annotate src/StackMachine.v @ 278:e7ed2fddd29a

Some improvements to installation instructions, based on Mitch Wand's feedback
author Adam Chlipala <adam@chlipala.net>
date Fri, 01 Oct 2010 13:39:05 -0400
parents a57e75752c80
children fabbc71abd80
rev   line source
adamc@269 1 (* Copyright (c) 2008-2010, Adam Chlipala
adamc@2 2 *
adamc@2 3 * This work is licensed under a
adamc@2 4 * Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
adamc@2 5 * Unported License.
adamc@2 6 * The license text is available at:
adamc@2 7 * http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
adamc@2 8 *)
adamc@2 9
adamc@3 10 (* begin hide *)
adam@277 11 Require Import Arith Bool List.
adamc@2 12
adamc@2 13 Require Import Tactics.
adamc@14 14
adamc@14 15 Set Implicit Arguments.
adamc@3 16 (* end hide *)
adamc@2 17
adamc@2 18
adamc@25 19 (** %\chapter{Some Quick Examples}% *)
adamc@25 20
adamc@25 21
adam@278 22 (** I will start off by jumping right in to a fully-worked set of examples, building certified compilers from increasingly complicated source languages to stack machines. We will meet a few useful tactics and see how they can be used in manual proofs, and we will also see how easily these proofs can be automated instead. I assume that you have installed Coq and Proof General. The code in this book is tested with Coq version 8.2pl2, though parts may work with other versions.
adamc@9 23
adam@278 24 To set up your Proof General environment to process the source to this chapter, a few simple steps are required.
adamc@25 25
adam@278 26 %\begin{enumerate}%#<ol>#
adam@278 27
adam@278 28 %\item %#<li>#Get the book source from
adam@278 29 %\begin{center}\url{http://adam.chlipala.net/cpdt/cpdt.tgz}\end{center}%#<blockquote><tt><a href="http://adam.chlipala.net/cpdt/cpdt.tgz">http://adam.chlipala.net/cpdt/cpdt.tgz</a></tt></blockquote></li>#
adam@278 30
adam@278 31 %\item %#<li>#Unpack the tarball to some directory %\texttt{%#<tt>#DIR#</tt>#%}%.#</li>#
adam@278 32
adam@278 33 %\item %#<li>#Run %\texttt{%#<tt>#make#</tt>#%}% in %\texttt{%#<tt>#DIR#</tt>#%}%.#</li>#
adam@278 34
adam@278 35 %\item %#<li>#There are some minor headaches associated with getting Proof General to pass the proper command line arguments to the %\texttt{%#<tt>#coqtop#</tt>#%}% program, which provides the interactive Coq toplevel. The best way to add settings that will be shared by many source files is to add a custom variable setting to your %\texttt{%#<tt>#.emacs#</tt>#%}% file, like this:
adamc@25 36 %\begin{verbatim}%#<pre>#(custom-set-variables
adamc@25 37 ...
adam@278 38 '(coq-prog-args '("-I" "DIR/src"))
adamc@25 39 ...
adamc@25 40 )#</pre>#%\end{verbatim}%
adam@278 41 The extra arguments demonstrated here are the proper choices for working with the code for this book. The ellipses stand for other Emacs customization settings you may already have. It can be helpful to save several alternate sets of flags in your %\texttt{%#<tt>#.emacs#</tt>#%}% file, with all but one commented out within the %\texttt{%#<tt>#custom-set-variables#</tt>#%}% block at any given time.#</li>#
adam@278 42
adam@278 43 #</ol>#%\end{enumerate}%
adam@278 44
adam@278 45 As always, you can step through the source file %\texttt{%#<tt>#StackMachine.v#</tt>#%}% for this chapter interactively in Proof General. Alternatively, to get a feel for the whole lifecycle of creating a Coq development, you can enter the pieces of source code in this chapter in a new %\texttt{%#<tt>#.v#</tt>#%}% file in an Emacs buffer. If you do the latter, include two lines [Require Import Arith Bool List Tactics.] and [Set Implicit Arguments.] at the start of the file, to match some code hidden in this rendering of the chapter source, and be sure to run the Coq binary %\texttt{%#<tt>#coqtop#</tt>#%}% with the command-line argument %\texttt{%#<tt>#-I DIR/src#</tt>#%}%. If you have installed Proof General properly, it should start automatically when you visit a %\texttt{%#<tt>#.v#</tt>#%}% buffer in Emacs.
adamc@11 46
adamc@11 47 With Proof General, the portion of a buffer that Coq has processed is highlighted in some way, like being given a blue background. You step through Coq source files by positioning the point at the position you want Coq to run to and pressing C-C C-RET. This can be used both for normal step-by-step coding, by placing the point inside some command past the end of the highlighted region; and for undoing, by placing the point inside the highlighted region. *)
adamc@9 48
adamc@9 49
adamc@20 50 (** * Arithmetic Expressions Over Natural Numbers *)
adamc@2 51
adamc@40 52 (** We will begin with that staple of compiler textbooks, arithmetic expressions over a single type of numbers. *)
adamc@9 53
adamc@20 54 (** ** Source Language *)
adamc@9 55
adamc@9 56 (** We begin with the syntax of the source language. *)
adamc@2 57
adamc@4 58 Inductive binop : Set := Plus | Times.
adamc@2 59
adamc@9 60 (** Our first line of Coq code should be unsurprising to ML and Haskell programmers. We define an algebraic datatype [binop] to stand for the binary operators of our source language. There are just two wrinkles compared to ML and Haskell. First, we use the keyword [Inductive], in place of %\texttt{%#<tt>#data#</tt>#%}%, %\texttt{%#<tt>#datatype#</tt>#%}%, or %\texttt{%#<tt>#type#</tt>#%}%. This is not just a trivial surface syntax difference; inductive types in Coq are much more expressive than garden variety algebraic datatypes, essentially enabling us to encode all of mathematics, though we begin humbly in this chapter. Second, there is the [: Set] fragment, which declares that we are defining a datatype that should be thought of as a constituent of programs. Later, we will see other options for defining datatypes in the universe of proofs or in an infinite hierarchy of universes, encompassing both programs and proofs, that is useful in higher-order constructions. *)
adamc@9 61
adamc@4 62 Inductive exp : Set :=
adamc@4 63 | Const : nat -> exp
adamc@4 64 | Binop : binop -> exp -> exp -> exp.
adamc@2 65
adamc@9 66 (** Now we define the type of arithmetic expressions. We write that a constant may be built from one argument, a natural number; and a binary operation may be built from a choice of operator and two operand expressions.
adamc@9 67
adam@277 68 A note for readers following along in the PDF version: coqdoc supports pretty-printing of tokens in LaTeX or HTML. Where you see a right arrow character, the source contains the ASCII text %\texttt{%#<tt>#->#</tt>#%}%. Other examples of this substitution appearing in this chapter are a double right arrow for %\texttt{%#<tt>#=>#</tt>#%}%, the inverted 'A' symbol for %\texttt{%#<tt>#forall#</tt>#%}%, and the Cartesian product 'X' for %\texttt{%#<tt>#*#</tt>#%}%. When in doubt about the ASCII version of a symbol, you can consult the chapter source code.
adamc@9 69
adamc@9 70 %\medskip%
adamc@9 71
adamc@9 72 Now we are ready to say what these programs mean. We will do this by writing an interpreter that can be thought of as a trivial operational or denotational semantics. (If you are not familiar with these semantic techniques, no need to worry; we will stick to "common sense" constructions.) *)
adamc@9 73
adamc@4 74 Definition binopDenote (b : binop) : nat -> nat -> nat :=
adamc@4 75 match b with
adamc@4 76 | Plus => plus
adamc@4 77 | Times => mult
adamc@4 78 end.
