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comparison src/Match.v @ 234:82eae7bc91ea
Working with evars
author | Adam Chlipala <adamc@hcoop.net> |
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date | Mon, 30 Nov 2009 15:41:51 -0500 |
parents | 15501145d696 |
children | b653e6b19b6d |
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233:f15f7c4eebfe | 234:82eae7bc91ea |
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849 (ex_conc (fun x0 : nat => P x0) x | 849 (ex_conc (fun x0 : nat => P x0) x |
850 (Match (P:=P x) (imp_True (P:=True)))))))) | 850 (Match (P:=P x) (imp_True (P:=True)))))))) |
851 : forall (P : nat -> Prop) (Q : Prop), | 851 : forall (P : nat -> Prop) (Q : Prop), |
852 (exists x : nat, P x /\ Q) --> Q /\ (exists x : nat, P x) | 852 (exists x : nat, P x /\ Q) --> Q /\ (exists x : nat, P x) |
853 ]] *) | 853 ]] *) |
854 | |
855 | |
856 (** * Creating Unification Variables *) | |
857 | |
858 (** A final useful ingredient in tactic crafting is the ability to allocate new unification variables explicitly. Tactics like [eauto] introduce unification variable internally to support flexible proof search. While [eauto] and its relatives do %\textit{%#<i>#backward#</i>#%}% reasoning, we often want to do similar %\textit{%#<i>#forward#</i>#%}% reasoning, where unification variables can be useful for similar reasons. | |
859 | |
860 For example, we can write a tactic that instantiates the quantifiers of a universally-quantified hypothesis. The tactic should not need to know what the appropriate instantiantiations are; rather, we want these choices filled with placeholders. We hope that, when we apply the specialized hypothesis later, syntactic unification will determine concrete values. | |
861 | |
862 Before we are ready to write a tactic, we can try out its ingredients one at a time. *) | |
863 | |
864 Theorem t5 : (forall x : nat, S x > x) -> 2 > 1. | |
865 intros. | |
866 | |
867 (** [[ | |
868 H : forall x : nat, S x > x | |
869 ============================ | |
870 2 > 1 | |
871 | |
872 ]] | |
873 | |
874 To instantiate [H] generically, we first need to name the value to be used for [x]. *) | |
875 | |
876 evar (y : nat). | |
877 | |
878 (** [[ | |
879 H : forall x : nat, S x > x | |
880 y := ?279 : nat | |
881 ============================ | |
882 2 > 1 | |
883 | |
884 ]] | |
885 | |
886 The proof context is extended with a new variable [y], which has been assigned to be equal to a fresh unification variable [?279]. We want to instantiate [H] with [?279]. To get ahold of the new unification variable, rather than just its alias [y], we perform a trivial call-by-value reduction in the expression [y]. In particular, we only request the use of one reduction rule, [delta], which deals with definition unfolding. We pass a flag further stipulating that only the definition of [y] be unfolded. This is a simple trick for getting at the value of a synonym variable. *) | |
887 | |
888 let y' := eval cbv delta [y] in y in | |
889 clear y; generalize (H y'). | |
890 | |
891 (** [[ | |
892 H : forall x : nat, S x > x | |
893 ============================ | |
894 S ?279 > ?279 -> 2 > 1 | |
895 | |
896 ]] | |
897 | |
898 Our instantiation was successful. We can finish by using the refined formula to replace the original. *) | |
899 | |
900 clear H; intro H. | |
901 | |
902 (** [[ | |
903 H : S ?281 > ?281 | |
904 ============================ | |
905 2 > 1 | |
906 | |
907 ]] | |
908 | |
909 We can finish the proof by using [apply]'s unification to figure out the proper value of [?281]. (The original unification variable was replaced by another, as often happens in the internals of the various tactics' implementations.) *) | |
910 | |
911 apply H. | |
912 Qed. | |
913 | |
914 (** Now we can write a tactic that encapsulates the pattern we just employed, instantiating all quantifiers of a particular hypothesis. *) | |
915 | |
916 Ltac insterU H := | |
917 repeat match type of H with | |
918 | forall x : ?T, _ => | |
919 let x := fresh "x" in | |
920 evar (x : T); | |
921 let x' := eval cbv delta [x] in x in | |
922 clear x; generalize (H x'); clear H; intro H | |
923 end. | |
924 | |
925 Theorem t5' : (forall x : nat, S x > x) -> 2 > 1. | |
926 intro H; insterU H; apply H. | |
927 Qed. | |
928 | |
