/usr/share/acl2-7.2dfsg/simplify.lisp is in acl2-source 7.2dfsg-3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186 1187 1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198 1199 1200 1201 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1207 1208 1209 1210 1211 1212 1213 1214 1215 1216 1217 1218 1219 1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233 1234 1235 1236 1237 1238 1239 1240 1241 1242 1243 1244 1245 1246 1247 1248 1249 1250 1251 1252 1253 1254 1255 1256 1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268 1269 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 1291 1292 1293 1294 1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318 1319 1320 1321 1322 1323 1324 1325 1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336 1337 1338 1339 1340 1341 1342 1343 1344 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 1356 1357 1358 1359 1360 1361 1362 1363 1364 1365 1366 1367 1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377 1378 1379 1380 1381 1382 1383 1384 1385 1386 1387 1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 1402 1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409 1410 1411 1412 1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432 1433 1434 1435 1436 1437 1438 1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 1500 1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626 1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633 1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789 1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 2101 2102 2103 2104 2105 2106 2107 2108 2109 2110 2111 2112 2113 2114 2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122 2123 2124 2125 2126 2127 2128 2129 2130 2131 2132 2133 2134 2135 2136 2137 2138 2139 2140 2141 2142 2143 2144 2145 2146 2147 2148 2149 2150 2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165 2166 2167 2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176 2177 2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 2186 2187 2188 2189 2190 2191 2192 2193 2194 2195 2196 2197 2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204 2205 2206 2207 2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216 2217 2218 2219 2220 2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228 2229 2230 2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241 2242 2243 2244 2245 2246 2247 2248 2249 2250 2251 2252 2253 2254 2255 2256 2257 2258 2259 2260 2261 2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 2267 2268 2269 2270 2271 2272 2273 2274 2275 2276 2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290 2291 2292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359 2360 2361 2362 2363 2364 2365 2366 2367 2368 2369 2370 2371 2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431 2432 2433 2434 2435 2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450 2451 2452 2453 2454 2455 2456 2457 2458 2459 2460 2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472 2473 2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482 2483 2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494 2495 2496 2497 2498 2499 2500 2501 2502 2503 2504 2505 2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511 2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523 2524 2525 2526 2527 2528 2529 2530 2531 2532 2533 2534 2535 2536 2537 2538 2539 2540 2541 2542 2543 2544 2545 2546 2547 2548 2549 2550 2551 2552 2553 2554 2555 2556 2557 2558 2559 2560 2561 2562 2563 2564 2565 2566 2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602 2603 2604 2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 2629 2630 2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636 2637 2638 2639 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 2680 2681 2682 2683 2684 2685 2686 2687 2688 2689 2690 2691 2692 2693 2694 2695 2696 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730 2731 2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748 2749 2750 2751 2752 2753 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 2769 2770 2771 2772 2773 2774 2775 2776 2777 2778 2779 2780 2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786 2787 2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793 2794 2795 2796 2797 2798 2799 2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828 2829 2830 2831 2832 2833 2834 2835 2836 2837 2838 2839 2840 2841 2842 2843 2844 2845 2846 2847 2848 2849 2850 2851 2852 2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859 2860 2861 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872 2873 2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 2879 2880 2881 2882 2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892 2893 2894 2895 2896 2897 2898 2899 2900 2901 2902 2903 2904 2905 2906 2907 2908 2909 2910 2911 2912 2913 2914 2915 2916 2917 2918 2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933 2934 2935 2936 2937 2938 2939 2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 2968 2969 2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012 3013 3014 3015 3016 3017 3018 3019 3020 3021 3022 3023 3024 3025 3026 3027 3028 3029 3030 3031 3032 3033 3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039 3040 3041 3042 3043 3044 3045 3046 3047 3048 3049 3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 3061 3062 3063 3064 3065 3066 3067 3068 3069 3070 3071 3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 3090 3091 3092 3093 3094 3095 3096 3097 3098 3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104 3105 3106 3107 3108 3109 3110 3111 3112 3113 3114 3115 3116 3117 3118 3119 3120 3121 3122 3123 3124 3125 3126 3127 3128 3129 3130 3131 3132 3133 3134 3135 3136 3137 3138 3139 3140 3141 3142 3143 3144 3145 3146 3147 3148 3149 3150 3151 3152 3153 3154 3155 3156 3157 3158 3159 3160 3161 3162 3163 3164 3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171 3172 3173 3174 3175 3176 3177 3178 3179 3180 3181 3182 3183 3184 3185 3186 3187 3188 3189 3190 3191 3192 3193 3194 3195 3196 3197 3198 3199 3200 3201 3202 3203 3204 3205 3206 3207 3208 3209 3210 3211 3212 3213 3214 3215 3216 3217 3218 3219 3220 3221 3222 3223 3224 3225 3226 3227 3228 3229 3230 3231 3232 3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239 3240 3241 3242 3243 3244 3245 3246 3247 3248 3249 3250 3251 3252 3253 3254 3255 3256 3257 3258 3259 3260 3261 3262 3263 3264 3265 3266 3267 3268 3269 3270 3271 3272 3273 3274 3275 3276 3277 3278 3279 3280 3281 3282 3283 3284 3285 3286 3287 3288 3289 3290 3291 3292 3293 3294 3295 3296 3297 3298 3299 3300 3301 3302 3303 3304 3305 3306 3307 3308 3309 3310 3311 3312 3313 3314 3315 3316 3317 3318 3319 3320 3321 3322 3323 3324 3325 3326 3327 3328 3329 3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335 3336 3337 3338 3339 3340 3341 3342 3343 3344 3345 3346 3347 3348 3349 3350 3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365 3366 3367 3368 3369 3370 3371 3372 3373 3374 3375 3376 3377 3378 3379 3380 3381 3382 3383 3384 3385 3386 3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397 3398 3399 3400 3401 3402 3403 3404 3405 3406 3407 3408 3409 3410 3411 3412 3413 3414 3415 3416 3417 3418 3419 3420 3421 3422 3423 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436 3437 3438 3439 3440 3441 3442 3443 3444 3445 3446 3447 3448 3449 3450 3451 3452 3453 3454 3455 3456 3457 3458 3459 3460 3461 3462 3463 3464 3465 3466 3467 3468 3469 3470 3471 3472 3473 3474 3475 3476 3477 3478 3479 3480 3481 3482 3483 3484 3485 3486 3487 3488 3489 3490 3491 3492 3493 3494 3495 3496 3497 3498 3499 3500 3501 3502 3503 3504 3505 3506 3507 3508 3509 3510 3511 3512 3513 3514 3515 3516 3517 3518 3519 3520 3521 3522 3523 3524 3525 3526 3527 3528 3529 3530 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536 3537 3538 3539 3540 3541 3542 3543 3544 3545 3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3557 3558 3559 3560 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 3570 3571 3572 3573 3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580 3581 3582 3583 3584 3585 3586 3587 3588 3589 3590 3591 3592 3593 3594 3595 3596 3597 3598 3599 3600 3601 3602 3603 3604 3605 3606 3607 3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613 3614 3615 3616 3617 3618 3619 3620 3621 3622 3623 3624 3625 3626 3627 3628 3629 3630 3631 3632 3633 3634 3635 3636 3637 3638 3639 3640 3641 3642 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655 3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668 3669 3670 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 3680 3681 3682 3683 3684 3685 3686 3687 3688 3689 3690 3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702 3703 3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730 3731 3732 3733 3734 3735 3736 3737 3738 3739 3740 3741 3742 3743 3744 3745 3746 3747 3748 3749 3750 3751 3752 3753 3754 3755 3756 3757 3758 3759 3760 3761 3762 3763 3764 3765 3766 3767 3768 3769 3770 3771 3772 3773 3774 3775 3776 3777 3778 3779 3780 3781 3782 3783 3784 3785 3786 3787 3788 3789 3790 3791 3792 3793 3794 3795 3796 3797 3798 3799 3800 3801 3802 3803 3804 3805 3806 3807 3808 3809 3810 3811 3812 3813 3814 3815 3816 3817 3818 3819 3820 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3828 3829 3830 3831 3832 3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839 3840 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854 3855 3856 3857 3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863 3864 3865 3866 3867 3868 3869 3870 3871 3872 3873 3874 3875 3876 3877 3878 3879 3880 3881 3882 3883 3884 3885 3886 3887 3888 3889 3890 3891 3892 3893 3894 3895 3896 3897 3898 3899 3900 3901 3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928 3929 3930 3931 3932 3933 3934 3935 3936 3937 3938 3939 3940 3941 3942 3943 3944 3945 3946 3947 3948 3949 3950 3951 3952 3953 3954 3955 3956 3957 3958 3959 3960 3961 3962 3963 3964 3965 3966 3967 3968 3969 3970 3971 3972 3973 3974 3975 3976 3977 3978 3979 3980 3981 3982 3983 3984 3985 3986 3987 3988 3989 3990 3991 3992 3993 3994 3995 3996 3997 3998 3999 4000 4001 4002 4003 4004 4005 4006 4007 4008 4009 4010 4011 4012 4013 4014 4015 4016 4017 4018 4019 4020 4021 4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027 4028 4029 4030 4031 4032 4033 4034 4035 4036 4037 4038 4039 4040 4041 4042 4043 4044 4045 4046 4047 4048 4049 4050 4051 4052 4053 4054 4055 4056 4057 4058 4059 4060 4061 4062 4063 4064 4065 4066 4067 4068 4069 4070 4071 4072 4073 4074 4075 4076 4077 4078 4079 4080 4081 4082 4083 4084 4085 4086 4087 4088 4089 4090 4091 4092 4093 4094 4095 4096 4097 4098 4099 4100 4101 4102 4103 4104 4105 4106 4107 4108 4109 4110 4111 4112 4113 4114 4115 4116 4117 4118 4119 4120 4121 4122 4123 4124 4125 4126 4127 4128 4129 4130 4131 4132 4133 4134 4135 4136 4137 4138 4139 4140 4141 4142 4143 4144 4145 4146 4147 4148 4149 4150 4151 4152 4153 4154 4155 4156 4157 4158 4159 4160 4161 4162 4163 4164 4165 4166 4167 4168 4169 4170 4171 4172 4173 4174 4175 4176 4177 4178 4179 4180 4181 4182 4183 4184 4185 4186 4187 4188 4189 4190 4191 4192 4193 4194 4195 4196 4197 4198 4199 4200 4201 4202 4203 4204 4205 4206 4207 4208 4209 4210 4211 4212 4213 4214 4215 4216 4217 4218 4219 4220 4221 4222 4223 4224 4225 4226 4227 4228 4229 4230 4231 4232 4233 4234 4235 4236 4237 4238 4239 4240 4241 4242 4243 4244 4245 4246 4247 4248 4249 4250 4251 4252 4253 4254 4255 4256 4257 4258 4259 4260 4261 4262 4263 4264 4265 4266 4267 4268 4269 4270 4271 4272 4273 4274 4275 4276 4277 4278 4279 4280 4281 4282 4283 4284 4285 4286 4287 4288 4289 4290 4291 4292 4293 4294 4295 4296 4297 4298 4299 4300 4301 4302 4303 4304 4305 4306 4307 4308 4309 4310 4311 4312 4313 4314 4315 4316 4317 4318 4319 4320 4321 4322 4323 4324 4325 4326 4327 4328 4329 4330 4331 4332 4333 4334 4335 4336 4337 4338 4339 4340 4341 4342 4343 4344 4345 4346 4347 4348 4349 4350 4351 4352 4353 4354 4355 4356 4357 4358 4359 4360 4361 4362 4363 4364 4365 4366 4367 4368 4369 4370 4371 4372 4373 4374 4375 4376 4377 4378 4379 4380 4381 4382 4383 4384 4385 4386 4387 4388 4389 4390 4391 4392 4393 4394 4395 4396 4397 4398 4399 4400 4401 4402 4403 4404 4405 4406 4407 4408 4409 4410 4411 4412 4413 4414 4415 4416 4417 4418 4419 4420 4421 4422 4423 4424 4425 4426 4427 4428 4429 4430 4431 4432 4433 4434 4435 4436 4437 4438 4439 4440 4441 4442 4443 4444 4445 4446 4447 4448 4449 4450 4451 4452 4453 4454 4455 4456 4457 4458 4459 4460 4461 4462 4463 4464 4465 4466 4467 4468 4469 4470 4471 4472 4473 4474 4475 4476 4477 4478 4479 4480 4481 4482 4483 4484 4485 4486 4487 4488 4489 4490 4491 4492 4493 4494 4495 4496 4497 4498 4499 4500 4501 4502 4503 4504 4505 4506 4507 4508 4509 4510 4511 4512 4513 4514 4515 4516 4517 4518 4519 4520 4521 4522 4523 4524 4525 4526 4527 4528 4529 4530 4531 4532 4533 4534 4535 4536 4537 4538 4539 4540 4541 4542 4543 4544 4545 4546 4547 4548 4549 4550 4551 4552 4553 4554 4555 4556 4557 4558 4559 4560 4561 4562 4563 4564 4565 4566 4567 4568 4569 4570 4571 4572 4573 4574 4575 4576 4577 4578 4579 4580 4581 4582 4583 4584 4585 4586 4587 4588 4589 4590 4591 4592 4593 4594 4595 4596 4597 4598 4599 4600 4601 4602 4603 4604 4605 4606 4607 4608 4609 4610 4611 4612 4613 4614 4615 4616 4617 4618 4619 4620 4621 4622 4623 4624 4625 4626 4627 4628 4629 4630 4631 4632 4633 4634 4635 4636 4637 4638 4639 4640 4641 4642 4643 4644 4645 4646 4647 4648 4649 4650 4651 4652 4653 4654 4655 4656 4657 4658 4659 4660 4661 4662 4663 4664 4665 4666 4667 4668 4669 4670 4671 4672 4673 4674 4675 4676 4677 4678 4679 4680 4681 4682 4683 4684 4685 4686 4687 4688 4689 4690 4691 4692 4693 4694 4695 4696 4697 4698 4699 4700 4701 4702 4703 4704 4705 4706 4707 4708 4709 4710 4711 4712 4713 4714 4715 4716 4717 4718 4719 4720 4721 4722 4723 4724 4725 4726 4727 4728 4729 4730 4731 4732 4733 4734 4735 4736 4737 4738 4739 4740 4741 4742 4743 4744 4745 4746 4747 4748 4749 4750 4751 4752 4753 4754 4755 4756 4757 4758 4759 4760 4761 4762 4763 4764 4765 4766 4767 4768 4769 4770 4771 4772 4773 4774 4775 4776 4777 4778 4779 4780 4781 4782 4783 4784 4785 4786 4787 4788 4789 4790 4791 4792 4793 4794 4795 4796 4797 4798 4799 4800 4801 4802 4803 4804 4805 4806 4807 4808 4809 4810 4811 4812 4813 4814 4815 4816 4817 4818 4819 4820 4821 4822 4823 4824 4825 4826 4827 4828 4829 4830 4831 4832 4833 4834 4835 4836 4837 4838 4839 4840 4841 4842 4843 4844 4845 4846 4847 4848 4849 4850 4851 4852 4853 4854 4855 4856 4857 4858 4859 4860 4861 4862 4863 4864 4865 4866 4867 4868 4869 4870 4871 4872 4873 4874 4875 4876 4877 4878 4879 4880 4881 4882 4883 4884 4885 4886 4887 4888 4889 4890 4891 4892 4893 4894 4895 4896 4897 4898 4899 4900 4901 4902 4903 4904 4905 4906 4907 4908 4909 4910 4911 4912 4913 4914 4915 4916 4917 4918 4919 4920 4921 4922 4923 4924 4925 4926 4927 4928 4929 4930 4931 4932 4933 4934 4935 4936 4937 4938 4939 4940 4941 4942 4943 4944 4945 4946 4947 4948 4949 4950 4951 4952 4953 4954 4955 4956 4957 4958 4959 4960 4961 4962 4963 4964 4965 4966 4967 4968 4969 4970 4971 4972 4973 4974 4975 4976 4977 4978 4979 4980 4981 4982 4983 4984 4985 4986 4987 4988 4989 4990 4991 4992 4993 4994 4995 4996 4997 4998 4999 5000 5001 5002 5003 5004 5005 5006 5007 5008 5009 5010 5011 5012 5013 5014 5015 5016 5017 5018 5019 5020 5021 5022 5023 5024 5025 5026 5027 5028 5029 5030 5031 5032 5033 5034 5035 5036 5037 5038 5039 5040 5041 5042 5043 5044 5045 5046 5047 5048 5049 5050 5051 5052 5053 5054 5055 5056 5057 5058 5059 5060 5061 5062 5063 5064 5065 5066 5067 5068 5069 5070 5071 5072 5073 5074 5075 5076 5077 5078 5079 5080 5081 5082 5083 5084 5085 5086 5087 5088 5089 5090 5091 5092 5093 5094 5095 5096 5097 5098 5099 5100 5101 5102 5103 5104 5105 5106 5107 5108 5109 5110 5111 5112 5113 5114 5115 5116 5117 5118 5119 5120 5121 5122 5123 5124 5125 5126 5127 5128 5129 5130 5131 5132 5133 5134 5135 5136 5137 5138 5139 5140 5141 5142 5143 5144 5145 5146 5147 5148 5149 5150 5151 5152 5153 5154 5155 5156 5157 5158 5159 5160 5161 5162 5163 5164 5165 5166 5167 5168 5169 5170 5171 5172 5173 5174 5175 5176 5177 5178 5179 5180 5181 5182 5183 5184 5185 5186 5187 5188 5189 5190 5191 5192 5193 5194 5195 5196 5197 5198 5199 5200 5201 5202 5203 5204 5205 5206 5207 5208 5209 5210 5211 5212 5213 5214 5215 5216 5217 5218 5219 5220 5221 5222 5223 5224 5225 5226 5227 5228 5229 5230 5231 5232 5233 5234 5235 5236 5237 5238 5239 5240 5241 5242 5243 5244 5245 5246 5247 5248 5249 5250 5251 5252 5253 5254 5255 5256 5257 5258 5259 5260 5261 5262 5263 5264 5265 5266 5267 5268 5269 5270 5271 5272 5273 5274 5275 5276 5277 5278 5279 5280 5281 5282 5283 5284 5285 5286 5287 5288 5289 5290 5291 5292 5293 5294 5295 5296 5297 5298 5299 5300 5301 5302 5303 5304 5305 5306 5307 5308 5309 5310 5311 5312 5313 5314 5315 5316 5317 5318 5319 5320 5321 5322 5323 5324 5325 5326 5327 5328 5329 5330 5331 5332 5333 5334 5335 5336 5337 5338 5339 5340 5341 5342 5343 5344 5345 5346 5347 5348 5349 5350 5351 5352 5353 5354 5355 5356 5357 5358 5359 5360 5361 5362 5363 5364 5365 5366 5367 5368 5369 5370 5371 5372 5373 5374 5375 5376 5377 5378 5379 5380 5381 5382 5383 5384 5385 5386 5387 5388 5389 5390 5391 5392 5393 5394 5395 5396 5397 5398 5399 5400 5401 5402 5403 5404 5405 5406 5407 5408 5409 5410 5411 5412 5413 5414 5415 5416 5417 5418 5419 5420 5421 5422 5423 5424 5425 5426 5427 5428 5429 5430 5431 5432 5433 5434 5435 5436 5437 5438 5439 5440 5441 5442 5443 5444 5445 5446 5447 5448 5449 5450 5451 5452 5453 5454 5455 5456 5457 5458 5459 5460 5461 5462 5463 5464 5465 5466 5467 5468 5469 5470 5471 5472 5473 5474 5475 5476 5477 5478 5479 5480 5481 5482 5483 5484 5485 5486 5487 5488 5489 5490 5491 5492 5493 5494 5495 5496 5497 5498 5499 5500 5501 5502 5503 5504 5505 5506 5507 5508 5509 5510 5511 5512 5513 5514 5515 5516 5517 5518 5519 5520 5521 5522 5523 5524 5525 5526 5527 5528 5529 5530 5531 5532 5533 5534 5535 5536 5537 5538 5539 5540 5541 5542 5543 5544 5545 5546 5547 5548 5549 5550 5551 5552 5553 5554 5555 5556 5557 5558 5559 5560 5561 5562 5563 5564 5565 5566 5567 5568 5569 5570 5571 5572 5573 5574 5575 5576 5577 5578 5579 5580 5581 5582 5583 5584 5585 5586 5587 5588 5589 5590 5591 5592 5593 5594 5595 5596 5597 5598 5599 5600 5601 5602 5603 5604 5605 5606 5607 5608 5609 5610 5611 5612 5613 5614 5615 5616 5617 5618 5619 5620 5621 5622 5623 5624 5625 5626 5627 5628 5629 5630 5631 5632 5633 5634 5635 5636 5637 5638 5639 5640 5641 5642 5643 5644 5645 5646 5647 5648 5649 5650 5651 5652 5653 5654 5655 5656 5657 5658 5659 5660 5661 5662 5663 5664 5665 5666 5667 5668 5669 5670 5671 5672 5673 5674 5675 5676 5677 5678 5679 5680 5681 5682 5683 5684 5685 5686 5687 5688 5689 5690 5691 5692 5693 5694 5695 5696 5697 5698 5699 5700 5701 5702 5703 5704 5705 5706 5707 5708 5709 5710 5711 5712 5713 5714 5715 5716 5717 5718 5719 5720 5721 5722 5723 5724 5725 5726 5727 5728 5729 5730 5731 5732 5733 5734 5735 5736 5737 5738 5739 5740 5741 5742 5743 5744 5745 5746 5747 5748 5749 5750 5751 5752 5753 5754 5755 5756 5757 5758 5759 5760 5761 5762 5763 5764 5765 5766 5767 5768 5769 5770 5771 5772 5773 5774 5775 5776 5777 5778 5779 5780 5781 5782 5783 5784 5785 5786 5787 5788 5789 5790 5791 