adamc@2 79
adamc@9 80 (** The meaning of a binary operator is a binary function over naturals, defined with pattern-matching notation analogous to the %\texttt{%#<tt>#case#</tt>#%}% and %\texttt{%#<tt>#match#</tt>#%}% of ML and Haskell, and referring to the functions [plus] and [mult] from the Coq standard library. The keyword [Definition] is Coq's all-purpose notation for binding a term of the programming language to a name, with some associated syntactic sugar, like the notation we see here for defining a function. That sugar could be expanded to yield this definition:
adamc@9 81
adamc@9 82 [[
adamc@9 83 Definition binopDenote : binop -> nat -> nat -> nat := fun (b : binop) =>
adamc@9 84 match b with
adamc@9 85 | Plus => plus
adamc@9 86 | Times => mult
adamc@9 87 end.
adamc@9 88
adamc@205 89 ]]
adamc@205 90
adamc@9 91 In this example, we could also omit all of the type annotations, arriving at:
adamc@9 92
adamc@9 93 [[
adamc@9 94 Definition binopDenote := fun b =>
adamc@9 95 match b with
adamc@9 96 | Plus => plus
adamc@9 97 | Times => mult
adamc@9 98 end.
adamc@9 99
adamc@205 100 ]]
adamc@205 101
adamc@9 102 Languages like Haskell and ML have a convenient %\textit{%#<i>#principal typing#</i>#%}% property, which gives us strong guarantees about how effective type inference will be. Unfortunately, Coq's type system is so expressive that any kind of "complete" type inference is impossible, and the task even seems to be hard heuristically in practice. Nonetheless, Coq includes some very helpful heuristics, many of them copying the workings of Haskell and ML type-checkers for programs that fall in simple fragments of Coq's language.
adamc@9 103
adamc@9 104 This is as good a time as any to mention the preponderance of different languages associated with Coq. The theoretical foundation of Coq is a formal system called the %\textit{%#<i>#Calculus of Inductive Constructions (CIC)#</i>#%}%, which is an extension of the older %\textit{%#<i>#Calculus of Constructions (CoC)#</i>#%}%. CIC is quite a spartan foundation, which is helpful for proving metatheory but not so helpful for real development. Still, it is nice to know that it has been proved that CIC enjoys properties like %\textit{%#<i>#strong normalization#</i>#%}%, meaning that every program (and, more importantly, every proof term) terminates; and %\textit{%#<i>#relative consistency#</i>#%}% with systems like versions of Zermelo Fraenkel set theory, which roughly means that you can believe that Coq proofs mean that the corresponding propositions are "really true," if you believe in set theory.
adamc@9 105
adamc@40 106 Coq is actually based on an extension of CIC called %\textit{%#<i>#Gallina#</i>#%}%. The text after the [:=] and before the period in the last code example is a term of Gallina. Gallina adds many useful features that are not compiled internally to more primitive CIC features. The important metatheorems about CIC have not been extended to the full breadth of these features, but most Coq users do not seem to lose much sleep over this omission.
adamc@9 107
adamc@9 108 Commands like [Inductive] and [Definition] are part of %\textit{%#<i>#the vernacular#</i>#%}%, which includes all sorts of useful queries and requests to the Coq system.
adamc@9 109
adamc@9 110 Finally, there is %\textit{%#<i>#Ltac#</i>#%}%, Coq's domain-specific language for writing proofs and decision procedures. We will see some basic examples of Ltac later in this chapter, and much of this book is devoted to more involved Ltac examples.
adamc@9 111
adamc@9 112 %\medskip%
adamc@9 113
adamc@9 114 We can give a simple definition of the meaning of an expression: *)
adamc@9 115
adamc@4 116 Fixpoint expDenote (e : exp) : nat :=
adamc@4 117 match e with
adamc@4 118 | Const n => n
adamc@4 119 | Binop b e1 e2 => (binopDenote b) (expDenote e1) (expDenote e2)
adamc@4 120 end.
adamc@2 121
adamc@9 122 (** We declare explicitly that this is a recursive definition, using the keyword [Fixpoint]. The rest should be old hat for functional programmers. *)
adamc@2 123
adamc@16 124 (** It is convenient to be able to test definitions before starting to prove things about them. We can verify that our semantics is sensible by evaluating some sample uses. *)
adamc@16 125
adamc@16 126 Eval simpl in expDenote (Const 42).
adamc@205 127 (** [= 42 : nat] *)
adamc@205 128
adamc@16 129 Eval simpl in expDenote (Binop Plus (Const 2) (Const 2)).
adamc@205 130 (** [= 4 : nat] *)
adamc@205 131
adamc@16 132 Eval simpl in expDenote (Binop Times (Binop Plus (Const 2) (Const 2)) (Const 7)).
adamc@205 133 (** [= 28 : nat] *)
adamc@9 134
adamc@20 135 (** ** Target Language *)
adamc@4 136
adamc@10 137 (** We will compile our source programs onto a simple stack machine, whose syntax is: *)
adamc@2 138
adamc@4 139 Inductive instr : Set :=
adamc@4 140 | IConst : nat -> instr
adamc@4 141 | IBinop : binop -> instr.
adamc@2 142
adamc@4 143 Definition prog := list instr.
adamc@4 144 Definition stack := list nat.
adamc@2 145
adamc@10 146 (** An instruction either pushes a constant onto the stack or pops two arguments, applies a binary operator to them, and pushes the result onto the stack. A program is a list of instructions, and a stack is a list of natural numbers.
adamc@10 147
adamc@10 148 We can give instructions meanings as functions from stacks to optional stacks, where running an instruction results in [None] in case of a stack underflow and results in [Some s'] when the result of execution is the new stack [s']. [::] is the "list cons" operator from the Coq standard library. *)
adamc@10 149
adamc@4 150 Definition instrDenote (i : instr) (s : stack) : option stack :=
adamc@4 151 match i with
adamc@4 152 | IConst n => Some (n :: s)
adamc@4 153 | IBinop b =>
adamc@4 154 match s with
adamc@4 155 | arg1 :: arg2 :: s' => Some ((binopDenote b) arg1 arg2 :: s')
adamc@4 156 | _ => None
adamc@4 157 end
adamc@4 158 end.
adamc@2 159
adamc@206 160 (** With [instrDenote] defined, it is easy to define a function [progDenote], which iterates application of [instrDenote] through a whole program.
adamc@10 161
adamc@206 162 [[
adamc@4 163 Fixpoint progDenote (p : prog) (s : stack) {struct p} : option stack :=
adamc@4 164 match p with
adamc@4 165 | nil => Some s
adamc@4 166 | i :: p' =>
adamc@4 167 match instrDenote i s with
adamc@4 168 | None => None
adamc@4 169 | Some s' => progDenote p' s'
adamc@4 170 end
adamc@4 171 end.
adamc@2 172
adamc@206 173 ]]
adamc@206 174
adamc@206 175 There is one interesting difference compared to our previous example of a [Fixpoint]. This recursive function takes two arguments, [p] and [s]. It is critical for the soundness of Coq that every program terminate, so a shallow syntactic termination check is imposed on every recursive function definition. One of the function parameters must be designated to decrease monotonically across recursive calls. That is, every recursive call must use a version of that argument that has been pulled out of the current argument by some number of [match] expressions. [expDenote] has only one argument, so we did not need to specify which of its arguments decreases. For [progDenote], we resolve the ambiguity by writing [{struct p}] to indicate that argument [p] decreases structurally.
