a7cb1c96ab4d59",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "NixOS",
"ref": "nixos-19.03",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"type": "github"
}
},
"root": {
"inputs": {
"alectryon": "alectryon",
@@ -194,6 +129,21 @@
"leanInk": "leanInk",
"mdBook": "mdBook"
}
},
"systems": {
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1681028828,
"narHash": "sha256-Vy1rq5AaRuLzOxct8nz4T6wlgyUR7zLU309k9mBC768=",
"owner": "nix-systems",
"repo": "default",
"rev": "da67096a3b9bf56a91d16901293e51ba5b49a27e",
"type": "github"
},
"original": {
"owner": "nix-systems",
"repo": "default",
"type": "github"
}
}
},
"root": "root",

View File

@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
};
outputs = inputs@{ self, ... }: inputs.flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system:
with inputs.lean.packages.${system}; with nixpkgs;
with inputs.lean.packages.${system}.deprecated; with nixpkgs;
let
doc-src = lib.sourceByRegex ../. ["doc.*" "tests(/lean(/beginEndAsMacro.lean)?)?"];
in {
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
src = inputs.mdBook;
cargoDeps = drv.cargoDeps.overrideAttrs (_: {
inherit src;
outputHash = "sha256-1YlPS6cqgxE4fjy9G8pWrpP27YrrbCDnfeyIsX81ZNw=";
outputHash = "sha256-CO3A9Kpp4sIvkT9X3p+GTidazk7Fn4jf0AP2PINN44A=";
});
doCheck = false;
});
@@ -44,21 +44,6 @@
mdbook build -d $out
'';
};
# We use a separate derivation instead of `checkPhase` so we can push it but not `doc` to the binary cache
test = stdenv.mkDerivation {
name ="lean-doc-test";
src = doc-src;
buildInputs = [ lean-mdbook stage1.Lean.lean-package strace ];
patchPhase = ''
cd doc
patchShebangs test
'';
buildPhase = ''
mdbook test
touch $out
'';
dontInstall = true;
};
leanInk = (buildLeanPackage {
name = "Main";
src = inputs.leanInk;
@@ -98,7 +83,6 @@
src = ./.;
roots = [
{ mod = "examples"; glob = "submodules"; }
{ mod = "monads"; glob = "submodules"; }
];
};
inked = renderPackage literate;

View File

@@ -1 +0,0 @@
# Float

View File

@@ -1,153 +0,0 @@
# Functions
Functions are the fundamental unit of program execution in any programming language.
As in other languages, a Lean function has a name, can have parameters and take arguments, and has a body.
Lean also supports functional programming constructs such as treating functions as values,
using unnamed functions in expressions, composition of functions to form new functions,
curried functions, and the implicit definition of functions by way of
the partial application of function arguments.
You define functions by using the `def` keyword followed by its name, a parameter list, return type and its body.
The parameter list consists of successive parameters that are separated by spaces.
You can specify an explicit type for each parameter.
If you do not specify a specific argument type, the compiler tries to infer the type from the function body.
An error is returned when it cannot be inferred.
The expression that makes up the function body is typically a compound expression consisting of a number of expressions
that culminate in a final expression that is the return value.
The return type is a colon followed by a type and is optional.
If you do not specify the type of the return value explicitly,
the compiler tries to determine the return type from the final expression.
```lean
def f x := x + 1
```
In the previous example, the function name is `f`, the argument is `x`, which has type `Nat`,
the function body is `x + 1`, and the return value is of type `Nat`.
The following example defines the factorial recursive function using pattern matching.
```lean
def fact x :=
match x with
| 0 => 1
| n+1 => (n+1) * fact n
#eval fact 100
```
By default, Lean only accepts total functions.
The `partial` keyword may be used to define a recursive function without a termination proof; `partial` functions compute in compiled programs, but are opaque in proofs and during type checking.
```lean
partial def g (x : Nat) (p : Nat -> Bool) : Nat :=
if p x then
x
else
g (x+1) p
#eval g 0 (fun x => x > 10)
```
In the previous example, `g x p` only terminates if there is a `y >= x` such that `p y` returns `true`.
Of course, `g 0 (fun x => false)` never terminates.
However, the use of `partial` is restricted to functions whose return type is not empty so the soundness
of the system is not compromised.
```lean,ignore
partial def loop? : α := -- failed to compile partial definition 'loop?', failed to
loop? -- show that type is inhabited and non empty
partial def loop [Inhabited α] : α := -- compiles
loop
example : True := -- accepted
loop
example : False :=
loop -- failed to synthesize instance Inhabited False
```
If we were able to partially define `loop?`, we could prove `False` with it.
# Lambda expressions
A lambda expression is an unnamed function.
You define lambda expressions by using the `fun` keyword. A lambda expression resembles a function definition, except that instead of the `:=` token,
the `=>` token is used to separate the argument list from the function body. As in a regular function definition,
the argument types can be inferred or specified explicitly, and the return type of the lambda expression is inferred from the type of the
last expression in the body.
```lean
def twice (f : Nat -> Nat) (x : Nat) : Nat :=
f (f x)
#eval twice (fun x => x + 1) 3
#eval twice (fun (x : Nat) => x * 2) 3
#eval List.map (fun x => x + 1) [1, 2, 3]
-- [2, 3, 4]
#eval List.map (fun (x, y) => x + y) [(1, 2), (3, 4)]
-- [3, 7]
```
# Syntax sugar for simple lambda expressions
Simple functions can be defined using parentheses and `·` as a placeholder.
```lean
#check (· + 1)
-- fun a => a + 1
#check (2 - ·)
-- fun a => 2 - a
#eval [1, 2, 3, 4, 5].foldl (· * ·) 1
-- 120
def h (x y z : Nat) :=
x + y + z
#check (h · 1 ·)
-- fun a b => h a 1 b
#eval [(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)].map (·.1)
-- [1, 3, 5]
```
In the previous example, the term `(·.1)` is syntax sugar for `fun x => x.1`.
# Pipelining
Pipelining enables function calls to be chained together as successive operations. Pipelining works as follows:
```lean
def add1 x := x + 1
def times2 x := x * 2
#eval times2 (add1 100)
#eval 100 |> add1 |> times2
#eval times2 <| add1 <| 100
```
The result of the previous `#eval` commands is 202.
The forward pipeline `|>` operator takes a function and an argument and return a value.
In contrast, the backward pipeline `<|` operator takes an argument and a function and returns a value.
These operators are useful for minimizing the number of parentheses.
```lean
def add1Times3FilterEven (xs : List Nat) :=
List.filter (· % 2 == 0) (List.map (· * 3) (List.map (· + 1) xs))
#eval add1Times3FilterEven [1, 2, 3, 4]
-- [6, 12]
-- Define the same function using pipes
def add1Times3FilterEven' (xs : List Nat) :=
xs |> List.map (· + 1) |> List.map (· * 3) |> List.filter (· % 2 == 0)
#eval add1Times3FilterEven' [1, 2, 3, 4]
-- [6, 12]
```
Lean also supports the operator `|>.` which combines forward pipeline `|>` operator with the `.` field notation.
```lean
-- Define the same function using pipes
def add1Times3FilterEven'' (xs : List Nat) :=
xs.map (· + 1) |>.map (· * 3) |>.filter (· % 2 == 0)
#eval add1Times3FilterEven'' [1, 2, 3, 4]
-- [6, 12]
```
For users familiar with the Haskell programming language,
Lean also supports the notation `f $ a` for the backward pipeline `f <| a`.

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@@ -1,142 +0,0 @@
## Implicit Arguments
Suppose we define the `compose` function as.
```lean
def compose (α β γ : Type) (g : β γ) (f : α β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
```
The function `compose` takes three types, ``α``, ``β``, and ``γ``, and two functions, ``g : β → γ`` and ``f : α → β``, a value `x : α`, and
returns ``g (f x)``, the composition of ``g`` and ``f``.
We say `compose` is polymorphic over types ``α``, ``β``, and ``γ``. Now, let's use `compose`:
```lean
# def compose (α β γ : Type) (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (x : α) : γ :=
# g (f x)
def double (x : Nat) := 2*x
def triple (x : Nat) := 3*x
#check compose Nat Nat Nat double triple 10 -- Nat
#eval compose Nat Nat Nat double triple 10 -- 60
def appendWorld (s : String) := s ++ "world"
#check String.length -- String → Nat
#check compose String String Nat String.length appendWorld "hello" -- Nat
#eval compose String String Nat String.length appendWorld "hello" -- 10
```
Because `compose` is polymorphic over types ``α``, ``β``, and ``γ``, we have to provide them in the examples above.
But this information is redundant: one can infer the types from the arguments ``g`` and ``f``.
This is a central feature of dependent type theory: terms carry a lot of information, and often some of that information can be inferred from the context.
In Lean, one uses an underscore, ``_``, to specify that the system should fill in the information automatically.
```lean
# def compose (α β γ : Type) (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (x : α) : γ :=
# g (f x)
# def double (x : Nat) := 2*x
# def triple (x : Nat) := 3*x
#check compose _ _ _ double triple 10 -- Nat
#eval compose Nat Nat Nat double triple 10 -- 60
# def appendWorld (s : String) := s ++ "world"
# #check String.length -- String → Nat
#check compose _ _ _ String.length appendWorld "hello" -- Nat
#eval compose _ _ _ String.length appendWorld "hello" -- 10
```
It is still tedious, however, to type all these underscores. When a function takes an argument that can generally be inferred from context,
Lean allows us to specify that this argument should, by default, be left implicit. This is done by putting the arguments in curly braces, as follows:
```lean
def compose {α β γ : Type} (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
# def double (x : Nat) := 2*x
# def triple (x : Nat) := 3*x
#check compose double triple 10 -- Nat
#eval compose double triple 10 -- 60
# def appendWorld (s : String) := s ++ "world"
# #check String.length -- String → Nat
#check compose String.length appendWorld "hello" -- Nat
#eval compose String.length appendWorld "hello" -- 10
```
All that has changed are the braces around ``α β γ: Type``.
It makes these three arguments implicit. Notationally, this hides the specification of the type,
making it look as though ``compose`` simply takes 3 arguments.
Variables can also be specified as implicit when they are declared with
the ``variable`` command:
```lean
universe u
section
variable {α : Type u}
variable (x : α)
def ident := x
end
variable (α β : Type u)
variable (a : α) (b : β)
#check ident
#check ident a
#check ident b
```
This definition of ``ident`` here has the same effect as the one above.
Lean has very complex mechanisms for instantiating implicit arguments, and we will see that they can be used to infer function types, predicates, and even proofs.
The process of instantiating these "holes," or "placeholders," in a term is part of a bigger process called *elaboration*.
The presence of implicit arguments means that at times there may be insufficient information to fix the meaning of an expression precisely.
An expression like ``ident`` is said to be *polymorphic*, because it can take on different meanings in different contexts.
One can always specify the type ``T`` of an expression ``e`` by writing ``(e : T)``.
This instructs Lean's elaborator to use the value ``T`` as the type of ``e`` when trying to elaborate it.
In the following example, this mechanism is used to specify the desired types of the expressions ``ident``.
```lean
def ident {α : Type u} (a : α) : α := a
#check (ident : Nat → Nat) -- Nat → Nat
```
Numerals are overloaded in Lean, but when the type of a numeral cannot be inferred, Lean assumes, by default, that it is a natural number.
So the expressions in the first two ``#check`` commands below are elaborated in the same way, whereas the third ``#check`` command interprets ``2`` as an integer.
```lean
#check 2 -- Nat
#check (2 : Nat) -- Nat
#check (2 : Int) -- Int
```
Sometimes, however, we may find ourselves in a situation where we have declared an argument to a function to be implicit,
but now want to provide the argument explicitly. If ``foo`` is such a function, the notation ``@foo`` denotes the same function with all
the arguments made explicit.
```lean
# def ident {α : Type u} (a : α) : α := a
variable (α β : Type)
#check @ident -- {α : Type u} → αα
#check @ident α -- αα
#check @ident β -- β → β
#check @ident Nat -- Nat → Nat
#check @ident Bool true -- Bool
```
Notice that now the first ``#check`` command gives the type of the identifier, ``ident``, without inserting any placeholders.
Moreover, the output indicates that the first argument is implicit.
Named arguments enable you to specify an argument for a parameter by matching the argument with
its name rather than with its position in the parameter list. You can use them to specify explicit *and* implicit arguments.
If you don't remember the order of the parameters but know their names, you can send the arguments in any order.
You may also provide the value for an implicit parameter when
Lean failed to infer it. Named arguments also improve the readability of your code by identifying what
each argument represents.
```lean
# def ident {α : Type u} (a : α) : α := a
#check ident (α := Nat) -- Nat → Nat
#check ident (α := Bool) -- Bool → Bool
```

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
# Inductive Types
[Theorem Proving in Lean](https://lean-lang.org/theorem_proving_in_lean4/inductive_types.html) has a chapter about inductive datatypes.

View File

@@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
# Integers
The `Int` type represents the arbitrary-precision integers. There are no overflows.
```lean
#eval (100000000000000000 : Int) * 200000000000000000000 * 1000000000000000000000
```
Recall that nonnegative numerals are considered to be a `Nat` if there are no typing constraints.
```lean
#check 1 -- Nat
#check -1 -- Int
#check (1:Int) -- Int
```
The operator `/` for `Int` implements integer division.
```lean
#eval -10 / 4 -- -2
```
Similar to `Nat`, the internal representation of `Int` is optimized. Small integers are
represented by a single machine word. Big integers are implemented using [GMP](https://gmplib.org/manual/) numbers.
We recommend you use fixed precision numeric types only in performance critical code.
The Lean kernel does not have special support for reducing `Int` during type checking.
However, since `Int` is defined as
```lean
# namespace hidden
inductive Int : Type where
| ofNat : Nat Int
| negSucc : Nat Int
# end hidden
```
the type checker will be able reduce `Int` expressions efficiently by relying on the special support for `Nat`.
```lean
theorem ex : -2000000000 * 1000000000 = -2000000000000000000 :=
rfl
```

View File

@@ -1,100 +0,0 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
pygments.lexers.theorem
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lexers for theorem-proving languages.
:copyright: Copyright 2006-2017 by the Pygments team, see AUTHORS.
:license: BSD, see LICENSE for details.
"""
import re
from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer, default, words
from pygments.token import Text, Comment, Operator, Keyword, Name, String, \
Number, Punctuation, Generic
__all__ = ['Lean4Lexer']
class Lean4Lexer(RegexLexer):
"""
For the `Lean 4 <https://github.com/leanprover/lean4>`_
theorem prover.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
name = 'Lean4'
aliases = ['lean4']
filenames = ['*.lean']
mimetypes = ['text/x-lean']
flags = re.MULTILINE | re.UNICODE
keywords1 = (
'import', 'abbreviation', 'opaque_hint', 'tactic_hint', 'definition',
'renaming', 'inline', 'hiding', 'parameter', 'lemma', 'variable',
'theorem', 'axiom', 'inductive', 'structure', 'universe', 'alias',
'help', 'options', 'precedence', 'postfix', 'prefix',
'infix', 'infixl', 'infixr', 'notation', '#eval',
'#check', '#reduce', '#exit', 'coercion', 'end', 'private', 'using', 'namespace',
'including', 'instance', 'section', 'context', 'protected', 'expose',
'export', 'set_option', 'extends', 'open', 'example',
'constant', 'constants', 'print', 'opaque', 'reducible', 'irreducible',
'def', 'macro', 'elab', 'syntax', 'macro_rules', 'reduce', 'where',
'abbrev', 'noncomputable', 'class', 'attribute', 'synth', 'mutual',
)
keywords2 = (
'forall', 'fun', 'Pi', 'obtain', 'from', 'have', 'show', 'assume',
'take', 'let', 'if', 'else', 'then', 'by', 'in', 'with', 'begin',
'proof', 'qed', 'calc', 'match', 'nomatch', 'do', 'at',
)
keywords3 = (
# Sorts
'Type', 'Prop', 'Sort',
)
operators = (
u'!=', u'#', u'&', u'&&', u'*', u'+', u'-', u'/', u'@', u'!', u'`',
u'-.', u'->', u'.', u'..', u'...', u'::', u':>', u';', u';;', u'<',
u'<-', u'=', u'==', u'>', u'_', u'|', u'||', u'~', u'=>', u'<=', u'>=',
u'/\\', u'\\/', u'', u'Π', u'λ', u'', u'', u'', u'', u'', u'',
u'¬', u'⁻¹', u'', u'', u'', u'', u'', u'', u'', u'×', u'',
u'', u'', u'', u'',
)
punctuation = (u'(', u')', u':', u'{', u'}', u'[', u']', u'', u'',
u':=', u',')
tokens = {
'root': [
(r'\s+', Text),
(r'/-', Comment, 'comment'),
(r'--.*?$', Comment.Single),
(words(keywords1, prefix=r'\b', suffix=r'\b'), Keyword.Namespace),
(words(keywords2, prefix=r'\b', suffix=r'\b'), Keyword),
(words(keywords3, prefix=r'\b', suffix=r'\b'), Keyword.Type),
(words(operators), Name.Builtin.Pseudo),
(words(punctuation), Operator),
(u"[A-Za-z_\u03b1-\u03ba\u03bc-\u03fb\u1f00-\u1ffe\u2100-\u214f]"
u"[A-Za-z_'\u03b1-\u03ba\u03bc-\u03fb\u1f00-\u1ffe\u2070-\u2079"
u"\u207f-\u2089\u2090-\u209c\u2100-\u214f0-9]*", Name),
(r'\d+', Number.Integer),
(r'"', String.Double, 'string'),
(r'[~?][a-z][\w\']*:', Name.Variable)
],
'comment': [
# Multiline Comments
(r'[^/-]', Comment.Multiline),
(r'/-', Comment.Multiline, '#push'),
(r'-/', Comment.Multiline, '#pop'),
(r'[/-]', Comment.Multiline)
],
'string': [
(r'[^\\"]+', String.Double),
(r'\\[n"\\]', String.Escape),
('"', String.Double, '#pop'),
],
}

