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2017-02-15[stm] Break stm/toplevel dependency loop.Emilio Jesus Gallego Arias
Currently, the STM, vernac interpretation, and the toplevel are intertwined in a mutual dependency that needs to be resolved using imperative callbacks. This is problematic for a few reasons, in particular it makes the interpretation of commands that affect the document quite intricate. As a first step, we split the `toplevel/` directory into two: "pure" vernac interpretation is moved to the `vernac/` directory, on which the STM relies. Test suite passes, and only one command seems to be disabled with this approach, "Show Script" which is to my understanding obsolete. Subsequent commits will fix this and refine some of the invariants that are not needed anymore.
2016-12-07Merge branch 'v8.6'Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-12-04Merge remote-tracking branch 'github/pr/366' into v8.6Maxime Dénès
Was PR#366: Univs: fix bug 5208
2016-12-02Comment on universe handling in ParametersMatthieu Sozeau
2016-12-02Univs: fix bug #5188Matthieu Sozeau
Parameter was implemented the wrong way trying to separate the universes of the telescope.
2016-11-30Fix UGraph.check_eq!Matthieu Sozeau
Universes are kept in normal form w.r.t. equality but not the <= relation, so the previous check worked almost always but was actually too strict! In cases like (max(Set,u) = u) when u is declared >= Set it was failing to find an equality. Applying the KISS principle: u = v <-> u <= v /\ v <= u. Fix invariant breakage that triggered the discovery of the check_eq bug as well. No algebraic universes should appear in a term position (on the left of a colon in a typing judgment), this was not the case when an algebraic universe instantiated an evar that appeared in the term. We force their universe variable status to change in refresh_universes to avoid this. Fix ind sort inference: Use syntactic universe equality for inductive sort inference instead of check_leq (which now correctly takes constraints into account) and simplify code
2016-11-18Merge branch 'v8.6'Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-10-22Renamings to avoid confusion deprecating old namesMatthieu Sozeau
reconsider_conv_pbs -> reconsider_unif_constraints consider_remaining_unif_problems -> solve_unif_constraints_with_heuristics
2016-09-23Merge branch 'v8.6'Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-09-22Revert "Merge remote-tracking branch 'github/pr/283' into trunk"Maxime Dénès
I hadn't realized that this PR uses OCaml's 4.03 inlined records feature. I will advocate again for a switch to the latest OCaml stable version, but meanwhile, let's revert. Sorry for the noise. This reverts commit 3c47248abc27aa9c64120db30dcb0d7bf945bc70, reversing changes made to ceb68d1d643ac65f500e0201f61e73cf22e6e2fb.
2016-09-20Rename Decl_kinds.binding_kind into Decls_kind.implicit_status.Maxime Dénès
The new name makes it more obvious what is meant here by "kind". We leave Decl_kinds.binding_kind as a deprecated alias for plugin compatibility. We also replace bool with implicit_status in a few places in the codebase.
2016-09-20Stylistic improvements in intf/decl_kinds.mli.Maxime Dénès
We get rid of tuples containing booleans (typically for universe polymorphism) by replacing them with records. The previously common idom: if pi2 kind (* polymorphic *) then ... else ... becomes: if kind.polymorphic then ... else ... To make the construction and destruction of these records lightweight, the labels of boolean arguments for universe polymorphism are now usually also called "polymorphic".
2016-09-19Fix warning when using Variables at toplevel.Maxime Dénès
2016-09-08Merge PR #244.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-08-30CLEANUP: switching from "right-to-left" to "left-to-right" function ↵Matej Kosik
composition operator. Short story: This pull-request: (1) removes the definition of the "right-to-left" function composition operator (2) adds the definition of the "left-to-right" function composition operator (3) rewrites the code relying on "right-to-left" function composition to rely on "left-to-right" function composition operator instead. Long story: In mathematics, function composition is traditionally denoted with ∘ operator. Ocaml standard library does not provide analogous operator under any name. Batteries Included provides provides two alternatives: _ % _ and _ %> _ The first operator one corresponds to the classical ∘ operator routinely used in mathematics. I.e.: (f4 % f3 % f2 % f1) x ≜ (f4 ∘ f3 ∘ f2 ∘ f1) x We can call it "right-to-left" composition because: - the function we write as first (f4) will be called as last - and the function write as last (f1) will be called as first. The meaning of the second operator is this: (f1 %> f2 %> f3 %> f4) x ≜ (f4 ∘ f3 ∘ f2 ∘ f1) x We can call it "left-to-right" composition because: - the function we write as first (f1) will be called first - and the function we write as last (f4) will be called last That is, the functions are written in the same order in which we write and read them. I think that it makes sense to prefer the "left-to-right" variant because it enables us to write functions in the same order in which they will be actually called and it thus better fits our culture (we read/write from left to right).