adamc@206 176
adamc@206 177 Recent versions of Coq will also infer a termination argument, so that we may write simply: *)
adamc@206 178
adamc@206 179 Fixpoint progDenote (p : prog) (s : stack) : option stack :=
adamc@206 180 match p with
adamc@206 181 | nil => Some s
adamc@206 182 | i :: p' =>
adamc@206 183 match instrDenote i s with
adamc@206 184 | None => None
adamc@206 185 | Some s' => progDenote p' s'
adamc@206 186 end
adamc@206 187 end.
adamc@2 188
adamc@4 189
adamc@9 190 (** ** Translation *)
adamc@4 191
adamc@10 192 (** Our compiler itself is now unsurprising. [++] is the list concatenation operator from the Coq standard library. *)
adamc@2 193
adamc@4 194 Fixpoint compile (e : exp) : prog :=
adamc@4 195 match e with
adamc@4 196 | Const n => IConst n :: nil
adamc@4 197 | Binop b e1 e2 => compile e2 ++ compile e1 ++ IBinop b :: nil
adamc@4 198 end.
adamc@2 199
adamc@2 200
adamc@16 201 (** Before we set about proving that this compiler is correct, we can try a few test runs, using our sample programs from earlier. *)
adamc@16 202
adamc@16 203 Eval simpl in compile (Const 42).
adamc@206 204 (** [= IConst 42 :: nil : prog] *)
adamc@206 205
adamc@16 206 Eval simpl in compile (Binop Plus (Const 2) (Const 2)).
adamc@206 207 (** [= IConst 2 :: IConst 2 :: IBinop Plus :: nil : prog] *)
adamc@206 208
adamc@16 209 Eval simpl in compile (Binop Times (Binop Plus (Const 2) (Const 2)) (Const 7)).
adamc@206 210 (** [= IConst 7 :: IConst 2 :: IConst 2 :: IBinop Plus :: IBinop Times :: nil : prog] *)
adamc@16 211
adamc@40 212 (** We can also run our compiled programs and check that they give the right results. *)
adamc@16 213
adamc@16 214 Eval simpl in progDenote (compile (Const 42)) nil.
adamc@206 215 (** [= Some (42 :: nil) : option stack] *)
adamc@206 216
adamc@16 217 Eval simpl in progDenote (compile (Binop Plus (Const 2) (Const 2))) nil.
adamc@206 218 (** [= Some (4 :: nil) : option stack] *)
adamc@206 219
adamc@16 220 Eval simpl in progDenote (compile (Binop Times (Binop Plus (Const 2) (Const 2)) (Const 7))) nil.
adamc@206 221 (** [= Some (28 :: nil) : option stack] *)
adamc@16 222
adamc@16 223
adamc@20 224 (** ** Translation Correctness *)
adamc@4 225
adamc@11 226 (** We are ready to prove that our compiler is implemented correctly. We can use a new vernacular command [Theorem] to start a correctness proof, in terms of the semantics we defined earlier: *)
adamc@11 227
adamc@26 228 Theorem compile_correct : forall e, progDenote (compile e) nil = Some (expDenote e :: nil).
adamc@11 229 (* begin hide *)
adamc@11 230 Abort.
adamc@11 231 (* end hide *)
adamc@22 232 (* begin thide *)
adamc@11 233
adamc@11 234 (** Though a pencil-and-paper proof might clock out at this point, writing "by a routine induction on [e]," it turns out not to make sense to attack this proof directly. We need to use the standard trick of %\textit{%#<i>#strengthening the induction hypothesis#</i>#%}%. We do that by proving an auxiliary lemma:
adamc@11 235 *)
adamc@2 236
adamc@206 237 Lemma compile_correct' : forall e p s,
adamc@206 238 progDenote (compile e ++ p) s = progDenote p (expDenote e :: s).
adamc@11 239
adamc@11 240 (** After the period in the [Lemma] command, we are in %\textit{%#<i>#the interactive proof-editing mode#</i>#%}%. We find ourselves staring at this ominous screen of text:
adamc@11 241
adamc@11 242 [[
adamc@11 243 1 subgoal
adamc@11 244
adamc@11 245 ============================
adamc@15 246 forall (e : exp) (p : list instr) (s : stack),
adamc@15 247 progDenote (compile e ++ p) s = progDenote p (expDenote e :: s)
adamc@206 248
adamc@11 249 ]]
adamc@11 250
adamc@11 251 Coq seems to be restating the lemma for us. What we are seeing is a limited case of a more general protocol for describing where we are in a proof. We are told that we have a single subgoal. In general, during a proof, we can have many pending subgoals, each of which is a logical proposition to prove. Subgoals can be proved in any order, but it usually works best to prove them in the order that Coq chooses.
adamc@11 252
adamc@11 253 Next in the output, we see our single subgoal described in full detail. There is a double-dashed line, above which would be our free variables and hypotheses, if we had any. Below the line is the conclusion, which, in general, is to be proved from the hypotheses.
adamc@11 254
adamc@11 255 We manipulate the proof state by running commands called %\textit{%#<i>#tactics#</i>#%}%. Let us start out by running one of the most important tactics:
adamc@11 256 *)
adamc@11 257
adamc@4 258 induction e.
adamc@2 259
adamc@11 260 (** We declare that this proof will proceed by induction on the structure of the expression [e]. This swaps out our initial subgoal for two new subgoals, one for each case of the inductive proof:
adamc@11 261
adamc@11 262 [[
adamc@11 263 2 subgoals
adamc@11 264
adamc@11 265 n : nat
adamc@11 266 ============================
adamc@11 267 forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 268 progDenote (compile (Const n) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 269 progDenote p (expDenote (Const n) :: s)
adamc@11 270 ]]
adamc@11 271 [[
adamc@11 272 subgoal 2 is:
adamc@11 273 forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 274 progDenote (compile (Binop b e1 e2) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 275 progDenote p (expDenote (Binop b e1 e2) :: s)
adamc@206 276
adamc@11 277 ]]
adamc@11 278
adamc@11 279 The first and current subgoal is displayed with the double-dashed line below free variables and hypotheses, while later subgoals are only summarized with their conclusions. We see an example of a free variable in the first subgoal; [n] is a free variable of type [nat]. The conclusion is the original theorem statement where [e] has been replaced by [Const n]. In a similar manner, the second case has [e] replaced by a generalized invocation of the [Binop] expression constructor. We can see that proving both cases corresponds to a standard proof by structural induction.
adamc@11 280
adamc@11 281 We begin the first case with another very common tactic.
adamc@11 282 *)
adamc@11 283
adamc@4 284 intros.
adamc@11 285
adamc@11 286 (** The current subgoal changes to:
adamc@11 287 [[
adamc@11 288
adamc@11 289 n : nat
adamc@11 290 s : stack
adamc@11 291 p : list instr
adamc@11 292 ============================
adamc@11 293 progDenote (compile (Const n) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 294 progDenote p (expDenote (Const n) :: s)
adamc@206 295
adamc@11 296 ]]
adamc@11 297
adamc@11 298 We see that [intros] changes [forall]-bound variables at the beginning of a goal into free variables.
adamc@11 299
adamc@11 300 To progress further, we need to use the definitions of some of the functions appearing in the goal. The [unfold] tactic replaces an identifier with its definition.
adamc@11 301 *)
adamc@11 302
adamc@4 303 unfold compile.
adamc@11 304 (** [[
adamc@11 305 n : nat
adamc@11 306 s : stack
adamc@11 307 p : list instr
adamc@11 308 ============================
adamc@11 309 progDenote ((IConst n :: nil) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 310 progDenote p (expDenote (Const n) :: s)
adamc@206 311
adamc@11 312 ]] *)
adamc@11 313
adamc@4 314 unfold expDenote.