5792 5793 5794 5795 5796 5797 5798 5799 5800 5801 5802 5803 5804 5805 5806 5807 5808 5809 5810 5811 5812 5813 5814 5815 5816 5817 5818 5819 5820 5821 5822 5823 5824 5825 5826 5827 5828 5829 5830 5831 5832 5833 5834 5835 5836 5837 5838 5839 5840 5841 5842 5843 5844 5845 5846 5847 5848 5849 5850 5851 5852 5853 5854 5855 5856 5857 5858 5859 5860 5861 5862 5863 5864 5865 5866 5867 5868 5869 5870 5871 5872 5873 5874 5875 5876 5877 5878 5879 5880 5881 5882 5883 5884 5885 5886 5887 5888 5889 5890 5891 5892 5893 5894 5895 5896 5897 5898 5899 5900 5901 5902 5903 5904 5905 5906 5907 5908 5909 5910 5911 5912 5913 5914 5915 5916 5917 5918 5919 5920 5921 5922 5923 5924 5925 5926 5927 5928 5929 5930 5931 5932 5933 5934 5935 5936 5937 5938 5939 5940 5941 5942 5943 5944 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 5950 5951 5952 5953 5954 5955 5956 5957 5958 5959 5960 5961 5962 5963 5964 5965 5966 5967 5968 5969 5970 5971 5972 5973 5974 5975 5976 5977 5978 5979 5980 5981 5982 5983 5984 5985 5986 5987 5988 5989 5990 5991 5992 5993 5994 5995 5996 5997 5998 5999 6000 6001 6002 6003 6004 6005 6006 6007 6008 6009 6010 6011 6012 6013 6014 6015 6016 6017 6018 6019 6020 6021 6022 6023 6024 6025 6026 6027 6028 6029 6030 6031 6032 6033 6034 6035 6036 6037 6038 6039 6040 6041 6042 6043 6044 6045 6046 6047 6048 6049 6050 6051 6052 6053 6054 6055 6056 6057 6058 6059 6060 6061 6062 6063 6064 6065 6066 6067 6068 6069 6070 6071 6072 6073 6074 6075 6076 6077 6078 6079 6080 6081 6082 6083 6084 6085 6086 6087 6088 6089 6090 6091 6092 6093 6094 6095 6096 6097 6098 6099 6100 6101 6102 6103 6104 6105 6106 6107 6108 6109 6110 6111 6112 6113 6114 6115 6116 6117 6118 6119 6120 6121 6122 6123 6124 6125 6126 6127 6128 6129 6130 6131 6132 6133 6134 6135 6136 6137 6138 6139 6140 6141 6142 6143 6144 6145 6146 6147 6148 6149 6150 6151 6152 6153 6154 6155 6156 6157 6158 6159 6160 6161 6162 6163 6164 6165 6166 6167 6168 6169 6170 6171 6172 6173 6174 6175 6176 6177 6178 6179 6180 6181 6182 6183 6184 6185 6186 6187 6188 6189 6190 6191 6192 6193 6194 6195 6196 6197 6198 6199 6200 6201 6202 6203 6204 6205 6206 6207 6208 6209 6210 6211 6212 6213 6214 6215 6216 6217 6218 6219 6220 6221 6222 6223 6224 6225 6226 6227 6228 6229 6230 6231 6232 6233 6234 6235 6236 6237 6238 6239 6240 6241 6242 6243 6244 6245 6246 6247 6248 6249 6250 6251 6252 6253 6254 6255 6256 6257 6258 6259 6260 6261 6262 6263 6264 6265 6266 6267 6268 6269 6270 6271 6272 6273 6274 6275 6276 6277 6278 6279 6280 6281 6282 6283 6284 6285 6286 6287 6288 6289 6290 6291 6292 6293 6294 6295 6296 6297 6298 6299 6300 6301 6302 6303 6304 6305 6306 6307 6308 6309 6310 6311 6312 6313 6314 6315 6316 6317 6318 6319 6320 6321 6322 6323 6324 6325 6326 6327 6328 6329 6330 6331 6332 6333 6334 6335 6336 6337 6338 6339 6340 6341 6342 6343 6344 6345 6346 6347 6348 6349 6350 6351 6352 6353 6354 6355 6356 6357 6358 6359 6360 6361 6362 6363 6364 6365 6366 6367 6368 6369 6370 6371 6372 6373 6374 6375 6376 6377 6378 6379 6380 6381 6382 6383 6384 6385 6386 6387 6388 6389 6390 6391 6392 6393 6394 6395 6396 6397 6398 6399 6400 6401 6402 6403 6404 6405 6406 6407 6408 6409 6410 6411 6412 6413 6414 6415 6416 6417 6418 6419 6420 6421 6422 6423 6424 6425 6426 6427 6428 6429 6430 6431 6432 6433 6434 6435 6436 6437 6438 6439 6440 6441 6442 6443 6444 6445 6446 6447 6448 6449 6450 6451 6452 6453 6454 6455 6456 6457 6458 6459 6460 6461 6462 6463 6464 6465 6466 6467 6468 6469 6470 6471 6472 6473 6474 6475 6476 6477 6478 6479 6480 6481 6482 6483 6484 6485 6486 6487 6488 6489 6490 6491 6492 6493 6494 6495 6496 6497 6498 6499 6500 6501 6502 6503 6504 6505 6506 6507 6508 6509 6510 6511 6512 6513 6514 6515 6516 6517 6518 6519 6520 6521 6522 6523 6524 6525 6526 6527 6528 6529 6530 6531 6532 6533 6534 6535 6536 6537 6538 6539 6540 6541 6542 6543 6544 6545 6546 6547 6548 6549 6550 6551 6552 6553 6554 6555 6556 6557 6558 6559 6560 6561 6562 6563 6564 6565 6566 6567 6568 6569 6570 6571 6572 6573 6574 6575 6576 6577 6578 6579 6580 6581 6582 6583 6584 6585 6586 6587 6588 6589 6590 6591 6592 6593 6594 6595 6596 6597 6598 6599 6600 6601 6602 6603 6604 6605 6606 6607 6608 6609 6610 6611 6612 6613 6614 6615 6616 6617 6618 6619 6620 6621 6622 6623 6624 6625 6626 6627 6628 6629 6630 6631 6632 6633 6634 6635 6636 6637 6638 6639 6640 6641 6642 6643 6644 6645 6646 6647 6648 6649 6650 6651 6652 6653 6654 6655 6656 6657 6658 6659 6660 6661 6662 6663 6664 6665 6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671 6672 6673 6674 6675 6676 6677 6678 6679 6680 6681 6682 6683 6684 6685 6686 6687 6688 6689 6690 6691 6692 6693 6694 6695 6696 6697 6698 6699 6700 6701 6702 6703 6704 6705 6706 6707 6708 6709 6710 6711 6712 6713 6714 6715 6716 6717 6718 6719 6720 6721 6722 6723 6724 6725 6726 6727 6728 6729 6730 6731 6732 6733 6734 6735 6736 6737 6738 6739 6740 6741 6742 6743 6744 6745 6746 6747 6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 6755 6756 6757 6758 6759 6760 6761 6762 6763 6764 6765 6766 6767 6768 6769 6770 6771 6772 6773 6774 6775 6776 6777 6778 6779 6780 6781 6782 6783 6784 6785 6786 6787 6788 6789 6790 6791 6792 6793 6794 6795 6796 6797 6798 6799 6800 6801 6802 6803 6804 6805 6806 6807 6808 6809 6810 6811 6812 6813 6814 6815 6816 6817 6818 6819 6820 6821 6822 6823 6824 6825 6826 6827 6828 6829 6830 6831 6832 6833 6834 6835 6836 6837 6838 6839 6840 6841 6842 6843 6844 6845 6846 6847 6848 6849 6850 6851 6852 6853 6854 6855 6856 6857 6858 6859 6860 6861 6862 6863 6864 6865 6866 6867 6868 6869 6870 6871 6872 6873 6874 6875 6876 6877 6878 6879 6880 6881 6882 6883 6884 6885 6886 6887 6888 6889 6890 6891 6892 6893 6894 6895 6896 6897 6898 6899 6900 6901 6902 6903 6904 6905 6906 6907 6908 6909 6910 6911 6912 6913 6914 6915 6916 6917 6918 6919 6920 6921 6922 6923 6924 6925 6926 6927 6928 6929 6930 6931 6932 6933 6934 6935 6936 6937 6938 6939 6940 6941 6942 6943 6944 6945 6946 6947 6948 6949 6950 6951 6952 6953 6954 6955 6956 6957 6958 6959 6960 6961 6962 6963 6964 6965 6966 6967 6968 6969 6970 6971 6972 6973 6974 6975 6976 6977 6978 6979 6980 6981 6982 6983 6984 6985 6986 6987 6988 6989 6990 6991 6992 6993 6994 6995 6996 6997 6998 6999 7000 7001 7002 7003 7004 7005 7006 7007 7008 7009 7010 7011 7012 7013 7014 7015 7016 7017 7018 7019 7020 7021 7022 7023 7024 7025 7026 7027 7028 7029 7030 7031 7032 7033 7034 7035 7036 7037 7038 7039 7040 7041 7042 7043 7044 7045 7046 7047 7048 7049 7050 7051 7052 7053 7054 7055 7056 7057 7058 7059 7060 7061 7062 7063 7064 7065 7066 7067 7068 7069 7070 7071 7072 7073 7074 7075 7076 7077 7078 7079 7080 7081 7082 7083 7084 7085 7086 7087 7088 7089 7090 7091 7092 7093 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101 7102 7103 7104 7105 7106 7107 7108 7109 7110 7111 7112 7113 7114 7115 7116 7117 7118 7119 7120 7121 7122 7123 7124 7125 7126 7127 7128 7129 7130 7131 7132 7133 7134 7135 7136 7137 7138 7139 7140 7141 7142 7143 7144 7145 7146 7147 7148 7149 7150 7151 7152 7153 7154 7155 7156 7157 7158 7159 7160 7161 7162 7163 7164 7165 7166 7167 7168 7169 7170 7171 7172 7173 7174 7175 7176 7177 7178 7179 7180 7181 7182 7183 7184 7185 7186 7187 7188 7189 7190 7191 7192 7193 7194 7195 7196 7197 7198 7199 7200 7201 7202 7203 7204 7205 7206 7207 7208 7209 7210 7211 7212 7213 7214 7215 7216 7217 7218 7219 7220 7221 7222 7223 7224 7225 7226 7227 7228 7229 7230 7231 7232 7233 7234 7235 7236 7237 7238 7239 7240 7241 7242 7243 7244 7245 7246 7247 7248 7249 7250 7251 7252 7253 7254 7255 7256 7257 7258 7259 7260 7261 7262 7263 7264 7265 7266 7267 7268 7269 7270 7271 7272 7273 7274 7275 7276 7277 7278 7279 7280 7281 7282 7283 7284 7285 7286 7287 7288 7289 7290 7291 7292 7293 7294 7295 7296 7297 7298 7299 7300 7301 7302 7303 7304 7305 7306 7307 7308 7309 7310 7311 7312 7313 7314 7315 7316 7317 7318 7319 7320 7321 7322 7323 7324 7325 7326 7327 7328 7329 7330 7331 7332 7333 7334 7335 7336 7337 7338 7339 7340 7341 7342 7343 7344 7345 7346 7347 7348 7349 7350 7351 7352 7353 7354 7355 7356 7357 7358 7359 7360 7361 7362 7363 7364 7365 7366 7367 7368 7369 7370 7371 7372 7373 7374 7375 7376 7377 7378 7379 7380 7381 7382 7383 7384 7385 7386 7387 7388 7389 7390 7391 7392 7393 7394 7395 7396 7397 7398 7399 7400 7401 7402 7403 7404 7405 7406 7407 7408 7409 7410 7411 7412 7413 7414 7415 7416 7417 7418 7419 7420 7421 7422 7423 7424 7425 7426 7427 7428 7429 7430 7431 7432 7433 7434 7435 7436 7437 7438 7439 7440 7441 7442 7443 7444 7445 7446 7447 7448 7449 7450 7451 7452 7453 7454 7455 7456 7457 7458 7459 7460 7461 7462 7463 7464 7465 7466 7467 7468 7469 7470 7471 7472 7473 7474 7475 7476 7477 7478 7479 7480 7481 7482 7483 7484 7485 7486 7487 7488 7489 7490 7491 7492 7493 7494 7495 7496 7497 7498 7499 7500 7501 7502 7503 7504 7505 7506 7507 7508 7509 7510 7511 7512 7513 7514 7515 7516 7517 7518 7519 7520 7521 7522 7523 7524 7525 7526 7527 7528 7529 7530 7531 7532 7533 7534 7535 7536 7537 7538 7539 7540 7541 7542 7543 7544 7545 7546 7547 7548 7549 7550 7551 7552 7553 7554 7555 7556 7557 7558 7559 7560 7561 7562 7563 7564 7565 7566 7567 7568 7569 7570 7571 7572 7573 7574 7575 7576 7577 7578 7579 7580 7581 7582 7583 7584 7585 7586 7587 7588 7589 7590 7591 7592 7593 7594 7595 7596 7597 7598 7599 7600 7601 7602 7603 7604 7605 7606 7607 7608 7609 7610 7611 7612 7613 7614 7615 7616 7617 7618 7619 7620 7621 7622 7623 7624 7625 7626 7627 7628 7629 7630 7631 7632 7633 7634 7635 7636 7637 7638 7639 7640 7641 7642 7643 7644 7645 7646 7647 7648 7649 7650 7651 7652 7653 7654 7655 7656 7657 7658 7659 7660 7661 7662 7663 7664 7665 7666 7667 7668 7669 7670 7671 7672 7673 7674 7675 7676 7677 7678 7679 7680 7681 7682 7683 7684 7685 7686 7687 7688 7689 7690 7691 7692 7693 7694 7695 7696 7697 7698 7699 7700 7701 7702 7703 7704 7705 7706 7707 7708 7709 7710 7711 7712 7713 7714 7715 7716 7717 7718 7719 7720 7721 7722 7723 7724 7725 7726 7727 7728 7729 7730 7731 7732 7733 7734 7735 7736 7737 7738 7739 7740 7741 7742 7743 7744 7745 7746 7747 7748 7749 7750 7751 7752 7753 7754 7755 7756 7757 7758 7759 7760 7761 7762 7763 7764 7765 7766 7767 7768 7769 7770 7771 7772 7773 7774 7775 7776 7777 7778 7779 7780 7781 7782 7783 7784 7785 7786 7787 7788 7789 7790 7791 7792 7793 7794 7795 7796 7797 7798 7799 7800 7801 7802 7803 7804 7805 7806 7807 7808 7809 7810 7811 7812 7813 7814 7815 7816 7817 7818 7819 7820 7821 7822 7823 7824 7825 7826 7827 7828 7829 7830 7831 7832 7833 7834 7835 7836 7837 7838 7839 7840 7841 7842 7843 7844 7845 7846 7847 7848 7849 7850 7851 7852 7853 7854 7855 7856 7857 7858 7859 7860 7861 7862 7863 7864 7865 7866 7867 7868 7869 7870 7871 7872 7873 7874 7875 7876 7877 7878 7879 7880 7881 7882 7883 7884 7885 7886 7887 7888 7889 7890 7891 7892 7893 7894 7895 7896 7897 7898 7899 7900 7901 7902 7903 7904 7905 7906 7907 7908 7909 7910 7911 7912 7913 7914 7915 7916 7917 7918 7919 7920 7921 7922 7923 7924 7925 7926 7927 7928 7929 7930 7931 7932 7933 7934 7935 7936 7937 7938 7939 7940 7941 7942 7943 7944 7945 7946 7947 7948 7949 7950 7951 7952 7953 7954 7955 7956 7957 7958 7959 7960 7961 7962 7963 7964 7965 7966 7967 7968 7969 7970 7971 7972 7973 7974 7975 7976 7977 7978 7979 7980 7981 7982 7983 7984 7985 7986 7987 7988 7989 7990 7991 7992 7993 7994 7995 7996 7997 7998 7999 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004 8005 8006 8007 8008 8009 8010 8011 8012 8013 8014 8015 8016 8017 8018 8019 8020 8021 8022 8023 8024 8025 8026 8027 8028 8029 8030 8031 8032 8033 8034 8035 8036 8037 8038 8039 8040 8041 8042 8043 8044 8045 8046 8047 8048 8049 8050 8051 8052 8053 8054 8055 8056 8057 8058 8059 8060 8061 8062 8063 8064 8065 8066 8067 8068 8069 8070 8071 8072 8073 8074 8075 8076 8077 8078 8079 8080 8081 8082 8083 8084 8085 8086 8087 8088 8089 8090 8091 8092 8093 8094 8095 8096 8097 8098 8099 8100 8101 8102 8103 8104 8105 8106 8107 8108 8109 8110 8111 8112 8113 8114 8115 8116 8117 8118 8119 8120 8121 8122 8123 8124 8125 8126 8127 8128 8129 8130 8131 8132 8133 8134 8135 8136 8137 8138 8139 8140 8141 8142 8143 8144 8145 8146 8147 8148 8149 8150 8151 8152 8153 8154 8155 8156 8157 8158 8159 8160 8161 8162 8163 8164 8165 8166 8167 8168 8169 8170 8171 8172 8173 8174 8175 8176 8177 8178 8179 8180 8181 8182 8183 8184 8185 8186 8187 8188 8189 8190 8191 8192 8193 8194 8195 8196 8197 8198 8199 8200 8201 8202 8203 8204 8205 8206 8207 8208 8209 8210 8211 8212 8213 8214 8215 8216 8217 8218 8219 8220 8221 8222 8223 8224 8225 8226 8227 8228 8229 8230 8231 8232 8233 8234 8235 8236 8237 8238 8239 8240 8241 8242 8243 8244 8245 8246 8247 8248 8249 8250 8251 8252 8253 8254 8255 8256 8257 8258 8259 8260 8261 8262 8263 8264 8265 8266 8267 8268 8269 8270 8271 8272 8273 8274 8275 8276 8277 8278 8279 8280 8281 8282 8283 8284 8285 8286 8287 8288 8289 8290 8291 8292 8293 8294 8295 8296 8297 8298 8299 8300 8301 8302 8303 8304 8305 8306 8307 8308 8309 8310 8311 8312 8313 8314 8315 8316 8317 8318 8319 8320 8321 8322 8323 8324 8325 8326 8327 8328 8329 8330 8331 8332 8333 8334 8335 8336 8337 8338 8339 8340 8341 8342 8343 8344 8345 8346 8347 8348 8349 8350 8351 8352 8353 8354 8355 8356 8357 8358 8359 8360 8361 8362 8363 8364 8365 8366 8367 8368 8369 8370 8371 8372 8373 8374 8375 8376 8377 8378 8379 8380 8381 8382 8383 8384 8385 8386 8387 8388 8389 8390 8391 8392 8393 8394 8395 8396 8397 8398 8399 8400 8401 8402 8403 8404 8405 8406 8407 8408 8409 8410 8411 8412 8413 8414 8415 8416 8417 8418 8419 8420 8421 8422 8423 8424 8425 8426 8427 8428 8429 8430 8431 8432 8433 8434 8435 8436 8437 8438 8439 8440 8441 8442 8443 8444 8445 8446 8447 8448 8449 8450 8451 8452 8453 8454 8455 8456 8457 8458 8459 8460 8461 8462 8463 8464 8465 8466 8467 8468 8469 8470 8471 8472 8473 8474 8475 8476 8477 8478 8479 8480 8481 8482 8483 8484 8485 8486 8487 8488 8489 8490 8491 8492 8493 8494 8495 8496 8497 8498 8499 8500 8501 8502 8503 8504 8505 8506 8507 8508 8509 8510 8511 8512 8513 8514 8515 8516 8517 8518 8519 8520 8521 8522 8523 8524 8525 8526 8527 8528 8529 8530 8531 8532 8533 8534 8535 8536 8537 8538 8539 8540 8541 8542 8543 8544 8545 8546 8547 8548 8549 8550 8551 8552 8553 8554 8555 8556 8557 8558 8559 8560 8561 8562 8563 8564 8565 8566 8567 8568 8569 8570 8571 8572 8573 8574 8575 8576 8577 8578 8579 8580 8581 8582 8583 8584 8585 8586 8587 8588 8589 8590 8591 8592 8593 8594 8595 8596 8597 8598 8599 8600 8601 8602 8603 8604 8605 8606 8607 8608 8609 8610 8611 8612 8613 8614 8615 8616 8617 8618 8619 8620 8621 8622 8623 8624 8625 8626 8627 8628 8629 8630 8631 8632 8633 8634 8635 8636 8637 8638 8639 8640 8641 8642 8643 8644 8645 8646 8647 8648 8649 8650 8651 8652 8653 8654 8655 8656 8657 8658 8659 8660 8661 8662 8663 8664 8665 8666 8667 8668 8669 8670 8671 8672 8673 8674 8675 8676 8677 8678 8679 8680 8681 8682 8683 8684 8685 8686 8687 8688 8689 8690 8691 8692 8693 8694 8695 8696 8697 8698 8699 8700 8701 8702 8703 8704 8705 8706 8707 8708 8709 8710 8711 8712 8713 8714 8715 8716 8717 8718 8719 8720 8721 8722 8723 8724 8725 8726 8727 8728 8729 8730 8731 8732 8733 8734 8735 8736 8737 8738 8739 8740 8741 8742 8743 8744 8745 8746 8747 8748 8749 8750 8751 8752 8753 8754 8755 8756 8757 8758 8759 8760 8761 8762 8763 8764 8765 8766 8767 8768 8769 8770 8771 8772 8773 8774 8775 8776 8777 8778 8779 8780 8781 8782 8783 8784 8785 8786 8787 8788 8789 8790 8791 8792 8793 8794 8795 8796 8797 8798 8799 8800 8801 8802 8803 8804 8805 8806 8807 8808 8809 8810 8811 8812 8813 8814 8815 8816 8817 8818 8819 8820 8821 8822 8823 8824 8825 8826 8827 8828 8829 8830 8831 8832 8833 8834 8835 8836 8837 8838 8839 8840 8841 8842 8843 8844 8845 8846 8847 8848 8849 8850 8851 8852 8853 8854 8855 8856 8857 8858 8859 8860 8861 8862 8863 8864 8865 8866 8867 8868 8869 8870 8871 8872 8873 8874 8875 8876 8877 8878 8879 8880 8881 8882 8883 8884 8885 8886 8887 8888 8889 8890 8891 8892 8893 8894 8895 8896 8897 8898 8899 8900 8901 8902 8903 8904 8905 8906 8907 8908 8909 8910 8911 8912 8913 8914 8915 8916 8917 8918 8919 8920 8921 8922 8923 8924 8925 8926 8927 8928 8929 8930 8931 8932 8933 8934 8935 8936 8937 8938 8939 8940 8941 8942 8943 8944 8945 8946 8947 8948 8949 8950 8951 8952 8953 8954 8955 8956 8957 8958 8959 8960 8961 8962 8963 8964 8965 8966 8967 8968 8969 8970 8971 8972 8973 8974 8975 8976 8977 8978 8979 8980 8981 8982 8983 8984 8985 8986 8987 8988 8989 8990 8991 8992 8993 8994 8995 8996 8997 8998 8999 9000 9001 9002 9003 9004 9005 9006 9007 9008 9009 9010 9011 | ; ACL2 Version 7.2 -- A Computational Logic for Applicative Common Lisp
; Copyright (C) 2016, Regents of the University of Texas
; This version of ACL2 is a descendent of ACL2 Version 1.9, Copyright
; (C) 1997 Computational Logic, Inc. See the documentation topic NOTE-2-0.
; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
; it under the terms of the LICENSE file distributed with ACL2.
; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
; LICENSE for more details.
; Written by: Matt Kaufmann and J Strother Moore
; email: Kaufmann@cs.utexas.edu and Moore@cs.utexas.edu
; Department of Computer Science
; University of Texas at Austin
; Austin, TX 78712 U.S.A.
(in-package "ACL2")
; A quick sketch of the three main functions here
; We renamed these functions because their nqthm names were confusing to
; one of us.
; ACL2 Nqthm
; simplify-clause SIMPLIFY-CLAUSE
; simplify-clause1 SIMPLIFY-CLAUSE0
; rewrite-clause SIMPLIFY-CLAUSE1
; Simplify-clause is the top-level clause simplifier but it does
; relatively little work. It merely determines what to expand and
; what not to, taking into account induction as described in comments
; in simplify-clause. The real workhorse of simplify-clause is its
; subroutine, simplify-clause1.
; Simplify-clause1 is non-recursive. It does an enormous amount of
; clause level work: removing trivial equations, detecting
; propositional tautologies with type-set, setting up the
; simplify-clause-pot-lst for the later literal-by-literal-rewriting,
; detecting linear arithmetic tautologies, and retrieving useful
; equalities from the linear arithmetic pot-lst. Once all that has
; happened, it calls rewrite-clause which begins the classic sweep of
; the clause rewriting each literal.
; Rewrite-clause is concerned only with rewriting the literals of a
; clause. It does not do any clause level work aside from that
; necessary to avoid tail biting. It rewrites each lit in turn,
; clausifies the result into a bunch of segments and splices them into
; the evolving set of answers.
; In this section we develop rewrite-clause.
; Note: The following two functions are no longer called. The were
; called before we made type-set track dependencies. However, after
; that change, we found the burden of passing up the ttrees generated
; below to be so off-putting that we eliminated their calls in favor
; of dumb-negate-lit and a no-op. It is our belief that these changes
; do not seriously weaken the system. Comments indicating the changes
; contain calls of the two functions so these decisions can be
; reconsidered.
(defun negate-lit (term type-alist ens force-flg wrld)
; This function returns a term equivalent to (not term) under the
; given type-alist and wrld. It also returns a ttree justifying this
; result.