2016-08-29CLEANUP: taking advantage of "_ % _" operator to express function ↵Matej Kosik
composition in a more obvious way This commit rewrites terms (fun x -> f1 (f2 ... (fN x)...)) to f1 % f2 % ... % fN
2016-08-24CLEANUP: minor readability improvementsMatej Kosik
mainly concerning referring to "Context.{Rel,Named}.get_{id,value,type}" functions. If multiple modules define a function with a same name, e.g.: Context.{Rel,Named}.get_type those calls were prefixed with a corresponding prefix to make sure that it is obvious which function is being called.
2016-08-19Make the user_err header an optional parameter.Emilio Jesus Gallego Arias
Suggested by @ppedrot
2016-08-19Remove errorlabstrm in favor of user_errEmilio Jesus Gallego Arias
As noted by @ppedrot, the first is redundant. The patch is basically a renaming. We didn't make the component optional yet, but this could happen in a future patch.
2016-08-19Unify location handling of error functions.Emilio Jesus Gallego Arias
In some cases prior to this patch, there were two cases for the same error function, one taking a location, the other not. We unify them by using an option parameter, in the line with recent changes in warnings and feedback. This implies a bit of clean up in some places, but more importantly, is the preparation for subsequent patches making `Loc.location` opaque, change that could be use to improve modularity and allow a more functional implementation strategy --- for example --- of the beautifier.
2016-07-29Merge remote-tracking branch 'gforge/v8.5' into v8.6Matthieu Sozeau
2016-07-29Fix bug #3886, generation of obligations of fixesMatthieu Sozeau
This partially reverts c14ccd1b8a3855d4eb369be311d4b36a355e46c1
2016-07-03errors.ml renamed into cErrors.ml (avoid clash with an OCaml compiler-lib ↵Pierre Letouzey
module) For the moment, there is an Error module in compilers-lib/ocamlbytecomp.cm(x)a
2016-07-01Separate flags for fix/cofix/match reduction and clean reduction function names.Maxime Dénès
This is a reimplementation of Hugo's PR#117. We are trying to address the problem that the name of some reduction functions was not saying what they were doing (e.g. whd_betadeltaiota was doing let-in reduction). Like PR#117, we are careful that no function changed semantics without changing the names. Porting existing ML code should be a matter of renamings a few function calls. Also, we introduce more precise reduction flags fMATCH, fFIX, fCOFIX collectively denominated iota. We renamed the following functions: Closure.betadeltaiota -> Closure.all Closure.betadeltaiotanolet -> Closure.allnolet Reductionops.beta -> Closure.beta Reductionops.zeta -> Closure.zeta Reductionops.betaiota -> Closure.betaiota Reductionops.betaiotazeta -> Closure.betaiotazeta Reductionops.delta -> Closure.delta Reductionops.betalet -> Closure.betazeta Reductionops.betadelta -> Closure.betadeltazeta Reductionops.betadeltaiota -> Closure.all Reductionops.betadeltaiotanolet -> Closure.allnolet Closure.no_red -> Closure.nored Reductionops.nored -> Closure.nored Reductionops.nf_betadeltaiota -> Reductionops.nf_all Reductionops.whd_betadelta -> Reductionops.whd_betadeltazeta Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiota -> Reductionops.whd_all Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiota_nolet -> Reductionops.whd_allnolet Reductionops.whd_betadelta_stack -> Reductionops.whd_betadeltazeta_stack Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiota_stack -> Reductionops.whd_all_stack Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiota_nolet_stack -> Reductionops.whd_allnolet_stack Reductionops.whd_betadelta_state -> Reductionops.whd_betadeltazeta_state Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiota_state -> Reductionops.whd_all_state Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiota_nolet_state -> Reductionops.whd_allnolet_state Reductionops.whd_eta -> Reductionops.shrink_eta Tacmach.pf_whd_betadeltaiota -> Tacmach.pf_whd_all Tacmach.New.pf_whd_betadeltaiota -> Tacmach.New.pf_whd_all And removed the following ones: Reductionops.whd_betaetalet Reductionops.whd_betaetalet_stack Reductionops.whd_betaetalet_state Reductionops.whd_betadeltaeta_stack Reductionops.whd_betadeltaeta_state Reductionops.whd_betadeltaeta Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiotaeta_stack Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiotaeta_state Reductionops.whd_betadeltaiotaeta They were unused and having some reduction functions perform eta is confusing as whd_all and nf_all don't do it.