adamc@11 315 (** [[
adamc@11 316 n : nat
adamc@11 317 s : stack
adamc@11 318 p : list instr
adamc@11 319 ============================
adamc@11 320 progDenote ((IConst n :: nil) ++ p) s = progDenote p (n :: s)
adamc@206 321
adamc@11 322 ]]
adamc@11 323
adamc@11 324 We only need to unfold the first occurrence of [progDenote] to prove the goal: *)
adamc@11 325
adamc@11 326 unfold progDenote at 1.
adamc@11 327
adamc@11 328 (** [[
adamc@11 329
adamc@11 330 n : nat
adamc@11 331 s : stack
adamc@11 332 p : list instr
adamc@11 333 ============================
adamc@11 334 (fix progDenote (p0 : prog) (s0 : stack) {struct p0} :
adamc@11 335 option stack :=
adamc@11 336 match p0 with
adamc@11 337 | nil => Some s0
adamc@11 338 | i :: p' =>
adamc@11 339 match instrDenote i s0 with
adamc@11 340 | Some s' => progDenote p' s'
adamc@11 341 | None => None (A:=stack)
adamc@11 342 end
adamc@11 343 end) ((IConst n :: nil) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 344 progDenote p (n :: s)
adamc@206 345
adamc@11 346 ]]
adamc@11 347
adamc@11 348 This last [unfold] has left us with an anonymous fixpoint version of [progDenote], which will generally happen when unfolding recursive definitions. Fortunately, in this case, we can eliminate such complications right away, since the structure of the argument [(IConst n :: nil) ++ p] is known, allowing us to simplify the internal pattern match with the [simpl] tactic:
adamc@11 349 *)
adamc@11 350
adamc@4 351 simpl.
adamc@11 352 (** [[
adamc@11 353 n : nat
adamc@11 354 s : stack
adamc@11 355 p : list instr
adamc@11 356 ============================
adamc@11 357 (fix progDenote (p0 : prog) (s0 : stack) {struct p0} :
adamc@11 358 option stack :=
adamc@11 359 match p0 with
adamc@11 360 | nil => Some s0
adamc@11 361 | i :: p' =>
adamc@11 362 match instrDenote i s0 with
adamc@11 363 | Some s' => progDenote p' s'
adamc@11 364 | None => None (A:=stack)
adamc@11 365 end
adamc@11 366 end) p (n :: s) = progDenote p (n :: s)
adamc@206 367
adamc@11 368 ]]
adamc@11 369
adamc@11 370 Now we can unexpand the definition of [progDenote]:
adamc@11 371 *)
adamc@11 372
adamc@11 373 fold progDenote.
adamc@11 374
adamc@11 375 (** [[
adamc@11 376
adamc@11 377 n : nat
adamc@11 378 s : stack
adamc@11 379 p : list instr
adamc@11 380 ============================
adamc@11 381 progDenote p (n :: s) = progDenote p (n :: s)
adamc@206 382
adamc@11 383 ]]
adamc@11 384
adamc@11 385 It looks like we are at the end of this case, since we have a trivial equality. Indeed, a single tactic finishes us off:
adamc@11 386 *)
adamc@11 387
adamc@4 388 reflexivity.
adamc@2 389
adamc@11 390 (** On to the second inductive case:
adamc@11 391
adamc@11 392 [[
adamc@11 393 b : binop
adamc@11 394 e1 : exp
adamc@11 395 IHe1 : forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 396 progDenote (compile e1 ++ p) s = progDenote p (expDenote e1 :: s)
adamc@11 397 e2 : exp
adamc@11 398 IHe2 : forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 399 progDenote (compile e2 ++ p) s = progDenote p (expDenote e2 :: s)
adamc@11 400 ============================
adamc@11 401 forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 402 progDenote (compile (Binop b e1 e2) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 403 progDenote p (expDenote (Binop b e1 e2) :: s)
adamc@206 404
adamc@11 405 ]]
adamc@11 406
adamc@11 407 We see our first example of hypotheses above the double-dashed line. They are the inductive hypotheses [IHe1] and [IHe2] corresponding to the subterms [e1] and [e2], respectively.
adamc@11 408
adamc@11 409 We start out the same way as before, introducing new free variables and unfolding and folding the appropriate definitions. The seemingly frivolous [unfold]/[fold] pairs are actually accomplishing useful work, because [unfold] will sometimes perform easy simplifications. *)
adamc@11 410
adamc@4 411 intros.
adamc@4 412 unfold compile.
adamc@4 413 fold compile.
adamc@4 414 unfold expDenote.
adamc@4 415 fold expDenote.
adamc@11 416
adamc@44 417 (** Now we arrive at a point where the tactics we have seen so far are insufficient. No further definition unfoldings get us anywhere, so we will need to try something different.
adamc@11 418
adamc@11 419 [[
adamc@11 420 b : binop
adamc@11 421 e1 : exp
adamc@11 422 IHe1 : forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 423 progDenote (compile e1 ++ p) s = progDenote p (expDenote e1 :: s)
adamc@11 424 e2 : exp
adamc@11 425 IHe2 : forall (s : stack) (p : list instr),
adamc@11 426 progDenote (compile e2 ++ p) s = progDenote p (expDenote e2 :: s)
adamc@11 427 s : stack
adamc@11 428 p : list instr
adamc@11 429 ============================
adamc@11 430 progDenote ((compile e2 ++ compile e1 ++ IBinop b :: nil) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 431 progDenote p (binopDenote b (expDenote e1) (expDenote e2) :: s)
adamc@206 432
adamc@11 433 ]]
adamc@11 434
adam@277 435 What we need is the associative law of list concatenation, which is available as a theorem [app_ass] in the standard library. *)
adamc@11 436
adamc@11 437 Check app_ass.
adamc@11 438 (** [[
adamc@11 439 app_ass
adamc@11 440 : forall (A : Type) (l m n : list A), (l ++ m) ++ n = l ++ m ++ n
adamc@206 441
adamc@11 442 ]]
adamc@11 443
adam@277 444 If we did not already know the name of the theorem, we could use the [SearchRewrite] command to find it, based on a pattern that we would like to rewrite: *)
adam@277 445
adam@277 446 SearchRewrite ((_ ++ _) ++ _).
adam@277 447 (** [[
adam@277 448 app_ass: forall (A : Type) (l m n : list A), (l ++ m) ++ n = l ++ m ++ n
adam@277 449 ass_app: forall (A : Type) (l m n : list A), l ++ m ++ n = (l ++ m) ++ n
adam@277 450
adam@277 451 ]]
adam@277 452
adamc@11 453 We use it to perform a rewrite: *)
adamc@11 454
adamc@4 455 rewrite app_ass.
adamc@11 456
adamc@206 457 (** changing the conclusion to:
adamc@11 458
adamc@206 459 [[
adamc@11 460 progDenote (compile e2 ++ (compile e1 ++ IBinop b :: nil) ++ p) s =
adamc@11 461 progDenote p (binopDenote b (expDenote e1) (expDenote e2) :: s)
adamc@206 462
adamc@11 463 ]]
adamc@11 464
adamc@11 465 Now we can notice that the lefthand side of the equality matches the lefthand side of the second inductive hypothesis, so we can rewrite with that hypothesis, too: *)
adamc@11 466
adamc@4 467 rewrite IHe2.
adamc@11 468 (** [[
adamc@11 469 progDenote ((compile e1 ++ IBinop b :: nil) ++ p) (expDenote e2 :: s) =
adamc@11 470 progDenote p (binopDenote b (expDenote e1) (expDenote e2) :: s)
adamc@206 471
adamc@11 472 ]]
adamc@11 473
adamc@11 474 The same process lets us apply the remaining hypothesis. *)
adamc@11 475
adamc@4 476 rewrite app_ass.
