| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We add state handling to tactics.
TODO:
- [rewrite] `add_morphism_infer` creates problems as it opens a proof.
- [g_obligations] with_tac
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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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These modules do actually belong there.
We have to slightly reorganize printers, removing a couple of
duplicated ones in the way.
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This is a pre-requisite to use automated formatting tools such as
`ocamlformat`, also, there were quite a few places where the comments
had basically no effect, thus it was confusing for the developer.
p.s: Reading some comments was a lot of fun :)
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We remove a few aliases present in the lower layers
[`Genintern/Tactypes`] from `Tacexpr`.
IMHO this enlarges the API for no good purpose, and difficults
analysis.
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This provides several advantages to people serializing tactic
scripts. Appearance of the involved constructors is common enough as
to bother to submit this PR.
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When deprecating some type alias [due to code refactoring] we forgot
to deprecate the constructors too. Closes #8498.
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In particular we check if really used for internal debugging purpose
or to display a message to the user. In the latter case, we replace it
(when possible) by a higher-level printer (e.g. printing foo instead
of Top.foo). In the former case, we clarify that the use is a
debugging use.
Still not perfect (see a few FIXME).
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reference was defined as Ident or Qualid, but the qualid type already
permits empty paths. So we had effectively two representations for
unqualified names, that were not seen as equal by eq_reference.
We remove the reference type and replace its uses by qualid.
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We move the last 3 types to more adequate places.
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- move_location to proofs/logic.
- intro_pattern_naming to Namegen.
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Previously to this patch, `Notation_term` contained information about
both parsing and notation interpretation.
We split notation grammar to a file `parsing/notation_gram` as to make
`interp/` not to depend on some parsing structures such as entries.
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We address the easy ones, but they should probably be all removed.
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We add a [SelectAlreadyFocused] constructor to [goal_selector] (read
"!") which causes a failure when there's not exactly 1 goal and
otherwise is a noop.
Then [Set Default Goal Selector "!".] puts us in "strict focusing"
mode where we can only run tactics if we have only one goal or use a
selector.
Closes #6689.
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Unfortunately, mli-only files cannot be included in packs, so we have
the weird situation that the scope for `Tacexpr` is wrong. So we
cannot address the module as `Ltac_plugin.Tacexpr` but it lives in the
global namespace instead.
This creates problem when using other modular build/packing strategies
[such as #6857] This could be indeed considered a bug in the OCaml
compiler.
In order to remedy this situation we face two choices:
- leave the module out of the pack (!)
- create an implementation for the module
I chose the second solution as it seems to me like the most sensible
choice.
cc: #6512.
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The `reference` type contains some ad-hoc locations in its
constructors, but there is no reason not to handle them with the
standard attribute container provided by `CAst.t`.
An orthogonal topic to this commit is whether the `reference` type
should contain a location or not at all.
It seems that many places would become a bit clearer by splitting
`reference` into non-located `reference` and `lreference`, however
some other places become messier so we maintain the current status-quo
for now.
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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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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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And some code simplification.
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We generalize the possible use of levels to raw and glob printers.
This is potentially useful for printing ltac expressions which are the
glob level.
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The rationale it that it is more common to do so and thus more
"natural" (principle of writing less whenever possible).
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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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Was broken since 8.6.
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We preserve the level instead of resetting it at level 0.
Probably it would be the same as giving level ltop since Tacexp
apparently comes only from using a tactic in an Ltac "let", which is
where I observed a problem.
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This is to avoid excessive parentheses, in particular when printing
"constr:()" in "Print Ltac f".
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We do up to `Term` which is the main bulk of the changes.
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Adding a file fixing #5996 and which uses this feature.
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This concerns pr_value and message_of_value.
This has a few consequences. For instance, no more ad hoc message "a
term" or "a tactic", when not enough information is available for
printing, one gets a generic message "a value of type foobar".
But we also have more printers, satisfying e.g. request #5786.
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The model provides three kinds of printers depending on whether the
printer needs a context, and, if yes if it supports levels. In the
latter case, it takes defaults levels for printing when in a
surrounded context (lconstr style) and for printing when not in a
surrounded context (constr style).
This model preserves the 8.7 focussing semantics of "idtac"
(i.e. focussing only when an env is needed) but it also shows that the
semantics of "idtac", which focusses the goal depending on the type of
its arguments, is a bit ad hoc to understand.
See discussion at PR#6047
"https://github.com/coq/coq/pull/6047#discussion_r148278454".
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For now, a few vernacular features were lot in the process, like locating
Ltac definitions. This will be fixed in an upcoming commit.
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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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This commit also fixes range selectors being incorrectly displayed.
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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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This allows to issue a more appropriate message when a notation with a
{ } cannot be defined because of an incompatible level. E.g.:
Notation "{ A } + B" := (sumbool A B) (at level 20).
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