2016-06-29Univs: earlier errors for strict univ decls #4527Matthieu Sozeau
When declaring the universes of a lemma explicitely, throw an error if after minimization the type of a lemma still refers to unbound universes. This is a fix and an incompatibility, but scripts will be backwards compatible themselves. Fix another minor bug in treating universe binders for (Co)Fixpoint.
2016-06-29A new infrastructure for warnings.Maxime Dénès
On the user side, coqtop and coqc take a list of warning names or categories after -w. No prefix means activate the warning, a "-" prefix means deactivate it, and "+" means turn the warning into an error. Special categories include "all", and "default" which contains the warnings enabled by default. We also provide a vernacular Set Warnings which takes the same flags as argument. Note that coqc now prints warnings. The name and category of a warning are printed with the warning itself. On the developer side, Feedback.msg_warning is still accessible, but the recommended way to print a warning is in two steps: 1) create it by: let warn_my_warning = CWarnings.create ~name:"my-warning" ~category:"my-category" (fun args -> Pp.strbrk ...) 2) print it by: warn_my_warning args
2016-06-27Merge branch 'v8.5'Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-06-27Adding ability to put any pattern in binders, prefixed by a quote.Daniel de Rauglaudre
Cf CHANGES for details.
2016-06-18Reuse the typing_flags datatype for inductives.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-06-18Moving the typing_flags to the environment.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-06-16Factorizing the uses of Declareops.safe_flags.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
This allows a smooth addition of various unsafe flags without wreaking havoc in the ML codebase.
2016-06-16Merge PR #79: Let the kernel assume that a (co-)inductive type is positive.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-06-15Allow `Pretyping.search_guard` to not check guardArnaud Spiwack
This is a minimal modification to the pretyping interface which allows for toplevel fixed points to be accepted by the pretyper. Toplevel co-fixed points are accepted without this. However (co-)fixed point _nested_ inside a `Definition` or a `Fixpoint` are always checked for guardedness by the pretyper.
2016-06-14Assume totality: dedicated type rather than boolArnaud Spiwack
The rational is that 1. further typing flags may be available in the future 2. it makes it easier to trace and document the argument
2016-05-31Feedback cleanupEmilio Jesus Gallego Arias
This patch splits pretty printing representation from IO operations. - `Pp` is kept in charge of the abstract pretty printing representation. - The `Feedback` module provides interface for doing printing IO. The patch continues work initiated for 8.5 and has the following effects: - The following functions in `Pp`: `pp`, `ppnl`, `pperr`, `pperrnl`, `pperr_flush`, `pp_flush`, `flush_all`, `msg`, `msgnl`, `msgerr`, `msgerrnl`, `message` are removed. `Feedback.msg_*` functions must be used instead. - Feedback provides different backends to handle output, currently, `stdout`, `emacs` and CoqIDE backends are provided. - Clients cannot specify flush policy anymore, thus `pp_flush` et al are gone. - `Feedback.feedback` takes an `edit_or_state_id` instead of the old mix. Lightly tested: Test-suite passes, Proof General and CoqIDE seem to work.
2016-05-26Univs/Program/Function: Fix bug #4725Matthieu Sozeau
- In Program, a check_evars_are_solved was introduced too early. Program does it's checking of evars by itself. - In Function, the universe environments were not threaded correctly.
2016-05-08Removing dead code and unused opens.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-03-10Removing OCaml deprecated function names from the Lazy module.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-02-16Renaming variants of Entries.local_entryMatej Kosik
The original datatype: Entries.local_entry = LocalDef of constr | LocalAssum of constr was changed to: Entries.local_entry = LocalDefEntry of constr | LocalAssumEntry of constr There are two advantages: 1. the new names are consistent with other variant names in the same module which also have this "*Entry" suffix 2. the new names do not collide with variants defined in the Context.{Rel,Named}.Declaration modules so both, "Entries" as well as "Context.{Rel,Named}.Declaration" can be open at the same time. The disadvantage is that those new variants are longer. But since those variants are rarely used, it it is not a big deal.
