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This should make https://github.com/coq/coq/pull/9129 easier.
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Kernel should be mostly correct, higher levels do random stuff at
times.
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Parameters had to be removed in cases_pattern_of_glob_constr.
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This work makes it possible to take advantage of a compact
representation for integers in the entire system, as opposed to only
in some reduction machines. It is useful for heavily computational
applications, where even constructing terms is not possible without such
a representation.
Concretely, it replaces part of the retroknowledge machinery with
a primitive construction for integers in terms, and introduces a kind of
FFI which maps constants to operators (on integers). Properties of these
operators are expressed as explicit axioms, whereas they were hidden in
the retroknowledge-based approach.
This has been presented at the Coq workshop and some Coq Working Groups,
and has been used by various groups for STM trace checking,
computational analysis, etc.
Contributions by Guillaume Bertholon and Pierre Roux <Pierre.Roux@onera.fr>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Grégoire <Benjamin.Gregoire@inria.fr>
Co-authored-by: Vincent Laporte <Vincent.Laporte@fondation-inria.fr>
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The warning can be avoided with the attributes, (or just disable the
warning itself I guess).
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Funind doesn't support polymorphism.
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We refactor the `Coqlib` API to locate objects over a namespace
`module.object.property`.
This introduces the vernacular command `Register g as n` to expose the
Coq constant `g` under the name `n` (through the `register_ref`
function). The constant can then be dynamically located using the
`lib_ref` function.
Co-authored-by: Emilio Jesús Gallego Arias <e+git@x80.org>
Co-authored-by: Maxime Dénès <mail@maximedenes.fr>
Co-authored-by: Vincent Laporte <Vincent.Laporte@fondation-inria.fr>
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Fixes #6764: Printing Notation regressed compared to 8.7
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Don't allow notations attached to uniform inductives
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- move_location to proofs/logic.
- intro_pattern_naming to Namegen.
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In #6092, `global_reference` was moved to `kernel`. It makes sense to
go further and use the current kernel style for names.
This has a good effect on the dependency graph, as some core modules
don't depend on library anymore.
A question about providing equality for the GloRef module remains, as
there are two different notions of equality for constants. In that
sense, `KerPair` seems suspicious and at some point it should be
looked at.
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We continue with the work of #402 and #6745 and update most of the
remaining parts of the AST:
- module declarations
- intro patterns
- top-level sentences
Now, parsed documents should be full annotated by `CAst` nodes.
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This commit was motivated by true spurious conversions arising in my
`to_constr` debug branch.
The changes here need careful review as the tradeoffs are subtle and
still a lot of clean up remains to be done in `vernac/*`.
We have opted for penalize [minimally] the few users coming from true
`Constr`-land, but I am sure we can tweak code in a much better way.
In particular, it is not clear if internalization should take an
`evar_map` even in the cases where it is not triggered, see the
changes under `plugins` for a good example.
Also, the new return type of `Pretyping.understand` should undergo
careful review.
We don't touch `Impargs` as it is not clear how to proceed, however,
the current type of `compute_implicits_gen` looks very suspicious as
it is called often with free evars.
Some TODOs are:
- impargs was calling whd_all, the Econstr equivalent can be either
+ Reductionops.whd_all [which does refolding and no sharing]
+ Reductionops.clos_whd_flags with all as a flag.
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We follow the suggestions in #402 and turn uses of `Loc.located` in
`vernac` into `CAst.t`. The impact should be low as this change mostly
affects top-level vernaculars.
With this change, we are even closer to automatically map a text
document to its AST in a programmatic way.
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The motivations are:
- To reflect the concrete syntax more closely.
- To factorize the different places where "contexts" are internalized:
before this patch, there is a different treatment of `Definition f
'(x,y) := x+y` and `Definition f := fun '(x,y) => x+y`, and a hack
to interpret `Definition f `pat := c : t`. With the patch, the fix
to avoid seeing a variable named `pat` works for both `fun 'x =>
...` and `Definition f 'x := ...`.
The drawbacks are:
- Counterpart to reflecting the concrete syntax more closerly, there
are more redundancies in the syntax. For instance, the case `CLetIn
(na,b,t,c)` can appears also in the form `CProdN (CLocalDef
(na,b,t)::rest,d)` and `CLambdaN (CLocalDef (na,b,t)::rest,d)`.
- Changes in the API, hence adaptation of plugins referring to `constr_expr` needed.
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There is no way today to distinguish primitive projections from
compatibility constants, at least in the case of a record without
parameters.
We remedy to this by always using the r.(p) syntax when printing
primitive projections, even with Set Printing All.
The input syntax r.(p) is still elaborated to GApp, so that we can preserve
the compatibility layer. Hopefully we can make up a plan to get rid of that
layer, but it will require fixing a few problems.
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Unfortunately OCaml doesn't deprecate the constructors of a type when
the type alias is deprecated.
In this case it means that we don't get rid of the kernel dependency
unless we deprecate the constructors too.