; Note Added After This Function Became Obsolete: Because
; known-whether-nil now may generate 'assumptions, negate-lit may
; generate 'assumptions. Thus, use of this function is even more
; problematic since the ttrees not only must be tracked but the
; necessary case splits done.
(mv-let (knownp nilp ttree)
(known-whether-nil term type-alist ens force-flg
nil ; dwp
wrld nil)
(cond (knownp
(cond (nilp (mv *t* ttree))
(t (mv *nil* ttree))))
(t (mv (dumb-negate-lit term) nil)))))
(defun pegate-lit (term type-alist ens force-flg wrld)
; Like negate-lit but returns a term equivalent to term, and a ttree.
; Note Added After This Function Became Obsolete: Because
; known-whether-nil now may generate 'assumptions, negate-lit may
; generate 'assumptions. Thus, use of this function is even more
; problematic since the ttrees not only must be tracked but the
; necessary case splits done.
(mv-let (knownp nilp ttree)
(known-whether-nil term type-alist ens force-flg
nil ; dwp
wrld nil)
(cond (knownp
(cond (nilp (mv *nil* ttree))
(t (mv *t* ttree))))
(t (mv term nil)))))
; Rockwell Addition: Now we know hard-error returns nil too.
(defun add-literal (lit cl at-end-flg)
; We add lit to clause cl, optionally at the end as per the flag.
; We assume that lit has been subjected to rewriting modulo the geneqv
; iff. Therefore, though we check lit against *t* and *nil* we do
; not do more powerful type-set reasoning. In addition, we know that
; (hard-error ctx str alist) is logically nil.
(cond ((quotep lit)
(cond ((equal lit *nil*) cl)
(t *true-clause*)))
((equal cl *true-clause*) *true-clause*)
((member-complement-term lit cl) *true-clause*)
((variablep lit)
(cond ((member-term lit cl) cl)
(at-end-flg (append cl (list lit)))
(t (cons lit cl))))
; Now we can take the ffn-symb of lit.
((eq (ffn-symb lit) 'hard-error)
; (Hard-error ctx str alist) = nil.
cl)
((and (eq (ffn-symb lit) 'rationalp)
(member-complement-term1 (fcons-term 'integerp (fargs lit))
cl))
*true-clause*)
((and (eq (ffn-symb lit) 'not)
(ffn-symb-p (fargn lit 1) 'integerp)
(member-equal (fcons-term 'rationalp (fargs (fargn lit 1))) cl))
*true-clause*)
((member-term lit cl) cl)
(at-end-flg (append cl (list lit)))
(t (cons lit cl))))
(defun add-each-literal (cl)
(cond ((null cl) nil)
(t (add-literal (car cl)
(add-each-literal (cdr cl))
nil))))
; By definition, clause cl1 subsumes clause cl2 provided some instance of cl1
; is a subset of cl2. Operationally, we think of finding a suitable
; substitution, alist. But this involves search since a given literal, lit1,
; of cl1 might be instantiated so that it becomes one of several literals in
; cl2, and which instantiation we choose depends on how we can similarly get
; the rest of cl1's literals ``absorbed.''
; We augment subsumption to handle the special case of clauses containing
; (EQUAL x 'const1) atoms. First, note that cl1 subsumes cl2 below:
; cl1: ((equal x 'const1) p...)
; cl2: ((not (equal x 'const2)) p... q...)
; In particular, modulo the instantiation done for subsumption, subsumption
; just checks the truth of (IMPLIES (OR . cl1) (OR . cl2)). But cl2 may be
; thought of as (IMPLIES (equal x 'const2) (OR p... q...)) and thus we are
; checking
; (IMPLIES (AND (equal x 'const2) (OR (equal x 'const1) p...))
; (OR p... q...))
; which is the same as
; (IMPLIES (AND (equal x 'const2) (OR p...))
; (OR p... q...))
; and hence true.
; To check this thinking for sanity, consider a specific application. Suppose
; we have proved cl1: (or (equal x 'const1) (p x)), and we are later confronted
; by cl2: (or (not (equal A 'const2)) (p A) (q A)). Are we justified in saying
; that the proved theorem establishes cl2? Yes. Think of cl1 as a rewrite
; rule: (implies (not (equal x 'const1)) (iff (p x) t)). Now consider
; rewriting (p A) in cl2. You may assume the falsity of the other literals of
; cl2. So we have (equal A 'const2). Backchain with cl1. We msut prove (not
; (equal A 'const1)), which is true because A is 'const2.
; So how extend subsumption to handle instantiation of an
; ``equality-with-a-constant''? First recall the basic subsumption algorithm.
; We think of a literal lit2 from cl2 as ``absorbing'' a literal lit1 of cl1 if
; there is an extension of the current unify substitution alist such that
; lit1/alist is lit2. Then we say that cl1 subsumes cl2 if for every literal
; lit1 of cl1 there is a literal lit2 of cl2 that absorbs it so that the rest
; of the literals of cl1 are subsumed. To extend this basic idea to handle
; equality-with-constants we extend the notion of absorption. We say (NOT
; (EQUAL a const2)) absorbs (EQUAL x const1) if const1 and const2 are distinct
; constants and x unifies with a. This is implemented in the function
; subsumes!1-equality-with-const below.
; We code two versions of subsumption. One, subsumes-rec fails after a certain
; specified number of unification calls. The other, subsumes!-rec has no such
; limit. They must be kept in sync. Both handle the special case of
; equalities with constants and of the dummy EXTRA-INFO literal.
(mutual-recursion
(defun subsumes-rec (count cl1 cl2 alist)
; Keep this nest in sync with the subsumes!-rec nest, which is similar except
; that there is no restriction (count) on the number of one-way-unify1 calls.
; We return a positive or negative integer, according to whether or not
; (respectively) some instance of cl1 via an extension of alist is a subset of
; clause cl2. In either case, the absolute value n of that integer is at most
; count, and (- count n) is the number of one-way-unify1 calls that were made.
; Otherwise we return 0, indicating that we could not determine subsumption
; using fewer than count such calls.
; Here is why subsumes-rec and subsumes1 take a "count" argument to limit the
; number of calls:
; Note that in the worst case, checking whether clause2 of length len2 is an
; instance of clause1 of length len1 is roughly on the order of len2^len1. For
; suppose every term in each clause is (integerp x) for a distinct x, except
; that the last term in the first clause is not a match for any member of the
; second clause. Then each (integerp x) in clause1 can be matched against any
; (integerp y) in clause2, so we have len2*len2*...*len2, len1-1 times.
(declare (type (signed-byte 30) count))
(the (signed-byte 30)
(cond ((eql count 0) 0)
((null cl1) count)
((extra-info-lit-p (car cl1))
(subsumes-rec count (cdr cl1) cl2 alist))
((ffn-symb-p (car cl1) 'EQUAL)
(cond ((quotep (fargn (car cl1) 1))
(subsumes1-equality-with-const count
(car cl1)
(fargn (car cl1) 2)
(fargn (car cl1) 1)
(cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))
((quotep (fargn (car cl1) 2))
(subsumes1-equality-with-const count
(car cl1)
(fargn (car cl1) 1)
(fargn (car cl1) 2)
(cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))
(t (subsumes1 count (car cl1) (cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))))
(t (subsumes1 count (car cl1) (cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist)))))
(defun subsumes1-equality-with-const (count lit x const1 tl1 tl2 cl2 alist)
(cond ((eql count 0) 0)
((null tl2) (-f count))
((extra-info-lit-p (car tl2))
(subsumes1-equality-with-const count lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
((and (ffn-symb-p (car tl2) 'NOT)
(ffn-symb-p (fargn (car tl2) 1) 'EQUAL))
(let ((arg1 (fargn (fargn (car tl2) 1) 1))
(arg2 (fargn (fargn (car tl2) 1) 2)))
(cond ((and (quotep arg1)
(not (equal arg1 const1)))
(mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 x arg2 alist)
(cond ((not wonp)
(subsumes1-equality-with-const (1-f count) lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
(t (let ((new-count (subsumes-rec (1-f count) tl1 cl2 alist1)))
(cond ((<= 0 new-count) new-count)
(t (subsumes1-equality-with-const (-f new-count)
lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2)
cl2 alist))))))))
((and (quotep arg2)
(not (equal arg2 const1)))
(mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 x arg1 alist)
(cond ((not wonp)
(subsumes1-equality-with-const (1-f count)
lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
(t (let ((new-count (subsumes-rec (1-f count) tl1 cl2 alist1)))
(cond ((<= 0 new-count) new-count)
(t (subsumes1-equality-with-const (-f new-count)
lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2)
cl2 alist))))))))
(t (subsumes1-equality-with-const count lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist)))))
(t (mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 lit (car tl2) alist)
(cond ((not wonp)
(subsumes1-equality-with-const (1-f count) lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
(t (let ((new-count (subsumes-rec (1-f count) tl1 cl2 alist1)))
(cond
((<= 0 new-count) new-count)
(t (subsumes1-equality-with-const (-f new-count) lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))))))))))
(defun subsumes1 (count lit tl1 tl2 cl2 alist)
; Keep this nest in sync with the subsumes!-rec nest, which is similar except
; that there is no restriction (count) on the number of one-way-unify1 calls.
; If we can extend alist to an alist1 so that lit/alist1 is a member of tl2 and
; tl1/alist1 is a subset of cl2, we return a positive integer obtained by
; decreasing count by the number of one-way-unify1 calls. If we determine that
; there is no such alist, we return a negative integer whose absolute value is
; obtained by decreasing count as above. But, if the number of one-way-unify1
; calls necessary is not less than count, we return 0.
(declare (type (signed-byte 30) count))
(the (signed-byte 30)
(cond ((eql count 0) 0)
((null tl2) (-f count))
((extra-info-lit-p (car tl2))
(subsumes1 count lit tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
(t (mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 lit (car tl2) alist)
(cond
((not wonp)
(subsumes1 (1-f count) lit tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
(t
(let ((new-count (subsumes-rec (1-f count) tl1 cl2 alist1)))
(declare (type (signed-byte 30) new-count))
(cond ((<= 0 new-count) new-count)
(t (subsumes1 (-f new-count) lit tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2
alist)))))))))))
)
(mutual-recursion
(defun subsumes!-rec (cl1 cl2 alist)
; Keep this nest in sync with the subsumes1 nest, which is similar except that
; there is a restriction (count) on the number of one-way-unify1 calls.
; We return t if some instance of cl1 via an extension of alist is a subset of
; clause cl2, otherwise nil.
(cond ((null cl1) t)
((extra-info-lit-p (car cl1))
(subsumes!-rec (cdr cl1) cl2 alist))
((ffn-symb-p (car cl1) 'EQUAL)
(cond ((quotep (fargn (car cl1) 1))
(subsumes!1-equality-with-const (car cl1)
(fargn (car cl1) 2)
(fargn (car cl1) 1)
(cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))
((quotep (fargn (car cl1) 2))
(subsumes!1-equality-with-const (car cl1)
(fargn (car cl1) 1)
(fargn (car cl1) 2)
(cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))
(t (subsumes!1 (car cl1) (cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))))
(t (subsumes!1 (car cl1) (cdr cl1) cl2 cl2 alist))))
(defun subsumes!1-equality-with-const (lit x const1 tl1 tl2 cl2 alist)
(cond ((null tl2) nil)
((extra-info-lit-p (car tl2))
(subsumes!1-equality-with-const lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
((and (ffn-symb-p (car tl2) 'NOT)
(ffn-symb-p (fargn (car tl2) 1) 'EQUAL))
(let ((arg1 (fargn (fargn (car tl2) 1) 1))
(arg2 (fargn (fargn (car tl2) 1) 2)))
(cond ((and (quotep arg1)
(not (equal arg1 const1)))
(mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 x arg2 alist)
(cond ((and wonp (subsumes!-rec tl1 cl2 alist1))
t)
(t (subsumes!1-equality-with-const lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist)))))
((and (quotep arg2)
(not (equal arg2 const1)))
(mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 x arg1 alist)
(cond ((and wonp (subsumes!-rec tl1 cl2 alist1))
t)
(t (subsumes!1-equality-with-const lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist)))))
(t (subsumes!1-equality-with-const lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist)))))
(t (mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 lit (car tl2) alist)
(cond ((and wonp (subsumes!-rec tl1 cl2 alist1))
t)
(t (subsumes!1-equality-with-const lit x const1 tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist)))))))
(defun subsumes!1 (lit tl1 tl2 cl2 alist)
; Keep this nest in sync with the subsumes1 nest, which is similar except that
; there is a restriction (count) on the number of one-way-unify1 calls.
; If we can extend alist to an alist1 so that lit/alist1 is a member of tl2 and
; tl1/alist1 is a subset of cl2, we return t; otherwise, nil.
(cond ((null tl2) nil)
((extra-info-lit-p (car tl2))
(subsumes!1 lit tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist))
(t (mv-let
(wonp alist1)
(one-way-unify1 lit (car tl2) alist)
(cond ((and wonp (subsumes!-rec tl1 cl2 alist1))
t)
(t (subsumes!1 lit tl1 (cdr tl2) cl2 alist)))))))
)
(defconst *init-subsumes-count*
(the (signed-byte 30)
; The following value is rather arbitrary, determined by experimentation so
; that subsumes doesn't run for more than a small fraction of a second on a
; 2.6GH P4 (depending on the underlying Lisp). The following takes about 0.04
; seconds to return '? (signalling that we have done 1,000,000 calls of
; one-way-unify1) on that machine using GCL 2.6.7 and about 0.17 seconds using
; Allegro CL 7.0.
; (subsumes 1000000
; '((integerp x1) (integerp x2) (integerp x3) (integerp x4)
; (integerp x5) (integerp x6) (integerp x7) (integerp x8)
; (foo a))
; '((integerp x1) (integerp x2) (integerp x3) (integerp x4)
; (integerp x5) (integerp x6) (integerp x7) (integerp x8))
; nil)
1000000))
(defun subsumes (init-subsumes-count cl1 cl2 alist)
; If init-subsumes-count is not nil, then it is a nonnegative integer
; specifying a strict upper bound on the number of one-way-unify1 calls. See
; the comment in subsumes-rec for an explanation of why we may want this bound.
; If the return value is t, then we can extend alist to a substitution s such
; that cl1/s is a subset of cl2. If the return value is nil, then we cannot
; thus extend alist. Otherwise (only possible if init-subsumes-count is not
; nil), the return value is '?, in which case we could not make such a
; determination with fewer than init-subsumes-count one-way-unify1 calls.
(cond
((time-limit5-reached-p
"Out of time in subsumption (subsumes).") ; nil, or throws
nil)
((null init-subsumes-count)
(subsumes!-rec cl1 cl2 alist))
(t (let ((temp (subsumes-rec init-subsumes-count cl1 cl2 alist)))
(cond ((eql temp 0)
'?)
(t (< 0 temp)))))))
(defun some-member-subsumes (init-subsumes-count cl-set cl acc)
; Returns t if some member of cl-set subsumes cl, acc if no member of cl-set
; subsumes cl, and '? (only possible if init-subsumes-count is non-nil) if we
; don't know.
(cond ((null cl-set) acc)
(t (let ((temp (subsumes init-subsumes-count (car cl-set) cl nil)))
(cond
((eq temp t))
(t (some-member-subsumes init-subsumes-count (cdr cl-set) cl
(or temp acc))))))))
(defun equal-mod-commuting-lst (cl1 cl2)
(cond ((endp cl1) (endp cl2))
((endp cl2) nil)
(t (and (equal-mod-commuting (car cl1) (car cl2) nil)
(equal-mod-commuting-lst (cdr cl1) (cdr cl2))))))
(defun member-equal-mod-commuting-lst (cl cl-set)
; Consider the following definition (which could be shortened, but equivalent,
; by calling mbt*).
; (defun foo (x)
; (declare (xargs :guard (and (integerp x)
; (< 10 x))))
; (mbe :logic t
; :exec (mbe :logic (car (cons (< 5 x) t))
; :exec t)))
; The naively generated guard proof obligation is as follows.
; (AND (IMPLIES (AND (< 10 X) (INTEGERP X))
; (EQUAL (CAR (CONS (< 5 X) T)) T))
; (IMPLIES (AND (< 10 X) (INTEGERP X))
; (EQUAL T (CAR (CONS (< 5 X) T)))))
; We would like to avoid generating one of those two clauses, and we can do so
; by checking that the two clauses are equal except perhaps for commuted
; equalities and calls of iff. (We could allow calls of equivalence relations
; too, but then we would need to pass in the world and, more significantly, we
; would feel obligated to track equivalence relations by passing back a tag
; ttree.) The present function is essentially (member-equal cl cl-set), except
; that equality is tested using equal-mod-commuting-lst: thus, some member of
; cl-set is identicial to cl except that literals can be commuted as explained
; above.
(cond ((endp cl-set) nil)
((equal-mod-commuting-lst cl (car cl-set)) t)
(t (member-equal-mod-commuting-lst cl (cdr cl-set)))))
(defun conjoin-clause-to-clause-set (cl cl-set)
; Once upon a time, in particular, in the two weeks before January 25,
; 1990, we did a subsumption check here. The idea was that if cl was
; subsumed by some member of cl-set, don't add it and if it subsumes
; some member of cl-set, delete that member. That caused unsoundness.
; The reason is that cl-set is not a set of clauses that is
; necessarily going to be proved. For example, cl-set may contain a
; collection of clause segments to which we will eventually add some
; additional hypotheses. If cl-set contains the clause segment ((P
; I)) and then we conjoin the clause segment ((P (F X))) to it, we
; don't want the first segment to subsume the second because we may
; eventually add the additional hypothesis (INTEGERP I) to all the
; segments.
(cond ((member-equal *t* cl) cl-set)
((member-equal-mod-commuting-lst cl cl-set) cl-set)
(t (cons cl cl-set))))
(defun add-each-literal-lst (cl-set)
(cond ((null cl-set) nil)
(t (conjoin-clause-to-clause-set
(add-each-literal (car cl-set))
(add-each-literal-lst (cdr cl-set))))))
(defun conjoin-clause-sets (cl-set1 cl-set2)
(cond ((null cl-set1) cl-set2)
(t (conjoin-clause-to-clause-set
(car cl-set1)
(conjoin-clause-sets (cdr cl-set1) cl-set2)))))
(defun some-element-member-complement-term (lst1 lst2)
(cond ((null lst1) nil)
((member-complement-term (car lst1) lst2) t)
(t (some-element-member-complement-term (cdr lst1) lst2))))
; Rockwell Addition: We used to just stick them together. Now we add
; each literal to catch cases like hard-error.
(defun disjoin-clauses1 (cl1 cl2)
; This is equivalent to (append cl1 (set-difference-equal cl2 cl1))
; except that we add each literal with add-literal to check for
; complementary pairs, etc.
; Note: This function repeatedly adds literals from cl2 to cl1, at the
; end. So it copies cl1's spine as many times as there are literals
; to add. We used to use the append formulation above but found that
; complementary pairs were being missed once we extended the notion of
; complementary to include rational v integer.
(cond ((endp cl2) cl1)
(t (disjoin-clauses1 (add-literal (car cl2) cl1 t)
(cdr cl2)))))
(defun disjoin-clauses (cl1 cl2)
(cond ((or (equal cl1 *true-clause*)
(equal cl2 *true-clause*))
*true-clause*)
((null cl1) cl2)
((null cl2) cl1)
(t (disjoin-clauses1 cl1 cl2))))
; See comment in disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set.
; (defun disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set-rec (segment cl-set acc)
; (cond ((null cl-set) acc)
; (t (disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set-rec
; segment
; (cdr cl-set)
; (conjoin-clause-to-clause-set
; (disjoin-clauses segment (car cl-set))
; acc)))))
(defun disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set (segment cl-set)
; This code is not tail-recursive, but it could be. At one time it caused
; stack overflow problems in LispWorks 4.2.0. Below is some alternate code,
; with a reverse call in order to provide unchanged functionality. Would we
; gain efficiency by eliminating tail recursion at the cost of that reverse
; call? Maybe. A clearer win would be to avoid the reverse call, which should
; be logically OK but could change the prover's behavior, thus invaliding huge
; portions of the regression suite.
; The alternate code is simply the following line, in place of all that
; follows:
; (disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set-rec segment (reverse cl-set) nil)
(cond ((null cl-set) nil)
(t (conjoin-clause-to-clause-set
(disjoin-clauses segment (car cl-set))
(disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set segment (cdr cl-set))))))
(defun split-on-assumptions (assumptions cl ans)
; Cl is a clause and ans is a set of clauses that will be our answer.
; Assumptions is a list of literals. For each lit in assumptions
; we add a new clause to ans, obtained by adding lit to cl.
(cond ((null assumptions) ans)
(t (split-on-assumptions
(cdr assumptions)
cl
(conjoin-clause-to-clause-set
(add-literal (car assumptions) cl nil)
ans)))))
(defun rewrite-clause-action (lit branches)
; Lit is a term. Branches is the result of clausifying the result of
; rewriting lit. We want to know if anything has happened. The table
; below indicates our result:
; branches result meaning
; {} 'shown-true Lit was rewritten and clausified to
; the empty set, i.e., lit is T under our
; assumptions.
; {NIL} 'shown-false Lit was rewritten and clausified to
; the set containing the empty clause, i.e.,
; lit is NIL under our assumptions.
; {{lit}} 'no-change Neither rewrite nor clausify did anything.
; otherwise 'change
(cond ((consp branches)
(cond ((null (cdr branches))
(cond ((null (car branches))
'shown-false)
((and (null (cdr (car branches)))
(equal lit (car (car branches))))
'no-change)
(t 'change)))
(t 'change)))
(t 'shown-true)))
; Forward Chaining
; ACL2 implements a rudimentary form of forward chaining -- though it is
; getting less rudimentary as time goes on! Its primary use is at the
; top-level of clause simplification (simplify-clause1), where before we begin
; to rewrite the literals of the clause (and in the same place we set up the
; simplify-clause-pot-lst), we forward chain from the negations of the literals
; of the clause and construct a list of all the (heuristically approved)
; conclusions we can derive. Each concl is paired with a tree that contains
; the 'lemma and 'pt dependencies. That list of pairs is passed down to the
; rewrite-clause level, where it is used to augment the type-alist before
; rewriting any given literal.
; This is the fourth (or fifth, depending on how you count) version of forward
; chaining. For an extensive comment on version II, see the historical plaque
; after the definition of rewrite-clause-type-alist. (There are also
; historical plaques elsewhere in this code.)
; The top-level interface to forward chaining is the function named
; forward-chain. However, forward-chain just calls forward-chain-top with one
; more argument, a token identifying the caller. We tend to use
; forward-chain-top in our code so that a sensible caller is known. But we
; provide forward-chain, with caller 'miscellaneous, mainly for builders of
; tools.
; Besides its use in simplify-clause1, forward-chain-top is called in several
; other places, including built-in-clausep (which is used in preprocess-clause
; and indirectly in defun's prove-termination), bdd-clause (which is used when
; we apply :bdd hints), get-induction-cands-from-cl-set1 (used in firing
; induction rules while computing induction schemes), and hyps-type-alist (used
; in show-rewrites). All of these provide sensible caller tokens. The caller
; is only relevant to the trace-like reporting facility.
; Basic Ideas and Terminology
; Forward chaining is implemented by the function forward-chain-top. At the
; highest level, think of forward chaining as ``activating'' all the forward
; chaining rules triggered by the terms in the problem and then ``advancing''
; each activation in the context of a type-alist that tells us all the things
; we know. An activation is actually an object with fields such as the
; instantiated hypothesis we're trying to relieve, the remaining hyps, the
; unify substitution, etc. To advance an activation we check each
; (instantiated) hyp successively against the type-alist with type-set. If we
; reach the end of the hyps, we know the conclusions of the rule are all true.