View File

@@ -128,16 +128,16 @@ Numeric literals can be specified in various bases.
```
numeral : numeral10 | numeral2 | numeral8 | numeral16
numeral10 : [0-9]+
numeral2 : "0" [bB] [0-1]+
numeral8 : "0" [oO] [0-7]+
numeral16 : "0" [xX] hex_char+
numeral10 : [0-9]+ ("_"+ [0-9]+)*
numeral2 : "0" [bB] ("_"* [0-1]+)+
numeral8 : "0" [oO] ("_"* [0-7]+)+
numeral16 : "0" [xX] ("_"* hex_char+)+
```
Floating point literals are also possible with optional exponent:
```
float : [0-9]+ "." [0-9]+ [[eE[+-][0-9]+]
float : numeral10 "." numeral10? [eE[+-]numeral10]
```
For example:
@@ -147,6 +147,7 @@ constant w : Int := 55
constant x : Nat := 26085
constant y : Nat := 0x65E5
constant z : Float := 2.548123e-05
constant b : Bool := 0b_11_01_10_00
```
Note: that negative numbers are created by applying the "-" negation prefix operator to the number, for example:

View File

@@ -1 +0,0 @@
# List

View File

@@ -1,393 +0,0 @@
# Macro Overview
The official paper describing the mechanics behind Lean 4's macro system can be
found in [Beyond Notations: Hygienic Macro Expansion for Theorem Proving
Languages](https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.10490) by Sebastian Ullrich and Leonardo
de Moura, and the accompanying repo with example code can be found in the
paper's code [supplement](https://github.com/Kha/macro-supplement). The
supplement also includes a working implementation of the macro expander, so it's
a good case study for people interested in the details.
## What is a macro in Lean?
A macro is a function that takes in a syntax tree and produces a new syntax
tree. Macros are useful for many reasons, but two of the big ones are a)
allowing users to extend the language with new syntactic constructs without
having to actually expand the core language, and b) allowing users to automate
tasks that would otherwise be extremely repetitive, time-consuming, and/or
error-prone.
A motivating example is set builder notation. We would like to be able to write
the set of natural numbers 0, 1, and 2 as just `{0, 1, 2}`. However, Lean does
not natively support this syntax, and the actual definition of a set in Mathlib
does not let us just declare sets in this manner; naively using the set API
would force us to write `Set.insert 1 (Set.insert 2 (Set.singleton 3))`.
Instead, we can teach Lean's macro system to recognize `{0, 1, 2}` as a
shorthand for a composition of existing methods and let it do the repetitive
work of creating the `Set.insert...` invocation for us. In this way, we can have
our more readable and more convenient syntax without having to extend Lean
itself, and while retaining the simple insert/singleton API.
## How macros are handled
The general procedure is as follows:
1. Lean parses a command, creating a Lean syntax tree which contains any
unexpanded macros.
2. Lean repeats the cycle (elaboration ~> (macro hygiene and expansion) ~>
elaboration...)
The cycle in step 2 repeats until there are no more macros which need to be
expanded, and elaboration can finish normally. This repetition is required since
macros can expand to other macros, and may expand to code that needs information
from the elaborator. As you can see, the process of macro parsing and expansion
is interleaved with the parsing and elaboration of non-macro code.
By default, macros in Lean are hygienic, which means the system avoids
accidental name capture when reusing the same name inside and outside the macro.
Users may occasionally want to disable hygiene, which can be accomplished with
the command `set_option hygiene false`. More in-depth information about hygiene
and how it's implemented in the official paper and supplement linked at the top
of this guide.
## Elements of "a" macro (important types)
In the big picture, a macro has two components that must be implemented by the
user, parsers and syntax transformers, where the latter is a function that says
what the input syntax should expand to. There is a third component, syntax
categories, such as `term`, `tactic`, and `command`, but declaring a new syntax
category is not always necessary. When we say "parser" in the context of a
macro, we refer to the core type `Lean.ParserDescr`, which parses elements of
type `Lean.Syntax`, where `Lean.Syntax` represents elements of a Lean syntax
tree. Syntax transformers are functions of type `Syntax -> MacroM Syntax`. Lean
has a synonym for this type, which is simply `Macro`. `MacroM` is a monad that
carries state needed for macro expansion to work nicely, including the info
needed to implement hygiene.
As an example, we again refer to Mathlib's set builder notation:
```lean
/- Declares a parser -/
syntax (priority := high) "{" term,+ "}" : term
/- Declares two expansions/syntax transformers -/
macro_rules
| `({$x}) => `(Set.singleton $x)
| `({$x, $xs:term,*}) => `(Set.insert $x {$xs,*})
/- Provided `Set` has been imported (from Mathlib4), these are all we need for `{1, 2, 3}` to be valid notation to create a literal set -/
```
This example should also make clear the reason why macros (and pretty much all
of Lean 4's metaprogramming facilities) are functions that take an argument of
type `Syntax` e.g. `Syntax -> MacroM Syntax`; the leading syntax element is the
thing that actually triggers the macro expansion by matching with the declared
parser, and as a user, you will almost always be interested in inspecting and
transforming that initial syntax element (though there are cases in which it can
just be ignored, as in the parameter-less exfalso tactic).
Returning briefly to the API provided by Lean, `Lean.Syntax`, is pretty much
what you would expect a basic syntax tree type to look like. Below is a slightly
simplified representation which omits details in the `atom` and `ident`
constructors; users can create atoms and idents which comport with this
simplified representation using the `mkAtom` and `mkIdent` methods provided in
the `Lean` namespace.
```lean
# open Lean
inductive Syntax where
| missing : Syntax
| node (kind : SyntaxNodeKind) (args : Array Syntax) : Syntax
| atom : String -> Syntax
| ident : Name -> Syntax
```
For those interested, `MacroM` is a `ReaderT`:
```lean
# open Lean
abbrev MacroM := ReaderT Macro.Context (EStateM Macro.Exception Macro.State)
```
The other relevant components are defined as follows:
```lean
# open Lean
structure Context where
methods : MethodsRef
mainModule : Name
currMacroScope : MacroScope
currRecDepth : Nat := 0
maxRecDepth : Nat := defaultMaxRecDepth
ref : Syntax
inductive Exception where
| error : Syntax String Exception
| unsupportedSyntax : Exception
structure State where
macroScope : MacroScope
traceMsgs : List (Prod Name String) := List.nil
deriving Inhabited
```
As a review/checklist, the three (sometimes only two depending on whether you
need a new syntax category) components users need to be concerned with are:
0. You may or may not need to declare a new syntax category using
`declare_syntax_cat`
1. Declare a parser with either `syntax` or `macro`
2. Declare an expansion/syntax transformer with either `macro_rules` or `macro`
Parsers and syntax transformers can be declared manually, but use of the pattern
language and `syntax`, `macro_rules`, and `macro` is recommended.
## syntax categories with declare_syntax_cat
`declare_syntax_cat` declares a new syntax category, like `command`, `tactic`,
or mathlib4's `binderterm`. These are the different categories of things that
can be referred to in a quote/antiquote. `declare_syntax_cat` results in a call
to `registerParserCategory` and produces a new parser descriptor:
```lean
set_option trace.Elab.definition true in
declare_syntax_cat binderterm
/-
Output:
[Elab.definition.body] binderterm.quot : Lean.ParserDescr :=
Lean.ParserDescr.node `Lean.Parser.Term.quot 1024
(Lean.ParserDescr.binary `andthen (Lean.ParserDescr.symbol "`(binderterm|")
(Lean.ParserDescr.binary `andthen (Lean.ParserDescr.cat `binderterm 0)
(Lean.ParserDescr.symbol ")")))
-/
```
Declaring a new syntax category like this one automatically declares a quotation
operator `` `(binderterm| ...)``. These pipe prefixes `<thing>|` are used in
syntax quotations to say what category a given quotation is expected to be an
element of. The pipe prefixes are *not* used for elements in the `term` and
`command` categories (since they're considered the default), but need to be used
for everything else.
## Parsers and the `syntax` keyword
Internally, elements of type `Lean.ParserDescr` are implemented as parser
combinators. However, Lean offers the ability to write parsers using the
macro/pattern language by way of the `syntax` keyword. This is the recommended
means of writing parsers. As an example, the parser for the `rwa` (rewrite, then
use assumption) tactic is:
```lean
# open Lean.Parser.Tactic
set_option trace.Elab.definition true in
syntax "rwa " rwRuleSeq (location)? : tactic
/-
which expands to:
[Elab.definition.body] tacticRwa__ : Lean.ParserDescr :=
Lean.ParserDescr.node `tacticRwa__ 1022
(Lean.ParserDescr.binary `andthen
(Lean.ParserDescr.binary `andthen (Lean.ParserDescr.nonReservedSymbol "rwa " false) Lean.Parser.Tactic.rwRuleSeq)
(Lean.ParserDescr.unary `optional Lean.Parser.Tactic.location))
-/
```
Literals are written as double-quoted strings (`"rwa "` expects the literal
sequence of characters `rwa`, while the trailing space provides a hint to the
formatter that it should add a space after `rwa` when pretty printing this
syntax); `rwRuleSeq` and `location` are themselves `ParserDescr`s, and we finish
with `: tactic` specifying that the preceding parser is for an element in the
`tactic` syntax category. The parentheses around `(location)?` are necessary
(rather than `location?`) because Lean 4 allows question marks to be used in
identifiers, so `location?` is one single identifier that ends with a question
mark, which is not what we want.
The name `tacticRwa__` is automatically generated. You can name parser
descriptors declared with the `syntax` keyword like so:
```lean
set_option trace.Elab.definition true in
syntax (name := introv) "introv " (colGt ident)* : tactic
/-
[Elab.definition.body] introv : Lean.ParserDescr :=
Lean.ParserDescr.node `introv 1022
(Lean.ParserDescr.binary `andthen (Lean.ParserDescr.nonReservedSymbol "introv " false)
(Lean.ParserDescr.unary `many
(Lean.ParserDescr.binary `andthen (Lean.ParserDescr.const `colGt) (Lean.ParserDescr.const `ident))))
-/
```
## The pattern language
Available quantifiers are `?` (one or zero occurrences, see note below), `*`
(zero or more occurrences), and `+` (one or more occurrences).
Keep in mind that Lean makes `?` available for use in identifiers, so if we want
a parser to look for an optional `location`, we would need to write
`(location)?` with parenthesis acting as a separator, since `location?` would
look for something under the identifier `location?` (where the `?` is part of
the identifier).
Parentheses can be used as delimiters.
Separated lists can be constructed like so: `$ts,*` for a comma separated list.
"extended splices" can be constructed as `$[..]`. See the official paper (p. 12)
for more details.
Literals are written as double-quoted strings. A literal may use trailing
whitespace (see e.g. the `rwa` or `introv` tactics) to tell the pretty-printer
how it should be displayed, but such whitespace will not prevent a literal with
no trailing whitespace from matching. The spaces are relevant, but not
interpreted literally. When the ParserDescr is turned into a Parser, the actual
token matcher [uses the .trim of the provided
string](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/blob/53ec43ff9b8f55989b12c271e368287b7b997b54/src/Lean/Parser/Basic.lean#L1193),
but the generated formatter [uses the spaces as
specified](https://github.com/leanprover/lean4/blob/8d370f151f7c88a687152a5b161dcb484c446ce2/src/Lean/PrettyPrinter/Formatter.lean#L328),
that is, turning the atom "rwa" in the syntax into the string rwa as part of the
pretty printed output.
## Syntax expansions with `macro_rules`, and how it desugars.
`macro_rules` lets you declare expansions for a given `Syntax` element using a
syntax similar to a `match` statement. The left-hand side of a match arm is a
quotation (with a leading `<cat>|` for categories other than `term` and
`command`) in which users can specify the pattern they'd like to write an
expansion for. The right-hand side returns a syntax quotation which is the
output the user wants to expand to.
A feature of Lean's macro system is that if there are multiple expansions for a
particular match, Lean will try the most recently declared expansion first, and
will retry with other matching expansions if the previous attempt failed. This
is particularly useful for extending existing tactics.
The following example shows both the retry behavior, and the fact that macros
declared using the shorthand `macro` syntax can still have additional expansions
declared with `macro_rules`. This `transitivity` tactic is implemented such that
it will work for either Nat.le or Nat.lt. The Nat.lt version was declared "most
recently", so it will be tried first, but if it fails (for example, if the
actual term in question is Nat.le) the next potential expansion will be tried:
```lean
macro "transitivity" e:(colGt term) : tactic => `(tactic| apply Nat.le_trans (m := $e))
macro_rules
| `(tactic| transitivity $e) => `(tactic| apply Nat.lt_trans (m := $e))
example (a b c : Nat) (h0 : a < b) (h1 : b < c) : a < c := by
transitivity b <;>
assumption
example (a b c : Nat) (h0 : a <= b) (h1 : b <= c) : a <= c := by
transitivity b <;>
assumption
/- This will fail, but is interesting in that it exposes the "most-recent first" behavior, since the
error message complains about being unable to unify mvar1 <= mvar2, rather than mvar1 < mvar2. -/
/-
example (a b c : Nat) (h0 : a <= b) (h1 : b <= c) : False := by
transitivity b <;>
assumption
-/
```
To see the desugared definition of the actual expansion, we can again use
`set_option trace.Elab.definition true in` and observe the output of the humble
`exfalso` tactic defined in Mathlib4:
```lean
set_option trace.Elab.definition true in
macro "exfalso" : tactic => `(tactic| apply False.elim)
/-
Results in the expansion:
[Elab.definition.body] _aux___macroRules_tacticExfalso_1 : Lean.Macro :=
fun x =>
let discr := x;
/- This is where Lean tries to actually identify that it's an invocation of the exfalso tactic -/
if Lean.Syntax.isOfKind discr `tacticExfalso = true then
let discr := Lean.Syntax.getArg discr 0;
let x := discr;
do
/- Lean getting scope/meta info from the macro monad -/
let info ← Lean.MonadRef.mkInfoFromRefPos
let scp ← Lean.getCurrMacroScope
let mainModule ← Lean.getMainModule
pure
(Lean.Syntax.node Lean.SourceInfo.none `Lean.Parser.Tactic.seq1
#[Lean.Syntax.node Lean.SourceInfo.none `null
#[Lean.Syntax.node Lean.SourceInfo.none `Lean.Parser.Tactic.apply
#[Lean.Syntax.atom info "apply",
Lean.Syntax.ident info (String.toSubstring "False.elim")
(Lean.addMacroScope mainModule `False.elim scp) [(`False.elim, [])]]]])
else
/- If this wasn't actually an invocation of the exfalso tactic, throw the "unsupportedSyntax" error -/
let discr := x;
throw Lean.Macro.Exception.unsupportedSyntax
-/
```
We can also create the syntax transformer declaration ourselves instead of using
`macro_rules`. We'll need to name our parser and use the attribute `@[macro
myExFalsoParser]` to associate our declaration with the parser:
```lean
# open Lean
syntax (name := myExfalsoParser) "myExfalso" : tactic
-- remember that `Macro` is a synonym for `Syntax -> TacticM Unit`
@[macro myExfalsoParser] def implMyExfalso : Macro :=
fun stx => `(tactic| apply False.elim)
example (p : Prop) (h : p) (f : p -> False) : 3 = 2 := by
myExfalso
exact f h
```
In the above example, we're still using the sugar Lean provides for creating
quotations, as it feels more intuitive and saves us some work. It is possible to
forego the sugar altogether:
```lean
syntax (name := myExfalsoParser) "myExfalso" : tactic
@[macro myExfalsoParser] def implMyExfalso : Lean.Macro :=
fun stx => pure (Lean.mkNode `Lean.Parser.Tactic.apply
#[Lean.mkAtomFrom stx "apply", Lean.mkCIdentFrom stx ``False.elim])
example (p : Prop) (h : p) (f : p -> False) : 3 = 2 := by
myExfalso
exact f h
```
## The `macro` keyword
`macro` is a shortcut which allows users to declare both a parser and an
expansion at the same time as a matter of convenience. Additional expansions for
the parser generated by the `macro` invocation can be added with a separate
`macro_rules` block (see the example in the `macro_rules` section).
## Unexpanders
TODO; for now, see the unexpander in Mathlib.Set for an example.
## More illustrative examples:
The
[Tactic.Basic](https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib4/blob/master/Mathlib/Tactic/Basic.lean)
file in Mathlib4 contains many good examples to learn from.
## Practical tips:
You can observe the output of commands and functions that in some way use the
macro system by setting this option to true : `set_option trace.Elab.definition
true`
Lean also offers the option of limiting the region in which option is set with
the syntax `set_option ... in`):
Hygiene can be disabled with the command option `set_option hygiene false`

View File

@@ -1,9 +1,14 @@
These are instructions to set up a working development environment for those who wish to make changes to Lean itself. It is part of the [Development Guide](../dev/index.md).
We strongly suggest that new users instead follow the [Quickstart](../quickstart.md) to get started using Lean, since this sets up an environment that can automatically manage multiple Lean toolchain versions, which is necessary when working within the Lean ecosystem.
Requirements
------------
- C++14 compatible compiler
- [CMake](http://www.cmake.org)
- [GMP (GNU multiprecision library)](http://gmplib.org/)
- [LibUV](https://libuv.org/)
Platform-Specific Setup
-----------------------
@@ -12,44 +17,32 @@ Platform-Specific Setup
- [Windows (msys2)](msys2.md)
- [Windows (WSL)](wsl.md)
- [macOS (homebrew)](osx-10.9.md)
- Linux/macOS/WSL via [Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/): Call `nix-shell` in the project root. That's it.
- Linux/macOS/WSL via [Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/): Call `nix develop` in the project root. That's it.
Generic Build Instructions
--------------------------
Setting up a basic release build:
Setting up a basic parallelized release build:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/leanprover/lean4 --recurse-submodules
git clone https://github.com/leanprover/lean4
cd lean4
mkdir -p build/release
cd build/release
cmake ../..
make
cmake --preset release
make -C build/release -j$(nproc || sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu)
```
For regular development, we recommend running
```bash
git config submodule.recurse true
```
in the checkout so that `--recurse-submodules` doesn't have to be
specified with `git pull/checkout/...`.
You can replace `$(nproc || sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu)` with the desired parallelism amount.
The above commands will compile the Lean library and binaries into the
`stage1` subfolder; see below for details. Add `-j N` for an
appropriate `N` to `make` for a parallel build.
`stage1` subfolder; see below for details.
For example, on an AMD Ryzen 9 `make` takes 00:04:55, whereas `make -j 10`
takes 00:01:38. Your results may vary depending on the speed of your hard
drive.
You should not usually run `make install` after a successful build.
You should not usually run `cmake --install` after a successful build.
See [Dev setup using elan](../dev/index.md#dev-setup-using-elan) on how to properly set up your editor to use the correct stage depending on the source directory.
Useful CMake Configuration Settings
-----------------------------------
Pass these along with the `cmake ../..` command.
Pass these along with the `cmake --preset release` command.
There are also two alternative presets that combine some of these options you can use instead of `release`: `debug` and `sandebug` (sanitize + debug).
* `-D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=`\
Select the build type. Valid values are `RELEASE` (default), `DEBUG`,

View File

@@ -1,39 +0,0 @@
# Compiling Lean with Visual Studio
WARNING: Compiling Lean with Visual Studio doesn't currently work.
There's an ongoing effort to port Lean to Visual Studio.
The instructions below are for VS 2017.
In the meantime you can use [MSYS2](msys2.md) or [WSL](wsl.md).
## Installing dependencies
First, install `vcpkg` from https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg if you haven't
done so already.
Then, open a console in the directory you cloned `vcpkg` to, and type:
`vcpkg install mpir` for the 32-bit library or
`vcpkg install mpir:x64-windows` for the x64 one.
In Visual Studio, use the "open folder" feature and open the Lean directory.
Go to the `CMake->Change CMake Settings` menu. File `CMakeSettings.json` opens.
In each of the targets, add the following snippet (i.e., after every
`ctestCommandArgs`):
```json
"variables": [
{
"name": "CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE",
"value": "C:\\path\\to\\vcpkg\\scripts\\buildsystems\\vcpkg.cmake"
}
]
```
## Enable Intellisense
In Visual Studio, press Ctrl+Q and type `CppProperties.json` and press Enter.
Ensure `includePath` variables include `"${workspaceRoot}\\src"`.
## Build Lean
Press F7.