2016-02-15merging conflicts with the original "trunk__CLEANUP__Context__2" branchMatej Kosik
2016-02-15Using monotonic types for conversion functions.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-02-15Renaming functions in Typing to stick to the standard e_* scheme.Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-02-09CLEANUP: Context.{Rel,Named}.Declaration.tMatej Kosik
Originally, rel-context was represented as: Context.rel_context = Names.Name.t * Constr.t option * Constr.t Now it is represented as: Context.Rel.t = LocalAssum of Names.Name.t * Constr.t | LocalDef of Names.Name.t * Constr.t * Constr.t Originally, named-context was represented as: Context.named_context = Names.Id.t * Constr.t option * Constr.t Now it is represented as: Context.Named.t = LocalAssum of Names.Id.t * Constr.t | LocalDef of Names.Id.t * Constr.t * Constr.t Motivation: (1) In "tactics/hipattern.ml4" file we define "test_strict_disjunction" function which looked like this: let test_strict_disjunction n lc = Array.for_all_i (fun i c -> match (prod_assum (snd (decompose_prod_n_assum n c))) with | [_,None,c] -> isRel c && Int.equal (destRel c) (n - i) | _ -> false) 0 lc Suppose that you do not know about rel-context and named-context. (that is the case of people who just started to read the source code) Merlin would tell you that the type of the value you are destructing by "match" is: 'a * 'b option * Constr.t (* worst-case scenario *) or Named.Name.t * Constr.t option * Constr.t (* best-case scenario (?) *) To me, this is akin to wearing an opaque veil. It is hard to figure out the meaning of the values you are looking at. In particular, it is hard to discover the connection between the value we are destructing above and the datatypes and functions defined in the "kernel/context.ml" file. In this case, the connection is there, but it is not visible (between the function above and the "Context" module). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Now consider, what happens when the reader see the same function presented in the following form: let test_strict_disjunction n lc = Array.for_all_i (fun i c -> match (prod_assum (snd (decompose_prod_n_assum n c))) with | [LocalAssum (_,c)] -> isRel c && Int.equal (destRel c) (n - i) | _ -> false) 0 lc If the reader haven't seen "LocalAssum" before, (s)he can use Merlin to jump to the corresponding definition and learn more. In this case, the connection is there, and it is directly visible (between the function above and the "Context" module). (2) Also, if we already have the concepts such as: - local declaration - local assumption - local definition and we describe these notions meticulously in the Reference Manual, then it is a real pity not to reinforce the connection of the actual code with the abstract description we published.
2016-01-29Merge branch 'v8.5'Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-01-23Implement support for universe binder lists in Instance and Program ↵Matthieu Sozeau
Fixpoint/Definition.
2016-01-21Merge branch 'v8.5'Pierre-Marie Pédrot
2016-01-20Update copyright headers.Maxime Dénès
2016-01-11CLEANUP: kernel/context.ml{,i}Matej Kosik
The structure of the Context module was refined in such a way that: - Types and functions related to rel-context declarations were put into the Context.Rel.Declaration module. - Types and functions related to rel-context were put into the Context.Rel module. - Types and functions related to named-context declarations were put into the Context.Named.Declaration module. - Types and functions related to named-context were put into the Context.Named module. - Types and functions related to named-list-context declarations were put into Context.NamedList.Declaration module. - Types and functions related to named-list-context were put into Context.NamedList module. Some missing comments were added to the *.mli file. The output of ocamldoc was checked whether it looks in a reasonable way. "TODO: cleanup" was removed The order in which are exported functions listed in the *.mli file was changed. (as in a mature modules, this order usually is not random) The order of exported functions in Context.{Rel,Named} modules is now consistent. (as there is no special reason why that order should be different) The order in which are functions defined in the *.ml file is the same as the order in which they are listed in the *.mli file. (as there is no special reason to define them in a different order) The name of the original fold_{rel,named}_context{,_reverse} functions was changed to better indicate what those functions do. (Now they are called Context.{Rel,Named}.fold_{inside,outside}) The original comments originally attached to the fold_{rel,named}_context{,_reverse} did not full make sense so they were updated. Thrown exceptions are now documented. Naming of formal parameters was made more consistent across different functions. Comments of similar functions in different modules are now consistent. Comments from *.mli files were copied to *.ml file. (We need that information in *.mli files because that is were ocamldoc needs it. It is nice to have it also in *.ml files because when we are using Merlin and jump to the definion of the function, we can see the comments also there and do not need to open a different file if we want to see it.) When we invoke ocamldoc, we instruct it to generate UTF-8 HTML instead of (default) ISO-8859-1. (UTF-8 characters are used in our ocamldoc markup) "open Context" was removed from all *.mli and *.ml files. (Originally, it was OK to do that. Now it is not.) An entry to dev/doc/changes.txt file was added that describes how the names of types and functions have changed.
2015-11-28Univs: correctly register universe binders for lemmas.Matthieu Sozeau
2015-11-19Allow program hooks to see the refined universe_context at the end of aMatthieu Sozeau
definition, if they manipulate structures depending on the initial state of the context.