; We record these facts in ``fc-derivations''. If we reach a hyp whose truth
; is not known under the current type-alist, we ``suspend'' the activation. Of
; course, if a hyp is found to be false, we simply drop the activation. We
; must also handle the branching caused by free vars in a hyp -- which causes
; an activation to split into several different activations under each of the
; possible matches for the free vars plus to remain suspended in case
; additional matches arise later.
; When we have advanced all the activations we have a list of still-suspended
; activations and a list of forward-chaining derivations deduced so far. We
; then heuristically decide which of the derivations to keep. This is called
; ``approving'' the derivations and is imposed to prevent pumps like (implies
; (p x) (p (f x))) from causing infinite forward chaining. A key heuristic is
; that the derived conclusion should not be worse than any conclusion used in
; its derivation. This means we must be able to determine which conclusions
; were used in the derivation of another one. We do that rather cheaply by
; embedding ttrees in fc-derivations. These ttrees are tainted from the
; perspective of the rest of the code, because they have dependencies buried
; inside them. We discuss this when we introduce them but it gives rise to
; such notions as an ``fcd-free'' ttree -- that is, a normal ttree as opposed
; to one with fc-derivations containing other ttrees in it -- and ``expunging''
; the fc-derivations from a non-fcd-free ttree to get an fcd-free ttree. The
; forward chaining module traffics in non-fcd-free ttrees but ultimately
; returns fcd-free ttrees and type-alists that may be used in the rest of the
; prover.
; Once we have collected the approved derivations, we assume them all obtaining
; a new type-alist. Since the newly added conclusions may contain new terms,
; we add more activations to our list of suspended activations. Then we start
; another ``round'' in which we try again to advance the suspended activations
; in the context of the new type-alist.
; The notion of a round is implemented by forward-chain1. The top-level
; forward chain just sets up the initial type-alist and the initial activations
; and calls forward-chain1, and then expunges and elaborates the type-alist a
; little. The notion of advancing an activation is implemented by a nest of
; three functions named advance-fc-activation1, 2, and 3, which roughly put,
; are designed to relieve a single hyp, relieve a list of hyps, and relieve
; hyps under a multiplicity of matches for free-vars. Advancing an
; fc-activation introduces the notion of a ``virtual activation'' to avoid
; consing up activation objects as we move from hyp to hyp, for example. A
; virtual activation, v, is an ordinary activation object, o, together with
; values held in certain local variables of the ``advance-fc-activation''
; functions; the actual activation represented by v could be obtained by
; writing those values to their respective fields in o. But we don't do that
; until it is time to suspend the virtual activation because we get blocked.
; Finally, we also squirrel away certain data in a wormhole, named
; ``fc-wormhole'' to allow us to create a ``report'' on what happened in
; forward chaining. Because forward chaining is called in several places and
; is an algorithm (like resolution) in which things are happening on many
; fronts (activations) at once, rather than a real-time trace-like facility we
; provide an after-the-fact reporting facility.
; We repeat some of this introductory material as we develop the code. We also
; provide prettyify-fc-activation and prettyify-fc-derivation for debugging
; purposes even though they are not used in this code. Prettyify-fc-derivation
; is particularly useful because it builds a decent representation of the
; derivation tree of conclusion produced by forward chaining and thus can help
; you understand fc-derivations and what has actually happened in a proof
; attempt.
; A forward chaining rule is
(defrec forward-chaining-rule
((rune . nume) trigger hyps concls . match-free) nil)
; One of the main inefficiencies in our earlier forward chaining schemes
; was that if a rule began to fire but misfired because some hyp could
; not be relieved, we would reconsider firing it later and redo the work
; associated with the misfire. We avoid that by storing what we call a
; "forward chaining activation" record which permits us to suspend the
; attempt to fire a rule and resume it later.
(defrec fc-activation
(inst-hyp (hyps . ttree)
unify-subst inst-trigger . rule) t)
; Warning: Despite the name, inst-hyp is not necessarily a term!
; See below.
; Warning: If you reorder the fields or add new ones, reconsider
; suspend-fc-activation, which is designed to save conses by exploiting
; the layout. Suspend-fc-activation is correct independently of the
; order of the fields, but may not actually save conses if they're
; rearranged.
; An fc-activation represents an attempt to apply the given
; forward-chaining-rule. Suppose a term of interest unifies with the
; trigger term of some rule. Then we try to relieve the hypotheses of
; that rule, using the current set of assumptions coded in a type-alist.
; Imagine that we relieve all those up to but not including hypn,
; producing an extended unify substitution and a ttree recording the
; dependencies so far. But then we learn that hypn is not yet
; definitely nil or definitely non-nil. Since the list of assumptions
; is growing, we may be able eventually to establish hypn. Therefore,
; instead of just quitting and starting over we suspend the attempted
; application of rule by producing an fc-activation record containing
; our current state.
; The current :unify-subst, :ttree and :rule are stored in the slots of
; those names. The :inst-trigger is the term in the current problem
; that fired this rule. What about :inst-hyps and :hyps? What do they
; hold? There are two cases of interest depending on whether the hyp we
; are stuck on (hypn above) contains free variables under unify-subst.
; :Inst-hyp is just hypn/unify-subst if hypn contains no free variables
; wrt unify-subst. In that case, :hyps is the cdr of the rule's hyps
; starting immediately after hypn. Furthermore, :inst-hyp is never an
; evaluable ground term (or else we would have evaluated it) or a FORCE
; or CASE-SPLIT (or else we would have forced or split on it). That is,
; :inst-hyp is a term that must be true under type-alist to proceed, and
; :hyps contains the hyps we must relieve after relieving inst-hyp. (We
; cannot get stuck on a hypothesis that is forced or split unless it
; contains free variables. So we never build an activation stuck on
; such a hyp.)
; :Inst-hyp is a special marker, called the :FC-FREE-VARS marker, if
; hypn contains free variables wrt unify-subst. In this case, :hyps is
; the cdr of the rule's hyps starting with the problematic hypn. The
; :FC-FREE-VARS marker looks like this and so is not a term:
; (:FC-FREE-VARS forcer-fn . last-keys-seen)
; Forcer-fn is nil if the hyp is not to be forced, and is either FORCE
; or CASE-SPLIT otherwise. (By providing for forcer-fn we can isolate
; the handling of free vars into one piece of code. Observe how
; advance-fc-activation2 calls advance-fc-activation1 when the hyp in
; question has free vars.) The FORCE or CASE-SPLIT annotation will have
; been stripped off of the car of :hyps, so that what is there is what
; must be found. Last-keys-seen is a list of all the keys ever
; used to create matches up to now -- and thus those keys should be
; avoided in the future.
; Summary: :inst-hyp is either a term or a non-term starting with
; :FC-FREE-VARS. If the former, it is the fully instantiated term that
; must be true under the current type-alist to proceed, it is not an
; evaluable ground term (except for possibly a constant like *t*) or a
; FORCE or CASE-SPLIT, and :hyps is the rest of the hyps. If the
; latter, the marker tells us how to match it without reproducing
; matches already created and whether to force or split on it. Note
; that we consider it very odd and rare to see a forced or split
; free-var hypothesis since it is either matched right away or
; introduces UNBOUND-FREE-vars into the proof.
; Historical Plaque: Forward chaining was first coded before type-set
; could force 'assumptions. Thus, splitting on 'assumptions was
; uncommon, indeed, it was only done for the output of linear
; arithmetic, where we first used the idea in the late 70's. Thus, the
; forward chaining mechanism was designed so as not to produce any
; 'assumptions, i.e., so as not to call rewrite. When type-set was
; extended, assumption generation and handling became more wide-spread.
; In particular, this function can generate assumptions due to the call
; of type-set below and those assumptions are handled by the caller of
; the forward-chaining module. So now, except for these historical
; comments, there is no rationale behind this function's abstinence from
; rewrite. Mixing forward and backward chaining so intimately might be
; interesting. It might also be a can of worms. It might also be
; inevitable. It just isn't the most important thing to do just yet.
; Historical Plaque: As of Version_4.1 we had a heuristic oversight in
; forward chaining that allowed the presence of one (irrelevant) forward
; chaining rule to thwart the application of a relevant forward chaining
; rule. Here I describe how. Suppose we have a relevant rule whose
; activation is blocked because it needs (FOOP x) where x is free.
; Suppose (FOOP (A)) is derived by some irrelevant rule. Then the
; relevant activation advances, choosing (A) for x. Eventually that
; activation terminates, e.g., because we can't prove the next hyp about
; x when x is (A). In Version_4.1 and before, all traces of the
; relevant activation are lost when it is advanced over (FOOP x). So if
; a subsequent rule derives (FOOP (B)) for us, we never make that choice
; for x. In summary: the irrelevant rule derives a spurious guess for x
; and we never try the relevant rule with the right choice of x, even
; though the choice is suggested on the eventual type-alist. This
; actually happened in an example distilled by Dave Greve. The obvious
; problem with leaving the relevant activation around, still blocked on
; (FOOP x), is that we'll repeatedly re-discover the possiblity that x
; is (A). In discussing how to avoid such redundancy, Dave suggested
; searching only the ``new'' part of each type-alist (new since the last
; attempt to guess free vars). However, that idea doesn't work because
; we cannot determine what part of the type-alist is ``new'' since we do
; not necessary just add pairs to a type-alist. End of Plaque.
; When we advance an activation we keep the inst-hyp, hyp, unify-subst,
; and ttree fields in variables and only put them back into the activation
; record when we decide to suspend it. They may or may not have changed.
(defun suspend-fc-activation (act inst-hyp hyps unify-subst ttree)
; This function is equivalent to
; (change fc-activation act
; :inst-hyp inst-hyp
; :hyps hyps
; :unify-subst unify-subst
; :ttree ttree)
; This would take 4 conses given the layout:
; (defrec fc-activation
; (inst-hyp (hyps . ttree)
; unify-subst inst-trigger . rule) t)
; But, for example, if only inst-hyp changes, then it could be done in 1 cons.
; So we optimize three cases: (a) where none of the fields change, (b) where
; :unify-subst didn't change, and (c) where only :inst-hyp changed. These
; cases are chosen both for their estimated frequency and the fact that the
; data structure actually permits conses to be saved. Case (a) is perhaps most
; common, when we make no progress relieving the hypothesis we're stuck on and
; free variables are not involved at all. Case (b) is when we've made progress
; but not selected any new free variables. Case (c) probably cannot occur --
; if inst-hyp changed then hyps changes too -- but we coded it because it was
; straightforward to do and because in past versions of this code it was
; possible for inst-hyp alone to change and thus it may become possible again.
; The only sense in which this function depends on the shape of
; fc-activation records is that if the shape were rearranged these
; optimizations might not save any conses. The correctness of the
; function (given its arguments) is independent of the shape of the
; record.
(cond ((equal unify-subst (access fc-activation act :unify-subst))
(cond ((and (equal hyps (access fc-activation act :hyps))
(equal ttree (access fc-activation act :ttree)))
(cond ((equal inst-hyp (access fc-activation act :inst-hyp))
; Case (a) -- 0 conses
act)
(t
; Case (c) -- 1 cons
(change fc-activation act
:inst-hyp inst-hyp))))
(t
; Case (b) -- 3 conses
(change fc-activation act
:inst-hyp inst-hyp
:hyps hyps
:ttree ttree))))
(t
; Otherwise -- 4 conses
(change fc-activation act
:inst-hyp inst-hyp
:hyps hyps
:unify-subst unify-subst
:ttree ttree))))
(defun prettyify-fc-activation (act level)
; This function converts an fc-activation act into a readable form and level is
; either 1 or 2 that specifies how much detail you want to see. What you
; get is:
; level result
; 1: (name (trigger: inst-trigger)
; (:blocked-hyp k)
; (:reason inst-hyp) | (:reason :FREE inst-hyp' seen)
; )
; 2: (rune (trigger: inst-trigger)
; (:blocked-hyp k)
; (:reason inst-hyp) | (:reason :FREE inst-hyp' seen)
; (:unify-subst unify-subst))
; where k is the number of the hyp that is currently blocking our
; progress and inst-hyp' is the hyp instantiated with the unbound-free
; extension of unify-subst and seen is the list of terms
; already used to bind the free vars in this hyp. As with
; prettyify-fc-derivation, name is the basic symbol of rune or else a
; pair of that symbol and the nat that makes this rune unique.
; To see how to read a rule, look at the level 2 code.
(let* ((rune (access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act :rule)
:rune))
(name (if (null (cddr rune)) (cadr rune) (cdr rune)))
(inst-trigger (access fc-activation act :inst-trigger))
(inst-hyp (access fc-activation act :inst-hyp))
(hyps (access fc-activation act :hyps))
(unify-subst (access fc-activation act :unify-subst))
(pretty-subst (pairlis$ (strip-cars unify-subst)
(pairlis-x2 (strip-cdrs unify-subst) nil)))
(k (+ 1 (- (len (access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act :rule)
:hyps))
(if (and (consp inst-hyp)
(eq (car inst-hyp) :FC-FREE-VARS))
(len hyps)
(+ 1 (len hyps)))))))
(case level
(1 `(,name (:TRIGGER ,inst-trigger)
(:BLOCKED-HYP ,k)
,(if (and (consp inst-hyp)
(eq (car inst-hyp) :FC-FREE-VARS))
`(:REASON :FREE ,(sublis-var
(bind-free-vars-to-unbound-free-vars
(all-vars (car hyps))
unify-subst)
(car hyps))
,(len (cddr inst-hyp)))
`(:REASON ,inst-hyp))))
(otherwise
`(
; This forward-chaining rule:
,rune
; was triggered by this term in the problem:
(:TRIGGER ,inst-trigger)
; but is currently blocked waiting for hyp number k:
(:BLOCKED-HYP ,k)
; which (either) contains a free var as shown or
; which is this when fully instantiated:
,(if (and (consp inst-hyp)
(eq (car inst-hyp) :FC-FREE-VARS))
`(:REASON :FREE ,(sublis-var
(bind-free-vars-to-unbound-free-vars
(all-vars (car hyps))
unify-subst)
(car hyps))
,(cddr inst-hyp))
`(:REASON ,inst-hyp))
; with the current unify-sustitution:
(:UNIFY-SUBST ,pretty-subst))))))
(defun prettyify-fc-activations (acts level)
(cond ((endp acts) nil)
(t (cons (prettyify-fc-activation (car acts) level)
(prettyify-fc-activations (cdr acts) level)))))
(defun make-fc-activation (term rule ttree ens)
; If rule is enabled and the trigger of rule can be instantiated with
; some substitution unify-subst to be term, then we make an
; fc-activation for this pair, otherwise we return nil. Activations
; have rather difficult-to-enforce rules on :inst-hyp and :hyps. For
; example, if the hyp upon which we're stuck contains no free vars, then
; :inst-hyp is supposed to be the instance for which we're looking --
; but we want to make sure that :inst-hyp cannot be settled by
; evaluation and is not supposed to be forced or split upon. Therefore,
; rather than try to enforce the invariants here we just start every
; activation with an :inst-hyp of *t*. This way we can add new methods
; of establishing a hyp without having to reproduce the code here.
; The initial ttree of the activation is ttree. When we are building an
; activation for a term in the initial clause, this ttree will be nil.
; When we are building an activation for a term derived by some earlier
; round, the ttree will contain its derivation, tagged 'fc-derivation as
; described below. The presence of that derivation in this activation
; will mean that the conclusion we eventually derive must not be worse
; than the conclusion of the derivation from which this term sprang.
; Once upon a time this function did not take the ttree arg and just
; used nil. But that gave rise to infinite loops that were not stopped
; by our worse-than hacks because the terms from which the bad terms
; were derived were not logically dependent on their parents.
(cond ((not (enabled-numep (access forward-chaining-rule rule :nume)
ens))
nil)
(t
(mv-let (unify-ans unify-subst)
(one-way-unify (access forward-chaining-rule rule :trigger)
term)
; Note: We do not start accumulating the persistence of this rule until we
; advance the fc-activation we create below.
(cond ((null unify-ans) nil)
(t (let ((rule-hyps
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :hyps)))
(make fc-activation
:inst-hyp *t*
:hyps rule-hyps
:ttree ttree
:unify-subst unify-subst
:inst-trigger term
:rule rule))))))))
(defun make-fc-activations (term rules ttree ens activations)
(cond ((endp rules) activations)
(t (let ((act (make-fc-activation term (car rules) ttree ens)))
(make-fc-activations term (cdr rules) ttree ens
(if act
(cons act activations)
activations))))))
(mutual-recursion
(defun collect-terms-and-activations (term ttree wrld ens trigger-terms activations)
; We sweep term and collect (a) every subterm starting with a function
; symbol having forward chaining rules -- whether or not the subterm
; triggers any activations, and (b) every activation of every forward
; chaining rule triggered. We accumulate those two results onto our
; last two arguments and return (mv trigger-terms activations). We do not
; collect activations for the same subterm twice.
(cond ((variablep term) (mv trigger-terms activations))
((fquotep term) (mv trigger-terms activations))
((or (flambda-applicationp term)
(eq (ffn-symb term) 'not))
; We do not sweep the bodies of lambda expressions nor do we allow NOT
; to trigger forward-chaining rules because printed clauses contain NOTs
; that aren't really there and it would confuse the user.
; Until Version_4.1 we swept the bodies of lambda expressions for
; triggering terms, but we see no point in doing that since the variable
; environment is different. Anything we derived triggered by such a
; term is true (since we only use assumptions from the original clause
; and true derivations) but would very likely be irrelevant because the
; triggering term doesn't actually occur in the problem.
(collect-terms-and-activations-lst (fargs term) ttree wrld ens
trigger-terms activations))
(t (let ((rules (getpropc (ffn-symb term)
'forward-chaining-rules
nil
wrld)))
; If the term has rules, we collect it and add any activations it
; triggers (though there may be none). But first we see whether we've
; already collected this term and don't do anything if we have. If the
; term doesn't have rules, we don't collect it. In any case, unless
; we've seen the term before, we sweep its args.
(cond
(rules
(cond
((member-equal term trigger-terms)
(mv trigger-terms activations))
(t
(collect-terms-and-activations-lst
(fargs term)
ttree wrld ens
(cons term trigger-terms)
(make-fc-activations term rules ttree ens activations)))))
(t (collect-terms-and-activations-lst
(fargs term) ttree wrld ens trigger-terms activations)))))))
(defun collect-terms-and-activations-lst
(terms ttree wrld ens trigger-terms activations)
(cond
((endp terms) (mv trigger-terms activations))
(t (mv-let (trigger-terms activations)
(collect-terms-and-activations (car terms)
ttree wrld ens
trigger-terms activations)
(collect-terms-and-activations-lst (cdr terms)
ttree wrld ens
trigger-terms activations)))))
)
(defun collect-terms-and-activations-from-fcd-lst (fcd-lst wrld ens
trigger-terms
activations)
; We map over a list of fc-derivations and treat each :concl as a source
; of trigger terms, each subterm being marked with the fc-derivation tag
; containing its derivation. We accumulate all our changes onto the
; last two arguments and return the extended values of those two lists.
(cond ((endp fcd-lst)
(mv trigger-terms activations))
(t (mv-let
(trigger-terms activations)
(collect-terms-and-activations
(access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :concl)
(add-to-tag-tree! 'fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) nil)
wrld ens trigger-terms activations)
(collect-terms-and-activations-from-fcd-lst
(cdr fcd-lst)
wrld ens trigger-terms activations)))))
; Now we develop the code to try to advance an activation. We will
; advance each activation as far as possible and then suspend it. Of
; course, many times re-suspending it is a no-op because we will have
; made no progress at all.
(mutual-recursion
; These two functions return non-nil when sublis-var (respectively,
; sublis-var-lst) can return a term (resp. list of terms) different from the
; input.
(defun sublis-varp (alist term)
(declare (xargs :guard (and (symbol-alistp alist)
(pseudo-termp term))))
(cond ((variablep term)
(assoc-eq term alist))
((fquotep term)
nil)
(t (sublis-var-lstp alist (fargs term)))))
(defun sublis-var-lstp (alist l)
(declare (xargs :guard (and (symbol-alistp alist)
(pseudo-term-listp l))))
(if (null l)
nil
(or (sublis-varp alist (car l))
(sublis-var-lstp alist (cdr l)))))
)
(defun mult-search-type-alist (rest-hyps concls term typ type-alist
unify-subst ttree oncep keys-seen)
; This function is a variant of search-type-alist that searches for
; all instances of term (other than those listed in keys-seen) bound to a
; subset of type-set typ. It returns three lists in 1:1 correspondence:
; a list of substitutions (which produce those instances), a list of
; tag-trees each extending ttree, and a list of the instances themselves
; (actually EQ to the terms from the type-alist upon which
; one-way-unify1 was called).
(cond ((null type-alist)
(mv nil nil nil))
((and (ts-subsetp (cadr (car type-alist)) typ)
(not (member-equal (car (car type-alist)) keys-seen)))
(mv-let (ans new-unify-subst)
(one-way-unify1 term (car (car type-alist)) unify-subst)
(cond
(ans (let ((diff-alist (alist-difference-eq new-unify-subst
unify-subst)))
(cond
((or oncep
(not (or (sublis-var-lstp diff-alist rest-hyps)
(sublis-var-lstp diff-alist concls))))
; We aren't going to look for additional bindings either because we're not
; supposed to (i.e. oncep is true) or there is no point. In the latter
; case the newly-bound variables do not occur free in the remaining hyps or the
; conclusions of the forward-chaining rule under consideration. So, there is
; no point to looking for additional bindings.
(mv (list new-unify-subst)
(list (cons-tag-trees (cddr (car type-alist))
ttree))
(list (car (car type-alist)))))
; We found a new unify-subst but there may be additional interesting ones out
; there.
(t (mv-let (other-unifies other-ttrees other-instances)
(mult-search-type-alist rest-hyps concls
term
typ
(cdr type-alist)
unify-subst
ttree
oncep
keys-seen)
(mv (cons new-unify-subst other-unifies)
(cons (cons-tag-trees
(cddr (car type-alist)) ttree)
other-ttrees)
(cons (car (car type-alist)) other-instances)))))))
; We didn't find any new substitutions; try again.
(t (mult-search-type-alist rest-hyps concls term
typ
(cdr type-alist)
new-unify-subst
ttree
oncep
keys-seen)))))
(t (mult-search-type-alist rest-hyps concls term
typ
(cdr type-alist)
unify-subst
ttree
oncep
keys-seen))))
(defun mult-lookup-hyp (hyp rest-hyps concls type-alist wrld unify-subst ttree
oncep last-keys-seen)
; This function basically takes a hyp and a type-alist. It returns (mv
; new-unify-substs new-ttrees new-last-keys-seen), in which extensions of
; unify-subst that make hyp true under type-alist are listed in 1:1
; correspondence with extensions of ttree. The function does not consider
; type-alist entries on the keys last-keys-seen and its third result is the
; keys it used this time.
; This function is basically a variant of lookup-hyp.
(mv-let (term typ)
(term-and-typ-to-lookup hyp wrld)
(mult-search-type-alist rest-hyps concls term typ type-alist
unify-subst ttree oncep last-keys-seen)))
(mutual-recursion
(defun ev-respecting-ens (form alist state latches ttree ens wrld)
; This is a variant of ev (see also ev-rec) that avoids calling functions whose
; executable counterparts are disabled. Thus, here we return (mv erp val
; latches ttree), where ev would return (mv erp val latches) and ttree extends
; the given ttree by adding executable-counterpart runes justifying the
; evaluation. If erp is non-nil then val and ttree are to be taken as
; meaningless.