929 (** This particular example is somewhat silly, since [apply] by itself would have solved the goal originally. Separate forward reasoning is more useful on hypotheses that end in existential quantifications. Before we go through an example, it is useful to define a variant of [insterU] that does not clear the base hypothesis we pass to it. *) | |
930 | |
931 Ltac insterKeep H := | |
932 let H' := fresh "H'" in | |
933 generalize H; intro H'; insterU H'. | |
934 | |
935 Section t6. | |
936 Variables A B : Type. | |
937 Variable P : A -> B -> Prop. | |
938 Variable f : A -> A -> A. | |
939 Variable g : B -> B -> B. | |
940 | |
941 Hypothesis H1 : forall v, exists u, P v u. | |
942 Hypothesis H2 : forall v1 u1 v2 u2, | |
943 P v1 u1 | |
944 -> P v2 u2 | |
945 -> P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2). | |
946 | |
947 Theorem t6 : forall v1 v2, exists u1, exists u2, P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2). | |
948 intros. | |
949 | |
950 (** Neither [eauto] nor [firstorder] is clever enough to prove this goal. We can help out by doing some of the work with quantifiers ourselves. *) | |
951 | |
952 do 2 insterKeep H1. | |
953 | |
954 (** Our proof state is extended with two generic instances of [H1]. | |
955 | |
956 [[ | |
957 H' : exists u : B, P ?4289 u | |
958 H'0 : exists u : B, P ?4288 u | |
959 ============================ | |
960 exists u1 : B, exists u2 : B, P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2) | |
961 | |
962 ]] | |
963 | |
964 [eauto] still cannot prove the goal, so we eliminate the two new existential quantifiers. *) | |
965 | |
966 repeat match goal with | |
967 | [ H : ex _ |- _ ] => destruct H | |
968 end. | |
969 | |
970 (** Now the goal is simple enough to solve by logic programming. *) | |
971 | |
972 eauto. | |
973 Qed. | |
974 End t6. | |
975 | |
976 (** Our [insterU] tactic does not fare so well with quantified hypotheses that also contain implications. We can see the problem in a slight modification of the last example. We introduce a new unary predicate [Q] and use it to state an additional requirement of our hypothesis [H1]. *) | |
977 | |
978 Section t7. | |
979 Variables A B : Type. | |
980 Variable Q : A -> Prop. | |
981 Variable P : A -> B -> Prop. | |
982 Variable f : A -> A -> A. | |
983 Variable g : B -> B -> B. | |
984 | |
985 Hypothesis H1 : forall v, Q v -> exists u, P v u. | |
986 Hypothesis H2 : forall v1 u1 v2 u2, | |
987 P v1 u1 | |
988 -> P v2 u2 | |
989 -> P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2). | |
990 | |
991 Theorem t6 : forall v1 v2, Q v1 -> Q v2 -> exists u1, exists u2, P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2). | |
992 intros; do 2 insterKeep H1; | |
993 repeat match goal with | |
994 | [ H : ex _ |- _ ] => destruct H | |
995 end; eauto. | |
996 | |
997 (** This proof script does not hit any errors until the very end, when an error message like this one is displayed. | |
998 | |
999 [[ | |
1000 No more subgoals but non-instantiated existential variables : | |
1001 Existential 1 = | |
1002 ?4384 : [A : Type | |
1003 B : Type | |
1004 Q : A -> Prop | |
1005 P : A -> B -> Prop | |
1006 f : A -> A -> A | |
1007 g : B -> B -> B | |
1008 H1 : forall v : A, Q v -> exists u : B, P v u | |
1009 H2 : forall (v1 : A) (u1 : B) (v2 : A) (u2 : B), | |
1010 P v1 u1 -> P v2 u2 -> P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2) | |
1011 v1 : A | |
1012 v2 : A | |
1013 H : Q v1 | |
1014 H0 : Q v2 | |
1015 H' : Q v2 -> exists u : B, P v2 u |- Q v2] | |
1016 | |
1017 ]] | |
1018 | |
1019 There is another similar line about a different existential variable. Here, "existential variable" means what we have also called "unification variable." In the course of the proof, some unification variable [?4384] was introduced but never unified. Unification variables are just a device to structure proof search; the language of Gallina proof terms does not include them. Thus, we cannot produce a proof term without instantiating the variable. | |
1020 | |
1021 The error message shows that [?4384] is meant to be a proof of [Q v2] in a particular proof state, whose variables and hypotheses are displayed. It turns out that [?4384] was created by [insterU], as the value of a proof to pass to [H1]. Recall that, in Gallina, implication is just a degenerate case of [forall] quantification, so the [insterU] code to match against [forall] also matched the implication. Since any proof of [Q v2] is as good as any other in this context, there was never any opportunity to use unification to determine exactly which proof is appropriate. We expect similar problems with any implications in arguments to [insterU]. *) | |
