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| author | herbelin | 2003-12-19 23:54:56 +0000 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | herbelin | 2003-12-19 23:54:56 +0000 |
| commit | bb0e4df94af2e247837911312d8ddeaa091e3e97 (patch) | |
| tree | 0bce8ed218cf1dc92651c14080b244b2910ac798 /doc | |
| parent | a5d5affb2c8d64f19cbe52dc781c6b0c1773bc61 (diff) | |
MAJ ltac, INSTALL, typos
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/coq/trunk@8429 85f007b7-540e-0410-9357-904b9bb8a0f7
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
| -rwxr-xr-x | doc/RefMan-int.tex | 35 |
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/doc/RefMan-int.tex b/doc/RefMan-int.tex index 9bcf2de776..56a04954b3 100755 --- a/doc/RefMan-int.tex +++ b/doc/RefMan-int.tex @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ proof assistant. A companion volume, the \Coq\ Tutorial, is provided for the beginners. It is advised to read the Tutorial first. A new book~\cite{CoqArt} on practical uses of the \Coq{} system will be published in 2004 and is a good support for both the beginner and -the advance user. +the advanced user. The system \Coq\ is designed to write formal specifications, programs and to verify that programs are correct with respect to their @@ -63,24 +63,28 @@ below. theorems and proofs in the Calculus of Inductive Constructions. Chapter~\ref{Theories} describes the standard library of \Coq. Chapter~\ref{Cic} is a mathematical description of the - formalism. Chapter~\ref{Modules} describes the module system. + formalism. Chapter~\ref{Mod} describes the module system. \item The second part describes the proof engine. It is divided in - four chapters. Chapter~\ref{Vernacular-commands} presents - all commands (we call them \emph{vernacular commands}) that are not - directly related to interactive proving: requests to the environment, - complete or partial evaluation, loading and compiling files. How to - start and stop proofs, do multiple proofs in parallel is explained - in Chapter~\ref{Proof-handling}. In Chapter~\ref{Tactics}, - all commands that realize one or more steps of the proof are - presented: we call them \emph{tactics}. Examples of tactics are + four chapters. Chapter~\ref{Vernacular-commands} presents all + commands (we call them \emph{vernacular commands}) that are not + directly related to interactive proving: requests to the + environment, complete or partial evaluation, loading and compiling + files. How to start and stop proofs, do multiple proofs in parallel + is explained in Chapter~\ref{Proof-handling}. In + Chapter~\ref{Tactics}, all commands that realize one or more steps + of the proof are presented: we call them \emph{tactics}. The + language to combine these tactics into complex proof strategies is + given in Chapter~\ref{TacticLanguage}. Examples of tactics are described in Chapter~\ref{Tactics-examples}. -\item The third part describes how to extend the system in two ways: - adding parsing and pretty-printing rules - (Chapter~\ref{Addoc-syntax}) and writing new tactics - (Chapter~\ref{TacticLanguage}). +%\item The third part describes how to extend the system in two ways: +% adding parsing and pretty-printing rules +% (Chapter~\ref{Addoc-syntax}) and writing new tactics +% (Chapter~\ref{TacticLanguage}). +\item The third part describes how to extend the syntax of \Coq. It +corresponds to the Chapter~\ref{Addoc-syntax}. \item In the fourth part more practical tools are documented. First in Chapter~\ref{Addoc-coqc}, the usage of \texttt{coqc} (batch mode) @@ -119,8 +123,7 @@ documents: to the Addendum. \item[Installation] A text file INSTALL that comes with the sources - explains how to install \Coq{}. A file UNINSTALL explains how - uninstall or move it. + explains how to install \Coq{}. \item[The \Coq{} standard library] A commented version of sources of the \Coq{} standard library |