View File

@@ -15,17 +15,24 @@ Mode](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/enable-your-devi
which will allow Lean to create symlinks that e.g. enable go-to-definition in
the stdlib.
## Installing the Windows SDK
Install the Windows SDK from [Microsoft](https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/windows-sdk/).
The oldest supported version is 10.0.18362.0. If you installed the Windows SDK to the default location,
then there should be a directory with the version number at `C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\Include`.
If there are multiple directories, only the highest version number matters.
## Installing dependencies
[The official webpage of MSYS2][msys2] provides one-click installers.
Once installed, you should run the "MSYS2 MinGW 64-bit shell" from the start menu (the one that runs `mingw64.exe`).
Do not run "MSYS2 MSYS" instead!
MSYS2 has a package management system, [pacman][pacman], which is used in Arch Linux.
Once installed, you should run the "MSYS2 CLANG64" shell from the start menu (the one that runs `clang64.exe`).
Do not run "MSYS2 MSYS" or "MSYS2 MINGW64" instead!
MSYS2 has a package management system, [pacman][pacman].
Here are the commands to install all dependencies needed to compile Lean on your machine.
```bash
pacman -S make python mingw-w64-x86_64-cmake mingw-w64-x86_64-clang mingw-w64-x86_64-ccache git unzip diffutils binutils
pacman -S make python mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-cmake mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-clang mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-ccache mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-libuv mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-gmp git unzip diffutils binutils
```
You should now be able to run these commands:
@@ -38,10 +45,9 @@ cmake --version
Then follow the [generic build instructions](index.md) in the MSYS2
MinGW shell, using:
```
cmake ../.. -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++
cmake --preset release -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++
```
instead of `cmake ../..`. This ensures that cmake will call `sh` instead of `cmd.exe`
for script tasks and it will use the clang compiler instead of gcc, which is required.
instead of `cmake --preset release`. This will use the clang compiler instead of gcc, which is required with msys2.
## Install lean
@@ -62,9 +68,9 @@ If you want a version that can run independently of your MSYS install
then you need to copy the following dependent DLL's from where ever
they are installed in your MSYS setup:
- libgcc_s_seh-1.dll
- libstdc++-6.dll
- libc++.dll
- libgmp-10.dll
- libuv-1.dll
- libwinpthread-1.dll
The following linux command will do that:
@@ -82,6 +88,6 @@ version clang to your path.
**-bash: gcc: command not found**
Make sure `/mingw64/bin` is in your PATH environment. If it is not then
check you launched the MSYS2 MinGW 64-bit shell from the start menu.
(The one that runs `mingw64.exe`).
Make sure `/clang64/bin` is in your PATH environment. If it is not then
check you launched the MSYS2 CLANG64 shell from the start menu.
(The one that runs `clang64.exe`).