adamc@4 477 rewrite IHe1.
adamc@11 478 (** [[
adamc@11 479 progDenote ((IBinop b :: nil) ++ p) (expDenote e1 :: expDenote e2 :: s) =
adamc@11 480 progDenote p (binopDenote b (expDenote e1) (expDenote e2) :: s)
adamc@206 481
adamc@11 482 ]]
adamc@11 483
adamc@11 484 Now we can apply a similar sequence of tactics to that that ended the proof of the first case.
adamc@11 485 *)
adamc@11 486
adamc@11 487 unfold progDenote at 1.
adamc@4 488 simpl.
adamc@11 489 fold progDenote.
adamc@4 490 reflexivity.
adamc@11 491
adamc@11 492 (** And the proof is completed, as indicated by the message:
adamc@11 493
adamc@11 494 [[
adamc@11 495 Proof completed.
adamc@11 496
adamc@205 497 ]]
adamc@205 498
adamc@11 499 And there lies our first proof. Already, even for simple theorems like this, the final proof script is unstructured and not very enlightening to readers. If we extend this approach to more serious theorems, we arrive at the unreadable proof scripts that are the favorite complaints of opponents of tactic-based proving. Fortunately, Coq has rich support for scripted automation, and we can take advantage of such a scripted tactic (defined elsewhere) to make short work of this lemma. We abort the old proof attempt and start again.
adamc@11 500 *)
adamc@11 501
adamc@4 502 Abort.
adamc@2 503
adamc@26 504 Lemma compile_correct' : forall e s p, progDenote (compile e ++ p) s =
adamc@4 505 progDenote p (expDenote e :: s).
adamc@4 506 induction e; crush.
adamc@4 507 Qed.
adamc@2 508
adamc@11 509 (** We need only to state the basic inductive proof scheme and call a tactic that automates the tedious reasoning in between. In contrast to the period tactic terminator from our last proof, the semicolon tactic separator supports structured, compositional proofs. The tactic [t1; t2] has the effect of running [t1] and then running [t2] on each remaining subgoal. The semicolon is one of the most fundamental building blocks of effective proof automation. The period terminator is very useful for exploratory proving, where you need to see intermediate proof states, but final proofs of any serious complexity should have just one period, terminating a single compound tactic that probably uses semicolons.
adamc@11 510
adamc@210 511 The [crush] tactic comes from the library associated with this book and is not part of the Coq standard library. The book's library contains a number of other tactics that are especially helpful in highly-automated proofs.
adamc@210 512
adamc@11 513 The proof of our main theorem is now easy. We prove it with four period-terminated tactics, though separating them with semicolons would work as well; the version here is easier to step through. *)
adamc@11 514
adamc@26 515 Theorem compile_correct : forall e, progDenote (compile e) nil = Some (expDenote e :: nil).
adamc@11 516 intros.
adamc@11 517 (** [[
adamc@11 518 e : exp
adamc@11 519 ============================
adamc@11 520 progDenote (compile e) nil = Some (expDenote e :: nil)
adamc@206 521
adamc@11 522 ]]
adamc@11 523
adamc@26 524 At this point, we want to massage the lefthand side to match the statement of [compile_correct']. A theorem from the standard library is useful: *)
adamc@11 525
adamc@11 526 Check app_nil_end.
adamc@11 527 (** [[
adamc@11 528 app_nil_end
adamc@11 529 : forall (A : Type) (l : list A), l = l ++ nil
adamc@11 530 ]] *)
adamc@11 531
adamc@4 532 rewrite (app_nil_end (compile e)).
adamc@11 533
adamc@11 534 (** This time, we explicitly specify the value of the variable [l] from the theorem statement, since multiple expressions of list type appear in the conclusion. [rewrite] might choose the wrong place to rewrite if we did not specify which we want.
adamc@11 535
adamc@11 536 [[
adamc@11 537 e : exp
adamc@11 538 ============================
adamc@11 539 progDenote (compile e ++ nil) nil = Some (expDenote e :: nil)
adamc@206 540
adamc@11 541 ]]
adamc@11 542
adamc@11 543 Now we can apply the lemma. *)
adamc@11 544
adamc@26 545 rewrite compile_correct'.
adamc@11 546 (** [[
adamc@11 547 e : exp
adamc@11 548 ============================
adamc@11 549 progDenote nil (expDenote e :: nil) = Some (expDenote e :: nil)
adamc@206 550
adamc@11 551 ]]
adamc@11 552
adamc@11 553 We are almost done. The lefthand and righthand sides can be seen to match by simple symbolic evaluation. That means we are in luck, because Coq identifies any pair of terms as equal whenever they normalize to the same result by symbolic evaluation. By the definition of [progDenote], that is the case here, but we do not need to worry about such details. A simple invocation of [reflexivity] does the normalization and checks that the two results are syntactically equal. *)
adamc@11 554
adamc@4 555 reflexivity.
adamc@4 556 Qed.
adamc@22 557 (* end thide *)
adamc@14 558
adamc@14 559
adamc@20 560 (** * Typed Expressions *)
adamc@14 561
adamc@14 562 (** In this section, we will build on the initial example by adding additional expression forms that depend on static typing of terms for safety. *)
adamc@14 563
adamc@20 564 (** ** Source Language *)
adamc@14 565
adamc@15 566 (** We define a trivial language of types to classify our expressions: *)
adamc@15 567
adamc@14 568 Inductive type : Set := Nat | Bool.
adamc@14 569
adam@277 570 (** Like most programming languages, Coq uses case-sensitive variable names, so that our user-defined type [type] is distinct from the [Type] keyword that we have already seen appear in the statement of a polymorphic theorem (and that we will meet in more detail later), and our constructor names [Nat] and [Bool] are distinct from the types [nat] and [bool] in the standard library.
adam@277 571
adam@277 572 Now we define an expanded set of binary operators. *)
adamc@15 573
adamc@14 574 Inductive tbinop : type -> type -> type -> Set :=
adamc@14 575 | TPlus : tbinop Nat Nat Nat
adamc@14 576 | TTimes : tbinop Nat Nat Nat
adamc@14 577 | TEq : forall t, tbinop t t Bool
adamc@14 578 | TLt : tbinop Nat Nat Bool.
adamc@14 579
adamc@15 580 (** The definition of [tbinop] is different from [binop] in an important way. Where we declared that [binop] has type [Set], here we declare that [tbinop] has type [type -> type -> type -> Set]. We define [tbinop] as an %\textit{%#<i>#indexed type family#</i>#%}%. Indexed inductive types are at the heart of Coq's expressive power; almost everything else of interest is defined in terms of them.
adamc@15 581
adamc@15 582 ML and Haskell have indexed algebraic datatypes. For instance, their list types are indexed by the type of data that the list carries. However, compared to Coq, ML and Haskell 98 place two important restrictions on datatype definitions.
adamc@15 583
adamc@15 584 First, the indices of the range of each data constructor must be type variables bound at the top level of the datatype definition. There is no way to do what we did here, where we, for instance, say that [TPlus] is a constructor building a [tbinop] whose indices are all fixed at [Nat]. %\textit{%#<i>#Generalized algebraic datatypes (GADTs)#</i>#%}% are a popular feature in GHC Haskell and other languages that removes this first restriction.
adamc@15 585
adamc@40 586 The second restriction is not lifted by GADTs. In ML and Haskell, indices of types must be types and may not be %\textit{%#<i>#expressions#</i>#%}%. In Coq, types may be indexed by arbitrary Gallina terms. Type indices can live in the same universe as programs, and we can compute with them just like regular programs. Haskell supports a hobbled form of computation in type indices based on multi-parameter type classes, and recent extensions like type functions bring Haskell programming even closer to "real" functional programming with types, but, without dependent typing, there must always be a gap between how one programs with types and how one programs normally.