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Virtually all classifications of vernacular commands (the STM
classifier, "filtered commands", "navigation commands", etc.) were
broken in presence of control vernaculars like Time, Timeout, Fail.
Funny examples of bugs include Time Abort All in coqtop or Time Set Ltac
Debug in CoqIDE.
This change introduces a type separation between vernacular controls and
vernacular commands, together with an "under_control" combinator.
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Over the time, `Command` grew organically and it has become now one of
the most complex files in the codebase; however, its functionality is
well separated into 4 key components that have little to do with each
other.
We thus split the file, and also document the interfaces. Some parts
of `Command` export tricky internals to use by other plugins, and it
is common that plugin writers tend to get confused, so we are more
explicit about these parts now.
This patch depends on #6413.
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We mirror the structure of EConstr and move the destructors from `Term`
to `Constr`.
This is a step towards having a single module for `Constr`.
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We'd like to handle proofs functionally we thus recommend not to use
printing functions without an explicit context.
We also adapt most of the code, making more explicit where the
printing environment is coming from.
An open task is to refactor some code so we gradually make the
`Pfedit.get_current_context ()` disappear.
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We do up to `Term` which is the main bulk of the changes.
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The old algorithm was relying on list membership, which is O(n). This was
nefarious for terms with many binders. We use instead sets in O(log n).
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The internal detype function takes an additional arguments dictating
whether it should be eager or lazy.
We introduce a new type of delayed `DAst.t` AST nodes and use it for
`glob_constr`.
Such type, instead of only containing a value, it can contain a lazy
computation too. We use a GADT to discriminate between both uses
statically, so that no delayed terms ever happen to be
marshalled (which would raise anomalies).
We also fix a regression in the test-suite:
Mixing laziness and effects is a well-known hell. Here, an exception
that was raised for mere control purpose was delayed and raised at a
later time as an anomaly. We make the offending function eager.
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We now only issue an error for locally specified (non)cumulativity
whenever it is the context (set locally or globally) is monorphic.
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As per https://github.com/coq/coq/pull/716#issuecomment-305140839
Partially using
```bash
git grep --name-only 'anomaly\s*\(~label:"[^"]*"\s*\)\?\(Pp.\)\?(\(\(Pp.\)\?str\)\?\s*".*[^\.!]")' | xargs sed s'/\(anomaly\s*\(~label:"[^"]*"\s*\)\?\(Pp.\)\?(\(\(Pp.\)\?str\)\?\s*".*\s*[^\.! ]\)\s*")/\1.")/g' -i
```
and
```bash
git grep --name-only ' !"' | xargs sed s'/ !"/!"/g' -i
```
The rest were manually edited by looking at the results of
```bash
git grep anomaly | grep '\.ml' | grep -v 'anomaly\s*\(~label:"[^"]*"\s*\)\?\(Pp\.\)\?(\(\(Pp.\)\?str\)\?\s*".*\(\.\|!\)")' | grep 'anomaly\($\|[^_]\)' | less
```
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This is the continuation of #244, we now deprecate `CErrors.error`,
the single entry point in Coq is `user_err`.
The rationale is to allow for easier grepping, and to ease a future
cleanup of error messages. In particular, we would like to
systematically classify all error messages raised by Coq and be sure
they are properly documented.
We restore the two functions removed in #244 to improve compatibility,
but mark them deprecated.
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We remove redundant functions `coq_constant`, `gen_reference`, and
`gen_constant`.
This is a first step towards a lazy binding of libraries references.
We have also chosen to untangle `constr` from `Coqlib`, as how to
instantiate the reference (in particular wrt universes) is a
client-side issue. (The client may want to provide an `evar_map` ?)
c.f. #186
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Following @gasche idea, and the original intention of #402, we switch
the main parsing AST of Coq from `'a Loc.located` to `'a CAst.ast`
which is private and record-based.
This provides significantly clearer code for the AST, and is robust
wrt attributes.
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This completes the Loc.ghost removal, the idea is to gear the API
towards optional, but uniform, location handling.
We don't print <unknown> anymore in the case there is no location.
This is what the test suite expects.
The old printing logic for located items was a bit inconsistent as
it sometimes printed <unknown> and other times it printed nothing as
the caller checked for `is_ghost` upstream.
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Now it is a private field, locations are optional.
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We continue the uniformization pass. No big news here, trying to be
minimally invasive.
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This is the second patch, which is a bit more invasive. We reasoning
is similar to the previous patch.
Code is not as clean as it could as we would need to convert
`glob_constr` to located too, then a few parts could just map the
location.
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The transition has been done a bit brutally. I think we can still save a
lot of useless normalizations here and there by providing the right API
in EConstr. Nonetheless, this is a first step.
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This is a patch fulfilling the relevant remark of Maxime that an
explicit information at the ML type level would be better than "cast
surgery" to carry the optional type of a let-in.
There are a very few semantic changes.
- a "(x:t:=c)" in a block of binders is now written in the more
standard way "(x:=c:t)"
- in notations, the type of a let-in is not displayed if not
explicitly asked so.
See discussion at PR #417 for more information.
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