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# Install Packages on OS X 10.9
# Install Packages on OS X 14.5
We assume that you are using [homebrew][homebrew] as a package manager.
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ brew install gcc
```
To install clang++-3.5 via homebrew, please execute:
```bash
brew install llvm --with-clang --with-asan
brew install llvm
```
To use compilers other than the default one (Apple's clang++), you
need to use `-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER` option to specify the compiler
@@ -32,15 +32,16 @@ following to use `g++`.
cmake -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=g++ ...
```
## Required Packages: CMake, GMP
## Required Packages: CMake, GMP, libuv
```bash
brew install cmake
brew install gmp
brew install libuv
```
## Recommended Packages: CCache
```bash
brew install ccache
```
```

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@@ -8,5 +8,5 @@ follow the [generic build instructions](index.md).
## Basic packages
```bash
sudo apt-get install git libgmp-dev cmake ccache clang
sudo apt-get install git libgmp-dev libuv1-dev cmake ccache clang
```

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
*.lean.md

View File

@@ -1,334 +0,0 @@
/-!
# Applicative Functors
Building on [Functors](functors.lean.md) is the [Applicative
Functor](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applicative_functor). For simplicity, you can refer to these
simply as "Applicatives". These are a little tricker than functors, but still simpler than monads.
Let's see how they work!
## What is an Applicative Functor?
An applicative functor defines a default or "base" construction for an object and allows
function application to be chained across multiple instances of the structure. All applicative
functors are functors, meaning they must also support the "map" operation.
## How are Applicatives represented in Lean?
An [applicative functor](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applicative_functor) is an intermediate
structure between `Functor` and `Monad`. It mainly consists of two operations:
* `pure : α → F α`
* `seq : F (α → β) → F α → F β` (written as `<*>`)
The `pure` operator specifies how you can wrap a normal object `α` into an instance of this structure `F α`.
This is the "default" mechanism mentioned above.
The `seq` operator allows you to chain operations by wrapping a function in a structure. The name
"applicative" comes from the fact that you "apply" functions from within the structure, rather than
simply from outside the structure, as was the case with `Functor.map`.
Applicative in Lean is built on some helper type classes, `Functor`, `Pure` and `Seq`:
-/
namespace hidden -- hidden
class Applicative (f : Type u Type v) extends Functor f, Pure f, Seq f, SeqLeft f, SeqRight f where
map := fun x y => Seq.seq (pure x) fun _ => y
seqLeft := fun a b => Seq.seq (Functor.map (Function.const _) a) b
seqRight := fun a b => Seq.seq (Functor.map (Function.const _ id) a) b
end hidden -- hidden
/-!
Notice that as with `Functor` it is also a type transformer `(f : Type u → Type v)` and notice the
`extends Functor f` is ensuring the base `Functor` also performs that same type transformation.
As stated above, all applicatives are then functors. This means you can assume that `map` already
exists for all these types.
The `Pure` base type class is a very simple type class that supplies the `pure` function.
-/
namespace hidden -- hidden
class Pure (f : Type u Type v) where
pure {α : Type u} : α f α
end hidden -- hidden
/-!
You can think of it as lifting the result of a pure value to some monadic type. The simplest example
of `pure` is the `Option` type:
-/
#eval (pure 10 : Option Nat) -- some 10
/-!
Here we used the `Option` implementation of `pure` to wrap the `Nat 10` value in an `Option Nat`
type resulting in the value `some 10`, and in fact if you look at the Monad instance of `Option` , you
will see that `pure` is indeed implemented using `Option.some`:
-/
instance : Monad Option where
pure := Option.some
/-!
The `Seq` type class is also a simple type class that provides the `seq` operator which can
also be written using the special syntax `<*>`.
-/
namespace hidden -- hidden
class Seq (f : Type u Type v) : Type (max (u+1) v) where
seq : {α β : Type u} f (α β) (Unit f α) f β
end hidden -- hidden
/-!
## Basic Applicative Examples
Many of the basic functors also have instances of `Applicative`.
For example, `Option` is also `Applicative`.
So let's take a look and what the `seq` operator can do. Suppose you want to multiply two `Option Nat`
objects. Your first attempt might be this:
-/
#check_failure (some 4) * (some 5) -- failed to synthesize instance
/-!
You then might wonder how to use the `Functor.map` to solve this since you could do these before:
-/
#eval (some 4).map (fun x => x * 5) -- some 20
#eval (some 4).map (· * 5) -- some 20
#eval (· * 5) <$> (some 4) -- some 20
/-!
Remember that `<$>` is the infix notation for `Functor.map`.
The functor `map` operation can apply a multiplication to the value in the `Option` and then lift the
result back up to become a new `Option` , but this isn't what you need here.
The `Seq.seq` operator `<*>` can help since it can apply a function to the items inside a
container and then lift the result back up to the desired type, namely `Option` .
There are two ways to do this:
-/
#eval pure (.*.) <*> some 4 <*> some 5 -- some 20
#eval (.*.) <$> some 4 <*> some 5 -- some 20
/-!
In the first way, we start off by wrapping the function in an applicative using pure. Then we apply
this to the first `Option` , and again to the second `Option` in a chain of operations. So you can see
how `Seq.seq` can be chained in fact, `Seq.seq` is really all about chaining of operations.
But in this case there is a simpler way. In the second way, you can see that "applying" a single
function to a container is the same as using `Functor.map`. So you use `<$>` to "transform" the first
option into an `Option` containing a function, and then apply this function over the second value.
Now if either side is `none`, the result is `none`, as expected, and in this case the
`seq` operator was able to eliminate the multiplication:
-/
#eval (.*.) <$> none <*> some 5 -- none
#eval (.*.) <$> some 4 <*> none -- none
/-!
For a more interesting example, let's make `List` an applicative by adding the following
definition:
-/
instance : Applicative List where
pure := List.pure
seq f x := List.bind f fun y => Functor.map y (x ())
/-!
Notice you can now sequence a _list_ of functions and a _list_ of items.
The trivial case of sequencing a singleton list is in fact the same as `map`, as you saw
earlier with the `Option` examples:
-/
#eval [ (·+2)] <*> [4, 6] -- [6, 8]
#eval (·+2) <$> [4,6] -- [6, 8]
/-!
But now with list it is easier to show the difference when you do this:
-/
#eval [(·+2), (· *3)] <*> [4, 6] -- [6, 8, 12, 18]
/-!
Why did this produce 4 values? The reason is because `<*>` applies _every_ function to _every_
value in a pairwise manner. This makes sequence really convenient for solving certain problems. For
example, how do you get the pairwise combinations of all values from two lists?
-/
#eval Prod.mk <$> [1, 2, 3] <*> [4, 5, 6]
-- [(1, 4), (1, 5), (1, 6), (2, 4), (2, 5), (2, 6), (3, 4), (3, 5), (3, 6)]
/-!
How do you get the sum of these pairwise values?
-/
#eval (·+·) <$> [1, 2, 3] <*> [4, 5, 6]
-- [5, 6, 7, 6, 7, 8, 7, 8, 9]
/-!
Here you can use `<$>` to "transform" each element of the first list into a function, and then apply
these functions over the second list.
If you have 3 lists, and want to find all combinations of 3 values across those lists you
would need helper function that can create a tuple out of 3 values, and Lean provides a
very convenient syntax for that `(·,·,·)`:
-/
#eval (·,·,·) <$> [1, 2] <*> [3, 4] <*> [5, 6]
-- [(1, 3, 5), (1, 3, 6), (1, 4, 5), (1, 4, 6), (2, 3, 5), (2, 3, 6), (2, 4, 5), (2, 4, 6)]
/-!
And you could sum these combinations if you first define a sum function that takes three inputs and
then you could chain apply this over the three lists. Again lean can create such a function
with the expression `(·+·+·)`:
-/
#eval (·+·+·) <$> [1, 2] <*> [3, 4] <*> [5, 6]
-- [9, 10, 10, 11, 10, 11, 11, 12]
/-!
And indeed each sum here matches the expected values if you manually sum the triples we
show above.
**Side note:** there is another way to combine lists with a function that does not do the pairwise
combinatorics, it is called `List.zipWith`:
-/
#eval List.zipWith (·+·) [1, 2, 3] [4, 5, 6]
-- [5, 7, 9]
/-!
And there is a helper function named `List.zip` that calls `zipWith` using the function `Prod.mk`
so you get a nice zipped list like this:
-/
#eval List.zip [1, 2, 3] [4, 5, 6]
-- [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)]
/-!
And of course, as you would expect, there is an `unzip` also:
-/
#eval List.unzip (List.zip [1, 2, 3] [4, 5, 6])
-- ([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6])
/-!
## Example: A Functor that is not Applicative
From the chapter on [functors](functors.lean.md) you might remember this example of `LivingSpace`
that had a `Functor` instance:
-/
structure LivingSpace (α : Type) where
totalSize : α
numBedrooms : Nat
masterBedroomSize : α
livingRoomSize : α
kitchenSize : α
deriving Repr, BEq
def LivingSpace.map (f : α β) (s : LivingSpace α) : LivingSpace β :=
{ totalSize := f s.totalSize
numBedrooms := s.numBedrooms
masterBedroomSize := f s.masterBedroomSize
livingRoomSize := f s.livingRoomSize
kitchenSize := f s.kitchenSize }
instance : Functor LivingSpace where
map := LivingSpace.map
/-!
It wouldn't really make sense to make an `Applicative` instance here. How would you write `pure` in
the `Applicative` instance? By taking a single value and plugging it in for total size _and_ the
master bedroom size _and_ the living room size? That wouldn't really make sense. And what would the
numBedrooms value be for the default? What would it mean to "chain" two of these objects together?
If you can't answer these questions very well, then it suggests this type isn't really an
Applicative functor.
## SeqLeft and SeqRight
You may remember seeing the `SeqLeft` and `SeqRight` base types on `class Applicative` earlier.
These provide the `seqLeft` and `seqRight` operations which also have some handy notation
shorthands `<*` and `*>` respectively. Where: `x <* y` evaluates `x`, then `y`, and returns the
result of `x` and `x *> y` evaluates `x`, then `y`, and returns the result of `y`.
To make it easier to remember, notice that it returns that value that the `<*` or `*>` notation is
pointing at. For example:
-/
#eval (some 1) *> (some 2) -- Some 2
#eval (some 1) <* (some 2) -- Some 1
/-!
So these are a kind of "discard" operation. Run all the actions, but only return the values that you
care about. It will be easier to see these in action when you get to full Monads, but they are used
heavily in the Lean `Parsec` parser combinator library where you will find parsing functions like
this one which parses the XML declaration `<?xml version="1.0" encoding='utf-8' standalone="yes">`:
```lean
def XMLdecl : Parsec Unit := do
skipString "<?xml"
VersionInfo
optional EncodingDecl *> optional SDDecl *> optional S *> skipString "?>"
```
But you will need to understand full Monads before this will make sense.
## Lazy Evaluation
Diving a bit deeper, (you can skip this and jump to the [Applicative
Laws](laws.lean.md#what-are-the-applicative-laws) if don't want to dive into this implementation detail right
now). But, if you write a simple `Option` example `(.*.) <$> some 4 <*> some 5` that produces `some 20`
using `Seq.seq` you will see something interesting:
-/
#eval Seq.seq ((.*.) <$> some 4) (fun (_ : Unit) => some 5) -- some 20
/-!
This may look a bit cumbersome, specifically, why did we need to invent this funny looking function
`fun (_ : Unit) => (some 5)`?
Well if you take a close look at the type class definition:
```lean
class Seq (f : Type u → Type v) where
seq : {α β : Type u} → f (α → β) → (Unit → f α) → f β
```
You will see this function defined here: `(Unit → f α)`, this is a function that takes `Unit` as input
and produces the output of type `f α` where `f` is the container type `Type u -> Type v`, in this example `Option`
and `α` is the element type `Nat`, so `fun (_ : Unit) => some 5` matches this definition because
it is taking an input of type Unit and producing `some 5` which is type `Option Nat`.
The that `seq` is defined this way is because Lean is an eagerly evaluated language
(call-by-value), you have to use this kind of Unit function whenever you want to explicitly delay
evaluation and `seq` wants that so it can eliminate unnecessary function evaluations whenever
possible.
Fortunately the `<*>` infix notation hides this from you by creating this wrapper function for you.
If you look up the notation using F12 in VS Code you will find it contains `(fun _ : Unit => b)`.
Now to complete this picture you will find the default implementation of `seq` on the Lean `Monad`
type class:
```lean
class Monad (m : Type u → Type v) extends Applicative m, Bind m where
seq f x := bind f fun y => Functor.map y (x ())
```
Notice here that `x` is the `(Unit → f α)` function, and it is calling that function by passing the
Unit value `()`, which is the Unit value (Unit.unit). All this just to ensure delayed evaluation.
## How do Applicatives help with Monads?
Applicatives are helpful for the same reasons as functors. They're a relatively simple abstract
structure that has practical applications in your code. Now that you understand how chaining
operations can fit into a structure definition, you're in a good position to start learning about
[Monads](monads.lean.md)!
-/

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@@ -1,178 +0,0 @@
/-!
# Except
The `Except` Monad adds exception handling behavior to your functions. Exception handling
in other languages like Python or Java is done with a built in `throw` method that you
can use anywhere. In `Lean` you can only `throw` an exception when your function is
executing in the context of an `Except` monad.
-/
def divide (x y: Float): Except String Float :=
if y == 0 then
throw "can't divide by zero"
else
pure (x / y)
#eval divide 5 2 -- Except.ok 2.500000
#eval divide 5 0 -- Except.error "can't divide by zero"
/-!
Just as the `read` operation was available from the `ReaderM` monad and the `get` and `set`
operations came with the `StateM` monad, here you can see a `throw` operation is provided by the
`Except` monad.
So in Lean, `throw` is not available everywhere like it is in most imperative programming languages.
You have to declare your function can throw by changing the type signature to `Except String Float`.
This creates a function that might return an error of type `String` or it might return a value of
type `Float` in the non-error case.
Once your function is monadic you also need to use the `pure` constructor of the `Except` monad to
convert the pure non-monadic value `x / y` into the required `Except` object. See
[Applicatives](applicatives.lean.md) for details on `pure`.
Now this return typing would get tedious if you had to include it everywhere that you call this
function, however, Lean type inference can clean this up. For example, you can define a test
function can calls the `divide` function and you don't need to say anything here about the fact that
it might throw an error, because that is inferred:
-/
def test := divide 5 0
#check test -- Except String Float
/-!
Notice the Lean compiler infers the required `Except String Float` type information for you.
And now you can run this test and get the expected exception:
-/
#eval test -- Except.error "can't divide by zero"
/-!
## Chaining
Now as before you can build a chain of monadic actions that can be composed together using `bind (>>=)`:
-/
def square (x : Float) : Except String Float :=
if x >= 100 then
throw "it's absolutely huge"
else
pure (x * x)
#eval divide 6 2 >>= square -- Except.ok 9.000000
#eval divide 6 0 >>= square -- Except.error "can't divide by zero"
#eval divide 100 1 >>= square -- Except.error "it's absolutely huge"
def chainUsingDoNotation := do
let r divide 6 0
square r
#eval chainUsingDoNotation -- Except.error "can't divide by zero"
/-!
Notice in the second `divide 6 0` the exception from that division was nicely propagated along
to the final result and the square function was ignored in that case. You can see why the
`square` function was ignored if you look at the implementation of `Except.bind`:
-/
def bind (ma : Except ε α) (f : α Except ε β) : Except ε β :=
match ma with
| Except.error err => Except.error err
| Except.ok v => f v
/-!
Specifically notice that it only calls the next function `f v` in the `Except.ok`, and
in the error case it simply passes the same error along.
Remember also that you can chain the actions with implicit binding by using the `do` notation
as you see in the `chainUsingDoNotation` function above.
## Try/Catch
Now with all good exception handling you also want to be able to catch exceptions so your program
can continue on or do some error recovery task, which you can do like this:
-/
def testCatch :=
try
let r divide 8 0 -- 'r' is type Float
pure (toString r)
catch e =>
pure s!"Caught exception: {e}"
#check testCatch -- Except String String
/-!
Note that the type inferred by Lean for this function is `Except String String` so unlike the
`test` function earlier, this time Lean type inference has figured out that since the pure
value `(toString r)` is of type `String`, then this function must have type `Except String String`
so you don't have to explicitly state this. You can always hover your mouse over `testCatch`
or use `#check testCatch` to query Lean interactively to figure out what type inference
has decided. Lean type inference makes life easy for you, so it's good to use it
when you can.
You can now see the try/catch working in this eval:
-/
#eval testCatch -- Except.ok "Caught exception: can't divide by zero"
/-!
Notice the `Caught exception:` wrapped message is returned, and that it is returned as an
`Except.ok` value, meaning `testCatch` eliminated the error result as expected.
So you've interleaved a new concept into your functions (exception handling) and the compiler is still
able to type check everything just as well as it does for pure functions and it's been able to infer
some things along the way to make it even easier to manage.
Now you might be wondering why `testCatch` doesn't infer the return type `String`? Lean does this as a
convenience since you could have a rethrow in or after the catch block. If you really want to stop
the `Except` type from bubbling up you can unwrap it like this:
-/
def testUnwrap : String := Id.run do
let r divide 8 0 -- r is type Except String Float
match r with
| .ok a => toString a -- 'a' is type Float
| .error e => s!"Caught exception: {e}"
#check testUnwrap -- String
#eval testUnwrap -- "Caught exception: can't divide by zero"
/-!
The `Id.run` function is a helper function that executes the `do` block and returns the result where
`Id` is the _identity monad_. So `Id.run do` is a pattern you can use to execute monads in a
function that is not itself monadic. This works for all monads except `IO` which, as stated earlier,
you cannot invent out of thin air, you must use the `IO` monad given to your `main` function.
## Monadic functions
You can also write functions that are designed to operate in the context of a monad.
These functions typically end in upper case M like `List.forM` used below:
-/
def validateList (x : List Nat) (max : Nat): Except String Unit := do
x.forM fun a => do
if a > max then throw "illegal value found in list"
#eval validateList [1, 2, 5, 3, 8] 10 -- Except.ok ()
#eval validateList [1, 2, 5, 3, 8] 5 -- Except.error "illegal value found in list"
/-!
Notice here that the `List.forM` function passes the monadic context through to the inner function
so it can use the `throw` function from the `Except` monad.
The `List.forM` function is defined like this where `[Monad m]` means "in the context of a monad `m`":
-/
def forM [Monad m] (as : List α) (f : α m PUnit) : m PUnit :=
match as with
| [] => pure
| a :: as => do f a; List.forM as f
/-!
## Summary
Now that you know all these different monad constructs, you might be wondering how you can combine
them. What if there was some part of your state that you wanted to be able to modify (using the
State monad), but you also needed exception handling. How can you get multiple monadic capabilities
in the same function. To learn the answer, head to [Monad Transformers](transformers.lean.md).
-/

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@@ -1,227 +0,0 @@
/-!
# Functor
A `Functor` is any type that can act as a generic container that allows you to transform the
underlying values inside the container using a function, so that the values are all updated, but the
structure of the container is the same. This is called "mapping".
A List is one of the most basic examples of a `Functor`.
A list contains zero or more elements of the same, underlying type. When you `map` a function over
a list, you create a new list with the same number of elements, where each has been transformed by
the function:
-/
#eval List.map (λ x => toString x) [1,2,3] -- ["1", "2", "3"]
-- you can also write this using dot notation on the List object
#eval [1,2,3].map (λ x => toString x) -- ["1", "2", "3"]
/-!
Here we converted a list of natural numbers (Nat) to a list of strings where the lambda function
here used `toString` to do the transformation of each element. Notice that when you apply `map` the
"structure" of the object remains the same, in this case the result is always a `List` of the same
size.
Note that in Lean a lambda function can be written using `fun` keyword or the unicode
symbol `λ` which you can type in VS code using `\la `.
List has a specialized version of `map` defined as follows:
-/
def map (f : α β) : List α List β
| [] => []
| a::as => f a :: map f as
/-!
This is a very generic `map` function that can take any function that converts `(α → β)` and use it
to convert `List α → List β`. Notice the function call `f a` above, this application of `f` is
producing the converted items for the new list.
Let's look at some more examples:
-/
-- List String → List Nat
#eval ["elephant", "tiger", "giraffe"].map (fun s => s.length)
-- [8, 5, 7]
-- List Nat → List Float
#eval [1,2,3,4,5].map (fun s => (s.toFloat) ^ 3.0)
-- [1.000000, 8.000000, 27.000000, 64.000000, 125.000000]
--- List String → List String
#eval ["chris", "david", "mark"].map (fun s => s.capitalize)
-- ["Chris", "David", "Mark"]
/-!
Another example of a functor is the `Option` type. Option contains a value or nothing and is handy
for code that has to deal with optional values, like optional command line arguments.