adamc@15 587 *)
adamc@15 588
adamc@15 589 (** We can define a similar type family for typed expressions. *)
adamc@15 590
adamc@14 591 Inductive texp : type -> Set :=
adamc@14 592 | TNConst : nat -> texp Nat
adamc@14 593 | TBConst : bool -> texp Bool
adamc@14 594 | TBinop : forall arg1 arg2 res, tbinop arg1 arg2 res -> texp arg1 -> texp arg2 -> texp res.
adamc@14 595
adamc@15 596 (** Thanks to our use of dependent types, every well-typed [texp] represents a well-typed source expression, by construction. This turns out to be very convenient for many things we might want to do with expressions. For instance, it is easy to adapt our interpreter approach to defining semantics. We start by defining a function mapping the types of our languages into Coq types: *)
adamc@15 597
adamc@14 598 Definition typeDenote (t : type) : Set :=
adamc@14 599 match t with
adamc@14 600 | Nat => nat
adamc@14 601 | Bool => bool
adamc@14 602 end.
adamc@14 603
adamc@15 604 (** It can take a few moments to come to terms with the fact that [Set], the type of types of programs, is itself a first-class type, and that we can write functions that return [Set]s. Past that wrinkle, the definition of [typeDenote] is trivial, relying on the [nat] and [bool] types from the Coq standard library.
adamc@15 605
adam@277 606 We need to define one auxiliary function, implementing a boolean binary "less-than" operator, which only appears in the standard library with a type fancier than what we are prepared to deal with here. The code is entirely standard and ML-like, with the one caveat being that the Coq [nat] type uses a unary representation, where [O] is zero and [S n] is the successor of [n].
adamc@15 607 *)
adamc@15 608
adamc@207 609 Fixpoint lt (n1 n2 : nat) : bool :=
adamc@14 610 match n1, n2 with
adamc@14 611 | O, S _ => true
adamc@14 612 | S n1', S n2' => lt n1' n2'
adamc@14 613 | _, _ => false
adamc@14 614 end.
adamc@14 615
adam@277 616 (** Now we can interpret binary operators, relying on standard-library equality test functions [eqb] and [beq_nat] for booleans and naturals, respectively: *)
adamc@15 617
adamc@14 618 Definition tbinopDenote arg1 arg2 res (b : tbinop arg1 arg2 res)
adamc@14 619 : typeDenote arg1 -> typeDenote arg2 -> typeDenote res :=
adamc@207 620 match b in (tbinop arg1 arg2 res)
adamc@207 621 return (typeDenote arg1 -> typeDenote arg2 -> typeDenote res) with
adamc@14 622 | TPlus => plus
adamc@14 623 | TTimes => mult
adam@277 624 | TEq Nat => beq_nat
adam@277 625 | TEq Bool => eqb
adamc@14 626 | TLt => lt
adamc@14 627 end.
adamc@14 628
adamc@207 629 (** This function has just a few differences from the denotation functions we saw earlier. First, [tbinop] is an indexed type, so its indices become additional arguments to [tbinopDenote]. Second, we need to perform a genuine %\textit{%#<i>#dependent pattern match#</i>#%}% to come up with a definition of this function that type-checks. In each branch of the [match], we need to use branch-specific information about the indices to [tbinop]. General type inference that takes such information into account is undecidable, so it is often necessary to write annotations, like we see above on the line with [match].
adamc@15 630
adamc@273 631 The [in] annotation restates the type of the term being case-analyzed. Though we use the same names for the indices as we use in the type of the original argument binder, these are actually fresh variables, and they are %\textit{%#<i>#binding occurrences#</i>#%}%. Their scope is the [return] clause. That is, [arg1], [arg2], and [res] are new bound variables bound only within the return clause [typeDenote arg1 -> typeDenote arg2 -> typeDenote res]. By being explicit about the functional relationship between the type indices and the match result, we regain decidable type inference.
adamc@15 632
adamc@207 633 In fact, recent Coq versions use some heuristics that can save us the trouble of writing [match] annotations, and those heuristics get the job done in this case. We can get away with writing just: *)
adamc@207 634
adamc@207 635 (* begin hide *)
adamc@207 636 Reset tbinopDenote.
adamc@207 637 (* end hide *)
adamc@207 638 Definition tbinopDenote arg1 arg2 res (b : tbinop arg1 arg2 res)
adamc@207 639 : typeDenote arg1 -> typeDenote arg2 -> typeDenote res :=
adamc@207 640 match b with
adamc@207 641 | TPlus => plus
adamc@207 642 | TTimes => mult
adam@277 643 | TEq Nat => beq_nat
adam@277 644 | TEq Bool => eqb
adamc@207 645 | TLt => lt
adamc@207 646 end.
adamc@207 647
adamc@207 648 (**
adamc@15 649 The same tricks suffice to define an expression denotation function in an unsurprising way:
adamc@15 650 *)
adamc@15 651
adamc@207 652 Fixpoint texpDenote t (e : texp t) : typeDenote t :=
adamc@207 653 match e with
adamc@14 654 | TNConst n => n
adamc@14 655 | TBConst b => b
adamc@14 656 | TBinop _ _ _ b e1 e2 => (tbinopDenote b) (texpDenote e1) (texpDenote e2)
adamc@14 657 end.
adamc@14 658
adamc@17 659 (** We can evaluate a few example programs to convince ourselves that this semantics is correct. *)
adamc@17 660
adamc@17 661 Eval simpl in texpDenote (TNConst 42).
adamc@207 662 (** [= 42 : typeDenote Nat] *)
adamc@207 663
adamc@17 664 Eval simpl in texpDenote (TBConst true).
adamc@207 665 (** [= true : typeDenote Bool] *)
adamc@207 666
adamc@17 667 Eval simpl in texpDenote (TBinop TTimes (TBinop TPlus (TNConst 2) (TNConst 2)) (TNConst 7)).
adamc@207 668 (** [= 28 : typeDenote Nat] *)
adamc@207 669
adamc@17 670 Eval simpl in texpDenote (TBinop (TEq Nat) (TBinop TPlus (TNConst 2) (TNConst 2)) (TNConst 7)).
adamc@207 671 (** [= false : typeDenote Bool] *)
adamc@207 672
adamc@17 673 Eval simpl in texpDenote (TBinop TLt (TBinop TPlus (TNConst 2) (TNConst 2)) (TNConst 7)).
adamc@207 674 (** [= true : typeDenote Bool] *)
adamc@17 675
adamc@14 676
adamc@20 677 (** ** Target Language *)
adamc@14 678
adamc@18 679 (** Now we want to define a suitable stack machine target for compilation. In the example of the untyped language, stack machine programs could encounter stack underflows and "get stuck." This was unfortunate, since we had to deal with this complication even though we proved that our compiler never produced underflowing programs. We could have used dependent types to force all stack machine programs to be underflow-free.
adamc@18 680
adamc@18 681 For our new languages, besides underflow, we also have the problem of stack slots with naturals instead of bools or vice versa. This time, we will use indexed typed families to avoid the need to reason about potential failures.
adamc@18 682
adamc@18 683 We start by defining stack types, which classify sets of possible stacks. *)
adamc@18 684
adamc@14 685 Definition tstack := list type.
adamc@14 686
adamc@18 687 (** Any stack classified by a [tstack] must have exactly as many elements, and each stack element must have the type found in the same position of the stack type.