(cond ((or (variablep form)
(fquotep form))
(mv-let (erp val latches)
(ev form alist state latches t nil)
(mv erp val latches ttree)))
(t (let ((fn (ffn-symb form)))
(cond
((or (flambdap fn)
(enabled-xfnp fn ens wrld))
(cond ((eq fn 'if)
(mv-let
(test-er test latches ttree)
(ev-respecting-ens (fargn form 1) alist state
latches ttree ens wrld)
(cond (test-er (mv t test latches ttree))
(test (ev-respecting-ens
(fargn form 2)
alist state latches
(push-lemma '(:EXECUTABLE-COUNTERPART if)
ttree)
ens wrld))
(t (ev-respecting-ens
(fargn form 3)
alist state latches
(push-lemma '(:EXECUTABLE-COUNTERPART if)
ttree)
ens wrld)))))
(t (mv-let
(args-er args latches ttree)
(ev-lst-respecting-ens (fargs form) alist state
latches ttree ens wrld)
(cond
(args-er (mv t args latches ttree))
(t (cond
((flambdap fn)
(ev-respecting-ens
(lambda-body (ffn-symb form))
(pairlis$ (lambda-formals (ffn-symb form))
args)
state latches ttree ens wrld))
(t (mv-let (erp val latches)
(ev-fncall fn args state latches t nil)
(mv erp val latches
(push-lemma
`(:EXECUTABLE-COUNTERPART ,fn)
ttree)))))))))))
(t (mv t nil latches ttree)))))))
(defun ev-lst-respecting-ens (lst alist state latches ttree ens wrld)
(cond ((endp lst)
(mv nil nil latches ttree))
(t (mv-let (erp val latches ttree)
(ev-respecting-ens (car lst) alist state latches ttree ens wrld)
(cond (erp (mv erp val latches ttree))
(t (mv-let (erp rst latches ttree)
(ev-lst-respecting-ens (cdr lst) alist state latches
ttree ens wrld)
(cond (erp (mv erp rst latches ttree))
(t (mv nil (cons val rst) latches ttree))))))))))
)
; Forward Chaining Derivations - fc-derivations - fcds
; To implement forward chaining, especially to implement the heuristic controls
; on which derived conclusions to keep, we have to use ttrees in a rather
; subtle way that involves embedding a ttree in a tagged object in another
; ttree. These tagged objects holding ttrees are called "fc-derivations" and a
; ttree that (may) contain fc-derivation tags is said to be ``not fcd-free''
; (i.e., not free of fc-derivation). We speak of type-alists as being fcd-free
; in the obvious way. We motivate and discuss fc-derivation here. However, no
; fc-derivation gets out of the forward chaining module. That is, once
; forward-chain-top has done its job, its returned ttrees are fcd-free.
; When we finally relieve all the hyps we will create the instantiated
; conclusion, concl. After heuristic filtering, approved concls will find
; their way into the type-alist by being assumed true. But within the forward
; chaining module we must be able to track dependencies for two reasons. The
; first reason concerns the ultimate use of such derived conclusions: when we
; have finished all our forward chaining and go into the rewriting of literals
; we will need to choose from among the available forward chained concls those
; that don't depend upon the literal we are rewriting. For this it is
; sufficient to have the ttree of the conclusion with its parent tree markers.
; But the second reason is entirely internal to forward chaining: we need loop
; stopping heuristics and the one we use is that no conclusion is worse than
; any of its immediate supporters (which, transitively means that no conclusion
; is worse than any of its supporters).
; So, associated with each derived conclusion is a derivation. To keep things
; as efficient as possible we don't make these derivations as clean as we
; might! Instead, we basically just store the ttree of each concl together
; with the concl and other information in a record. All such records at the
; "top level" of a ttree are the immediate supporters and one must descend
; recursively into the ttrees of the derivations to get the whole tree.
; This is odd because it results in a ttree being a component of an object
; stored in a ttree. Those interior ttrees are actually hidden from our ttree
; scanners. Before we leave forward chaining we must lift out any important
; information. But within forward chaining this structure is sufficient and
; reasonably efficient.
; An "fc-derivation" is a structure of the form:
; (defrec fc-derivation
; (((concl . ttree) . (fn-cnt . p-fn-cnt))
; .
; ((inst-trigger . rune) . (fc-round . unify-subst)))
; t)
; Note: This is just an 8-tipped perfectly symmetric tree. We
; contemplated optimizing it for access time to the pieces. Informally,
; we suspect concl, fn-cnt, p-fn-cnt, and ttree, are the most critical
; because of their use in fcd-worse-than-or-equal. We also contemplated
; replacing ttree, inst-trigger, rune, and unify-subst by the
; fc-activation that gave rise to this conclusion, thereby saving the
; time of consing up so much in this record. But (a) the activation is
; not already consed up at the time we build this fc-derivation ``from''
; it -- we are only holding its pieces in advance-fc-activation2. (b)
; To do that would slow down access to those buried pieces. (c) And
; risk having move the declaration of fc-activations into linear-a.lisp
; too. So we just tear the activation apart and put the pieces into the
; derivation.
; Rune is the name of the rule applied, concl is the instantiated
; conclusion. Fn-cnt is the function symbol count of concl (as computed
; by fn-count) and p-fn-cnt is the pseudo-function count (see
; term-order). These are used in our heuristic for deciding whether to
; keep a concl, as are rune, concl, and inst-trigger. Ttree is the
; ttree that derived concl from name. Inst-trigger is the term in the
; current problem that fired this rule. And fc-round is the number of
; the forward chaining round in which this concl was derived.
; If we decide to keep concl then we make a ttree that contains its
; fc-derivation as its only object, tagged 'fc-derivation. That ttree is
; attached to the assumption of concl in the new type-alist and will
; attach itself to all uses of concl. Given an fc-derivation we can
; reconstruct the derivation of its concl as follows: concl was derived
; by applying name to all of the derived concls in all of the
; 'fc-derivations in its ttree.
; When the forward chaining algorithm is complete we convert the
; recursively nested ttrees in 'fc-derivations to standard ttrees. This
; destroys the information about exactly how concl was derived from its
; supporters but it lifts out and makes visible the 'lemmas and 'pt upon
; which the concl is based.
; Here ends the essay on fc-derivations. Now we develop the code.
(defun add-fc-derivations (rune concls unify-subst inst-trigger
fc-round ens wrld state ttree
fcd-lst)
; Suppose concls is the instantiated concls of a successful forward
; chaining rule. Here we convert each concl in it into an fc-derivation
; We add each fc-derivation to the list fcd-lst and return the final
; fcd-lst.
(cond ((null concls) fcd-lst)
(t (mv-let
(flg concl new-ttree)
(eval-ground-subexpressions (car concls) ens wrld state ttree)
(declare (ignore flg))
(mv-let
(fn-cnt p-fn-cnt)
(fn-count concl)
(add-fc-derivations rune (cdr concls) unify-subst inst-trigger
fc-round ens wrld state ttree
(cons
(make fc-derivation
:fc-round fc-round
:rune rune
:concl concl
:fn-cnt fn-cnt
:p-fn-cnt p-fn-cnt
:inst-trigger inst-trigger
:unify-subst unify-subst
:ttree new-ttree)
fcd-lst)))))))
; The following function is not used in forward chaining except as a
; trace/debugging tool. Given an fc-derivation, it produces a human
; readable (at least for some humans) form of the derivation.
(mutual-recursion
(defun prettyify-fc-derivation (fcd level)
; Level is a natural specifying how much detail we want. ``Name'' below
; is just the event name of the rune if there is only one
; forward-chaining rune with that name, e.g., rune is (:FORWARD-CHAINING
; name), or the cdr of the rune otherwise, e.g., (:FORWARD-CHAINING
; name . 3). The idea is to keep the prettyified version short and
; all the runes are :FORWARD-CHAINING ones, while being unambiguous.
; 1: (fc-round concl name)
; 2: (fc-round concl name (:literals ...) . level-0-supporters)
; 3: (fc-round concl name (:literals ...) . level-3-supporters)
; 4: (fc-round concl rune (:unify-subst ...)
; (:literals ...) . level-4-supporters)
; Look at the code for level 4 to see how you read these things.
(let* ((fc-round (access fc-derivation fcd :fc-round))
(concl (access fc-derivation fcd :concl))
(rune (access fc-derivation fcd :rune))
(name (if (null (cddr rune)) (cadr rune) (cdr rune)))
(unify-subst (access fc-derivation fcd :unify-subst))
(pretty-subst (pairlis$ (strip-cars unify-subst)
(pairlis-x2 (strip-cdrs unify-subst) nil))))
(case level
(1 `(,fc-round ,concl ,name))
(2 `(,fc-round ,concl ,name
(:LITERALS ,@(collect-parents
(access fc-derivation fcd :ttree)))
,@(prettyify-fc-derivations
(tagged-objects
'fc-derivation
(access fc-derivation fcd :ttree))
0)))
(3 `(,fc-round ,concl ,name
(:LITERALS ,@(collect-parents
(access fc-derivation fcd :ttree)))
,@(prettyify-fc-derivations
(tagged-objects 'fc-derivation
(access fc-derivation fcd :ttree))
3)))
(otherwise
`(
; Forward chaining round:
,fc-round
; produced the new fact:
,concl
; via the rule
,rune
; and unify-subst:
(:UNIFY-SUBST ,@pretty-subst)
; relying on these literals from the original clause to relieve some of
; the hyps:
(:LITERALS ,@(collect-parents
(access fc-derivation fcd :ttree)))
; and relying on these facts from earlier rounds for the other hyps:
,@(prettyify-fc-derivations
(tagged-objects 'fc-derivation
(access fc-derivation fcd :ttree))
4))))))
(defun prettyify-fc-derivations (fcd-lst level)
(cond ((null fcd-lst) nil)
(t (cons (prettyify-fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) level)
(prettyify-fc-derivations (cdr fcd-lst) level)))))
)
(mutual-recursion
(defun expunge-fc-derivations-lst (fc-derivation-lst ttree)
(cond ((endp fc-derivation-lst) ttree)
(t (push-lemma
(access fc-derivation (car fc-derivation-lst) :rune)
(cons-tag-trees (expunge-fc-derivations
(access fc-derivation (car fc-derivation-lst)
:ttree))
(expunge-fc-derivations-lst (cdr fc-derivation-lst)
ttree))))))
(defun expunge-fc-derivations (ttree)
; Ttree is a not fcd-free and we make it fcd-free. In particular, we
; copy ttree, replacing each 'fc-derivation in it by a new node which
; tags the rule name with 'lemma and lifts out the interior ttrees and
; expunges them. Thus, when we are done we have a ttree with no
; 'fc-derivation tags, but which has 'lemma tags on the set of names in
; the 'fc-derivations and which has all of the 'pt objects and
; 'assumptions (for example) that were recursively embedded in
; 'fc-derivations.
; Note: This function must be able to find 'fc-derivations anywhere within the
; ttree. In particular, before we removed ttrees from the type-alists in
; 'assumptions, we had to expunge the fc-derivations within the type-alists.
; See the comment in force-assumptions. Remember that 'fc-derivations are for
; heuristic use only, except that they may contain 'pt and 'assumption objects
; that we must lift out. So we should be ruthless about finding and expunging
; all 'fc-derivations.
; Once upon a time we detected an 'fc-derivation at the end of prove. It
; slipped into the final proof tree as follows: Forward chaining made two
; rounds. During the first, hyp1 was concluded. During the second, hyp2 was
; concluded and forced an assumption. That assumption contained the type-alist
; produced from the first round, which had the 'fc-derivation for hyp1. Now if
; forward-chaining had proved the theorem, we would be in good shape. But
; suppose it doesn't prove the theorem and we start rewriting. Suppose the
; rewriter appeals to hyp2. That causes it to raise the assumption. We then
; try, at the end of rewrite-clause, to relieve the assumption by rewriting it
; under its type-alist. Suppose that we use hyp1 during that successful
; relieving of the assumption: its 'fc-derivation then enters our final proof
; tree. Here is a script that used to provoke this bug. The fix, below, is to
; expunge fc-derivations from the :type-alists of assumptions. We keep this
; script simply because it took a while to find the path down which the
; 'fc-derivation migrated out of forward-chaining.
; (er-progn
; (defstub hyp1 (x) t)
; (defstub hyp2 (x) t)
; (defstub trig (x) t)
; (defstub assumptionp (x) t)
; (defstub concl (x) t)
;
; (defaxiom fc-to-hyp1
; (hyp1 (trig x))
; :rule-classes ((:forward-chaining :trigger-terms ((trig X)))))
;
; (defaxiom then-fc-to-hyp2
; (implies (and (hyp1 x) (force (assumptionp x)))
; (hyp2 x))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom in-rewrite-use-hyp2-thus-raising-the-assumption
; (implies (hyp2 x) (concl x)))
;
; (defaxiom and-relieve-the-assumption-by-appeal-to-hyp1-sucking-in-the-fc-deriv
; (implies (hyp1 x) (assumptionp x)))
;
; (thm (concl (trig a))))
(let ((objects (tagged-objects 'fc-derivation ttree)))
(cond (objects (expunge-fc-derivations-lst
objects
(remove-tag-from-tag-tree! 'fc-derivation ttree)))
(t ttree))))
)
; A Reporting Facility for Forward Chaining
; We now describe our design for a reporting facility for forward chaining.
; The facility is designed to help answer the question ``What happens with the
; attempt to use <some forward-chaining rules>?'' where the rules of interest
; are described with some ``criteria'' defined below.
; What should be displayed as the answer?
; (1) The clause being worked on (once we thought the clause-id was a good
; idea, but not every clause given to forward-chain-top has a clause-id).
; (2) The final status of every rule activated that met the criteria.
; By ``final status'' we mean the rune, instantiated trigger, full
; unify-substitution, and disposition of every rule that meets the criteria.
; By ``disposition'' we mean one of these tuples:
; (a) SUCCESS ADDED <term> -- successfully fired and gave us <term>
; (b) SUCCESS REJECTED <term> -- successfully fired but conclusion <term> was
; disapproved
; (c) BLOCKED UNRELIEVED-HYPx <hyp> -- unable to relieve <hyp>;
; UNRELIEVED-HYPx is either UNRELIEVED-HYP or
; UNRELIEVED-HYP-FREE to indicate whether hyp has
; free vars. But hyp is printed with the
; unify-subst applied and with UNBOUND-FREE-vars
; in place of the free vars. We include the
; UNRELIEVED-HYP-FREE tag just to make it easier
; to mechanically recognize the presence of free
; vars. (d) BLOCKED FALSE <hyp> -- hyp shown
; false <hyp>
; The ``criteria'' is a list of triples, sometimes called a ``criterion.''
; Each criterion consist of a rune, an inst-trigger, and a concl. All three
; parts of a criterion are optional and we use t to indicate the absence of a
; part. An activation satisfies the criteria if it satisfies one of the
; criterion. An activation satisfies a criterion if it satisfies each of the
; provided (non-t) parts. An activation satisfies the rune (or inst-trigger)
; part if the activation's rune (or inst-trigger) is the criterion's rune (or
; inst-trigger). However, because of free variables we cannot always know if a
; still-active activation will produce the conclusion of the activation we
; seek. If an activation has free variables in it, the best we can do is
; determine whether conclusion of the rule, under the unify-subst, can be made
; to match the concl we seek. Therefore, an activation satisfies the concl
; part if the concl of its rule matches (with one-way-unify1 extending
; unify-subst) the concl we seek. (To be precise, fc rules have :concls and we
; wish to know whether some member of the :concls of the rule matches the concl
; we seek.) This is as good as an equality check if the unify-subst is
; complete on the variables in the concl.
; How can we collect and display this information?
; We will work inside a wormhole named the ``fc-wormhole''.
; The wormhole-data shall consist of an alist with the following keys:
; :CRITERIA - a list of triples
; :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP - t if we are to print reports every time
; forward-chain-top is called, nil if we are to just save the data for browsing
; later.
; :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS - an alist pairing a ``call number'' n to an alist with
; the following keys. The order of the keys in this alist is not necessarily
; that shown below. We manipulate the alist only with assoc-eq and
; put-assoc-eq, but we initialize it with the keys in an ``optimized'' order.
; :INPUT - all of the arguments of this call of forward-chain-top, except
; for WRLD, ENS, STATE. We omit the first two because they make it hard to
; print the wormhole state. We omit the last for obvious reasons. The
; omission of ens makes the stored data actually inadequate to reproduce
; the call, since the ens used might be a locally installed :in-theory. The
; arguments include caller, so these are really calls of forward-chain-top!
; :ROUNDS - how many forward-chaining rounds were used
; :OUTPUT - the output values returned by this call, as a triple: (flg
; type-alist ttree-or-fc-pairs). The semantics of this triple is that if
; flg is t, then forward-chain-top found a contradiction, type-alist is nil
; and ttree-or-fc-pairs is an fcd-free ttree explaining the contradiction;
; on the other hand, if flg is nil, then forward-chain-top did not find a
; contradiction, type-alist is an fcd-free type-alist extending the
; original one with what we know and ttree-or-fc-pairs is a list of pairs
; of the form (concl . ttree) where each concl is a derived conclusion and
; its ttree is fcd-free. See forward-chain-top.
; If the :OUTPUT value is nil instead of a triple, it means the call was
; interrupted before we stored the final values.
; (1) :BLOCKED-FALSE-SATISFYING-ACTIVATIONS - every time we abandon a
; satisfying activation because its hyp is false, we add it to this list;
; note that we will have to do some work to install inst-hyp, etc. into
; the activation act0 just detected by advance-fc-activationi.
; (2) :ALL-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS - every time we make an fc derivation from a
; satisfying activation, we save the fc-derivation here.
; (3) :APPROVED-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS - every time we approve a satisfying
; fc-derivation we save the fc-derivation here.
; (4) :LEFTOVER-ACTIVATIONS - all activations still suspended at the
; termination of of forward chaining
; (5) :REDUNDANT-APPROVED-FC-DERIVATIONS - every time we assume an approved
; derived conclusion true, we check to see whether it changes the
; type-alist. If not, we put the fc-derivation on this list.
; For brevity we sometimes call the last five lists ``sites'' and number them
; as seen. For example, we'll ask whether an fc-derivation ``is a member of
; site (3).''
; Note that there are three levels of alist here. We call the top one ``the
; fc-wormhole data.'' We call the second level one, the ``calls alist'', and
; we call the third level one the ``call alist.'' That is, the fc-wormhole
; data is an alist with two keys, one of which is :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS. The
; value of that particular key is the calls alist, which is an alist with n
; numeric keys. There is a key for each time forward-chain-top has been
; called. The calls alist is ordered with the largest key first. Suppose k is
; the call number of the most recent call of forward chain. Then the value of
; k in the calls alist is a call alist, which has :INPUT, :ROUNDS, :OUTPUT, and
; the four sites as its keys.
(defun current-fc-call-number (data)
; See paragraph above.
(car (car (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))))
(defun current-fc-call-alist (data)
; See paragraph above.
(cdr (car (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))))
(defun put-current-fc-call-alist (call-alist data)
; See paragraph above.
(let* ((calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(temp (car calls-alist))
(k (car temp))) ; current-fc-call-number
(put-assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons k call-alist) (cdr calls-alist))
data)))
; When prove is first called, we initialize the fc-wormhole data by clearing
; the calls-alist but leaving the :CRITERIA and :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP settings as
; is. The user is responsible for them. All of our code is written to
; optimize the case where the :CRITERIA is nil. In that case, we come as close
; as we can to doing nothing at all about tracking forward-chaining.
; To allow the user maintain the criteria and reporting flag, we provide these
; very basic primitives.
(defun initialize-fc-wormhole-sites ()
; This function initializes the fc-wormhole and is called in prove.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((data (wormhole-data whs)))
(set-wormhole-data
whs
`((:CRITERIA
,@(cdr (assoc-eq :criteria data)))
(:REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP
. ,(cdr (assoc-eq :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP data)))
(:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS . nil)))))
nil))
(defun show-fc-criteria ()
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(prog2$ (cw "Forward Chaining Tracking Criteria:~%~x0~%"
(cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs))))
whs))
nil))
(defun reset-fc-reporting ()
; This user-level function resets the criteria but leaves the on-the-fly flg as
; last set. All data is wiped out.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(set-wormhole-data
whs
'((:CRITERIA . nil)
(:REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP . nil)
(:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS . nil))))
nil))
(defun translate-fc-criterion (x state)
(cond
((and (true-listp x)
(equal (length x) 3))
(let ((rune (car x))
(inst-trigger (cadr x))
(concl (caddr x)))
(cond
((not (or (eq rune t)
(and (runep rune (w state))
(eq (car rune) :forward-chaining))))
(er soft 'set-fc-criteria
"~x0 is not a :FORWARD-CHAINING rune."
rune))
(t (er-let*
((inst-trigger
(cond ((eq inst-trigger t) (value t))
(t (translate inst-trigger
t t t 'add-fc-criterion (w state) state))))
(concl
(cond ((eq concl t) (value t))
(t (translate concl
t t t 'add-fc-criterion (w state) state)))))
(value (list rune inst-trigger concl)))))))
(t (er soft 'set-fc-criteria
"Each element of a criteria must be a triple, (rune inst-trigger ~
inst-concl), where rune is a :FORWARD-CHAINING rune or t, ~
inst-trigger is a term or t, and inst-concl is a term or t. ~
But ~x0 is not of this form."
x))))
(defun translate-fc-criteria (lst state)
; We either cause an error or return a properly translated forward chaining
; criteria. Recall that a criteria is a true-list of triples, each of the form
; (rune inst-trigger inst-concl), where any of the three components may be nil
; but when a component is not nil, the rune must be a rune, and the other two
; must be terms.
(cond ((atom lst)
(cond ((equal lst nil) (value nil))
(t (er soft 'set-fc-criteria
"The criteria must be a true-list."))))
(t (er-let*
((triple (translate-fc-criterion (car lst) state))
(rest (translate-fc-criteria (cdr lst) state)))
(value (cons triple rest))))))
(defun set-fc-criteria-fn (x state)
; Warning: Keep this in syc with set-waterfall-parallelism-fn.
(er-let* ((criteria
(cond
((equal x '(nil)) (value nil))
#+acl2-par ; the following test is always false when #-acl2-par
((f-get-global 'waterfall-parallelism state)
(er soft 'set-fc-criteria
"It is illegal to track forward-chaining when ~
waterfall-parallelism is enabled. "))
((equal x '(t)) (value '((t t t))))
(t (translate-fc-criteria x state)))))
(prog2$
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(set-wormhole-data
whs
(put-assoc-eq :CRITERIA criteria (wormhole-data whs))))
nil)
(value nil))))
(defmacro set-fc-criteria (&rest x)
`(set-fc-criteria-fn ',x state))
(defun set-fc-report-on-the-fly (flg)
; This function allows the user to set the flag that determines whether we do
; on-the-fly reporting (flg = t) or not (flg = nil) during forward chaining.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((data (wormhole-data whs)))
(prog2$
(cond
(flg
(cond
((cdr (assoc-eq :criteria data))
(cw "On-the-fly reporting of forward-chaining activity is ~
enabled. The criteria being tracked are: ~x0.~%"
(cdr (assoc-eq :criteria data))))
(t
(cw "On-the-fly reporting of forward-chaining activity is enabled ~
but no data will be collected because there are no criteria.~%"))))
((cdr (assoc-eq :criteria data))
(cw "On-the-fly reporting of forward-chaining activity is disabled. ~
The criteria being tracked are: ~x0.~%"
(cdr (assoc-eq :criteria data))))
(t
(cw "On-the-fly reporting of forward-chaining activity is disabled ~
but no data will be collected because there are no criteria.~%")))
(set-wormhole-data whs
(put-assoc-eq :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP flg data)))))
nil))
; When forward-chain-top is called, we add a new entry to the calls-alist:
(defun new-fc-call (caller cl pts force-flg do-not-reconsiderp wrld ens
oncep-override)
; Once upon a time we stored all the arguments (except state) in :INPUT.
; However, that makes it really hard to print whs because it contains many
; copies of world and ens. So we just print those symbols, not their
; values. This is inadequate to reproduce the call, since the ens
; might be local to the goal.