1022 | |
1023 Abort. | |
1024 End t7. | |
1025 | |
1026 Reset insterU. | |
1027 | |
1028 (** We can redefine [insterU] to treat implications differently. In particular, we pattern-match on the type of the type [T] in [forall x : ?T, ...]. If [T] has type [Prop], then [x]'s instantiation should be thought of as a proof. Thus, instead of picking a new unification variable for it, we instead apply a user-supplied tactic [tac]. It is important that we end this special [Prop] case with [|| fail 1], so that, if [tac] fails to prove [T], we abort the instantiation, rather than continuing on to the default quantifier handling. *) | |
1029 | |
1030 Ltac insterU tac H := | |
1031 repeat match type of H with | |
1032 | forall x : ?T, _ => | |
1033 match type of T with | |
1034 | Prop => | |
1035 (let H' := fresh "H'" in | |
1036 assert (H' : T); [ | |
1037 solve [ tac ] | |
1038 | generalize (H H'); clear H H'; intro H ]) | |
1039 || fail 1 | |
1040 | _ => | |
1041 let x := fresh "x" in | |
1042 evar (x : T); | |
1043 let x' := eval cbv delta [x] in x in | |
1044 clear x; generalize (H x'); clear H; intro H | |
1045 end | |
1046 end. | |
1047 | |
1048 Ltac insterKeep tac H := | |
1049 let H' := fresh "H'" in | |
1050 generalize H; intro H'; insterU tac H'. | |
1051 | |
1052 Section t7. | |
1053 Variables A B : Type. | |
1054 Variable Q : A -> Prop. | |
1055 Variable P : A -> B -> Prop. | |
1056 Variable f : A -> A -> A. | |
1057 Variable g : B -> B -> B. | |
1058 | |
1059 Hypothesis H1 : forall v, Q v -> exists u, P v u. | |
1060 Hypothesis H2 : forall v1 u1 v2 u2, | |
1061 P v1 u1 | |
1062 -> P v2 u2 | |
1063 -> P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2). | |
1064 | |
1065 Theorem t6 : forall v1 v2, Q v1 -> Q v2 -> exists u1, exists u2, P (f v1 v2) (g u1 u2). | |
1066 | |
1067 (** We can prove the goal by calling [insterKeep] with a tactic that tries to find and apply a [Q] hypothesis over a variable about which we do not yet know any [P] facts. We need to begin this tactic code with [idtac; ] to get around a strange limitation in Coq's proof engine, where a first-class tactic argument may not begin with a [match]. *) | |
1068 | |
1069 intros; do 2 insterKeep ltac:(idtac; match goal with | |
1070 | [ H : Q ?v |- _ ] => | |
1071 match goal with | |
1072 | [ _ : context[P v _] |- _ ] => fail 1 | |
1073 | _ => apply H | |
1074 end | |
1075 end) H1; | |
1076 repeat match goal with | |
1077 | [ H : ex _ |- _ ] => destruct H | |
1078 end; eauto. | |
1079 Qed. | |
1080 End t7. | |
1081 | |
1082 (** It is often useful to instantiate existential variables explicitly. A built-in tactic provides one way of doing so. *) | |
1083 | |
1084 Theorem t8 : exists p : nat * nat, fst p = 3. | |
1085 econstructor; instantiate (1 := (3, 2)); reflexivity. | |
1086 Qed. | |
1087 | |
1088 (** The [1] above is identifying an existential variable appearing in the current goal, with the last existential appearing assigned number 1, the second last assigned number 2, and so on. The named existential is replaced everywhere by the term to the right of the [:=]. | |
1089 | |
1090 The [instantiate] tactic can be convenient for exploratory proving, but it leads to very brittle proof scripts that are unlikely to adapt to changing theorem statements. It is often more helpful to have a tactic that can be used to assign a value to a term that is known to be an existential. By employing a roundabout implementation technique, we can build a tactic that generalizes this functionality. In particular, our tactic [equate] will assert that two terms are equal. If one of the terms happens to be an existential, then it will be replaced everywhere with the other term. *) | |
1091 | |
1092 Ltac equate x y := | |
1093 let H := fresh "H" in | |
1094 assert (H : x = y); [ reflexivity | clear H ]. | |
1095 | |
1096 (** [equate] fails if it is not possible to prove [x = y] by [reflexivity]. We perform the proof only for its unification side effects, clearing the fact [x = y] afterward. With [equate], we can build a less brittle version of the prior example. *) | |
1097 | |
1098 Theorem t9 : exists p : nat * nat, fst p = 3. | |
1099 econstructor; match goal with | |
1100 | [ |- fst ?x = 3 ] => equate x (3, 2) | |
1101 end; reflexivity. | |
1102 Qed. |