adamc@18 688
adamc@18 689 We can define instructions in terms of stack types, where every instruction's type tells us what initial stack type it expects and what final stack type it will produce. *)
adamc@18 690
adamc@14 691 Inductive tinstr : tstack -> tstack -> Set :=
adamc@14 692 | TINConst : forall s, nat -> tinstr s (Nat :: s)
adamc@14 693 | TIBConst : forall s, bool -> tinstr s (Bool :: s)
adamc@14 694 | TIBinop : forall arg1 arg2 res s,
adamc@14 695 tbinop arg1 arg2 res
adamc@14 696 -> tinstr (arg1 :: arg2 :: s) (res :: s).
adamc@14 697
adamc@18 698 (** Stack machine programs must be a similar inductive family, since, if we again used the [list] type family, we would not be able to guarantee that intermediate stack types match within a program. *)
adamc@18 699
adamc@14 700 Inductive tprog : tstack -> tstack -> Set :=
adamc@14 701 | TNil : forall s, tprog s s
adamc@14 702 | TCons : forall s1 s2 s3,
adamc@14 703 tinstr s1 s2
adamc@14 704 -> tprog s2 s3
adamc@14 705 -> tprog s1 s3.
adamc@14 706
adamc@18 707 (** Now, to define the semantics of our new target language, we need a representation for stacks at runtime. We will again take advantage of type information to define types of value stacks that, by construction, contain the right number and types of elements. *)
adamc@18 708
adamc@14 709 Fixpoint vstack (ts : tstack) : Set :=
adamc@14 710 match ts with
adamc@14 711 | nil => unit
adamc@14 712 | t :: ts' => typeDenote t * vstack ts'
adamc@14 713 end%type.
adamc@14 714
adamc@210 715 (** This is another [Set]-valued function. This time it is recursive, which is perfectly valid, since [Set] is not treated specially in determining which functions may be written. We say that the value stack of an empty stack type is any value of type [unit], which has just a single value, [tt]. A nonempty stack type leads to a value stack that is a pair, whose first element has the proper type and whose second element follows the representation for the remainder of the stack type. We write [%type] so that Coq knows to interpret [*] as Cartesian product rather than multiplication.
adamc@18 716
adamc@207 717 This idea of programming with types can take a while to internalize, but it enables a very simple definition of instruction denotation. Our definition is like what you might expect from a Lisp-like version of ML that ignored type information. Nonetheless, the fact that [tinstrDenote] passes the type-checker guarantees that our stack machine programs can never go wrong. *)
adamc@18 718
adamc@14 719 Definition tinstrDenote ts ts' (i : tinstr ts ts') : vstack ts -> vstack ts' :=
adamc@207 720 match i with
adamc@14 721 | TINConst _ n => fun s => (n, s)
adamc@14 722 | TIBConst _ b => fun s => (b, s)
adamc@14 723 | TIBinop _ _ _ _ b => fun s =>
adamc@14 724 match s with
adamc@14 725 (arg1, (arg2, s')) => ((tbinopDenote b) arg1 arg2, s')
adamc@14 726 end
adamc@14 727 end.
adamc@14 728
adamc@18 729 (** Why do we choose to use an anonymous function to bind the initial stack in every case of the [match]? Consider this well-intentioned but invalid alternative version:
adamc@18 730
adamc@18 731 [[
adamc@18 732 Definition tinstrDenote ts ts' (i : tinstr ts ts') (s : vstack ts) : vstack ts' :=
adamc@207 733 match i with
adamc@18 734 | TINConst _ n => (n, s)
adamc@18 735 | TIBConst _ b => (b, s)
adamc@18 736 | TIBinop _ _ _ _ b =>
adamc@18 737 match s with
adamc@18 738 (arg1, (arg2, s')) => ((tbinopDenote b) arg1 arg2, s')
adamc@18 739 end
adamc@18 740 end.
adamc@18 741
adamc@205 742 ]]
adamc@205 743
adamc@18 744 The Coq type-checker complains that:
adamc@18 745
adamc@18 746 [[
adamc@18 747 The term "(n, s)" has type "(nat * vstack ts)%type"
adamc@207 748 while it is expected to have type "vstack ?119".
adamc@207 749
adamc@207 750 ]]
adamc@207 751
adamc@207 752 The text [?119] stands for a unification variable. We can try to help Coq figure out the value of this variable with an explicit annotation on our [match] expression.
adamc@207 753
adamc@207 754 [[
adamc@207 755 Definition tinstrDenote ts ts' (i : tinstr ts ts') (s : vstack ts) : vstack ts' :=
adamc@207 756 match i in tinstr ts ts' return vstack ts' with
adamc@207 757 | TINConst _ n => (n, s)
adamc@207 758 | TIBConst _ b => (b, s)
adamc@207 759 | TIBinop _ _ _ _ b =>
adamc@207 760 match s with
adamc@207 761 (arg1, (arg2, s')) => ((tbinopDenote b) arg1 arg2, s')
adamc@207 762 end
adamc@207 763 end.
adamc@207 764
adamc@207 765 ]]
adamc@207 766
adamc@207 767 Now the error message changes.
adamc@207 768
adamc@207 769 [[
adamc@207 770 The term "(n, s)" has type "(nat * vstack ts)%type"
adamc@207 771 while it is expected to have type "vstack (Nat :: t)".
adamc@207 772
adamc@18 773 ]]
adamc@18 774
adamc@18 775 Recall from our earlier discussion of [match] annotations that we write the annotations to express to the type-checker the relationship between the type indices of the case object and the result type of the [match]. Coq chooses to assign to the wildcard [_] after [TINConst] the name [t], and the type error is telling us that the type checker cannot prove that [t] is the same as [ts]. By moving [s] out of the [match], we lose the ability to express, with [in] and [return] clauses, the relationship between the shared index [ts] of [s] and [i].
adamc@18 776
adamc@18 777 There %\textit{%#<i>#are#</i>#%}% reasonably general ways of getting around this problem without pushing binders inside [match]es. However, the alternatives are significantly more involved, and the technique we use here is almost certainly the best choice, whenever it applies.
adamc@18 778
adamc@18 779 *)
adamc@18 780
adamc@18 781 (** We finish the semantics with a straightforward definition of program denotation. *)
adamc@18 782
adamc@207 783 Fixpoint tprogDenote ts ts' (p : tprog ts ts') : vstack ts -> vstack ts' :=
adamc@207 784 match p with
adamc@14 785 | TNil _ => fun s => s
adamc@14 786 | TCons _ _ _ i p' => fun s => tprogDenote p' (tinstrDenote i s)
adamc@14 787 end.
adamc@14 788
adamc@14 789
adamc@14 790 (** ** Translation *)
adamc@14 791
adamc@19 792 (** To define our compilation, it is useful to have an auxiliary function for concatenating two stack machine programs. *)
adamc@19 793
adamc@207 794 Fixpoint tconcat ts ts' ts'' (p : tprog ts ts') : tprog ts' ts'' -> tprog ts ts'' :=
adamc@207 795 match p with
adamc@14 796 | TNil _ => fun p' => p'
adamc@14 797 | TCons _ _ _ i p1 => fun p' => TCons i (tconcat p1 p')
adamc@14 798 end.
adamc@14 799
adamc@19 800 (** With that function in place, the compilation is defined very similarly to how it was before, modulo the use of dependent typing. *)
adamc@19 801
adamc@207 802 Fixpoint tcompile t (e : texp t) (ts : tstack) : tprog ts (t :: ts) :=
adamc@207 803 match e with
adamc@14 804 | TNConst n => TCons (TINConst _ n) (TNil _)
adamc@14 805 | TBConst b => TCons (TIBConst _ b) (TNil _)
adamc@14 806 | TBinop _ _ _ b e1 e2 => tconcat (tcompile e2 _)
adamc@14 807 (tconcat (tcompile e1 _) (TCons (TIBinop _ b) (TNil _)))
adamc@14 808 end.