Remember you can construct an Option using the type constructors `some` or `none`:
-/
#check some 5 -- Option Nat
#eval some 5 -- some 5
#eval (some 5).map (fun x => x + 1) -- some 6
#eval (some 5).map (fun x => toString x) -- some "5"
/-!
Lean also provides a convenient short hand syntax for `(fun x => x + 1)`, namely `(· + 1)`
using the middle dot unicode character which you can type in VS code using `\. `.
-/
#eval (some 4).map (· * 5) -- some 20
/-!
The `map` function preserves the `none` state of the Option, so again
map preserves the structure of the object.
-/
def x : Option Nat := none
#eval x.map (fun x => toString x) -- none
#check x.map (fun x => toString x) -- Option String
/-!
Notice that even in the `none` case it has transformed `Option Nat` into `Option String` as
you see in the `#check` command.
## How to make a Functor Instance?
The `List` type is made an official `Functor` by the following type class instance:
-/
instance : Functor List where
map := List.map
/-!
Notice all you need to do is provide the `map` function implementation. For a quick
example, let's supposed you create a new type describing the measurements of a home
or apartment:
-/
structure LivingSpace (α : Type) where
totalSize : α
numBedrooms : Nat
masterBedroomSize : α
livingRoomSize : α
kitchenSize : α
deriving Repr, BEq
/-!
Now you can construct a `LivingSpace` in square feet using floating point values:
-/
abbrev SquareFeet := Float
def mySpace : LivingSpace SquareFeet :=
{ totalSize := 1800, numBedrooms := 4, masterBedroomSize := 500,
livingRoomSize := 900, kitchenSize := 400 }
/-!
Now, suppose you want anyone to be able to map a `LivingSpace` from one type of measurement unit to
another. Then you would provide a `Functor` instance as follows:
-/
def LivingSpace.map (f : α β) (s : LivingSpace α) : LivingSpace β :=
{ totalSize := f s.totalSize
numBedrooms := s.numBedrooms
masterBedroomSize := f s.masterBedroomSize
livingRoomSize := f s.livingRoomSize
kitchenSize := f s.kitchenSize }
instance : Functor LivingSpace where
map := LivingSpace.map
/-!
Notice this functor instance takes `LivingSpace` and not the fully qualified type `LivingSpace SquareFeet`.
Notice below that `LivingSpace` is a function from Type to Type. For example, if you give it type `SquareFeet`
it gives you back the fully qualified type `LivingSpace SquareFeet`.
-/
#check LivingSpace -- Type → Type
/-!
So the `instance : Functor` then is operating on the more abstract, or generic `LivingSpace` saying
for the whole family of types `LivingSpace α` you can map to `LivingSpace β` using the generic
`LivingSpace.map` map function by simply providing a function that does the more primitive mapping
from `(f : α → β)`. So `LivingSpace.map` is a sort of function applicator.
This is called a "higher order function" because it takes a function as input
`(α → β)` and returns another function as output `F α → F β`.
Notice that `LivingSpace.map` applies a function `f` to convert the units of all the LivingSpace
fields, except for `numBedrooms` which is a count (and therefore is not a measurement that needs
converting).
So now you can define a simple conversion function, let's say you want square meters instead:
-/
abbrev SquareMeters := Float
def squareFeetToMeters (ft : SquareFeet ) : SquareMeters := (ft / 10.7639104)
/-!
and now bringing it all together you can use the simple function `squareFeetToMeters` to map
`mySpace` to square meters:
-/
#eval mySpace.map squareFeetToMeters
/-
{ totalSize := 167.225472,
numBedrooms := 4,
masterBedroomSize := 46.451520,
livingRoomSize := 83.612736,
kitchenSize := 37.161216 }
-/
/-!
Lean also defines custom infix operator `<$>` for `Functor.map` which allows you to write this:
-/
#eval (fun s => s.length) <$> ["elephant", "tiger", "giraffe"] -- [8, 5, 7]
#eval (fun x => x + 1) <$> (some 5) -- some 6
/-!
Note that the infix operator is left associative which means it binds more tightly to the
function on the left than to the expression on the right, this means you can often drop the
parentheses on the right like this:
-/
#eval (fun x => x + 1) <$> some 5 -- some 6
/-!
Note that Lean lets you define your own syntax, so `<$>` is nothing special.
You can define your own infix operator like this:
-/
infixr:100 " doodle " => Functor.map
#eval (· * 5) doodle [1, 2, 3] -- [5, 10, 15]
/-!
Wow, this is pretty powerful. By providing a functor instance on `LivingSpace` with an
implementation of the `map` function it is now super easy for anyone to come along and
transform the units of a `LivingSpace` using very simple functions like `squareFeetToMeters`. Notice
that squareFeetToMeters knows nothing about `LivingSpace`.
## How do Functors help with Monads ?
Functors are an abstract mathematical structure that is represented in Lean with a type class. The
Lean functor defines both `map` and a special case for working on constants more efficiently called
`mapConst`:
```lean
class Functor (f : Type u → Type v) : Type (max (u+1) v) where
map : {α β : Type u} → (α → β) → f α → f β
mapConst : {α β : Type u} → α → f β → f α
```
Note that `mapConst` has a default implementation, namely:
`mapConst : {α β : Type u} → α → f β → f α := Function.comp map (Function.const _)` in the `Functor`
type class. So you can use this default implementation and you only need to replace it if
your functor has a more specialized variant than this (usually the custom version is more performant).
In general then, a functor is a function on types `F : Type u → Type v` equipped with an operator
called `map` such that if you have a function `f` of type `α → β` then `map f` will convert your
container type from `F α → F β`. This corresponds to the category-theory notion of
[functor](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functor) in the special case where the category is the
category of types and functions between them.
Understanding abstract mathematical structures is a little tricky for most people. So it helps to
start with a simpler idea like functors before you try to understand monads. Building on
functors is the next abstraction called [Applicatives](applicatives.lean.md).
-/

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# Monads
Monads are used heavily in Lean, as they are also in Haskell. Monads come from the wonderful world
of [Category Theory](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monad_%28category_theory%29).
Monads in Lean are so similar to Haskell that this introduction to monads is heavily based on the
similar chapter of the [Monday Morning Haskell](https://mmhaskell.com/monads/). Many thanks to
the authors of that material for allowing us to reuse it here.
Monads build on the following fundamental type classes which you will need to understand
first before fully understanding monads. Shown in light blue are some concrete functors
and monads that will also be covered in this chapter:
![image](../images/monads.svg)
This chapter is organized to give you a bottom up introduction to monads, starting with functors and
applicative functors, you'll get an intuition for how these abstract structures work in Lean. Then
you'll dive into monads and learn how to use some of the most useful built-in ones.
## [Functor](functors.lean.md)
A functor is a type class that provides a map function and the map function is something many
people are already familiar with so this should be easy to follow. Here you will see some
concrete examples in action with `List` and `Option`.
## [Applicative Functors](applicatives.lean.md)
Applicatives are a little more difficult to understand than functors, but their functionality can
still be summed up in a couple simple functions. Here you will learn how to create an
`Applicative List` and a completely custom `Applicative` type.
## [Monads Tutorial](monads.lean.md)
Now that you have an intuition for how abstract structures work, you'll examine some of the problems
that functors and applicative functors don't help you solve. Then you'll learn the specifics of how
to actually use monads with some examples using the `Option` monad and the all important `IO` monad.
## [Reader Monad](readers.lean.md)
Now that you understand the details of what makes a monadic structure work, in this section, you'll
learn about one of the most useful built in monads `ReaderM`, which gives your programs a
global read-only context.
## [State Monad](states.lean.md)
This section introduces the `StateM` monad. This monad allows you to access a particular type that you can
both read from and write to. It opens the door to fully stateful programming, allowing you to do many
of the things a function programming language supposedly "can't" do.
## [Except Monad](except.lean.md)
Similar to the `Option` monad the `Except` monad allows you to change the signature of a function so
that it can return an `ok` value or an `error` and it provides the classic exception handling
operations `throw/try/catch` so that your programs can do monad-based exception handling.
## [Monad Transformers](transformers.lean.md)
Now that you are familiar with all the above monads it is time to answer the question - how you can
make them work together? After all, there are definitely times when you need multiple kinds of
monadic behavior. This section introduces the concept of monad transformers, which allow you to
combine multiple monads into one.
## [Monad Laws](laws.lean.md)
This section examines what makes a monad a legal monad. You could just implement your monadic type
classes any way you want and write "monad" instances, but starting back with functors and
applicative functors, you'll learn that all these structures have "laws" that they are expected to
obey with respect to their behavior. You can make instances that don't follow these laws. But you do
so at your peril, as other programmers will be very confused when they try to use them.

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/-!
# Monad Laws
In the previous sections you learned how to use [Functors](functors.lean.md),
[Applicatives](applicatives.lean.md), and [Monads](monads.lean.md), and you played with some useful
instances including [Option](monads.lean.md), [IO](monads.lean.md), [Reader](readers.lean.md),
[State](states.lean.md) and [Except](except.lean.md) and you learned about composition using [Monad
Transformers](transformers.lean.md).
So far, you've learned the concrete details you need in order to _use_ monads in your Lean programs.
But there's still one more important concept you need if you want to _create_ new functors,
applicatives and monads. Namely, the notion of _structural "laws"_ -- rules that these type
classes should follow in order to meet other programmers' expectations about your code.
## Life without Laws
Remember Lean represents each of these abstract structures by a type class. Each of these type classes
has one or two main functions. So, as long as you implement those functions and it type checks, you
have a new functor, applicative, or monad, right?
Well not quite. Yes, your program will compile and you'll be able to use the instances. But this
doesn't mean your instances follow the mathematical constructs. If they don't, your instances won't
fulfill other programmers' expectations. Each type class has its own "laws". For instance, suppose
you have the following Point Functor:
-/
structure Point (α : Type) where
x : α
y : α
deriving Repr, BEq
def Point.map (f : α β) (s : Point α) : Point β :=
{ x := f s.y, -- an example of something weird
y := f s.x }
instance : Functor Point where
map := Point.map
#eval (·+2) <$> (Point.mk 1 2) -- { x := 4, y := 3 }
/-!
This Point does something weird, when you `map` it because it transposes the `x` and `y` coordinates
which is not what other people would expect from a `map` function. In fact, it breaks the rules
as you will see below.
## What are the Functor laws?
Functors have two laws: the _identity_ law, and the _composition_ law. These laws express behaviors that
your functor instances should follow. If they don't, other programmers will be very confused at the
effect your instances have on their program.
The identity law says that if you "map" the identity function (`id`) over your functor, the
resulting functor should be the same. A succinct way of showing this on a `List` functor is:
-/
def list1 := [1,2,3]
#eval id <$> list1 == list1 -- true
/-!
Now let's try the same test on the `Point` functor:
-/
def p1 : Point Nat := (Point.mk 1 2)
#eval id <$> p1 == p1 -- false
/-!
Oh, and look while the `List` is behaving well, the `Point` functor fails this identity test.
The _composition_ law says that if you "map" two functions in succession over a functor, this
should be the same as "composing" the functions and simply mapping that one super-function over the
functor. In Lean you can compose two functions using `Function.comp f g` (or the syntax `f ∘ g`,
which you can type in VS code using `\o `) and you will get the same results from both of these
showing that the composition law holds for `List Nat`:
-/
def double (x : Nat) := x + x
def square (x : Nat) := x * x
#eval double <$> (square <$> list1) -- [2, 8, 18]
#eval (double <$> (square <$> list1)) == ((double square) <$> list1) -- true
-- ok, what about the Point class?
#eval double <$> (square <$> p1) -- { x := 2, y := 8 }
#eval (double square) <$> p1 -- { x := 8, y := 2 }
#eval double <$> (square <$> p1) == (double square) <$> p1 -- false
/-!
Note that composition also fails on the bad `Point` because the x/y transpose.
As you can see this bad `Point` implementation violates both of the functor laws. In this case it
would not be a true functor. Its behavior would confuse any other programmers trying to use it. You
should take care to make sure that your instances make sense. Once you get a feel for these type
classes, the likelihood is that the instances you'll create will follow the laws.
You can also write a bad functor that passes one law but not the other like this:
-/
def bad_option_map {α β : Type u} : (α β) Option α Option β
| _, _ => none
instance : Functor Option where
map := bad_option_map
def t1 : Option Nat := some 10
#eval id <$> t1 == t1 -- false
#eval double <$> (square <$> t1) == (double square) <$> t1 -- true
/-!
This fails the id law but obeys the composition law. Hopefully this explains the value of these
laws, and you don't need to see any more bad examples!
## What are the Applicative Laws?
While functors have two laws, applicatives have four laws:
- Identity
- Homomorphism
- Interchange
- Composition
### Identity
`pure id <*> v = v`
Applying the identity function through an applicative structure should not change the underlying
values or structure. For example:
-/
instance : Applicative List where
pure := List.pure
seq f x := List.bind f fun y => Functor.map y (x ())
#eval pure id <*> [1, 2, 3] -- [1, 2, 3]
/-!
The `pure id` statement here is wrapping the identity function in an applicative structure
so that you can apply that over the container `[1, 2, 3]` using the Applicative `seq` operation
which has the notation `<*>`.
To prove this for all values `v` and any applicative `m` you can write this theorem:
-/
example [Applicative m] [LawfulApplicative m] (v : m α) :
pure id <*> v = v :=
by simp -- Goals accomplished 🎉
/-!
### Homomorphism
`pure f <*> pure x = pure (f x)`
Suppose you wrap a function and an object in `pure`. You can then apply the wrapped function over the
wrapped object. Of course, you could also apply the normal function over the normal object, and then
wrap it in `pure`. The homomorphism law states these results should be the same.
For example:
-/
def x := 1
def f := (· + 2)
#eval pure f <*> pure x = (pure (f x) : List Nat) -- true
/-!
You should see a distinct pattern here. The overriding theme of almost all these laws is that these
`Applicative` types should behave like normal containers. The `Applicative` functions should not
have any side effects. All they should do is facilitate the wrapping, unwrapping, and transformation
of data contained in the container resulting in a new container that has the same structure.
### Interchange
`u <*> pure y = pure (. y) <*> u`.
This law is is a little more complicated, so don't sweat it too much. It states that the order that
you wrap things shouldn't matter. One the left, you apply any applicative `u` over a pure wrapped
object. On the right, you first wrap a function applying the object as an argument. Note that `(·
y)` is short hand for: `fun f => f y`. Then you apply this to the first applicative `u`. These
should be the same.
For example:
-/
def y := 4
def g : List (Nat Nat) := [(· + 2)]
#eval g <*> pure y = pure (· y) <*> g -- true
/-!
You can prove this with the following theorem:
-/
example [Applicative m] [LawfulApplicative m] (u : m (α β)) (y : α) :
u <*> pure y = pure (· y) <*> u :=
by simp [pure_seq] -- Goals accomplished 🎉
/-!
### Composition:
`u <*> v <*> w = u <*> (v <*> w)`
This final applicative law mimics the second functor law. It is a composition law. It states that
function composition holds across applications within the applicative:
For example:
-/
def u := [1, 2]
def v := [3, 4]
def w := [5, 6]
#eval pure (·+·+·) <*> u <*> v <*> w
-- [9, 10, 10, 11, 10, 11, 11, 12]
#eval let grouping := pure (·+·) <*> v <*> w
pure (·+·) <*> u <*> grouping
-- [9, 10, 10, 11, 10, 11, 11, 12]
/-!
To test composition you see the separate grouping `(v <*> w)` then that can be used in the outer
sequence `u <*> grouping` to get the same final result `[9, 10, 10, 11, 10, 11, 11, 12]`.
## What are the Monad Laws?
Monads have three laws:
- Left Identity
- Right Identity
- Associativity
### Left Identity
Identity laws for monads specify that `pure` by itself shouldn't really change anything about the
structure or its values.
Left identity is `x >>= pure = x` and is demonstrated by the following examples on a monadic `List`:
-/
instance : Monad List where
pure := List.pure
bind := List.bind
def a := ["apple", "orange"]
#eval a >>= pure -- ["apple", "orange"]
#eval a >>= pure = a -- true
/-!
### Right Identity
Right identity is `pure x >>= f = f x` and is demonstrated by the following example:
-/
def h (x : Nat) : Option Nat := some (x + 1)
def z := 5
#eval pure z >>= h -- some 6
#eval h z -- some 6
#eval pure z >>= h = h z -- true
/-!
So in this example, with this specific `z` and `h`, you see that the rule holds true.
### Associativity
The associativity law is written as:
```lean,ignore
x >>= f >>= g = x >>= (λ x => f x >>= g)
```
where `(x : m α)` and `(f : α → m β)` and `(g : β → m γ)`.
The associativity law is difficult to parse like some of the applicative laws, but what it is saying
is that if you change the grouping of `bind` operations, you should still get the same result.
This law has a parallel structure to the other composition laws.
You can see this in action in the following rewrite of `runOptionFuncsBind` from [monads](monads.lean.md):
-/
def optionFunc1 : String -> Option Nat
| "" => none
| str => some str.length
def optionFunc2 (i : Nat) : Option Float :=
if i % 2 == 0 then none else some (i.toFloat * 3.14159)
def optionFunc3 (f : Float) : Option (List Nat) :=
if f > 15.0 then none else some [f.floor.toUInt32.toNat, f.ceil.toUInt32.toNat]
def runOptionFuncsBind (input : String) : Option (List Nat) :=
optionFunc1 input >>= optionFunc2 >>= optionFunc3
def runOptionFuncsBindGrouped (input : String) : Option (List Nat) :=
optionFunc1 input >>= (λ x => optionFunc2 x >>= optionFunc3)
#eval runOptionFuncsBind "big" -- some [9, 10]
#eval runOptionFuncsBindGrouped "big" -- some [9, 10]
/-!
Notice here we had to insert a `λ` function just like the definition says: `(λ x => f x >>= g)`.
This is because unlike applicatives, you can't resolve the structure of later operations without the
results of earlier operations quite as well because of the extra context monads provide. But you can
still group their later operations into composite functions taking their inputs from earlier on, and
the result should be the same.
## Summary
While these laws may be a bit difficult to understand just by looking at them, the good news is that
most of the instances you'll make will naturally follow the laws so long as you keep it simple, so
you shouldn't have to worry about them too much.
There are two main ideas from all the laws:
1. Applying the identity or pure function should not change the underlying values or structure.
1. It should not matter what order you group operations in. Another way to state this is function
composition should hold across your structures.
Following these laws will ensure other programmers are not confused by the behavior of your
new functors, applicatives and monads.
-/

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/-!
# Monads
Building on [Functors](functors.lean.md) and [Applicatives](applicatives.lean.md) we can now
introduce [monads](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monad_%28category_theory%29).
A monad is another type of abstract, functional structure. Let's explore what makes it different
from the first two structures.
## What is a Monad?
A monad is a computational context. It provides a structure that allows you to chain together
operations that have some kind of shared state or similar effect. Whereas pure functional code can
only operate on explicit input parameters and affect the program through explicit return values,
operations in a monad can affect other computations in the chain implicitly through side effects,
especially modification of an implicitly shared value.
## How are monads represented in Lean?
Like functors and applicatives, monads are represented with a type class in Lean:
```lean,ignore
class Monad (m : Type u → Type v) extends Applicative m, Bind m where
```
Just as every applicative is a functor, every monad is also an applicative and there's one more new
base type class used here that you need to understand, namely, `Bind`.
```lean,ignore
class Bind (f : Type u → Type v) where
bind : {α β : Type u} → f α → (α → f β) → f β
```
The `bind` operator also has infix notation `>>=` where `x >>= g` represents the result of executing
`x` to get a value of type `f α` then unwrapping the value `α` from that and passing it to function
`g` of type `α → f β` returning the result of type `f β` where `f` is the target structure type
(like `Option` or List)
This `bind` operation looks similar to the other ones you've seen so far, if you put them all
together `Monad` has the following operations:
```lean,ignore
class Monad (f : Type u → Type v) extends Applicative f, Bind f where
pure {α : Type u} : α → f α
map : {α β : Type u} → (α → β) → f α → f β
seq : {α β : Type u} → f (α → β) → (Unit → f α) → f β
bind : {α β : Type u} → f α → (α → f β) → f β
...
```
Notice `Monad` also contains `pure` it must also have a "default" way to wrap a value in the
structure.
The `bind` operator is similar to the applicative `seq` operator in that it chains two operations,