(declare (ignore wrld ens))
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data))))
(cond
((cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA data))
(set-wormhole-data
whs
(put-assoc-eq
:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons (+ 1 (or (car (car calls-alist)) 0)) ; may be first time
`((:BLOCKED-FALSE-SATISFYING-ACTIVATIONS . nil)
(:ALL-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS . nil)
(:APPROVED-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS . nil)
(:LEFTOVER-ACTIVATIONS . nil)
(:INPUT
. ,(list caller cl pts force-flg do-not-reconsiderp
'wrld 'ens oncep-override 'state))
(:ROUNDS . nil)
(:OUTPUT . nil)))
calls-alist)
data)))
(t whs))))
:no-wormhole-lock))
; As forward-chain-top operates, it monitors the activations it creates and
; records certain information. First, we must be able to determine whether an
; activation satisfies the criteria. It is convenient to here develop several
; notions of satisfaction. Bear with us.
; Here is the definition of when an fc-activation satisfies a criterion. It
; uses the notion of whether some concl in the concls of a forward-chaining
; rule matches a given term, e.g., whether the term is a ``member (modulo
; unification)'' of the concls.
(defun member-one-way-unify1 (term pat-lst unify-subst)
; We return t or nil to indicate whether some member of pat-lst unifies with
; term, extending unify-subst.
(cond
((endp pat-lst) nil)
(t (mv-let (flg alist)
(one-way-unify1 (car pat-lst) term unify-subst)
(declare (ignore alist))
(cond
(flg t)
(t (member-one-way-unify1 term (cdr pat-lst) unify-subst)))))))
(defun satisfying-fc-activation1p (criterion act)
(let ((rune (car criterion))
(trig (cadr criterion))
(concl (caddr criterion))
(rule (access fc-activation act :rule)))
(and (or (eq rune t)
(equal rune
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :rune)))
(or (eq trig t)
(equal trig
(access fc-activation act :inst-trigger)))
(or (eq concl t)
(member-one-way-unify1
concl
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :concls)
(access fc-activation act :unify-subst))))))
; And then we can conjoin that across a criteria (list of ``criterions'').
(defun satisfying-fc-activationp (criteria act)
(cond ((endp criteria) nil)
(t (or (satisfying-fc-activation1p (car criteria) act)
(satisfying-fc-activationp (cdr criteria) act)))))
(defun collect-satisfying-fc-activations (criteria acts ans)
; Accumulate all satisfying fc-activations in acts onto ans.
(cond ((endp acts) ans)
((satisfying-fc-activationp criteria (car acts))
(collect-satisfying-fc-activations criteria
(cdr acts)
(cons (car acts) ans)))
(t (collect-satisfying-fc-activations criteria (cdr acts) ans))))
; The notion of a satisfying fc-activation applies naturally to the ``virtual
; activations'' manipulated in advance-fc-activation1, 2, and 3, where we have
; an activation represented by some initial version of it, act0, together with
; the current values of fields :inst-hyp, :hyps, :unify-subst, and :ttree --
; but without those values actually deposited in the activation. The only one
; of the virtual fields that is relevant to satisfiability is the unify-subst.
(defun satisfying-virtual-fc-activation1p (criterion act0 unify-subst)
; Here we define the analog of satisfying-fc-activationp except that the
; activation we assess is a ``virtual'' one obtained by putting unify-subst
; into the act0. The functions that advance fc-activations traffic in
; ``virtual'' activations represented by some initial act0 and the current
; values intended to occupy the inst-hyp, hyps, unify-subst, and ttree fields.
; But of those ``virtual'' fields, the only one that affects satisfiability is
; unify-subst.
(let ((rune (car criterion))
(trig (cadr criterion))
(concl (caddr criterion))
(rule (access fc-activation act0 :rule)))
(and (or (eq rune t)
(equal rune
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :rune)))
(or (eq trig t)
(equal trig
(access fc-activation act0 :inst-trigger)))
(or (eq concl t)
(member-one-way-unify1
concl
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :concls)
unify-subst)))))
(defun satisfying-virtual-fc-activationp (criteria act0 unify-subst)
(cond ((endp criteria) nil)
(t (or (satisfying-virtual-fc-activation1p (car criteria)
act0 unify-subst)
(satisfying-virtual-fc-activationp (cdr criteria)
act0 unify-subst)))))
; The notion of a satisfying fc-activation extends naturally to the notion of a
; satisfying fc-derivation. However, by the time we get to fc-derivations we
; can check equality of the instantiated conclusion to the concl sought.
(defun satisfying-fc-derivation1p (criterion fcd)
(let ((rune (car criterion))
(trig (cadr criterion))
(concl (caddr criterion)))
(and (or (eq rune t)
(equal rune
(access fc-derivation fcd :rune)))
(or (eq trig t)
(equal trig
(access fc-derivation fcd :inst-trigger)))
(or (eq concl t)
(equal concl
(access fc-derivation fcd :concl))))))
(defun satisfying-fc-derivationp (criteria fcd)
(cond ((endp criteria) nil)
(t (or (satisfying-fc-derivation1p (car criteria) fcd)
(satisfying-fc-derivationp (cdr criteria) fcd)))))
(defun collect-satisfying-fc-derivations (criteria fcd-lst ans)
; Accumulate all satisfying fc-derivations in fcd-lst onto ans.
(cond ((endp fcd-lst) ans)
((satisfying-fc-derivationp criteria (car fcd-lst))
(collect-satisfying-fc-derivations criteria
(cdr fcd-lst)
(cons (car fcd-lst) ans)))
(t (collect-satisfying-fc-derivations criteria (cdr fcd-lst) ans))))
; We now define the functions that move information into the five fc-wormhole
; sites. We call this ``filtering'' because we only move the objects that
; satisfy the criteria.
(defun filter-satisfying-virtual-fc-activation (act0 inst-hyp hyps unify-subst ttree)
; This is the function that adds an activation to the
; :blocked-false-satisfying-activations, aka site (1), of the current
; forward-chain-top call, provided the activation satisfies the criteria. This
; is called from both advance-fc-activation1 and advance-fc-activation2, which
; are the two functions that detect false hypotheses. Those two functions will
; not actually have the realized activation available to them (without consing
; it up). Instead, they have act0, inst-hyp, hyps, unify-subst, and ttree.
; The actual activation being considered is that obtained by putting those
; fields into act0, something that the advance-fc-activation functions don't do
; unnecessarily. But we must create the actual from the virtual if we wish to
; save the actual activation. This function avoids creating the activation if
; it is not satisfying.
; The prefix ``filter'' in this name is a little misleading. We generally use
; that prefix to suggest mapping over a list and extracting the ones satisfying
; some criteria. But here we have just one virtual activation and we either
; save it or not depending on whether it is satisfying.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((criteria (cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs)))))
(cond
((null criteria) whs)
((satisfying-virtual-fc-activationp
criteria
act0 unify-subst)
; At this point we know we need the activation. So we get comfortable.
(let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(k (car (car calls-alist)))
(call-alist (cdr (car calls-alist)))
(act (suspend-fc-activation act0 inst-hyp hyps
unify-subst ttree)))
(set-wormhole-data
whs
(put-assoc-eq
:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons k
(put-assoc-eq
:BLOCKED-FALSE-SATISFYING-ACTIVATIONS
(cons act
(cdr (assoc-eq
:BLOCKED-FALSE-SATISFYING-ACTIVATIONS
call-alist)))
call-alist))
(cdr calls-alist))
data))))
(t whs))))
:no-wormhole-lock))
(defun filter-all-satisfying-fc-derivations (fcd-lst)
; This function moves satisfying fcds from fcd-lst into site (2) of the current
; call of forward-chain-top.
; Two of our sites, (2) all-satisfying-fc-derivations and (3)
; approved-satisfying-fc-derivations, contain fc-derivations. The process of
; collecting into these sites is the same: we map over some fcd-lst and cons
; every satisfying fcd onto the appropriate site. One possibly confusing
; difference between the handling of these two sites is that to collect into
; site (2) we must call this function repeatedly during forward chaining, once
; per round, because it is only at the level of a round (forward-chain1) that
; we know all the fc-derivations made in a round. But the top-level
; forward-chain-top process keeps track of all approved fc-derivations, so we
; call the guts of this function just once on the other site at the top-level
; (as we exit forward-chain-top) to filter site (3).
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((criteria (cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs)))))
(cond
((null criteria) whs)
(t
(let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(k (car (car calls-alist)))
(call-alist (cdr (car calls-alist))))
(set-wormhole-data
whs
(put-assoc-eq
:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons k
(put-assoc-eq
:ALL-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS
(collect-satisfying-fc-derivations
criteria
fcd-lst
(cdr (assoc-eq :ALL-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS
call-alist)))
call-alist))
(cdr calls-alist))
data)))))))
:no-wormhole-lock))
(defun filter-satisfying-fc-activations (acts)
; Site (4) is leftover-activations. At the termination of forward-chaining we
; are holding a list of all still-suspended fc-activations and this is the
; function that filters that list into site 4 of the current call of
; forward-chain-top.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((criteria (cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs)))))
(cond
((null criteria) whs)
(t (let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(k (car (car calls-alist)))
(call-alist (cdr (car calls-alist))))
(set-wormhole-data
whs
(put-assoc-eq
:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons k
(put-assoc-eq
:LEFTOVER-ACTIVATIONS
(collect-satisfying-fc-activations
criteria
acts
(cdr (assoc-eq :LEFTOVER-ACTIVATIONS
call-alist)))
call-alist))
(cdr calls-alist))
data)))))))
:no-wormhole-lock))
(defun filter-redundant-approved-fc-derivation (fcd)
; We move fcd into site (5), :REDUNDANT-APPROVED-FC-DERIVATIONS, provided fcd
; meets the criteria. By calling this function on fcd we are indicating that
; the conclusion of the fcd was already known true under the type-alist.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((criteria (cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs)))))
(cond ((null criteria) whs)
((satisfying-fc-derivationp criteria fcd)
(let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(k (car (car calls-alist)))
(call-alist (cdr (car calls-alist))))
(set-wormhole-data
whs
(put-assoc-eq
:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons k
(put-assoc-eq
:REDUNDANT-APPROVED-FC-DERIVATIONS
(cons fcd
(cdr (assoc-eq :REDUNDANT-APPROVED-FC-DERIVATIONS
call-alist)))
call-alist))
(cdr calls-alist))
data))))
(t whs))))
:no-wormhole-lock))
; So now we have got the machinery to populate sites (1)-(5) of the
; current call of forward-chain-top.
; When forward-chain-top is about to exit, we finish the task of recording the
; results of the current call. fc-exit This consists of three main parts: we
; move some accumulated data into sites 3 and 4 (sites 1 and 2 will be
; accumulated as we go), we generate a report that is either long or short
; depending on the :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP flag, and we store the returned values.
; We now develop the machinery to report. Reports take two forms, a long and short
; form. The short form is just:
; (Forward-chaining called by caller. See (FC-Report k).)
; where caller is the token indicating the caller of forward-chain-top and k is
; the call-number of the current call of forward-chain-top.
; The long form will summarize all the activity. We will arrange for the
; function fc-report to print the long form after the fact and we'll print the
; long form on the fly if the flag is set.
; A difficulty with reporting is that activations branch as free variables are
; instantiated. Thus, a rule triggered by a given term may have many final
; unify-substs and dispositions. The report therefore lists every rule and
; trigger term and then all the dispositions:
; (<rune>
; (:TRIGGER <inst-term>)
; ((:UNIFY-SUBST <pretty-subst>)
; (:DISPOSITION <outcome> <reason> <term>))
; ...
; ((:UNIFY-SUBST <subst>)
; (:DISPOSITION <outcome> <reason> <term>)))
; We prepare this report in its raw form and will just print it. The user may
; want to process it further with some attachment.
; When we begin to create the report we have:
; (1) blocked-false-satisfying-activations - every satisfying fc-activation
; found to have a false hyp
; (2) all-satisfying-fc-derivations - every fc-derivation that satisfies the
; criteria
; (3) approved-satisfying-fc-derivations - the fc-derivations that both satisfy
; the criteria and were approved
; (4) leftover-activations - all activations still suspended at the termination
; of forward chaining
; Recall that the status of an activation consists of its unify-subst (which
; completes the identification of the branch) and the disposition:
; (a) SUCCESS APPROVED <term> -- successfully fired and gave us <term>
; (b) SUCCESS REJECTED <term> -- successfully fired but conclusion <term> was disapproved
; (c) SUCCESS REDUNDANT <term> -- successfully fired and approved but already known
; (d) BLOCKED UNRELIEVED-HYPx <hyp> -- unable to relieve <hyp>
; (e) BLOCKED FALSE <hyp> -- hyp shown false <hyp>
; Our strategy will be first to collect all (rune . inst-trigger) pairs and
; then, for each such pair, map over each of the sites (1)-(5) to collect the
; status of that pair.
; To collect all (rune . inst-trigger) pairs we have to map over sites (1),
; (2), and (4), i.e., all blocked false activations, all fc-derivations, and
; all still-suspended activations.
(defun collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-activations (acts ans)
(cond ((endp acts) ans)
(t (collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-activations
(cdr acts)
(add-to-set-equal (cons (access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation (car acts) :rule)
:rune)
(access fc-activation (car acts) :inst-trigger))
ans)))))
(defun collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-derivations (fcds ans)
(cond ((endp fcds) ans)
(t (collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-derivations
(cdr fcds)
(add-to-set-equal (cons (access fc-derivation (car fcds) :rune)
(access fc-derivation (car fcds) :inst-trigger))
ans)))))
; Once we've collected all the rune-trigger pairs, we can map over each site to
; collect the status information for each pair.
(defun prettyify-subst (alist)
; Turn a dotted-pair alist into a doublet alist, e.g.,
; ((X CAR A) (Y . B)) into ((X (CAR A)) (Y B)).
(cond ((endp alist) nil)
(t (cons (list (car (car alist)) (cdr (car alist)))
(prettyify-subst (cdr alist))))))
(defun collect-fc-status-site-1 (rune inst-trigger acts)
; Acts is site (1) blocked-false-satisfying-activations - every satisfying
; fc-activation found to have a false hyp. Note that when we store a
; satisfying activation at this site we put the inst-hyp (which was either
; type-set to *ts-nil* or evaluated to *nil*) into the activation. The hyp
; cannot possibly have free vars in it (because we never choose instantiations
; to falsify a hyp). It may have a FORCE or CASE-SPLIT on it, but that's ok
; because type-set and eval handle those functions and accurately determined
; that the inst-hyp is false.
(cond
((endp acts) nil)
((and (equal rune
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation (car acts) :rule)
:rune))
(equal inst-trigger
(access fc-activation (car acts) :inst-trigger)))
(cons `((:UNIFY-SUBST
,(prettyify-subst (access fc-activation (car acts) :unify-subst)))
(:DISPOSITION BLOCKED FALSE
,(access fc-activation (car acts) :inst-hyp)))
(collect-fc-status-site-1 rune inst-trigger (cdr acts))))
(t (collect-fc-status-site-1 rune inst-trigger (cdr acts)))))
(defun collect-fc-status-sites-2-3-5 (rune inst-trigger all-fcds
approved-fcds
redundant-approved-fc-derivations)
; All-fcds is site (2) all-satisfying-fc-derivations - every fc-derivation that
; satisfies the criteria, approved-fcds is site (3)
; approved-satisfying-fc-derivations - the fc-derivations that both satisfy the
; criteria and were approved, and redundant-approved-fc-derivations is site
; (5). We map down all-fcds and use the other two to determine if whether each
; was approved, redundant, or rejected.
(cond
((endp all-fcds) nil)
((and (equal rune
(access fc-derivation (car all-fcds) :rune))
(equal inst-trigger
(access fc-derivation (car all-fcds) :inst-trigger)))
(cons `((:UNIFY-SUBST
,(prettyify-subst (access fc-derivation (car all-fcds) :unify-subst)))
(:DISPOSITION
SUCCESS
,(if (member-equal (car all-fcds) approved-fcds)
(if (member-equal (car all-fcds) redundant-approved-fc-derivations)
'REDUNDANT
'APPROVED)
'REJECTED)
,(access fc-derivation (car all-fcds) :concl)))
(collect-fc-status-sites-2-3-5 rune inst-trigger (cdr all-fcds)
approved-fcds
redundant-approved-fc-derivations)))
(t (collect-fc-status-sites-2-3-5 rune inst-trigger (cdr all-fcds)
approved-fcds
redundant-approved-fc-derivations))))
(defun prettyify-blocked-fc-inst-hyp (inst-hyp hyps unify-subst)
; The arguments are those respective fields in some fc-activation. Hence,
; inst-hyp is either the :FC-FREE-VAR marker (which implicitly depends on the
; contents of the hyp and unify-subst fields) or an instantiated hyp. We
; recover the actual (partially) instantiated hyp we're stuck on.
(cond ((and (consp inst-hyp)
(eq (car inst-hyp) :FC-FREE-VARS))
(let ((hyp (sublis-var
(bind-free-vars-to-unbound-free-vars
(all-vars (car hyps))
unify-subst)
(car hyps))))
(if (cadr inst-hyp) ; then FORCE or CASE-SPLIT should be added
`(,(cadr inst-hyp) ,hyp)
hyp)))
(t inst-hyp)))
(defun collect-fc-status-site-4 (rune inst-trigger acts)
; Acts is site (4) leftover-activations - all activations still suspended at
; the termination of forward chaining.
(cond
((endp acts) nil)
((and (equal rune
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation (car acts) :rule)
:rune))
(equal inst-trigger
(access fc-activation (car acts) :inst-trigger)))
(let ((inst-hyp (access fc-activation (car acts) :inst-hyp)))
(cons `((:UNIFY-SUBST
,(prettyify-subst (access fc-activation (car acts) :unify-subst)))
(:DISPOSITION BLOCKED
,(if (and (consp inst-hyp)
(eq (car inst-hyp) :FC-FREE-VARS))
'UNRELIEVED-HYP-FREE
'UNRELIEVED-HYP)
,(prettyify-blocked-fc-inst-hyp
inst-hyp
(access fc-activation (car acts) :hyps)
(access fc-activation (car acts) :unify-subst))))
(collect-fc-status-site-4 rune inst-trigger (cdr acts)))))
(t (collect-fc-status-site-4 rune inst-trigger (cdr acts)))))
(defun collect-fc-status (rune inst-trigger site1 site2 site3 site4 site5)
; Given a rune and instantiated trigger term we collect the final status of
; every activation of that pair recorded in the sites. Every activation
; (derivation) in the sites is known to satisfy the criteria.
`(,rune
(:TRIGGER ,inst-trigger)
,@(collect-fc-status-site-1 rune inst-trigger site1)
,@(collect-fc-status-sites-2-3-5 rune inst-trigger site2 site3 site5)
,@(collect-fc-status-site-4 rune inst-trigger site4)))
(defun make-fc-activity-report1 (rune-trigger-pairs site1 site2 site3 site4 site5)
; Given a list of (rune . inst-trigger) pairs and the four sites, we
; collect the final status of each pair.
(cond ((endp rune-trigger-pairs) nil)
(t (cons (collect-fc-status (car (car rune-trigger-pairs))
(cdr (car rune-trigger-pairs))
site1 site2 site3 site4 site5)
(make-fc-activity-report1 (cdr rune-trigger-pairs)
site1 site2 site3 site4 site5)))))
(defun make-fc-activity-report (call-alist)
; Given the data collected in the fc-wormhole by forward-chain-top, we prepare
; the final status reports of every activation satisfying the criteria.
(let* ((site1
(cdr (assoc-eq :blocked-false-satisfying-activations call-alist)))
(site2
(cdr (assoc-eq :all-satisfying-fc-derivations call-alist)))
(site3
(cdr (assoc-eq :approved-satisfying-fc-derivations call-alist)))
(site4
(cdr (assoc-eq :leftover-activations call-alist)))
(site5
(cdr (assoc-eq :redundant-approved-fc-derivations call-alist)))
(rune-trigger-pairs
(collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-activations
site1
(collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-derivations
site2
(collect-rune-trigger-pairs-from-fc-activations
site4 nil)))))
(merge-sort-lexorder
(make-fc-activity-report1 rune-trigger-pairs
site1 site2 site3 site4 site5))))
(defun fc-report1 (whs k)
; We assume we are in the fc-wormhole when this function is called. It takes
; the wormhole status and an alleged caller number, k, and prints the report
; for the kth call of forward-chain-top. It returns nil.
(let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(temp (assoc-equal k calls-alist)))
(cond
((and temp
(cdr (assoc-eq :OUTPUT (cdr temp))))
(let* ((call-alist (cdr temp))
(input (cdr (assoc-eq :INPUT call-alist)))
(caller (car input))
(clause (cadr input))
(output (cdr (assoc-eq :OUTPUT call-alist)))
(flg (car output))
(rounds (cdr (assoc-eq :ROUNDS call-alist)))
(activity (make-fc-activity-report call-alist)))
(cw "~%~
-----------------------------------------------------------------~%~
Forward Chaining Report ~x0:~%~
Caller: ~x1~%~
Clause: ~x2~%~
Number of Rounds: ~x3~%~
Contradictionp: ~x4~%~
Activations:~%~
~x5~%~
-----------------------------------------------------------------~%"
k
caller
clause
rounds
flg
activity)))
(t (cw "~%There is no Forward Chaining Report for ~x0.~%"
k)))))
(defun fc-report (k)
; This function is intended to be called from outside the fc-wormhole,
; by the user.
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((criteria (cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs)))))
(cond
((null criteria) whs)
(t (prog2$ (fc-report1 whs k) whs)))))
nil))
; As noted above, when forward-chain-top is about to exit, we finish the task
; of recording the results of the current call. We move some accumulated data
; into sites 3 and 4 (sites 1 and 2 will be accumulated as we go), we generate
; a report that is either long or short depending on the :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP
; flag, and we store the returned values.
(defun fc-exit (flg type-alist ttree-or-fc-pairs
caller rounds all-approved-fcds all-leftover-activations)
; We exit forward-chain-top by calling this function. Logically you can think
; of this function as just:
; (mv flg type-alist ttree-or-fc-pairs)
; The other arguments are used to report on forward-chaining.
; At the time this is called we will have already fully loaded sites (1) and
; (2), i.e., the satisfying activations with false hyps and the list of all
; satisfying fc-derivations. We load sites (3) and (4) -- the approved
; satisfying fc-derivations and the (satisfying) leftover activations -- here,
; using the supplied all-approved-fcds and all-leftover-activations arguments.
; Then we generate a report -- long or short as appropriate -- and return.
(prog2$
(wormhole-eval
'fc-wormhole
'(lambda (whs)
(let ((criteria (cdr (assoc-eq :CRITERIA (wormhole-data whs)))))
(cond
((null criteria) whs)
(t (let* ((data (wormhole-data whs))
(calls-alist (cdr (assoc-eq :FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS data)))
(k (car (car calls-alist)))
(call-alist (cdr (car calls-alist)))
(new-data
(put-assoc-eq
:FORWARD-CHAIN-CALLS
(cons (cons k
(put-assoc-eq
:APPROVED-SATISFYING-FC-DERIVATIONS
(collect-satisfying-fc-derivations
criteria all-approved-fcds nil)
(put-assoc-eq
:LEFTOVER-ACTIVATIONS
(collect-satisfying-fc-activations
criteria all-leftover-activations nil)
(put-assoc-eq
:ROUNDS rounds
(put-assoc-eq
:OUTPUT
(list flg type-alist ttree-or-fc-pairs)
call-alist)))))
(cdr calls-alist))
data))
(new-whs (set-wormhole-data whs new-data)))
(cond
((cdr (assoc-eq :REPORT-ON-THE-FLYP new-data))
(prog2$ (fc-report1 new-whs k)
new-whs))
(t (prog2$
(cw "~%(Forward Chaining on behalf of ~x0: (FC-Report ~x1))~%"
caller k)
new-whs))))))))
:no-wormhole-lock)
(mv flg type-alist ttree-or-fc-pairs)))
; Explanation of the Kernel Code for FC Advancement
; The mutual-recursion nest below is the kernel code for advancing
; fc-activations. There is a wrapper defined afterwards. The kernel functions
; advance an activation along all possible threads and return a list of
; suspensions created only when they finally get stuck on some hypothesis. But
; in the mutual recursion keep in mind act0, inst-hyps, hyps, unify-subst, and
; ttree. Initially, act0 is the fc-activation with which we started.