adamc@14 809
adamc@40 810 (** One interesting feature of the definition is the underscores appearing to the right of [=>] arrows. Haskell and ML programmers are quite familiar with compilers that infer type parameters to polymorphic values. In Coq, it is possible to go even further and ask the system to infer arbitrary terms, by writing underscores in place of specific values. You may have noticed that we have been calling functions without specifying all of their arguments. For instance, the recursive calls here to [tcompile] omit the [t] argument. Coq's %\textit{%#<i>#implicit argument#</i>#%}% mechanism automatically inserts underscores for arguments that it will probably be able to infer. Inference of such values is far from complete, though; generally, it only works in cases similar to those encountered with polymorphic type instantiation in Haskell and ML.
adamc@19 811
adamc@19 812 The underscores here are being filled in with stack types. That is, the Coq type inferencer is, in a sense, inferring something about the flow of control in the translated programs. We can take a look at exactly which values are filled in: *)
adamc@19 813
adamc@14 814 Print tcompile.
adamc@19 815 (** [[
adamc@19 816 tcompile =
adamc@19 817 fix tcompile (t : type) (e : texp t) (ts : tstack) {struct e} :
adamc@19 818 tprog ts (t :: ts) :=
adamc@19 819 match e in (texp t0) return (tprog ts (t0 :: ts)) with
adamc@19 820 | TNConst n => TCons (TINConst ts n) (TNil (Nat :: ts))
adamc@19 821 | TBConst b => TCons (TIBConst ts b) (TNil (Bool :: ts))
adamc@19 822 | TBinop arg1 arg2 res b e1 e2 =>
adamc@19 823 tconcat (tcompile arg2 e2 ts)
adamc@19 824 (tconcat (tcompile arg1 e1 (arg2 :: ts))
adamc@19 825 (TCons (TIBinop ts b) (TNil (res :: ts))))
adamc@19 826 end
adamc@19 827 : forall t : type, texp t -> forall ts : tstack, tprog ts (t :: ts)
adamc@19 828 ]] *)
adamc@19 829
adamc@19 830
adamc@19 831 (** We can check that the compiler generates programs that behave appropriately on our sample programs from above: *)
adamc@19 832
adamc@19 833 Eval simpl in tprogDenote (tcompile (TNConst 42) nil) tt.
adamc@207 834 (** [= (42, tt) : vstack (Nat :: nil)] *)
adamc@207 835
adamc@19 836 Eval simpl in tprogDenote (tcompile (TBConst true) nil) tt.
adamc@207 837 (** [= (true, tt) : vstack (Bool :: nil)] *)
adamc@207 838
adamc@19 839 Eval simpl in tprogDenote (tcompile (TBinop TTimes (TBinop TPlus (TNConst 2) (TNConst 2)) (TNConst 7)) nil) tt.
adamc@207 840 (** [= (28, tt) : vstack (Nat :: nil)] *)
adamc@207 841
adamc@19 842 Eval simpl in tprogDenote (tcompile (TBinop (TEq Nat) (TBinop TPlus (TNConst 2) (TNConst 2)) (TNConst 7)) nil) tt.
adamc@207 843 (** [= (false, tt) : vstack (Bool :: nil)] *)
adamc@207 844
adamc@19 845 Eval simpl in tprogDenote (tcompile (TBinop TLt (TBinop TPlus (TNConst 2) (TNConst 2)) (TNConst 7)) nil) tt.
adamc@207 846 (** [= (true, tt) : vstack (Bool :: nil)] *)
adamc@19 847
adamc@14 848
adamc@20 849 (** ** Translation Correctness *)
adamc@20 850
adamc@20 851 (** We can state a correctness theorem similar to the last one. *)
adamc@20 852
adamc@207 853 Theorem tcompile_correct : forall t (e : texp t),
adamc@207 854 tprogDenote (tcompile e nil) tt = (texpDenote e, tt).
adamc@20 855 (* begin hide *)
adamc@20 856 Abort.
adamc@20 857 (* end hide *)
adamc@22 858 (* begin thide *)
adamc@20 859
adamc@20 860 (** Again, we need to strengthen the theorem statement so that the induction will go through. This time, I will develop an alternative approach to this kind of proof, stating the key lemma as: *)
adamc@14 861
adamc@207 862 Lemma tcompile_correct' : forall t (e : texp t) ts (s : vstack ts),
adamc@207 863 tprogDenote (tcompile e ts) s = (texpDenote e, s).
adamc@20 864
adamc@26 865 (** While lemma [compile_correct'] quantified over a program that is the "continuation" for the expression we are considering, here we avoid drawing in any extra syntactic elements. In addition to the source expression and its type, we also quantify over an initial stack type and a stack compatible with it. Running the compilation of the program starting from that stack, we should arrive at a stack that differs only in having the program's denotation pushed onto it.
adamc@20 866
adamc@20 867 Let us try to prove this theorem in the same way that we settled on in the last section. *)
adamc@20 868
adamc@14 869 induction e; crush.
adamc@20 870
adamc@20 871 (** We are left with this unproved conclusion:
adamc@20 872
adamc@20 873 [[
adamc@20 874 tprogDenote
adamc@20 875 (tconcat (tcompile e2 ts)
adamc@20 876 (tconcat (tcompile e1 (arg2 :: ts))
adamc@20 877 (TCons (TIBinop ts t) (TNil (res :: ts))))) s =
adamc@20 878 (tbinopDenote t (texpDenote e1) (texpDenote e2), s)
adamc@207 879
adamc@20 880 ]]
adamc@20 881
adamc@20 882 We need an analogue to the [app_ass] theorem that we used to rewrite the goal in the last section. We can abort this proof and prove such a lemma about [tconcat].
adamc@20 883 *)
adamc@207 884
adamc@14 885 Abort.
adamc@14 886
adamc@26 887 Lemma tconcat_correct : forall ts ts' ts'' (p : tprog ts ts') (p' : tprog ts' ts'')
adamc@14 888 (s : vstack ts),
adamc@14 889 tprogDenote (tconcat p p') s
adamc@14 890 = tprogDenote p' (tprogDenote p s).
adamc@14 891 induction p; crush.
adamc@14 892 Qed.
adamc@14 893
adamc@20 894 (** This one goes through completely automatically.
adamc@20 895
adamc@26 896 Some code behind the scenes registers [app_ass] for use by [crush]. We must register [tconcat_correct] similarly to get the same effect: *)
adamc@20 897
adamc@26 898 Hint Rewrite tconcat_correct : cpdt.
adamc@14 899
adamc@26 900 (** We ask that the lemma be used for left-to-right rewriting, and we ask for the hint to be added to the hint database called [cpdt], which is the database used by [crush]. Now we are ready to return to [tcompile_correct'], proving it automatically this time. *)
adamc@20 901
adamc@207 902 Lemma tcompile_correct' : forall t (e : texp t) ts (s : vstack ts),
adamc@207 903 tprogDenote (tcompile e ts) s = (texpDenote e, s).
adamc@14 904 induction e; crush.
adamc@14 905 Qed.
adamc@14 906
adamc@20 907 (** We can register this main lemma as another hint, allowing us to prove the final theorem trivially. *)
adamc@20 908
adamc@26 909 Hint Rewrite tcompile_correct' : cpdt.
adamc@14 910
adamc@207 911 Theorem tcompile_correct : forall t (e : texp t),
adamc@207 912 tprogDenote (tcompile e nil) tt = (texpDenote e, tt).
adamc@14 913 crush.
adamc@14 914 Qed.
adamc@22 915 (* end thide *)