with one of them being function related. Notice that `bind`, `seq` and `map` all take a function of
some kind. Let's examine those function types:
- map: `(α → β)`
- seq: `f (α → β)`
- bind: `(α → f β)`
So `map` is a pure function, `seq` is a pure function wrapped in the structure, and `bind` takes a
pure input but produces an output wrapped in the structure.
Note: we are ignoring the `(Unit → f α)` function used by `seq` here since that has a special
purpose explained in [Applicatives Lazy Evaluation](applicatives.lean.md#lazy-evaluation).
## Basic Monad Example
Just as `Option` is a functor and an applicative functor, it is also a monad! Let's start with how
`Option` implements the Monad type class.
-/
instance : Monad Option where
pure := Option.some
bind := Option.bind
/-!
where:
```lean,ignore
def Option.bind : Option α → (α → Option β) → Option β
| none, _ => none
| some a, f => f a
```
> **Side note**: this function definition is using a special shorthand syntax in Lean where the `:=
match a, b with` code can be collapsed away. To make this more clear consider the following simpler
example, where `Option.bind` is using the second form like `bar`:
-/
def foo (x : Option Nat) (y : Nat) : Option Nat :=
match x, y with
| none, _ => none
| some x, y => some (x + y)
def bar : Option Nat Nat Option Nat
| none, _ => none
| some x, y => some (x + y)
#eval foo (some 1) 2 -- some 3
#eval bar (some 1) 2 -- some 3
/-!
What is important is that `Option.bind` is using a `match` statement to unwrap the input value
`Option α`, if it is `none` then it does nothing and returns `none`, if it has a value of type `α`
then it applies the function in the second argument `(α → Option β)` to this value, which is
the expression `f a` that you see in the line ` | some a, f => f a` above. The function
returns a result of type `Option β` which then becomes the return value for `bind`. So there
is no structure wrapping required on the return value since the input function already did that.
But let's bring in the definition of a monad. What does it mean to describe `Option` as a
computational context?
The `Option` monad encapsulates the context of failure. Essentially, the `Option` monad lets us
abort a series of operations whenever one of them fails. This allows future operations to assume
that all previous operations have succeeded. Here's some code to motivate this idea:
-/
def optionFunc1 : String -> Option Nat
| "" => none
| str => some str.length
def optionFunc2 (i : Nat) : Option Float :=
if i % 2 == 0 then none else some (i.toFloat * 3.14159)
def optionFunc3 (f : Float) : Option (List Nat) :=
if f > 15.0 then none else some [f.floor.toUInt32.toNat, f.ceil.toUInt32.toNat]
def runOptionFuncs (input : String) : Option (List Nat) :=
match optionFunc1 input with
| none => none
| some i => match optionFunc2 i with
| none => none
| some f => optionFunc3 f
#eval runOptionFuncs "big" -- some [9, 10]
/-!
Here you see three different functions that could fail. These are then combined in `runOptionFuncs`.
But then you have to use nested `match` expressions to check if the previous result succeeded. It
would be very tedious to continue this pattern much longer.
The `Option` monad helps you fix this. Here's what this function looks like using the `bind`
operator.
-/
def runOptionFuncsBind (input : String) : Option (List Nat) :=
optionFunc1 input >>= optionFunc2 >>= optionFunc3
#eval runOptionFuncsBind "big" -- some [9, 10]
/-!
It's much cleaner now! You take the first result and pass it into the second and third functions
using the `bind` operation. The monad instance handles all the failure cases so you don't have to!
Let's see why the types work out. The result of `optionFunc1` input is simply `Option Nat`. Then the
bind operator allows you to take this `Option Nat` value and combine it with `optionFunc2`, whose type
is `Nat → Option Float` The **bind operator resolves** these to an `Option Float`. Then you pass this
similarly through the bind operator to `optionFunc3`, resulting in the final type, `Option (List Nat)`.
Your functions will not always combine so cleanly though. This is where `do` notation comes into play.
This notation allows you to write monadic operations one after another, line-by-line. It almost makes
your code look like imperative programming. You can rewrite the above as:
-/
def runOptionFuncsDo (input : String) : Option (List Nat) := do
let i optionFunc1 input
let f optionFunc2 i
optionFunc3 f
#eval runOptionFuncsDo "big" -- some [9, 10]
/-!
The `←` operator used here is special. It effectively unwraps the value on the right-hand side from
the monad. This means the value `i` has type `Nat`, _even though_ the result of `optionFunc1` is
`Option Nat`. This is done using a `bind` operation under the hood.
> Note you can use `<-` or the nice unicode symbol `←` which you can type into VS code by typing
these characters `\l `. When you type the final space, `\l` is replaced with `←`.
Observe that we do not unwrap the final line of the computation. The function result is `Option
(List Nat)` which matches what `optionFunc3` returns. At first glance, this may look more complicated
than the `bind` example. However, it gives you a lot more flexibility, like mixing monadic and
non-monadic statements, using if then/else structures with their own local do blocks and so on. It
is particularly helpful when one monadic function depends on multiple previous functions.
## Example using List
You can easily make `List` into a monad with the following, since List already provides an
implementation of `pure` and `bind`.
-/
instance : Monad List where
pure := List.pure
bind := List.bind
/-!
Like you saw with the applicative `seq` operator, the `bind` operator applies the given function
to every element of the list. It is useful to look at the bind implementation for List:
-/
open List
def bind (a : List α) (b : α List β) : List β := join (map b a)
/-!
So `Functor.map` is used to apply the function `b` to every element of `a` but this would
return a whole bunch of little lists, so `join` is used to turn those back into a single list.
Here's an example where you use `bind` to convert a list of strings into a combined list of chars:
-/
#eval "apple".toList -- ['a', 'p', 'p', 'l', 'e']
#eval ["apple", "orange"] >>= String.toList
-- ['a', 'p', 'p', 'l', 'e', 'o', 'r', 'a', 'n', 'g', 'e']
/-!
## The IO Monad
The `IO Monad` is perhaps the most important monad in Lean. It is also one of the hardest monads to
understand starting out. Its actual implementation is too intricate to discuss when first learning
monads. So it is best to learn by example.
What is the **computational context** that describes the IO monad? IO operations can read
information from or write information to the terminal, file system, operating system, and/or
network. They interact with systems outside of your program. If you want to get user input, print a
message to the user, read information from a file, or make a network call, you'll need to do so
within the IO Monad.
The state of the world outside your program can change at virtually any moment, and so this IO
context is particularly special. So these IO operations are "side effects" which means you cannot
perform them from "pure" Lean functions.
Now, the most important job of pretty much any computer program is precisely to perform this
interaction with the outside world. For this reason, the root of all executable Lean code is a
function called main, with the type `IO Unit`. So every program starts in the IO monad!
When your function is `IO` monadic, you can get any input you need, call into "pure" code with the
inputs, and then output the result in some way. The reverse does not work. You cannot call into IO
code from pure code like you can call into a function that takes `Option` as input. Another way to
say this is you cannot invent an `IO` context out of thin air, it has to be given to you in your
`main` function.
Let's look at a simple program showing a few of the basic IO functions. It also uses `do` notation
to make the code read nicely:
-/
def main : IO Unit := do
IO.println "enter a line of text:"
let stdin IO.getStdin -- IO IO.FS.Stream (monadic)
let input stdin.getLine -- IO.FS.Stream → IO String (monadic)
let uppercased := input.toUpper -- String → String (pure)
IO.println uppercased -- IO Unit (monadic)
/-!
So, once again you can see that the `do` notation lets you chain a series of monadic actions.
`IO.getStdin` is of type `IO IO.FS.Stream` and `stdin.getLine` is of type `IO String`
and `IO.println` is of type `IO Unit`.
In between you see a non-monadic expression `let uppercased := input.toUpper` which is fine too.
A let statement can occur in any monad. Just as you could unwrap `i` from `Option Nat` to get the
inner Nat, you can use `←` to unwrap the result of `getLine` to get a String. You can then manipulate
this value using normal pure string functions like `toUpper`, and then you can pass the result to the
`IO.println` function.
This is a simple echo program. It reads a line from the terminal, and then prints the line back out
capitalized to the terminal. Hopefully it gives you a basic understanding of how IO works.
You can test this program using `lean --run` as follows:
```
> lean --run Main.lean
enter a line of text:
the quick brown fox
THE QUICK BROWN FOX
```
Here the user entered the string `the quick brown fox` and got back the uppercase result.
## What separates Monads from Applicatives?
The key that separates these is **context**. You cannot really determine the structure of
"future" operations without knowing the results of "past" operations, because the past can alter the
context in which the future operations work. With applicatives, you can't get the final function
result without evaluating everything, but you can determine the structure of how the operation will
take place. This allows some degree of parallelism with applicatives that is not generally possible
with monads.
## Conclusion
Hopefully you now have a basic level understanding of what a monad is. But perhaps some more
examples of what a "computational context" means would be useful to you. The Reader, State and
Except monads each provide a concrete and easily understood context that can be compared easily to
function parameters. You can learn more about those in [Reader monads](readers.lean.md),
[State monads](states.lean.md), and the [Except monad](except.lean.md).
-/

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@@ -1,199 +0,0 @@
/-!
# Readers
In the [previous section](monads.lean.md) you learned about the conceptual idea of monads. You learned
what they are, and saw how some common types like `IO` and `Option` work as monads. Now in this
section, you will be looking at some other useful monads. In particular, the `ReaderM` monad.
## How to do Global Variables in Lean?
In Lean, your code is generally "pure", meaning functions can only interact with the arguments
passed to them. This effectively means you cannot have global variables. You can have global
definitions, but these are fixed at compile time. If some user behavior might change them, you would have
to wrap them in the `IO` monad, which means they can't be used from pure code.
Consider this example. Here, you want to have an `Environment` containing different parameters as a
global variable. However, you want to load these parameters from the process environment variables,
which requires the `IO` monad.
-/
structure Environment where
path : String
home : String
user : String
deriving Repr
def getEnvDefault (name : String): IO String := do
let val? IO.getEnv name
pure <| match val? with
| none => ""
| some s => s
def loadEnv : IO Environment := do
let path getEnvDefault "PATH"
let home getEnvDefault "HOME"
let user getEnvDefault "USER"
pure { path, home, user }
def func1 (e : Environment) : Float :=
let l1 := e.path.length
let l2 := e.home.length * 2
let l3 := e.user.length * 3
(l1 + l2 + l3).toFloat * 2.1
def func2 (env : Environment) : Nat :=
2 + (func1 env).floor.toUInt32.toNat
def func3 (env : Environment) : String :=
"Result: " ++ (toString (func2 env))
def main : IO Unit := do
let env loadEnv
let str := func3 env
IO.println str
#eval main -- Result: 7538
/-!
The only function actually using the environment is func1. However func1 is a pure function. This
means it cannot directly call loadEnv, an impure function in the IO monad. This means the
environment has to be passed through as a variable to the other functions, just so they can
ultimately pass it to func1. In a language with global variables, you could save env as a global
value in main. Then func1 could access it directly. There would be no need to have it as a parameter
to func1, func2 and func3. In larger programs, these "pass-through" variables can cause a lot of
headaches.
## The Reader Solution
The `ReaderM` monad solves this problem. It effectively creates a global read-only value of a
specified type. All functions within the monad can "read" the type. Let's look at how the `ReaderM`
monad changes the shape of this code. Now the functions **no longer need** to be given the
`Environment` as an explicit parameter, as they can access it through the monad.
-/
def readerFunc1 : ReaderM Environment Float := do
let env read
let l1 := env.path.length
let l2 := env.home.length * 2
let l3 := env.user.length * 3
return (l1 + l2 + l3).toFloat * 2.1
def readerFunc2 : ReaderM Environment Nat :=
readerFunc1 >>= (fun x => return 2 + (x.floor.toUInt32.toNat))
def readerFunc3 : ReaderM Environment String := do
let x readerFunc2
return "Result: " ++ toString x
def main2 : IO Unit := do
let env loadEnv
let str := readerFunc3.run env
IO.println str
#eval main2 -- Result: 7538
/-!
The `ReaderM` monad provides a `run` method and it is the `ReaderM` run method that takes the initial
`Environment` context. So here you see `main2` loads the environment as before, and establishes
the `ReaderM` context by passing `env` to the `run` method.
> **Side note 1**: The `return` statement used above also needs some explanation. The `return`
statement in Lean is closely related to `pure`, but a little different. First the similarity is that
`return` and `pure` both lift a pure value up to the Monad type. But `return` is a keyword so you do
not need to parenthesize the expression like you do when using `pure`. (Note: you can avoid
parentheses when using `pure` by using the `<|` operator like we did above in the initial
`getEnvDefault` function). Furthermore, `return` can also cause an early `return` in a monadic
function similar to how it can in an imperative language while `pure` cannot.
> So technically if `return` is the last statement in a function it could be replaced with `pure <|`,
but one could argue that `return` is still a little easier for most folks to read, just so long as
you understand that `return` is doing more than other languages, it is also wrapping pure values in
the monadic container type.
> **Side note 2**: If the function `readerFunc3` also took some explicit arguments then you would have
to write `(readerFunc3 args).run env` and this is a bit ugly, so Lean provides an infix operator
`|>` that eliminates those parentheses so you can write `readerFunc3 args |>.run env` and then you can
chain multiple monadic actions like this `m1 args1 |>.run args2 |>.run args3` and this is the
recommended style. You will see this pattern used heavily in Lean code.
The `let env ← read` expression in `readerFunc1` unwraps the environment from the `ReaderM` so we
can use it. Each type of monad might provide one or more extra functions like this, functions that
become available only when you are in the context of that monad.
Here the `readerFunc2` function uses the `bind` operator `>>=` just to show you that there are bind
operations happening here. The `readerFunc3` function uses the `do` notation you learned about in
[Monads](monads.lean.md) which hides that bind operation and can make the code look cleaner.
So the expression `let x ← readerFunc2` is also calling the `bind` function under the covers,
so that you can access the unwrapped value `x` needed for the `toString x` conversion.
The important difference here to the earlier code is that `readerFunc3` and `readerFunc2` no longer
have an **explicit** Environment input parameter that needs to be passed along all the way to
`readerFunc1`. Instead, the `ReaderM` monad is taking care of that for you, which gives you the
illusion of something like global context where the context is now available to all functions that use
the `ReaderM` monad.
The above code also introduces an important idea. Whenever you learn about a monad "X", there's
often (but not always) a `run` function to execute that monad, and sometimes some additional
functions like `read` that interact with the monad context.
You might be wondering, how does the context actually move through the `ReaderM` monad? How can you
add an input argument to a function by modifying its return type? There is a special command in
Lean that will show you the reduced types:
-/
#reduce ReaderM Environment String -- Environment → String
/-!
And you can see here that this type is actually a function! It's a function that takes an
`Environment` as input and returns a `String`.
Now, remember in Lean that a function that takes an argument of type `Nat` and returns a `String`
like `def f (a : Nat) : String` is the same as this function `def f : Nat → String`. These are
exactly equal as types. Well this is being used by the `ReaderM` Monad to add an input argument to
all the functions that use the `ReaderM` monad and this is why `main` is able to start things off by
simply passing that new input argument in `readerFunc3.run env`. So now that you know the implementation
details of the `ReaderM` monad you can see that what it is doing looks very much like the original
code we wrote at the beginning of this section, only it's taking a lot of the tedious work off your
plate and it is creating a nice clean separation between what your pure functions are doing, and the
global context idea that the `ReaderM` adds.
## withReader
One `ReaderM` function can call another with a modified version of the `ReaderM` context. You can
use the `withReader` function from the `MonadWithReader` type class to do this:
-/
def readerFunc3WithReader : ReaderM Environment String := do
let x withReader (λ env => { env with user := "new user" }) readerFunc2
return "Result: " ++ toString x
/-!
Here we changed the `user` in the `Environment` context to "new user" and then we passed that
modified context to `readerFunc2`.
So `withReader f m` executes monad `m` in the `ReaderM` context modified by `f`.
## Handy shortcut with (← e)
If you use the operator `←` in a let expression and the variable is only used once you can
eliminate the let expression and place the `←` operator in parentheses like this
call to loadEnv:
-/
def main3 : IO Unit := do
let str := readerFunc3 ( loadEnv)
IO.println str
/-!
## Conclusion
It might not seem like much has been accomplished with this `ReaderM Environment` monad, but you will
find that in larger code bases, with many different types of monads all composed together this
greatly cleans up the code. Monads provide a beautiful functional way of managing cross-cutting
concerns that would otherwise make your code very messy.
Having this control over the inherited `ReaderM` context via `withReader` is actually very useful
and something that is quite messy if you try and do this sort of thing with global variables, saving
the old value, setting the new one, calling the function, then restoring the old value, making sure
you do that in a try/finally block and so on. The `ReaderM` design pattern avoids that mess
entirely.
Now it's time to move on to [StateM Monad](states.lean.md) which is like a `ReaderM` that is
also updatable.
-/

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@@ -1,265 +0,0 @@
import Lean.Data.HashMap
/-!
# State
In the [previous section](readers.lean.md), you learned about the `ReaderM` monad. Hopefully this gave you
a new perspective on Lean. It showed that, in fact, you _can_ have global variables of some sort;
you just need to encode them in the type signature somehow, and this is what monads are for! In this
part, you will explore the `StateM` monad, which is like a `ReaderM` only the state can also be updated.
## Motivating example: Tic Tac Toe
For this section, let's build a simple model for a Tic Tace Toe game. The main object is the `GameState`
data type containing several important pieces of information. First and foremost, it has the
"board", a map from 2D tile indices to the "Tile State" (X, O or empty). Then it also knows the
current player, and it has a random generator.
-/
open Std (HashMap)
abbrev TileIndex := Nat × Nat -- a 2D index
inductive TileState where
| TileEmpty | TileX | TileO
deriving Repr, BEq
inductive Player where
| XPlayer | OPlayer
deriving Repr, BEq
abbrev Board := HashMap TileIndex TileState
structure GameState where
board : Board
currentPlayer : Player
generator : StdGen
/-!
Let's think at a high level about how some of the game functions would work. You could, for
instance, have a function for selecting a random move. This would output a `TileIndex` to play and
alter the game's number generator. You would then make a move based on the selected move and the
current player. This would change the board state as well as swap the current player. In other
words, you have operations that depend on the current state of the game, but also need to **update
that state**.
## The StateM Monad to the Rescue
This is exactly the situation the `StateM` monad deals with. The `StateM` monad wraps computations in
the context of reading and modifying a global state object.
It is parameterized by a single type parameter `s`, the state type in use. So just like the `ReaderM`
has a single type you read from, the `StateM` has a single type you can both **read from and write
to**. There are three primary actions you can take within the `StateM`monad:
- **get** - retrieves the state, like Reader.read
- **set** - updates the state
- **modifyGet** - retrieves the state, then updates it
There is also a `run` function, similar to `run` on `ReaderM`. Like the `ReaderM` monad, you must
provide an initial state, in addition to the computation to run. `StateM` then produces two outputs:
the result of the computation combined with the final updated state.
If you wish to discard the final state and just get the computation's result, you can use
`run'` method instead. Yes in Lean, the apostrophe can be part of a name, you read this "run
prime", and the general naming convention is that the prime method discards something.
So for your Tic Tac Toe game, many of your functions will have a signature like `State GameState a`.
## Stateful Functions
Now you can examine some of the different functions mentioned above and determine their types.