; Initially, the other four were just the obvious fields extracted from this
; activation. But as we recur we may change the other four. When we finally
; get stuck, we suspend act0 by setting all four of the fields because we don't
; know which ones have changed. The function suspend-fc-activation optimizes
; the construction for common cases of unchanged fields.
; The mutual recursion has 3 functions or phases and their names end in 1, 2,
; and 3. Phase (1) works on the inst-hyp, which is either an :FC-FREE-VARS
; marker or the instantiated hyp upon which we were stuck the last time we saw
; this activation. If the inst-hyp is just an instantiated hyp and we find it
; to be true now, we enter phase (2) below to work on the other hyps. If the
; inst-hyp is a :FC-FREE-VARS marker and we find instances of it that are true,
; we enter phase (3) to pursue each possible unify-subst and ttree, but we also
; generally re-suspend in case further instances come along as the type-alist
; grows. Phase (2) just loops down hyps calling itself recursively. However,
; if it sees a hyp containing a free variable, it just manufactures an
; appropriate inst-hyp and calls phase (1) so we don't reproduce that code.
; Finally, Phase (3) just loops through the unify-substs and ttrees generated
; by finding suitable instances and calls phase (2) on the rest of the hyps.
; So the call graph of this nest is:
; (1) calls
; (2) to go on to the rest of the hyps and
; (3) to pursue each choice of free vars
; (2) calls
; (1) to handle free vars and
; (2) to go on to the rest of the hyps
; (3) calls
; (2) to handle a given unify-subst and
; (3) to handle the rest of the unify-substs.
; All of these functions accumulate suspensions of the newly advanced act0 onto
; suspensions and derived conclusions (in the form of fc-derivations) onto
; fcd-lst. It is only in the base case of phase (2), when hyps is nil, that we
; convert successful terminal fc-activations into fc-derivations.
; If we're asked to FORCE or CASE-SPLIT on a hyp that contains free variables
; and we are unable to find a true match for it on the type-alist, we
; immediately force or split on it, binding the free variables to variables
; with "UNBOUND-FREE-" prefixed onto the existing names. In principle we can
; bind the free variables of a hyp to any term. We chose these names in the
; hope that they catch the eye of the user when they appear in failed proofs.
; The user was warned of this possibility when a forward-chaining rule was
; built with a forced or split hyp containing free variables. Also, when
; forcing or splitting on a hypothesis containing free vars we don't produce a
; suspension to find new instances because that would just keep spitting out
; UNBOUND-FREE variables.
(mutual-recursion
(defun advance-fc-activation1
(act0 inst-hyp hyps unify-subst ttree ; key args
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override ; contextual args
suspensions fcd-lst) ; answers
; See explanation above the mutual-recursion nest.
(cond
((and (consp inst-hyp)
(eq (car inst-hyp) :FC-FREE-VARS))
(let ((forcer-fn (cadr inst-hyp)) ; nil, FORCE, or CASE-SPLIT
(last-keys-seen (cddr inst-hyp)))
; When inst-hyp is the marker, the hyp we are to relieve is the first one in
; hyps. Any FORCE or CASE-SPLIT has been removed but recorded in the forcer-fn
; field. Last-keys-seen is the list of all type-alist keys from which matches
; have already been produced.
(let* ((hyp (car hyps))
(rule (access fc-activation act0 :rule))
(oncep1
(oncep oncep-override
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :match-free)
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :rune)
(access forward-chaining-rule rule :nume))))
; Hyp is the hypothesis we are stuck on.
; We match hyp/unify-subst against the true terms in type-alist, in all
; possible ways, obtaining lists of the extended unify-substs and their
; respective ttrees, and a list of the key terms from the type-alist
; used to produce these unifications.
(mv-let (new-unify-subst-list new-ttree-list new-keys-seen)
(mult-lookup-hyp hyp (cdr hyps)
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act0 :rule)
:concls)
type-alist
wrld unify-subst ttree
oncep1
last-keys-seen)
(cond
(new-unify-subst-list
; We found one or more extensions of unify-subst and pursue all of them.
; Normally we also suspend any activation that is stuck on a free-var hyp in
; case future type-alists permit other matches, but if this rule has explicitly
; been tagged as using the first binding (as now stored in the flag oncep1) or
; if this hyp is to be forced or split upon we don't also suspend it.
(advance-fc-activation3
act0 (cdr hyps) new-unify-subst-list new-ttree-list
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
(if (or oncep1 (and forcer-fn force-flg))
suspensions
(cons (suspend-fc-activation
act0
(list* :FC-FREE-VARS
forcer-fn
(append new-keys-seen
last-keys-seen))
hyps
unify-subst
ttree)
suspensions))
fcd-lst))
((and forcer-fn force-flg)
; In this case, we found no instances of this hyp on type-alist and it
; is supposed to be forced (or case-split). So we must assume something
; to move forward. We replace its free vars with UNBOUND-FREE-vars and
; proceed, without saving a suspension.
(let ((fully-bound-unify-subst
(bind-free-vars-to-unbound-free-vars
(all-vars hyp)
unify-subst)))
(mv-let (new-force-flg ttree)
(force-assumption
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act0 :rule)
:rune)
(access fc-activation act0 :inst-trigger)
(sublis-var fully-bound-unify-subst hyp)
type-alist nil
(immediate-forcep forcer-fn ens)
force-flg
ttree)
; Force-assumption always returns an unchanged force-flg which we just ignore.
(declare (ignore new-force-flg))
(advance-fc-activation2
act0 (cdr hyps) unify-subst ttree
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state
oncep-override
suspensions
fcd-lst))))
(t
; In this case, we are stuck on a hyp with free vars, no match is
; available, and we're not supposed to force it. So we create a
; suspension.
(mv (cons (suspend-fc-activation
act0
(list* :FC-FREE-VARS
forcer-fn
(append new-keys-seen
last-keys-seen))
hyps
unify-subst
ttree)
suspensions)
fcd-lst)))))))
(t
; In this case, we're stuck on a fully instantiated hyp,
; hypn/unify-subst, where hypn had no free variables and is not an
; evaluable ground term, or a FORCE or CASE-SPLIT. Inst-hyp must be
; true under type-alist to proceed.
(mv-let
(ts ttree1)
(type-set inst-hyp force-flg nil type-alist ens wrld nil
nil nil)
(cond
((ts= ts *ts-nil*)
; This hyp has been shown false. We just let the activation
; evaporate by not including this suspension of act0 in our answer.
(prog2$
(filter-satisfying-virtual-fc-activation ; (FC Report)
act0 inst-hyp hyps unify-subst ttree)
(mv suspensions
fcd-lst)))
((ts-intersectp ts *ts-nil*)
; The value of hyp is indeterminate. We suspend it. It is tempting to
; think of the suspension below as being identical to act0 -- i.e., no
; changes -- but we're in recursion, so who knows?
; Suspend-fc-activation will check if anything changed.
(mv (cons (suspend-fc-activation act0 inst-hyp hyps
unify-subst ttree)
suspensions)
fcd-lst))
(t
; Finally! We're past inst-hyp and begin to work our way down hyps.
(advance-fc-activation2
act0 hyps unify-subst (cons-tag-trees ttree1 ttree)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst)))))))
(defun advance-fc-activation2
(act0 hyps unify-subst ttree ; key args
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override ; contextual args
suspensions fcd-lst) ; answers
; See explanation above the mutual-recursion nest.
(cond
((null hyps)
; We succeeded in relieving all the hypotheses of this activation. We
; produce the resultant fc-derivations and add them to fcd-lst.
(mv suspensions
(add-fc-derivations (access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act0 :rule)
:rune)
(sublis-var-lst
unify-subst
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act0 :rule)
:concls))
unify-subst
(access fc-activation act0 :inst-trigger)
fc-round ens wrld state
ttree
fcd-lst)))
(t
(let* ((forcep1 (and (nvariablep (car hyps))
; (not (fquotep (car hyps)))
(or (eq (ffn-symb (car hyps)) 'force)
(eq (ffn-symb (car hyps)) 'case-split))))
(forcer-fn (and forcep1 (ffn-symb (car hyps))))
(hyp (if forcep1 (fargn (car hyps) 1) (car hyps))))
(cond
((free-varsp hyp unify-subst)
; To avoid code duplication we let advance-fc-activation1 handle all
; free var situations:
(advance-fc-activation1
act0
(if forcer-fn
(if (eq forcer-fn 'FORCE)
'(:FC-FREE-VARS FORCE . nil)
'(:FC-FREE-VARS CASE-SPLIT . nil))
'(:FC-FREE-VARS nil . nil))
(cons hyp (cdr hyps))
unify-subst
ttree
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst))
(t
; Hyp contains no free vars, so we instantiate it and then use any of
; three methods (depending on the instance) to decide if it is true:
; type-set with the current type-alist, ground evaluation, or
; forcing/case splitting.
(let ((inst-hyp (sublis-var unify-subst hyp)))
(mv-let (ts ttree1)
(type-set inst-hyp force-flg nil type-alist ens wrld nil
nil nil)
; Note that ttree1 is the ttree associated with the type-set computation
; and that it does not include ttree. If we use the type-set
; information, we must add ttree1 to ttree.
(cond
((ts= ts *ts-nil*)
; Inst-hyp is false under the current type-alist, so we just
; abandon this activation.
(prog2$
(filter-satisfying-virtual-fc-activation ; (FC Report)
act0 inst-hyp hyps unify-subst ttree)
(mv suspensions
fcd-lst)))
((ts-intersectp ts *ts-nil*)
(cond
((not (free-varsp inst-hyp nil))
; This means that inst-hyp is actually a ground term. We try to
; evaluate it. Note that we do not try to eval or even partially eval
; non-ground hyps. For example, the translation of (OR (NATP '1) (NATP
; A)) will eval non-erroneously to T and the translation of (AND (NATP
; '1) (NATP A)) will eval-ground-subexpressions to (NATP A). So there
; may be some merit in a fancier treatment of evaluation. However,
; rewriting a hyp, even via evaluation, might be problematic in this
; setting since the only way we can decide a non-trivial inst-hyp is via
; type-set, which is often just an assoc-equal. So for the moment we're
; only using evaluation on ground terms where it makes the most sense.
(mv-let
(erp val latches ttree2)
(ev-respecting-ens
inst-hyp nil state nil nil ens wrld)
(declare (ignore latches))
; Note that ttree2 is the ttree for the evaluation and it does not
; include ttree or ttree1. We are not using the type-set stuff because
; it only told us that inst-hyp was nil or non-nil. But the evaluation
; ttree should be added to the original ttree if we use the evaluation
; result.
(cond
(erp
; This hyp cannot be evaluated, e.g., perhaps it contains a constrained
; function. So we must either force it or wait for it to come up on the
; type-alist. Note that in this part be ignore type-set's ttree1 and
; the evaluator's ttree2.
(mv-let
(force-flg ttree)
(cond
((or (not forcep1) (not force-flg))
(mv nil ttree))
(t
(force-assumption
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act0 :rule)
:rune)
(access fc-activation act0 :inst-trigger)
inst-hyp
type-alist nil
(immediate-forcep forcer-fn ens)
force-flg
ttree)))
(cond
(force-flg
; Inst-hyp is ground but cannot be evaluated and is supposed to be forced or
; split upon. So we did that and the result is in ttree. Therefore, we
; just move on.
(advance-fc-activation2
act0 (cdr hyps) unify-subst ttree
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst))
(t
; Inst-hyp is ground but cannot be evaluated and is not supposed to be
; forced. So we just suspend it. Note that inst-hyp satisfies our
; invariant on fc-activations: it contains no free vars, is not an
; evaluable ground term, and is not a FORCE or CASE-SPLIT. We just have
; to wait until the type-alist makes it true.
(mv (cons (suspend-fc-activation
act0
inst-hyp
(cdr hyps)
unify-subst
ttree)
suspensions)
fcd-lst)))))
(val
; Inst-hyp evaluated to non-nil, so we just move on (using the evaluator's
; ttree2) plus the original one.
(advance-fc-activation2
act0 (cdr hyps) unify-subst
(cons-tag-trees ttree2 ttree)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst))
(t
; Inst-hyp evaluated to nil, so we just abandon the activation.
; Forcing considerations are irrelevant here.
(prog2$
(filter-satisfying-virtual-fc-activation ; (FC Report)
act0 inst-hyp hyps unify-subst ttree)
(mv suspensions
fcd-lst))))))
(t
; Inst-hyp contains variables and so we don't even try evaluation --
; even though there are expressions containing variables and IFs that
; evaluate to constants. Instead, we just see whether we should force
; it. We ignore type-set's ttree1.
(mv-let
(force-flg ttree)
(cond
((or (not forcep1) (not force-flg))
(mv nil ttree))
(t
(force-assumption
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act0 :rule)
:rune)
(access fc-activation act0 :inst-trigger)
inst-hyp
type-alist nil
(immediate-forcep forcer-fn ens)
force-flg
ttree)))
(cond
(force-flg
; Inst-hyp has been forced. So just move on.
(advance-fc-activation2
act0 (cdr hyps) unify-subst ttree
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst))
(t
; Inst-hyp ``cannot'' be evaluated and is not supposed to be
; forced. So we just suspend it. Note that inst-hyp satisfies our
; invariant on fc-activations: it contains no free vars, is not an
; evaluable ground term, and is not a FORCE or CASE-SPLIT. We just have
; to wait until the type-alist makes it true.
(mv (cons (suspend-fc-activation
act0
inst-hyp
(cdr hyps)
unify-subst
ttree)
suspensions)
fcd-lst)))))))
(t
; Inst-hyp is true under type-alist. We add type-set's ttree1 to ttree
; as we move on.
(advance-fc-activation2
act0 (cdr hyps) unify-subst
(cons-tag-trees ttree1 ttree)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst)))))))))))
(defun advance-fc-activation3
(act0 hyps unify-subst-lst ttree-lst ; key args
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override ; contextual args
suspensions fcd-lst) ; answers
(cond ((endp unify-subst-lst)
(mv suspensions fcd-lst))
(t
(mv-let (suspensions1 fcd-lst1)
(advance-fc-activation2
act0
hyps (car unify-subst-lst) (car ttree-lst)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions
fcd-lst)
(advance-fc-activation3
act0
hyps (cdr unify-subst-lst) (cdr ttree-lst)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions1 fcd-lst1)))))
)
; The wrapper for the forward chaining kernel: advancing an fc-activation.
(defun advance-fc-activation (act fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst)
(with-accumulated-persistence
(access forward-chaining-rule
(access fc-activation act :rule)
:rune)
(suspensions1 fcd-lst1)
t ; Wart: We consider all forward-chaining work to be ``useful''
(advance-fc-activation1
act
(access fc-activation act :inst-hyp)
(access fc-activation act :hyps)
(access fc-activation act :unify-subst)
(access fc-activation act :ttree)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions
fcd-lst)))
; Recall the basic data structure of forward chaining, the fc-pot-lst.
; It is a list of fc-pots, each of which is (term act1 ... actn), with a
; pot for every term in the problem pairing all the fc-activations
; triggered by the corresponding term. We want to advance all the
; activations in every pot. We start by advancing all the activations
; listed in a single pot.
(defun advance-fc-activations (lst fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst)
; Lst is of the form (act1 ... actn), where each acti is an fc
; activation. Fcd-lst is a list of fc-derivations onto which we
; accumulate any derived conclusions (as fc-derivations). We return two
; results which we build by accumulation onto the last two arguments: a
; new list of possibly advanced suspended activations and the
; accumulated successful derivations.
(cond ((null lst)
(mv suspensions fcd-lst))
(t (mv-let
(suspensions1 fcd-lst1)
(advance-fc-activation (car lst)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions fcd-lst)
(advance-fc-activations (cdr lst)
fc-round type-alist ens force-flg wrld state oncep-override
suspensions1 fcd-lst1)))))
(defun fc-pair-lst (fcd-lst)
; We convert a list of fc-derivations to a list of pairs of the form
; (concl . ttree), where each ttree is fcd-free. We call such a pair an
; "fc-pair." These pairs can be sensibly used outside of the
; forward-chaining module.
; Note: It is important that this function return a list in 1:1 correspondence
; with fcd-lst. The reason is that after forming this list (in
; forward-chain-top) we map over it with fc-pair-lst-type-alist (immediately
; below) while mapping in parallel over the original fcd-lst, assuming that the
; concl being dealt with from the first came from the corresponding element of
; the second.
(cond ((null fcd-lst) nil)
(t (cons (cons (access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :concl)
(push-lemma
(access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :rune)
(expunge-fc-derivations
(access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :ttree))))
(fc-pair-lst (cdr fcd-lst))))))
(defun fc-pair-lst-type-alist (fc-pair-lst fcd-lst type-alist force-flg ens wrld)
; Fc-pair-lst is a list of pairs of the form (concl . ttree). Fcd-lst is the
; list from which fc-pair-lst was derived and hence is in 1:1 correspondence
; with it. That is, the (concl . ttree) entry from the first argument came
; from the fcd in the corresponding position of the second argument.
; We extend type-alist by assuming the truth of every concl, tagging each
; type-alist entry with the corresponding ttree, which we assume is fcd-free.
; Assuming the initial type-alist is fcd-free, the final one is too. We return
; three results, (mv flg type-alist ttree). If a contradiction is found, flg
; is t, type-alist is nil, and ttree is the fcd-free ttree explaining it.
; Otherwise, type-alist is the resulting type-alist and ttree is nil.
; At one time we assumed that there was no contradiction, causing a hard error
; if we found one. However, Jared Davis sent the following script that causes
; that hard error, so we changed this function. A relevant comment, from
; before that change, is given below.
; (defstub appealp (* *) => *)
; (defstub appeal-listp (* *) => *)
; (defstub appeal-structurep (*) => *)
; (defstub appeal-structure-listp (*) => *)
; (defstub get-subgoals (*) => *)
; (defstub appeal-provisionally-okp (* * *) => *)
; (defstub proofp (* * *) => *)
; (defstub proof-listp (* * *) => *)
;
; (defaxiom appeal-structure-listp-forward-to-appeal-structurep-of-car
; (implies (appeal-structure-listp x)
; (equal (appeal-structurep (car x))
; (if x t nil)))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appealp-listp-forward-to-appealp-of-car
; (implies (appeal-listp x arity-table)
; (equal (appealp (car x) arity-table)
; (if x t nil)))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appealp-forward-to-appeal-structurep
; (implies (appealp x arity-table)
; (appeal-structurep x))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appeal-structure-listp-forward-to-appeal-structure-listp-of-cdr
; (implies (appeal-structure-listp x)
; (appeal-structure-listp (cdr x)))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appeal-listp-forward-to-appeal-listp-of-cdr
; (implies (appeal-listp x arity-table)
; (appeal-listp (cdr x) arity-table))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appeal-listp-forward-to-appeal-structure-listp
; (implies (appeal-listp x arity-table)
; (appeal-structure-listp x))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appeal-structure-listp-forward-to-true-listp
; (implies (appeal-structure-listp x)
; (true-listp x))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appeal-listp-when-proofp
; (implies (proof-listp x database arity-table)
; (appeal-listp x arity-table))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defaxiom appealp-when-proofp
; (implies (proofp x database arity-table)
; (appealp x arity-table))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (defthm hard-error-in-fc-pair-lst-type-alist
; (implies (and (proof-listp xs database arity-table)
; (not (consp xs)))
; (equal (proofp (car xs) database arity-table)
; nil)))
; Historical Comment:
; Note on the Hard Error below: How might this error arise? The intuitive
; argument that it doesn't goes like this: This function is called in
; forward-chain, on something produced by forward-chain1. But inspection of
; forward-chain1 shows that it uses type-alist-fcd-lst to check that approved
; fc derivations are not contradictory. What can go wrong? Well, one thing
; that has gone wrong is that type-alist-fcd-lst looks at the derivations in a
; different order than they are looked at by this function. Hence, the old
; familiar type-alist-clause bugaboo (order of the literals) comes into play.
; We have seen an example where forward-chain1 checked ((< 0 x) (< x 1)
; (integerp x)) and found no contradiction but then passed the reversed list to
; this function which found the contradiction and caused the hard error for the
; first time ever. Our response to that was to put a reconsider-type-alist
; into type-alist-fcd-lst. But our "proof" that this hard error never arises
; is now suspect.
(cond ((null fc-pair-lst) (mv nil type-alist nil))
(t (mv-let
(mbt mbf tta fta ttree)
(assume-true-false (car (car fc-pair-lst))
(cdr (car fc-pair-lst))
force-flg nil type-alist ens wrld
nil nil :fta)
(declare (ignore fta))
(cond (mbf (mv t nil ttree))
(mbt (prog2$
(filter-redundant-approved-fc-derivation (car fcd-lst))
(fc-pair-lst-type-alist (cdr fc-pair-lst)
(cdr fcd-lst)
type-alist
force-flg ens wrld)))
(t (fc-pair-lst-type-alist (cdr fc-pair-lst)
(cdr fcd-lst)
tta
force-flg ens wrld)))))))
; Now we work on the heuristic for approving fc derivations. The
; problem is to avoid infinite forward chaining. So we define a
; predicate that determines whether we wish to keep a given derivation.
(defmacro fcd-runep (rune ttree)
; Rune is the name of a forward chaining rule. We want to determine if rune
; has been used in any fc-derivation in ttree. This macro is analogous to
; tag-tree-occur except that it knows that 'fc-derivation tags contain other
; ttrees and it looks recursively into those ttrees too. It is a macro so that
; fcd-runep-lst can be singly recursive (which could conceivably help
; performance, but at any rate seems very unlikely to hurt).
`(fcd-runep-lst ,rune (tagged-objects 'fc-derivation ,ttree)))
(defun fcd-runep-lst (rune lst)
(cond ((endp lst) nil)
(t (or (equal rune (access fc-derivation (car lst) :rune))
(fcd-runep rune (access fc-derivation (car lst) :ttree))
(fcd-runep-lst rune (cdr lst))))))
(defmacro fcd-worse-than-or-equal (concl fn-cnt p-fn-cnt ttree)
; Concl is a term and fn-cnt is its function symbol count. If there exists a
; concl' with fn count fn-cnt' in an 'fc-derivation of ttree such that fn-cnt
; >= fn-cnt' and concl is worse-than-or-equal to concl', then we return t.
; Otherwise we return nil. We define a macro so that
; fcd-worse-than-or-equal-lst can be singly recursive (which could conceivably
; help performance, but at any rate seems very unlikely to hurt).
`(fcd-worse-than-or-equal-lst
,concl ,fn-cnt ,p-fn-cnt (tagged-objects 'fc-derivation ,ttree)))
(defun fcd-worse-than-or-equal-lst (concl fn-cnt p-fn-cnt lst)
(cond ((endp lst) nil)
(t (or (and (let ((fc-fn-cnt (access fc-derivation (car lst)
:fn-cnt)))
(or (> fn-cnt fc-fn-cnt)
(and (eql fn-cnt fc-fn-cnt)
(>= p-fn-cnt
(access fc-derivation (car lst)
:p-fn-cnt)))))
(worse-than-or-equal concl
(access fc-derivation
(car lst)
:concl)))
(fcd-worse-than-or-equal concl fn-cnt p-fn-cnt
(access fc-derivation
(car lst)
:ttree))
(fcd-worse-than-or-equal-lst concl fn-cnt p-fn-cnt
(cdr lst))))))
; Once upon a time we had heuristics for keeping concl if there was
; a lit of the current clause that was worse than it or if there was a
; concl already kept that was worse than it. We have
; removed those heuristics and replaced them by the faster check that the
; triggering term occurs in the clause. But we'll keep the
; definitions in case we want to reinstate the heuristics.