You can, for instance, pick a random move:
-/
open TileState
def findOpen : StateM GameState (List TileIndex) := do
let game get
return game.board.toList.filterMap fun (i, x) => guard (x == TileEmpty) *> pure i
def chooseRandomMove : StateM GameState TileIndex := do
let game get
let openSpots findOpen
let gen := game.generator
let (i, gen') := randNat gen 0 (openSpots.length - 1)
set { game with generator := gen' }
return openSpots[i]!
/-!
This returns a `TileIndex` and modifies the random number generator stored in the `GameState`!
Notice you have a fun little use of the `Applicative.seqRight` operator `*>` in `findOpen`
as described in [Applicatives](applicatives.lean.md).
Now you can create the function that can make a move:
-/
open Player
def tileStateForPlayer : Player TileState
| XPlayer => TileX
| OPlayer => TileO
def nextPlayer : Player Player
| XPlayer => OPlayer
| OPlayer => XPlayer
def applyMove (i : TileIndex): StateM GameState Unit := do
let game get
let p := game.currentPlayer
let newBoard := game.board.insert i (tileStateForPlayer p)
set { game with currentPlayer := nextPlayer p, board := newBoard }
/-!
This updates the board in the `GameState` with the new tile, and then changes the current player,
providing no output (`Unit` return type).
So finally, you can combine these functions together with `do` notation, and it actually looks quite
clean! You don't need to worry about the side effects. The different monadic functions handle them.
Here's a sample of what your function might look like to play one turn of the game. At the end, it
returns a boolean determining if all the spaces have been filled.
Notice in `isGameDone` and `nextTurn` we have stopped providing the full return type
`StateM GameState Unit`. This is because Lean is able to infer the correct monadic return type
from the context and as a result the code is now looking really clean.
-/
def isGameDone := do
return ( findOpen).isEmpty
def nextTurn := do
let i chooseRandomMove
applyMove i
isGameDone
/-!
To give you a quick test harness that runs all moves for both players you can run this:
-/
def initBoard : Board := Id.run do
let mut board := HashMap.empty
for i in [0:3] do
for j in [0:3] do
let t : TileIndex := (i, j)
board := board.insert t TileEmpty
board
def printBoard (board : Board) : IO Unit := do
let mut row : List String := []
for i in board.toList do
let s := match i.2 with
| TileEmpty => " "
| TileX => "X"
| TileO => "O"
row := row.append [s]
if row.length == 3 then
IO.println row
row := []
def playGame := do
while true do
let finished nextTurn
if finished then return
def main : IO Unit := do
let gen IO.stdGenRef.get
let (x, gen') := randNat gen 0 1
let gs := {
board := initBoard,
currentPlayer := if x = 0 then XPlayer else OPlayer,
generator := gen' }
let (_, g) := playGame |>.run gs
printBoard g.board
#eval main
-- [X, X, O]
-- [X, O, O]
-- [O, O, X]
/-!
Note that when you run the above code interactively the random number generator always starts in the
same place. But if you run `lean --run states.lean` then you will see randomness in the result.
## Implementation
It may be helpful to see how the `StateM` monad adds the input state and output state. If you look
at the reduced Type for `nextTurn`:
-/
#reduce StateM GameState Bool
-- GameState → Bool × GameState
/-!
So a function like `nextTurn` that might have just returned a `Bool` has been modified by the
`StateM` monad such that the initial `GameState` is passed in as a new input argument, and the output
value has been changed to the pair `Bool × GameState` so that it can return the pure `Bool` and the
updated `GameState`. So `playGame` then is automatically saving that updated game state so that each
time around the `while` loop it is acting on the new state, otherwise that would be an infinite loop!
It is also interesting to see how much work the `do` and `←` notation are doing for you. To
implement the `nextTurn` function without these you would have to write this, manually plumbing
the state all the way through:
-/
def nextTurnManually : StateM GameState Bool
| state =>
let (i, gs) := chooseRandomMove |>.run state
let (_, gs') := applyMove i |>.run gs
let (result, gs'') := isGameDone |>.run gs'
(result, gs'')
/-!
This expression `let (i, gs)` conveniently breaks a returned pair up into 2 variables.
In the expression `let (_, gs')` we didn't care what the first value was so we used underscore.
Notice that nextTurn is capturing the updated game state from `chooseRandomMove` in the variable
`gs`, which it is then passing to `applyMove` which returns `gs'` which is passed to `isGameDone`
and that function returns `gs''` which we then return from `nextTurnManually`. Phew, what a lot
of work you don't have to do when you use `do` notation!
## StateM vs ReaderM
While `ReaderM` functions can use `withReader` to modify the context before calling another function,
`StateM` functions are a little more powerful, let's look at this function again:
```
def nextTurn : StateM GameState Bool := do
let i ← chooseRandomMove
applyMove i
isGameDone
```
In this function `chooseRandomMove` is modifying the state that `applyMove` is getting
and `chooseRandomMove` knows nothing about `applyMove`. So `StateM` functions can have this
kind of downstream effect outside their own scope, whereas, `withReader` cannot do that.
So there is no equivalent to `withReader` for `StateM`, besides you can always use the `StateM`
`set` function to modify the state before calling the next function anyway. You could however,
manually call a `StateM` function like you see in `nextTurnManually` and completely override
the state at any point that way.
## State, IO and other languages
When thinking about Lean, it is often seen as a restriction that you can't have global variables or
`static` variables like you can with other languages like Python or C++. However, hopefully you see
now this isn't true. You can have a data type with exactly the same functionality as a Python class.
You would simply have many functions that can modify some global state using the `StateM` monad.
The difference is in Lean you simply put a label on these types of functions. You don't allow it to
happen for free anywhere in an uncontrolled fashion because that results in too many sleepless
nights debugging nasty code. You want to know when side effects can potentially happen, because
knowing when they can happen makes your code easier to reason about. In a Python class, many of the
methods won't actually need to modify the global state. But they could, which makes it harder to
debug them. In Lean you can simply make these pure functions, and the compiler will ensure they stay
pure and cannot modify any global state.
IO is the same way. It's not like you can't perform IO in Lean. Instead, you want to label the areas
where you can, to increase your certainty about the areas where you don't need to. When you know part of
your code cannot communicate with the outside world, you can be far more certain of its behavior.
The `StateM` monad is also a more disciplined way of managing side effects. Top level code could
call a `StateM` function multiple times with different independent initial states, even doing that
across multiple tasks in parallel and each of these cannot clobber the state belonging to other
tasks. Monadic code is more predictable and reusable than code that uses global variables.
## Summary
That wraps it up for the `StateM` monad! There is one more very useful monad that can be used to do
exception handling which will be covered in the [next section](except.lean.md).
-/

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@@ -1,316 +0,0 @@
/-!
# Monad Transformers
In the previous sections you learned about some handy monads [Option](monads.lean.md),
[IO](monads.lean.md), [Reader](readers.lean.md), [State](states.lean.md) and
[Except](except.lean.md), and you now know how to make your function use one of these, but what you
do not yet know is how to make your function use multiple monads at once.
For example, suppose you need a function that wants to access some Reader context and optionally throw
an exception? This would require composition of two monads `ReaderM` and `Except` and this is what
monad transformers are for.
A monad transformer is fundamentally a wrapper type. It is generally parameterized by another
monadic type. You can then run actions from the inner monad, while adding your own customized
behavior for combining actions in this new monad. The common transformers add `T` to the end of an
existing monad name. You will find `OptionT`, `ExceptT`, `ReaderT`, `StateT` but there is no transformer
for `IO`. So generally if you need `IO` it becomes the innermost wrapped monad.
In the following example we use `ReaderT` to provide some read only context to a function
and this `ReaderT` transformer will wrap an `Except` monad. If all goes well the
`requiredArgument` returns the value of a required argument and `optionalSwitch`
returns true if the optional argument is present.
-/
abbrev Arguments := List String
def indexOf? [BEq α] (xs : List α) (s : α) (start := 0): Option Nat :=
match xs with
| [] => none
| a :: tail => if a == s then some start else indexOf? tail s (start+1)
def requiredArgument (name : String) : ReaderT Arguments (Except String) String := do
let args read
let value := match indexOf? args name with
| some i => if i + 1 < args.length then args[i+1]! else ""
| none => ""
if value == "" then throw s!"Command line argument {name} missing"
return value
def optionalSwitch (name : String) : ReaderT Arguments (Except String) Bool := do
let args read
return match (indexOf? args name) with
| some _ => true
| none => false
#eval requiredArgument "--input" |>.run ["--input", "foo"]
-- Except.ok "foo"
#eval requiredArgument "--input" |>.run ["foo", "bar"]
-- Except.error "Command line argument --input missing"
#eval optionalSwitch "--help" |>.run ["--help"]
-- Except.ok true
#eval optionalSwitch "--help" |>.run []
-- Except.ok false
/-!
Notice that `throw` was available from the inner `Except` monad. The cool thing is you can switch
this around and get the exact same result using `ExceptT` as the outer monad transformer and
`ReaderM` as the wrapped monad. Try changing requiredArgument to `ExceptT String (ReaderM Arguments) Bool`.
Note: the `|>.` notation is described in [Readers](readers.lean.md#the-reader-solution).
## Adding more layers
Here's the best part about monad transformers. Since the result of a monad transformer is itself a
monad, you can wrap it inside another transformer! Suppose you need to pass in some read only context
like the command line arguments, update some read-write state (like program Config) and optionally
throw an exception, then you could write this:
-/
structure Config where
help : Bool := false
verbose : Bool := false
input : String := ""
deriving Repr
abbrev CliConfigM := StateT Config (ReaderT Arguments (Except String))
def parseArguments : CliConfigM Bool := do
let mut config get
if ( optionalSwitch "--help") then
throw "Usage: example [--help] [--verbose] [--input <input file>]"
config := { config with
verbose := ( optionalSwitch "--verbose"),
input := ( requiredArgument "--input") }
set config
return true
def main (args : List String) : IO Unit := do
let config : Config := { input := "default"}
match parseArguments |>.run config |>.run args with
| Except.ok (_, c) => do
IO.println s!"Processing input '{c.input}' with verbose={c.verbose}"
| Except.error s => IO.println s
#eval main ["--help"]
-- Usage: example [--help] [--verbose] [--input <input file>]
#eval main ["--input", "foo"]
-- Processing input file 'foo' with verbose=false
#eval main ["--verbose", "--input", "bar"]
-- Processing input 'bar' with verbose=true
/-!
In this example `parseArguments` is actually three stacked monads, `StateM`, `ReaderM`, `Except`. Notice
the convention of abbreviating long monadic types with an alias like `CliConfigM`.
## Monad Lifting
Lean makes it easy to compose functions that use different monads using a concept of automatic monad
lifting. You already used lifting in the above code, because you were able to compose
`optionalSwitch` which has type `ReaderT Arguments (Except String) Bool` and call it from
`parseArguments` which has a bigger type `StateT Config (ReaderT Arguments (Except String))`.
This "just worked" because Lean did some magic with monad lifting.
To give you a simpler example of this, suppose you have the following function:
-/
def divide (x : Float ) (y : Float): ExceptT String Id Float :=
if y == 0 then
throw "can't divide by zero"
else
pure (x / y)
#eval divide 6 3 -- Except.ok 2.000000
#eval divide 1 0 -- Except.error "can't divide by zero"
/-!
Notice here we used the `ExceptT` transformer, but we composed it with the `Id` identity monad.
This is then the same as writing `Except String Float` since the identity monad does nothing.
Now suppose you want to count the number of times divide is called and store the result in some
global state:
-/
def divideCounter (x : Float) (y : Float) : StateT Nat (ExceptT String Id) Float := do
modify fun s => s + 1
divide x y
#eval divideCounter 6 3 |>.run 0 -- Except.ok (2.000000, 1)
#eval divideCounter 1 0 |>.run 0 -- Except.error "can't divide by zero"
/-!
The `modify` function is a helper which makes it easier to use `modifyGet` from the `StateM` monad.
But something interesting is happening here, `divideCounter` is returning the value of
`divide`, but the types don't match, yet it works? This is monad lifting in action.
You can see this more clearly with the following test:
-/
def liftTest (x : Except String Float) :
StateT Nat (Except String) Float := x
#eval liftTest (divide 5 1) |>.run 3 -- Except.ok (5.000000, 3)
/-!
Notice that `liftTest` returned `x` without doing anything to it, yet that matched the return type
`StateT Nat (Except String) Float`. Monad lifting is provided by monad transformers. if you
`#print liftTest` you will see that Lean is implementing this using a call to a function named
`monadLift` from the `MonadLift` type class:
```lean,ignore
class MonadLift (m : Type u → Type v) (n : Type u → Type w) where
monadLift : {α : Type u} → m α → n α
```
So `monadLift` is a function for lifting a computation from an inner `Monad m α ` to an outer `Monad n α`.
You could replace `x` in `liftTest` with `monadLift x` if you want to be explicit about it.
The StateT monad transformer defines an instance of `MonadLift` like this:
```lean
@[inline] protected def lift {α : Type u} (t : m α) : StateT σ m α :=
fun s => do let a ← t; pure (a, s)
instance : MonadLift m (StateT σ m) := ⟨StateT.lift⟩
```
This means that any monad `m` can be wrapped in a `StateT` monad by using the function
`fun s => do let a ← t; pure (a, s)` that takes state `s`, runs the inner monad action `t`, and
returns the result and the new state in a pair `(a, s)` without making any changes to `s`.
Because `MonadLift` is a type class, Lean can automatically find the required `monadLift`
instances in order to make your code compile and in this way it was able to find the `StateT.lift`
function and use it to wrap the result of `divide` so that the correct type is returned from
`divideCounter`.
If you have an instance `MonadLift m n` that means there is a way to turn a computation that happens
inside of `m` into one that happens inside of `n` and (this is the key part) usually *without* the
instance itself creating any additional data that feeds into the computation. This means you can in
principle declare lifting instances from any monad to any other monad, it does not, however, mean
that you should do this in all cases. You can get a very nice report on how all this was done by
adding the line `set_option trace.Meta.synthInstance true in` before `divideCounter` and moving you
cursor to the end of the first line after `do`.
This was a lot of detail, but it is very important to understand how monad lifting works because it
is used heavily in Lean programs.
## Transitive lifting
There is also a transitive version of `MonadLift` called `MonadLiftT` which can lift multiple
monad layers at once. In the following example we added another monad layer with
`ReaderT String ...` and notice that `x` is also automatically lifted to match.
-/
def liftTest2 (x : Except String Float) :
ReaderT String (StateT Nat (Except String)) Float := x
#eval liftTest2 (divide 5 1) |>.run "" |>.run 3
-- Except.ok (5.000000, 3)
/-!
The ReaderT monadLift is even simpler than the one for StateT:
```lean,ignore
instance : MonadLift m (ReaderT ρ m) where
monadLift x := fun _ => x
```
This lift operation creates a function that defines the required `ReaderT` input
argument, but the inner monad doesn't know or care about `ReaderT` so the
monadLift function throws it away with the `_` then calls the inner monad action `x`.
This is a perfectly legal implementation of the `ReaderM` monad.
## Add your own Custom MonadLift
This does not compile:
-/
def main2 : IO Unit := do
try
let ret divideCounter 5 2 |>.run 0
IO.println (toString ret)
catch e =>
IO.println e
/-!
saying:
```
typeclass instance problem is stuck, it is often due to metavariables
ToString ?m.4786
```
The reason is `divideCounter` returns the big `StateT Nat (ExceptT String Id) Float` and that type
cannot be automatically lifted into the `main` return type of `IO Unit` unless you give it some
help.
The following custom `MonadLift` solves this problem:
-/
def liftIO (t : ExceptT String Id α) : IO α := do
match t with
| .ok r => EStateM.Result.ok r
| .error s => EStateM.Result.error s
instance : MonadLift (ExceptT String Id) IO where
monadLift := liftIO
def main3 : IO Unit := do
try
let ret divideCounter 5 2 |>.run 0
IO.println (toString ret)
catch e =>
IO.println e
#eval main3 -- (2.500000, 1)
/-!
It turns out that the `IO` monad you see in your `main` function is based on the `EStateM.Result` type
which is similar to the `Except` type but it has an additional return value. The `liftIO` function
converts any `Except String α` into `IO α` by simply mapping the ok case of the `Except` to the
`Result.ok` and the error case to the `Result.error`.
## Lifting ExceptT
In the previous [Except](except.lean.md) section you saw functions that `throw` Except
values. When you get all the way back up to your `main` function which has type `IO Unit` you have
the same problem you had above, because `Except String Float` doesn't match even if you use a
`try/catch`.
-/
def main4 : IO Unit := do
try
let ret divide 5 0
IO.println (toString ret) -- lifting happens here.
catch e =>
IO.println s!"Unhandled exception: {e}"
#eval main4 -- Unhandled exception: can't divide by zero
/-!
Without the `liftIO` the `(toString ret)` expression would not compile with a similar error:
```
typeclass instance problem is stuck, it is often due to metavariables
ToString ?m.6007
```
So the general lesson is that if you see an error like this when using monads, check for
a missing `MonadLift`.
## Summary
Now that you know how to combine your monads together, you're almost done with understanding the key
concepts of monads! You could probably go out now and start writing some pretty nice code! But to
truly master monads, you should know how to make your own, and there's one final concept that you
should understand for that. This is the idea of type "laws". Each of the structures you've learned
so far has a series of laws associated with it. And for your instances of these classes to make
sense, they should follow the laws! Check out [Monad Laws](laws.lean.md).
-/

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@@ -1,108 +0,0 @@
# Namespaces
Lean provides us with the ability to group definitions into nested, hierarchical *namespaces*:
```lean
namespace Foo
def a : Nat := 5
def f (x : Nat) : Nat := x + 7
def fa : Nat := f a
def ffa : Nat := f (f a)
#check a
#check f
#check fa
#check ffa
#check Foo.fa
end Foo
-- #check a -- error
-- #check f -- error
#check Foo.a
#check Foo.f
#check Foo.fa
#check Foo.ffa
open Foo
#check a
#check f
#check fa
#check Foo.fa
```
When we declare that we are working in the namespace ``Foo``, every identifier we declare has
a full name with prefix "``Foo.``" Within the namespace, we can refer to identifiers
by their shorter names, but once we end the namespace, we have to use the longer names.
The ``open`` command brings the shorter names into the current context. Often, when we import a
module, we will want to open one or more of the namespaces it contains, to have access to the short identifiers.
But sometimes we will want to leave this information hidden, for example, when they conflict with
identifiers in another namespace we want to use. Thus namespaces give us a way to manage our working environment.
For example, Lean groups definitions and theorems involving lists into a namespace ``List``.
```lean
#check List.nil
#check List.cons
#check List.map
```
We will discuss their types, below. The command ``open List`` allows us to use the shorter names:
```lean
open List
#check nil
#check cons
#check map
```
Like sections, namespaces can be nested:
```lean
namespace Foo
def a : Nat := 5
def f (x : Nat) : Nat := x + 7
def fa : Nat := f a
namespace Bar
def ffa : Nat := f (f a)
#check fa
#check ffa
end Bar
#check fa
#check Bar.ffa
end Foo
#check Foo.fa
#check Foo.Bar.ffa
open Foo
#check fa
#check Bar.ffa
```
Namespaces that have been closed can later be reopened, even in another file:
```lean
namespace Foo
def a : Nat := 5
def f (x : Nat) : Nat := x + 7
def fa : Nat := f a
end Foo
#check Foo.a
#check Foo.f
namespace Foo
def ffa : Nat := f (f a)
end Foo
```
Like sections, nested namespaces have to be closed in the order they are opened.
Namespaces and sections serve different purposes: namespaces organize data and sections declare variables for insertion in definitions.
Sections are also useful for delimiting the scope of commands such as ``set_option`` and ``open``.
In many respects, however, a ``namespace ... end`` block behaves the same as a ``section ... end`` block.
In particular, if you use the ``variable`` command within a namespace, its scope is limited to the namespace.
Similarly, if you use an ``open`` command within a namespace, its effects disappear when the namespace is closed.

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# Natural numbers
The `Nat` type represents the natural numbers, i.e., arbitrary-precision unsigned integers.
There are no overflows.
```lean
#eval 100000000000000000 * 200000000000000000000 * 1000000000000000000000
```
A numeral is considered to be a `Nat` if there are no typing constraints.
```lean
#check 10 -- Nat
#check id 10 -- Nat
def f (x : Int) : Int :=
x - 1
#eval f (3 - 5) -- 3 and 5 are `Int` since `f` expects an `Int`.
-- -3
```
The operator `-` for `Nat` implements truncated subtraction.
```lean
#eval 10 - 5 -- 5
#eval 5 - 10 -- 0
theorem ex : 5 - 10 = 0 :=
rfl
#eval (5:Int) - 10 -- -5
```
The operator `/` for `Nat` implements Euclidean division.
```lean
#eval 10 / 4 -- 2
#check 10.0 / 4.0 -- Float
#eval 10.0 / 4.0 -- 2.5
```
As we described in the previous sections, we define the `Nat` type as an `inductive` datatype.
```lean
# namespace hidden
inductive Nat where
| zero : Nat
| succ : Nat Nat
# end hidden
```
However, the internal representation of `Nat` is optimized. Small natural numbers (i.e., < `2^63` in a 64-bit machine) are
represented by a single machine word. Big numbers are implemented using [GMP](https://gmplib.org/manual/) numbers.
We recommend you use fixed precision numeric types only in performance critical code.
The Lean kernel has builtin support for the `Nat` type too, and can efficiently reduce `Nat` expressions during type checking.
```lean
#reduce 100000000000000000 * 200000000000000000000 * 1000000000000000000000
theorem ex
: 1000000000000000 * 2000000000000000000 = 2000000000000000000000000000000000 :=
rfl
```
The sharp-eyed reader will notice that GMP is part of the Lean kernel trusted code base.
We believe this is not a problem because you can use external type checkers to double-check your developments,
and we consider GMP very trustworthy.
Existing external type checkers for Lean 3 (e.g., [Trepplein](https://github.com/gebner/trepplein) and [TC](https://github.com/leanprover/tc))
can be easily adapted to Lean 4.
If you are still concerned after checking your development with multiple different external checkers because
they may all rely on buggy arbitrary-precision libraries,
you can develop your own certified arbitrary-precision library and use it to implement your own type checker for Lean.

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@@ -1,78 +0,0 @@
# Notations and Precedence
The most basic syntax extension commands allow introducing new (or
overloading existing) prefix, infix, and postfix operators.
```lean
infixl:65 " + " => HAdd.hAdd -- left-associative
infix:50 " = " => Eq -- non-associative
infixr:80 " ^ " => HPow.hPow -- right-associative
prefix:75 "-" => Neg.neg
# set_option quotPrecheck false
postfix:max "⁻¹" => Inv.inv
```
After the initial command name describing the operator kind (its
"fixity"), we give the *parsing precedence* of the operator preceded
by a colon `:`, then a new or existing token surrounded by double
quotes (the whitespace is used for pretty printing), then the function
this operator should be translated to after the arrow `=>`.
The precedence is a natural number describing how "tightly" an
operator binds to its arguments, encoding the order of operations. We
can make this more precise by looking at what the commands above unfold to:
```lean
notation:65 lhs:65 " + " rhs:66 => HAdd.hAdd lhs rhs
notation:50 lhs:51 " = " rhs:51 => Eq lhs rhs
notation:80 lhs:81 " ^ " rhs:80 => HPow.hPow lhs rhs
notation:75 "-" arg:75 => Neg.neg arg
# set_option quotPrecheck false
notation:1024 arg:1024 "⁻¹" => Inv.inv arg -- `max` is a shorthand for precedence 1024
```
It turns out that all commands from the first code block are in fact
command *macros* translating to the more general `notation` command.
We will learn about writing such macros below. Instead of a single
token, the `notation` command accepts a mixed sequence of tokens and
named term placeholders with precedences, which can be referenced on
the right-hand side of `=>` and will be replaced by the respective
term parsed at that position. A placeholder with precedence `p`
accepts only notations with precedence at least `p` in that place.
Thus the string `a + b + c` cannot be parsed as the equivalent of `a +
(b + c)` because the right-hand side operand of an `infixl` notation
has precedence one greater than the notation itself. In contrast,
`infixr` reuses the notation's precedence for the right-hand side
operand, so `a ^ b ^ c` *can* be parsed as `a ^ (b ^ c)`. Note that if
we used `notation` directly to introduce an infix notation like
```lean
# set_option quotPrecheck false
notation:65 lhs:65 " ~ " rhs:65 => wobble lhs rhs
```
where the precedences do not sufficiently determine associativity,
Lean's parser will default to right associativity. More precisely,
Lean's parser follows a local *longest parse* rule in the presence of
ambiguous grammars: when parsing the right-hand side of `a ~` in `a ~
b ~ c`, it will continue parsing as long as possible (as the current
precedence allows), not stopping after `b` but parsing `~ c` as well.
Thus the term is equivalent to `a ~ (b ~ c)`.
As mentioned above, the `notation` command allows us to define
arbitrary *mixfix* syntax freely mixing tokens and placeholders.
```lean
# set_option quotPrecheck false
notation:max "(" e ")" => e
notation:10 Γ "" e " : " τ => Typing Γ e τ
```
Placeholders without precedence default to `0`, i.e. they accept
notations of any precedence in their place. If two notations overlap,
we again apply the longest parse rule:
```lean
notation:65 a " + " b:66 " + " c:66 => a + b - c
#eval 1 + 2 + 3 -- 0
```
The new notation is preferred to the binary notation since the latter,
before chaining, would stop parsing after `1 + 2`. If there are
multiple notations accepting the same longest parse, the choice will
be delayed until elaboration, which will fail unless exactly one
overload is type correct.

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# Option

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@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
# Organizational features
In this section we introduce some organizational features of Lean that are not a part of its kernel per se,
but make it possible to work in the framework more efficiently.

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@@ -5,14 +5,19 @@ See [Setup](./setup.md) for supported platforms and other ways to set up Lean 4.
1. Install [VS Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/).
1. Launch VS Code and install the `lean4` extension by clicking on the "Extensions" sidebar entry and searching for "lean4".
1. Launch VS Code and install the `Lean 4` extension by clicking on the 'Extensions' sidebar entry and searching for 'Lean 4'.
![installing the vscode-lean4 extension](images/code-ext.png)
![installing the vscode-lean4 extension](images/code-ext.png)
1. Open the Lean 4 setup guide by creating a new text file using "File > New Text File" (`Ctrl+N`), clicking on the ∀-symbol in the top right and selecting "Documentation… > Setup: Show Setup Guide".
1. Open the Lean 4 setup guide by creating a new text file using 'File > New Text File' (`Ctrl+N` / `Cmd+N`), clicking on the ∀-symbol in the top right and selecting 'Documentation… > Docs: Show Setup Guide'.
![show setup guide](images/show-setup-guide.png)
![show setup guide](images/show-setup-guide.png)
1. Follow the Lean 4 setup guide. It will walk you through learning resources for Lean 4, teach you how to set up Lean's dependencies on your platform, install Lean 4 for you at the click of a button and help you set up your first project.
1. Follow the Lean 4 setup guide. It will:
![setup guide](images/setup_guide.png)
- walk you through learning resources for Lean,
- teach you how to set up Lean's dependencies on your platform,
- install Lean 4 for you at the click of a button,
- help you set up your first project.
![setup guide](images/setup_guide.png)

3
doc/reference.md Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
# The Lean Reference Manual
The latest version of the Lean reference manual is available [here](https://lean-lang.org/doc/reference/latest).

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@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
# Variables and Sections
Consider the following three function definitions:
```lean
def compose (α β γ : Type) (g : β γ) (f : α β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
def doTwice (α : Type) (h : α α) (x : α) : α :=
h (h x)
def doThrice (α : Type) (h : α α) (x : α) : α :=
h (h (h x))
```
Lean provides us with the ``variable`` command to make such declarations look more compact:
```lean
variable (α β γ : Type)
def compose (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (x : α) : γ :=
g (f x)
def doTwice (h : αα) (x : α) : α :=
h (h x)
def doThrice (h : αα) (x : α) : α :=
h (h (h x))
```
We can declare variables of any type, not just ``Type`` itself:
```lean
variable (α β γ : Type)
variable (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (h : αα)
variable (x : α)
def compose := g (f x)
def doTwice := h (h x)
def doThrice := h (h (h x))
#print compose
#print doTwice
#print doThrice
```
Printing them out shows that all three groups of definitions have exactly the same effect.
The ``variable`` command instructs Lean to insert the declared variables as bound variables in definitions that refer to them.
Lean is smart enough to figure out which variables are used explicitly or implicitly in a definition. We can therefore proceed as
though ``α``, ``β``, ``γ``, ``g``, ``f``, ``h``, and ``x`` are fixed objects when we write our definitions, and let Lean abstract
the definitions for us automatically.
When declared in this way, a variable stays in scope until the end of the file we are working on.
Sometimes, however, it is useful to limit the scope of a variable. For that purpose, Lean provides the notion of a ``section``:
```lean
section useful
variable (α β γ : Type)
variable (g : β → γ) (f : α → β) (h : αα)
variable (x : α)
def compose := g (f x)
def doTwice := h (h x)
def doThrice := h (h (h x))
end useful
```
When the section is closed, the variables go out of scope, and become nothing more than a distant memory.
You do not have to indent the lines within a section. Nor do you have to name a section, which is to say,
you can use an anonymous ``section`` / ``end`` pair.
If you do name a section, however, you have to close it using the same name.
Sections can also be nested, which allows you to declare new variables incrementally.

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@@ -6,7 +6,8 @@ Platforms built & tested by our CI, available as binary releases via elan (see b
* x86-64 Linux with glibc 2.27+
* x86-64 macOS 10.15+
* x86-64 Windows 10+
* aarch64 (Apple Silicon) macOS 10.15+
* x86-64 Windows 11 (any version), Windows 10 (version 1903 or higher), Windows Server 2022
### Tier 2
@@ -16,7 +17,6 @@ Releases may be silently broken due to the lack of automated testing.
Issue reports and fixes are welcome.
* aarch64 Linux with glibc 2.27+
* aarch64 (Apple Silicon) macOS
* x86 (32-bit) Linux
* Emscripten Web Assembly

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
# Strings

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@@ -1,58 +0,0 @@
# String interpolation
The `s!` prefix identifies a string literal as an interpolated string.
An interpolated string is a string literal that might contain interpolation expressions.
When an interpolated string is resolved to a result string, items with interpolation expressions are
replaced by the string representations of the expression results. The polymorphic method `toString` is used
to convert the value into a string.
String interpolation provides a more readable and convenient syntax to create formatted strings than
a string composite formatting feature. The following example uses both features to produce the same output:
```lean
def name := "John"
def age := 28
#eval IO.println s!"Hello, {name}! Are you {age} years old?"
#eval IO.println ("Hello, " ++ name ++ "! Are you " ++ toString age ++ " years old?")
-- `println! <interpolated-string>` is a macro for `IO.println s!<interpolated-string>`
#eval println! "Hello, {name}! Are you {age} years old?"
```
# Structure of an interpolated string
To identify a string literal as an interpolated string, prepend it with `s!`.
Terms inside braces `{}` are ordinary expressions whose type implements the type class `ToString`.
To include a curly brace `{` in your interpolated string, you must escape it using `\{`.
You can nest interpolated strings inside interpolated strings.
```lean
def vals := [1, 2, 3]
#eval IO.println s!"\{ vals := {vals} }"
#eval IO.println s!"variables: {vals.map (fun i => s!"x_{i}")}"
```
# `ToString` instances
You can define a `ToString` instance for your own datatypes.
```lean
structure Person where
name : String
age : Nat
instance : ToString Person where
toString : Person -> String
| { name := n, age := v } => s!"\{ name := {n}, age := {v} }"
def person1 : Person := {
name := "John"
age := 28
}
#eval println! "person1: {person1}"
```

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@@ -1,227 +0,0 @@
# Structures
Structure is a special case of inductive datatype. It has only one constructor and is not recursive.
Similar to the `inductive` command, the `structure` command introduces a namespace with the same name.
The general form is as follows:
```
structure <name> <parameters> <parent-structures> where
<constructor-name> :: <fields>
```
Most parts are optional. Here is our first example.
```lean
structure Point (α : Type u) where
x : α
y : α
```
In the example above, the constructor name is not provided. So, the constructor is named `mk` by Lean.
Values of type ``Point`` are created using `Point.mk a b` or `{ x := a, y := b : Point α }`. The latter can be
written as `{ x := a, y := b }` when the expected type is known.
The fields of a point ``p`` are accessed using ``Point.x p`` and ``Point.y p``. You can also the more compact notation `p.x` and `p.y` as a shorthand
for `Point.x p` and `Point.y p`.
```lean
# structure Point (α : Type u) where
# x : α
# y : α
#check Point
#check Point -- Type u -> Type u
#check @Point.mk -- {α : Type u} → αα → Point α
#check @Point.x -- {α : Type u} → Point αα
#check @Point.y -- {α : Type u} → Point αα
#check Point.mk 10 20 -- Point Nat
#check { x := 10, y := 20 : Point Nat } -- Point Nat
def mkPoint (a : Nat) : Point Nat :=
{ x := a, y := a }
#eval (Point.mk 10 20).x -- 10
#eval (Point.mk 10 20).y -- 20
#eval { x := 10, y := 20 : Point Nat }.x -- 10
#eval { x := 10, y := 20 : Point Nat }.y -- 20
def addXY (p : Point Nat) : Nat :=
p.x + p.y
#eval addXY { x := 10, y := 20 } -- 30
```
In the notation `{ ... }`, if the fields are in different lines, the `,` is optional.
```lean
# structure Point (α : Type u) where
# x : α
# y : α
def mkPoint (a : Nat) : Point Nat := {
x := a
y := a
}
```
You can also use `where` instead of `:= { ... }`.
```lean
# structure Point (α : Type u) where
# x : α
# y : α
def mkPoint (a : Nat) : Point Nat where
x := a
y := a
```
Here are some simple theorems about our `Point` type.
```lean
# structure Point (α : Type u) where
# x : α
# y : α
theorem ex1 (a b : α) : (Point.mk a b).x = a :=
rfl
theorem ex2 (a b : α) : (Point.mk a b).y = b :=
rfl
theorem ex3 (a b : α) : Point.mk a b = { x := a, y := b } :=
rfl
```
The dot notation is convenient not just for accessing the projections of a structure,
but also for applying functions defined in a namespace with the same name.
If ``p`` has type ``Point``, the expression ``p.foo`` is interpreted as ``Point.foo p``,
assuming that the first argument to ``foo`` has type ``Point``.
The expression ``p.add q`` is therefore shorthand for ``Point.add p q`` in the example below.
```lean
structure Point (α : Type u) where
x : α
y : α
def Point.add (p q : Point Nat) : Point Nat :=
{ x := p.x + q.x, y := p.y + q.y }
def p : Point Nat := Point.mk 1 2
def q : Point Nat := Point.mk 3 4
#eval (p.add q).x -- 4
#eval (p.add q).y -- 6
```
After we introduce type classes, we show how to define a function like ``add`` so that
it works generically for elements of ``Point α`` rather than just ``Point Nat``,
assuming ``α`` has an associated addition operation.
More generally, given an expression ``p.foo x y z``, Lean will insert ``p`` at the first argument to ``foo`` of type ``Point``.
For example, with the definition of scalar multiplication below, ``p.smul 3`` is interpreted as ``Point.smul 3 p``.
```lean
structure Point (α : Type u) where
x : α
y : α
def Point.smul (n : Nat) (p : Point Nat) :=
Point.mk (n * p.x) (n * p.y)
def p : Point Nat :=
Point.mk 1 2
#eval (p.smul 3).x -- 3
#eval (p.smul 3).y -- 6
```
## Inheritance
We can *extend* existing structures by adding new fields. This feature allows us to simulate a form of *inheritance*.
```lean
structure Point (α : Type u) where
x : α
y : α
inductive Color where
| red
| green
| blue
structure ColorPoint (α : Type u) extends Point α where
color : Color
#check { x := 10, y := 20, color := Color.red : ColorPoint Nat }
-- { toPoint := { x := 10, y := 20 }, color := Color.red }
```
The output for the `check` command above suggests how Lean encoded inheritance and multiple inheritance.
Lean uses fields to each parent structure.
```lean
structure Foo where
x : Nat
y : Nat
structure Boo where
w : Nat
z : Nat
structure Bla extends Foo, Boo where
bit : Bool
#check Bla.mk -- Foo → Boo → Bool → Bla
#check Bla.mk { x := 10, y := 20 } { w := 30, z := 40 } true
#check { x := 10, y := 20, w := 30, z := 40, bit := true : Bla }
#check { toFoo := { x := 10, y := 20 },
toBoo := { w := 30, z := 40 },
bit := true : Bla }
theorem ex :
Bla.mk { x := x, y := y } { w := w, z := z } b
=
{ x := x, y := y, w := w, z := z, bit := b } :=
rfl
```
## Default field values
You can assign default value to fields when declaring a new structure.
```lean
inductive MessageSeverity
| error | warning
structure Message where
fileName : String
pos : Option Nat := none
severity : MessageSeverity := MessageSeverity.error
caption : String := ""
data : String
def msg1 : Message :=
{ fileName := "foo.lean", data := "failed to import file" }
#eval msg1.pos -- none
#eval msg1.fileName -- "foo.lean"
#eval msg1.caption -- ""
```
When extending a structure, you can not only add new fields, but provide new default values for existing fields.
```lean
# inductive MessageSeverity
# | error | warning
# structure Message where
# fileName : String
# pos : Option Nat := none
# severity : MessageSeverity := MessageSeverity.error
# caption : String := ""
# data : String
structure MessageExt extends Message where
timestamp : Nat
caption := "extended" -- new default value for field `caption`
def msg2 : MessageExt where
fileName := "bar.lean"
data := "error at initialization"
timestamp := 10
#eval msg2.fileName -- "bar.lean"
#eval msg2.timestamp -- 10
#eval msg2.caption -- "extended"
```
## Updating structure fields
Structure fields can be updated using `{ <struct-val> with <field> := <new-value>, ... }`:
```lean
# structure Point (α : Type u) where
# x : α
# y : α
def incrementX (p : Point Nat) : Point Nat := { p with x := p.x + 1 }
```

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@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
# Syntax Extensions
Lean's syntax can be extended and customized
by users at every level, ranging from [basic "mixfix" notations](./notation.md)
over [macro transformers](./macro_overview.md) to
[type-aware elaborators](./elaborators.md). In fact, all builtin syntax is parsed and
processed using the same mechanisms and APIs open to users. In this
section, we will describe and explain the various extension points.
Significant syntax extensions already builtin into Lean such as the
[`do` notation](./do.md) are described in subsections.
While introducing new syntax is a relatively rare feature in
programming languages and sometimes even frowned upon because of its
potential to obscure code, it is an invaluable tool in formalization
for expressing established conventions and notations of the respective
field succinctly in code. Going beyond basic notations, Lean's ability
to factor out common boilerplate code into (well-behaved) macros and
to embed entire custom domain specific languages (DSLs) to textually
encode subproblems efficiently and readably can be of great benefit to
both programmers and proof engineers alike.

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@@ -43,7 +43,8 @@ $ pdflatex test.tex
## Example with `minted`
First [install Pygments](https://pygments.org/download/). Then save [`lean4.py`](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/leanprover/lean4/master/doc/latex/lean4.py), which contains an version of the Lean highlighter updated for Lean 4, and the following sample LaTeX file `test.tex` into the same directory:
First [install Pygments](https://pygments.org/download/) (version 2.18 or newer).
Then save the following sample LaTeX file `test.tex` into the same directory:
```latex
\documentclass{article}
@@ -51,9 +52,8 @@ First [install Pygments](https://pygments.org/download/). Then save [`lean4.py`]
% switch to a monospace font supporting more Unicode characters
\setmonofont{FreeMono}
\usepackage{minted}
% instruct minted to use our local theorem.py
\newmintinline[lean]{lean4.py:Lean4Lexer -x}{bgcolor=white}
\newminted[leancode]{lean4.py:Lean4Lexer -x}{fontsize=\footnotesize}
\newmintinline[lean]{lean4}{bgcolor=white}
\newminted[leancode]{lean4}{fontsize=\footnotesize}
\usemintedstyle{tango} % a nice, colorful theme
\begin{document}
@@ -67,9 +67,6 @@ theorem funext {f₁ f₂ : ∀ (x : α), β x} (h : ∀ x, f₁ x = f₂ x) : f
\end{document}
```
If your version of `minted` is v2.7 or newer, but before v3.0,
you will additionally need to follow the workaround described in https://github.com/gpoore/minted/issues/360.
You can then compile `test.tex` by executing the following command:
```bash
@@ -81,11 +78,14 @@ Some remarks:
- either `xelatex` or `lualatex` is required to handle Unicode characters in the code.
- `--shell-escape` is needed to allow `xelatex` to execute `pygmentize` in a shell.
- If the chosen monospace font is missing some Unicode symbols, you can direct them to be displayed using a fallback font or other replacement LaTeX code.
``` latex
\usepackage{newunicodechar}
\newfontfamily{\freeserif}{DejaVu Sans}
\newunicodechar{✝}{\freeserif{✝}}
\newunicodechar{𝓞}{\ensuremath{\mathcal{O}}}
```
- minted has a "helpful" feature that draws red boxes around characters the chosen lexer doesn't recognize.
Since the Lean lexer cannot encompass all user-defined syntax, it is advisable to [work around](https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/343506/14563) this feature.
``` latex
\usepackage{newunicodechar}
\newfontfamily{\freeserif}{DejaVu Sans}
\newunicodechar{✝}{\freeserif{✝}}
\newunicodechar{𝓞}{\ensuremath{\mathcal{O}}}
```
- If you are using an old version of Pygments, you can copy
[`lean.py`](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pygments/pygments/master/pygments/lexers/lean.py) into your working directory,
and use `lean4.py:Lean4Lexer -x` instead of `lean4` above.
If your version of `minted` is v2.7 or newer, but before v3.0,
you will additionally need to follow the workaround described in https://github.com/gpoore/minted/issues/360.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
# Task

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