; (defun exists-lit-worse-than-or-equal (cl concl fn-cnt)
; (cond
; ((null cl) nil)
; (t (or (and (>= (fn-count (car cl)) fn-cnt)
; (worse-than-or-equal (car cl) concl))
; (exists-lit-worse-than-or-equal (cdr cl)
; concl
; fn-cnt)))))
(defun exists-fcd-worse-than-or-equal (fcd-lst concl fn-cnt p-fn-cnt)
(cond
((null fcd-lst) nil)
(t (or (and (let ((fcd-fn-cnt (access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :fn-cnt)))
(or (> fcd-fn-cnt fn-cnt)
(and (eql fcd-fn-cnt fn-cnt)
(>= (access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :p-fn-cnt)
p-fn-cnt))))
(worse-than-or-equal
(access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :concl)
concl))
(exists-fcd-worse-than-or-equal (cdr fcd-lst)
concl
fn-cnt
p-fn-cnt)))))
(defun all-dumb-occur-lst (args cl)
(cond ((endp args) t)
(t (and (dumb-occur-lst (car args) cl)
(all-dumb-occur-lst (cdr args) cl)))))
(defun all-args-occur-after-strip-not (term cl)
; One of our heuristics for approving a derivation is that all of the
; arguments appearing in its conclusion occur in cl. This function
; checks that when term is the :concl of an fc-derivation. Roughly
; speaking, we check that every arg of term occurs in cl. However, we
; first strip off any NOTs that surround term. Rather arbitrarily, if
; the resulting atom is a variable, we return t, and if it is a constant
; we return nil.
(cond ((variablep term) t)
((fquotep term) nil)
((eq (ffn-symb term) 'not)
(all-args-occur-after-strip-not (fargn term 1) cl))
(t (all-dumb-occur-lst (fargs term) cl))))
(defun approved-fc-derivationp (fcd cl)
; We return t iff we approve fcd as a new fact we will add to fcd-lst
; while forward chaining from clause cl.
; Once upon a time, our heuristic for approving an fc-derivation is
; that one of the following 4 conditions is satisfied. (a) The
; relevant forward-chaining rune has not been used before in this
; derivation. (b) Concl is not worse-than-or-equal any concl in its
; derivation. (c) The triggering term of this fcd is in the current
; clause. (d) All of the args of concl occur in the clause. However,
; after an improvement to the forward-chaining code to extract new
; trigger terms from all approved conclusions, we found that condition
; (c) was unnecessary and, in fact, could cause forward-chaining to
; loop indefinitely. So (c) has been commented out below.
(let ((ttree (access fc-derivation fcd :ttree)))
(or (not (fcd-runep (access fc-derivation fcd :rune) ttree)) ; (a)
(not (fcd-worse-than-or-equal (access fc-derivation fcd :concl) ; (b)
(access fc-derivation fcd :fn-cnt)
(access fc-derivation fcd :p-fn-cnt)
ttree))
; (dumb-occur-lst (access fc-derivation fcd :inst-trigger) cl) ; (c)
; There is one more condition, (d), below, but first a big comment
; explaining it. If all of the arguments of the conclusion (ignoring
; any leading NOTs) of the forward-chaining rule appear in the clause,
; we approve the result. Dave Greve has encountered cases where this
; extra flexibility is important for making type-like forward-chaining
; derivations, as illustrated by the following example.
; (defstub con (x y) nil)
; (defstub des (x) nil)
;
; (defstub typec (x) nil)
; (defstub typeg (x) nil)
; (defstub typed (x) nil)
;
; (defaxiom typed-implies-typeg
; (implies
; (typed x)
; (typeg x))
; :rule-classes (:rewrite :forward-chaining))
;
; (defaxiom typeg-des
; (implies
; (typec x)
; (typed (des x)))
; :rule-classes (:rewrite
; (:forward-chaining :trigger-terms ((des x)))))
;
; (defaxiom typec-con
; (implies
; (and
; (natp n)
; (typeg x))
; (typec (con x n)))
; :rule-classes (:rewrite
; (:forward-chaining :trigger-terms ((con x n)))))
;
; (defun several (g)
; (let* ((c (con g 1))
; (g (des c))
; (c (con g 2))
; (g (des c))
; (c (con g 3))
; (g (des c)))
; (con g 4)))
;
; (in-theory (disable
; (:rewrite typec-con)
; (:rewrite typeg-des)
; (:rewrite typed-implies-typeg)
; ))
;
; ; The following fails without the call below of
; ; all-args-occur-after-strip-not below unless we remove the
; ; in-theory event above.
; (defthm typec-several
; (implies
; (typed g)
; (typec (several g))))
(all-args-occur-after-strip-not (access fc-derivation fcd :concl) ; (d)
cl))))
(defun approve-fc-derivations (new-fcd-lst cl approved-this-round all-approved)
; We have just derived the fc-derivations in new-fcd-lst, from the
; negations of the literals in cl. We filter out those new
; fc-derivations that we do not approve. We add the approved ones to
; both approved-this-round and all-approved. The former is initially
; nil within a given round and is thus the approved derivations of that
; round. The latter is cumulative across all rounds. We return both.
(cond ((null new-fcd-lst) (mv approved-this-round all-approved))
((approved-fc-derivationp (car new-fcd-lst) cl)
(approve-fc-derivations (cdr new-fcd-lst)
cl
(cons (car new-fcd-lst) approved-this-round)
(cons (car new-fcd-lst) all-approved)))
(t (approve-fc-derivations (cdr new-fcd-lst)
cl
approved-this-round
all-approved))))
; Once we have a batch of approved derivations, we sort them so the
; ``simpler'' ones appear first. We will then assume them in that
; order. The heuristic is that simpler conclusions might strengthen
; what we learn about subsequent ones, as would happen if we assumed
; (integerp x) before we assumed (integerp (foo x)).
(mutual-recursion
(defun max-level-no (term wrld)
; Each defun'd function, except the ones being defund at the moment,
; has a 'level-no property, which is a non-negative integer. The ACL2
; primitives have no level-no property, which we treat as though it were
; 0. This function computes the maximum stored level-no of the functions
; appearing in term. Any fn appearing without a level-no is treated
; as though it had level 0, i.e., it is ignored.
(cond ((variablep term) 0)
((fquotep term) 0)
(t (max (get-level-no (ffn-symb term) wrld)
(max-level-no-lst (fargs term)
wrld)))))
(defun max-level-no-lst (args wrld)
(cond ((null args) 0)
(t (max (max-level-no (car args) wrld)
(max-level-no-lst (cdr args) wrld)))))
(defun get-level-no (fn wrld)
; Fn is either a lambda expression or a function symbol. We return
; its level number.
(cond ((flambdap fn) (max-level-no (lambda-body fn) wrld))
((getpropc fn 'level-no nil wrld))
(t 0)))
)
(mutual-recursion
(defun sort-approved1-rating1 (term wrld fc vc)
(cond ((variablep term) (mv fc (1+ vc)))
((fquotep term) (mv fc vc))
((flambda-applicationp term)
(mv-let (fc vc)
(sort-approved1-rating1 (lambda-body term) wrld fc vc)
(sort-approved1-rating1-lst (fargs term) wrld (1+ fc) vc)))
((or (eq (ffn-symb term) 'not)
(= (getpropc (ffn-symb term) 'absolute-event-number 0 wrld)
0))
(sort-approved1-rating1-lst (fargs term) wrld fc vc))
(t (sort-approved1-rating1-lst (fargs term) wrld
(+ 1
(get-level-no (ffn-symb term) wrld)
fc)
vc))))
(defun sort-approved1-rating1-lst (lst wrld fc vc)
(cond ((null lst) (mv fc vc))
(t (mv-let (fc vc)
(sort-approved1-rating1 (car lst) wrld fc vc)
(sort-approved1-rating1-lst (cdr lst) wrld fc vc)))))
)
(defun sort-approved1-rating (term wrld)
; In forward-chaining we assume all the derived concls. We sort them by the
; ratings computed here, assuming first those terms with the highest rating.
; Therefore, we wish to give high numbers to very type-like terms such as
; (rationalp x) and (not (< x '0)). Actually, all our ratings are nonpositive
; integers, with 0 thus the highest. The terms pictured above have ratings of
; -1 because they contain a single variable and are otherwise completely
; primitive. If you assume no term contains more than 10 variable occurrences
; then the ordering imposed by these ratings is lexicographic, favoring
; low function count and using variable occurrences to break ties. No
; real consideration has been given this measure beyond that it puts
; the terms above before others!
(mv-let (fc vc)
(sort-approved1-rating1 term wrld 0 0)
(- (+ (* 10 fc) vc))))
(defun sort-approved1 (approved wrld)
(cond ((null approved) nil)
(t (cons
(cons (sort-approved1-rating
(access fc-derivation (car approved) :concl)
wrld)
(car approved))
(sort-approved1 (cdr approved) wrld)))))
(defun sort-approved (approved wrld)
; Approved is a list of fc-derivations which have derived certain :concls.
; We sort that list so that those with the higher rated :concls come first.
(strip-cdrs (merge-sort-car-> (sort-approved1 approved wrld))))
(defun strip-fcd-concls (fcd-lst)
(cond ((null fcd-lst) nil)
(t (cons (access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :concl)
(strip-fcd-concls (cdr fcd-lst))))))
; Upon obtaining the approved derived conclusions, we need to extend the
; type-alist with them.
(defun type-alist-fcd-lst (fcd-lst type-alist
do-not-reconsiderp force-flg ens wrld)
; We take a list of fc-derivations and assume the truth of each concl,
; extending type-alist. We return two results. The first is t or nil
; indicating whether a contradiction was found. When a contradiction is
; found, the second result is the ttree of that contradiction. When a
; contradiction is not found, the second is the final type-alist. In
; both cases, the second result is not fcd-free.
; Note that when we finish, (endp fcd-lst), we reconsider the type-alist. This
; is analogous to type-alist-clause-finish. We have seen an example of forward
; chaining where we derived, in order, (< 0 x), (< x 1), (integerp x), and
; failed to recognize the contradiction, just as type-alist-clause-finish1
; fails to recognize that contradiction.
(cond
((endp fcd-lst)
(if do-not-reconsiderp
(mv nil type-alist)
(mv-let (contradictionp xtype-alist ttree)
(reconsider-type-alist type-alist type-alist nil ens wrld
nil nil)
(cond
(contradictionp (mv t ttree))
(t (mv nil xtype-alist))))))
(t (mv-let
(mbt mbf tta fta ttree)
(assume-true-false
(access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :concl)
(add-to-tag-tree! 'fc-derivation
(car fcd-lst)
nil)
force-flg nil type-alist ens wrld nil nil :fta)
(declare (ignore fta))
(cond (mbf (mv t ttree))
(mbt (type-alist-fcd-lst (cdr fcd-lst)
type-alist
do-not-reconsiderp force-flg
ens wrld))
(t (type-alist-fcd-lst (cdr fcd-lst)
tta
do-not-reconsiderp force-flg ens
wrld)))))))
; Finally, we have to detect ``stability'' as we repeatedly do rounds of
; forward chaining. One aspect of stability is that every approved
; conclusion is already in the list of trigger terms in the problem.
(defun every-concl-member-equalp (fcd-lst trigger-terms)
; Fcd-lst is a list of fc-derivations. We return t if the :concl of
; every element of fcd-lst is a member-equal of trigger-terms.
(cond ((endp fcd-lst) t)
((member-equal (access fc-derivation (car fcd-lst) :concl)
trigger-terms)
(every-concl-member-equalp (cdr fcd-lst) trigger-terms))
(t nil)))
; Now we are ready to define the function that carries out successive
; rounds of a forward chaining.
(defun forward-chain1 (cl fc-round trigger-terms activations type-alist force-flg wrld
do-not-reconsiderp ens oncep-override state
all-approved-fcds)
; Cl is a clause and fc-round is the current forward chaining round
; number. Trigger-terms is the list of every subterm in the problem
; whose top function symbol has forward chaining rules. Activations is
; the list of all (suspended) activations. We first advance every
; activation, obtaining a new list of activations and some derived
; conclusions represented as fcds. We filter the derived conclusions,
; throwing out any that, on heuristic grounds, we don't like. We then
; assume the approved ones, updating the type-alist. Some approved
; conclusions may not give us any new type information, e.g., they are
; already encoded in the type-alist, but we keep track of those
; conclusions anyway because they might give us new trigger terms. We
; then add activations for all the new trigger terms and appropriately
; extend trigger-terms. Then we repeat this process until either we get
; a contradiction or we stabilize.
; We return (mv flg ttree all-approved-fcds fc-round activations). If flg is
; t, then we found a contradiction and ttree is a (not fcd-free) ttree.
; Otherwise, ttree is nil. In both cases, all-approved-fcds is the accumulated
; list of all approved fc-derivations produced during forward-chaining,
; fc-round is the final fc-round number, and activations is the list of
; still-suspended activations at the end of the process. These last two are
; only used in the trace facility for forward-chaining.
; Note: The extended type-alist we build here is of no use outside
; forward chaining because it is full of fc-derivations. We return two
; results. The first is a t or nil indicating whether a contradiction
; was found. The second is a ttree if a contradiction was found and is
; the final fcd-lst otherwise.
(mv-let (activations1 fcd-lst1)
(advance-fc-activations
activations fc-round type-alist ens force-flg
wrld state oncep-override
nil ; initial new activations
nil ; initial new derived concls
)
(prog2$
(filter-all-satisfying-fc-derivations fcd-lst1) ; (FC Reporting)
(mv-let (approved-this-round all-approved-fcds)
(approve-fc-derivations fcd-lst1
cl
nil ; initial approved this round
all-approved-fcds)
(mv-let (contradictionp x)
(type-alist-fcd-lst
(sort-approved approved-this-round wrld)
type-alist do-not-reconsiderp force-flg ens wrld)
; If contradictionp is t, x is a ttree; otherwise, x is a type-alist.
; In any case, x is not fcd-free.
(cond
(contradictionp
; Note: x, below, is a ttree and is not fcd-free.
(mv t x all-approved-fcds fc-round activations1))
; Note: x, below, is a type-alist and is not fcd-free.
((and (equal x type-alist)
(every-concl-member-equalp approved-this-round
trigger-terms))
(mv nil nil all-approved-fcds fc-round activations1))
(t
(mv-let (trigger-terms1 activations1)
(collect-terms-and-activations-from-fcd-lst
approved-this-round wrld ens
trigger-terms activations1)
(forward-chain1
cl
(+ 1 fc-round)
trigger-terms1 activations1
x ; type-alist
force-flg wrld do-not-reconsiderp ens
oncep-override state
all-approved-fcds)))))))))
(defun forward-chain-top (caller cl pts force-flg do-not-reconsiderp wrld ens
oncep-override state)
; The only difference between forward-chain-top and forward-chain is that this
; function allows the caller to identify itself; forward-chain just uses the
; 'miscellaneous caller so that tool books that use forward chaining don't have
; to be changed.
; We forward chain in all possible ways from clause cl. We return three
; results, (mv flg type-alist ttree-or-fc-pairs), where type-alist is nil if
; flg is t and the last result is either a ttree (flg=t) or fc-pairs (flg=nil)
; as described below. Thus, the answer is of one of the forms:
; (mv t nil ttree) or (mv nil type-alist fc-pairs).
; Flg is either t or nil indicating whether a contradiction was found. If so,
; the second result is nil and the third is an fcd-free ttree that encodes the
; 'lemmas and literals used (via 'pt tags). If no contradiction is found, the
; second result is an fcd-free type-alist obtained by assuming false all of the
; literals of cl (this type-alist is fully tagged with 'pt tags) plus all of
; the conclusions derived from forward chaining; the third is a list of
; fc-pairs, each of the form (concl . ttree), where concl is a truth derived
; from some subset of the negations of literals of cl and ttree is fcd-free and
; tags the :FORWARD-CHAINING 'lemmas used and all parents (via 'pt tags).
; Note: The type-alist returned assumes the falsity of every literal in
; the clause and thus is not suitable for use by rewrite. We return it
; strictly for the use of setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst and bdd-clause.
; In reading the code below, read (fc-exit a b c ...) as though it
; were (mv a b c). The stuff in ... is just used in the reporting.
(prog2$
(new-fc-call caller cl pts force-flg do-not-reconsiderp wrld ens
oncep-override)
(mv-let
(contradictionp type-alist ttree1)
(type-alist-clause cl (pts-to-ttree-lst pts) nil nil ens wrld
nil nil)
; If a contradiction was found, type-alist is nil and ttree1 is an fcd-free
; tree explaining the contradiction. Otherwise, type-alist is the type-alist
; produced by assuming all the literals false and ttree1 is nil.
(cond
(contradictionp (mv t nil ttree1))
(t (mv-let
(trigger-terms activations)
(collect-terms-and-activations-lst cl nil wrld ens nil nil)
; Trigger-terms is the list of all subterms of cl whose top function
; symbols have fc rules and activations is the list of all (suspended)
; activations triggered by those subterms.
(mv-let
(contradictionp ttree2 all-approved-fcds rounds activations1)
(pstk
(forward-chain1 cl 1
trigger-terms activations
type-alist force-flg wrld
do-not-reconsiderp ens oncep-override
state nil))
(cond (contradictionp
; If a contradiction was found by forward chaining, ttree2 is the ttree that
; derives it. But it is not fcd-free and we need to make it fcd-free
; before letting it out of the forward-chaining module.
(fc-exit t nil (expunge-fc-derivations ttree2)
; We return the three things above but use the following in the report:
caller rounds all-approved-fcds activations1))
(t
; If no contradiction was found, ttree2 is nil. We need to convert
; all-approved-fcds to a list of pairs of the form (concl . ttree), where each
; ttree is fcd-free.
(let ((fc-pair-lst (fc-pair-lst all-approved-fcds)))
(mv-let
(contradictionp type-alist3 ttree3)
(fc-pair-lst-type-alist
fc-pair-lst all-approved-fcds type-alist force-flg ens wrld)
(cond
(contradictionp
(fc-exit t nil ttree3
; (mv t nil ttree3)
; ... and the stuff we need to do reporting ...
caller rounds all-approved-fcds activations1))
(t
(mv-let
(contradictionp type-alist4 ttree4)
(type-alist-equality-loop
type-alist3 ens wrld
*type-alist-equality-loop-max-depth*)
(cond
(contradictionp
(fc-exit t nil ttree4
; (mv t nil ttree4)
; ... and the stuff we need to do reporting ...
caller rounds all-approved-fcds activations1))
(t
(fc-exit nil type-alist4 fc-pair-lst
; (mv nil type-alist4 fc-pair-lst)
; ... and the stuff we need to do reporting ...
caller rounds all-approved-fcds activations1)))))))))))))))))
(defun forward-chain (cl pts force-flg do-not-reconsiderp wrld ens
oncep-override state)
; This is a version of forward-chain that is backwards compatible with the
; Version_4.1 signature, which did not allow the caller to identify itself. It
; is defined so it can be used in books like the expander.
(forward-chain-top 'miscellaneous
cl pts force-flg do-not-reconsiderp wrld ens
oncep-override state))
; When forward-chain has done its job and produced an fc-pair list,
; we will pass that list to rewrite-clause. Rewrite-clause rewrites
; each literal in turn, under a type-alist constructed from the remaining
; literals (some of which will have been rewritten since forward-chain
; constructed the type-alist returned above) and from the fc-pair list.
; Here is how we construct the type-alist:
(defun select-forward-chained-concls-and-ttrees (fc-pair-lst pt lits ttree-lst)
; Fc-pair-lst is a list of pairs of the form (concl . ttree). Each ttree
; contains 'pt tags indicating the parents of concl. Pt is a parent tree.
; Consider those elements of fc-pair-lst, say fc-pair-lst', whose parents are
; disjoint from pt. While working on the literals in pt we are permitted to
; assume the truth of every concl in fc-pair-lst'. This function computes
; fc-pair-lst' and destructures it into two lists which we return in the form
; of (mv lits ttree-lst). Lits and ttree-lst are in 1:1 correspondence. Each
; lit is the negation of a concl in fc-pair-lst' and the corresponding ttree is
; the ttree for concl in fc-pair-lst'. Thus, lits can be thought of as a
; clause segment that can be appended to the other literals we get to assume
; false while working on pt. The ttrees in ttree-lst may have 'assumption tags
; because forwarding chaining may FORCE or CASE-SPLIT.
(cond ((null fc-pair-lst) (mv lits ttree-lst))
((to-be-ignoredp (cdr (car fc-pair-lst)) pt)
(select-forward-chained-concls-and-ttrees (cdr fc-pair-lst)
pt lits ttree-lst))
(t (select-forward-chained-concls-and-ttrees
(cdr fc-pair-lst)
pt
(cons (dumb-negate-lit (car (car fc-pair-lst)))
lits)
(cons (cdr (car fc-pair-lst))
ttree-lst)))))
; Essay on the Construction of the Type-alist to Rewrite the Current Literal
; Simplification sweeps across the literals of a clause, rewriting each in turn
; while assuming the others false. After rewriting a literal, we clausify the
; result into n clause segments [extending other already-rewritten segments]
; and rewrite the next literal under (the falsity of each literal in) each of
; those segments together with the remaining literals and any available
; conclusions produced by forward chaining. Thus, to get the type-alist to be
; used while rewriting ``the current literal'' we assume the falsity of three
; lists of literals: new-clause [the clause segement obtained from one path
; through the previously rewritten literals], (cdr tail) [the rest of the
; unrewritten literals], and lits [the literals derived by forward chaining].
; We use the ordinary type-alist-clause to create the new type-alist. The
; question is: in which order shall we combine these three lists to give to
; type-alist-clause?
; Warning: Note that rearranging the order in which we make these assumptions
; reorders the type-alist! But this can be a Very Big Deal. Different rules
; might fire because one type-alist is actually stronger than another,
; different free variable choices may be available because we run into
; different hypotheses (in different orders) suggesting bindings, and the order
; of literals in forced subgoals may be different because we reconstruct forced
; subgoals from converting the governing type-alist into a conjunction of
; terms. Experimenting with reordering is a costly experiment.
; We have tried three approaches: (append lits new-clause (cdr tail)), (append
; new-clause (cdr tail) lits), and a ``smart'' approach in which we sort the
; literals to put the smaller ones first, thereby allowing their type-sets to
; improve, perhaps, the type-sets computed for larger literals (like disjuctive
; ones (IF a a b)) involving the some of the smaller ones. The code deleted
; below was part of this ``smart'' approach. All of these reordering
; strategies must maintain the correspondence between the forward-chained
; literals and the ttrees that produced them and some of the code below deals
; with how to permute two lists so as to order one by size and keep the result
; in 1:1 correspondence with the permuted other.
; Start Experimental Code
; (mutual-recursion
; (defun term-size (term)
;
; ; This computes the number of conses in a term, down to (but not including) the
; ; quoted constants. This is just an ``arbitrary'' measure with the following
; ; two properties: (a) it is fast to compute, though one might someday try to
; ; speed it up via memoization, and (b) it has the property that if a and b are
; ; two non-constant terms and term a occurs inside of term b, then the size of a
; ; is less than the size of b. This is expoloited to reorder a clause so that
; ; the smaller literals come first during the process of sequentially assuming
; ; their falsity to construct a type-alist to use in the rewriting of some other
; ; literal. See rewrite-clause-type-alist.
;
; (cond ((variablep term) 1)
; ((fquotep term) 1)
; (t (+ 1 (term-size-lst (fargs term))))))
; (defun term-size-lst (term-lst)
; (cond ((endp term-lst) 0)
; (t (+ (term-size (car term-lst))
; (term-size-lst (cdr term-lst)))))))
;
; ; Suppose x is some clause and y is some list of ttrees in 1:1 correspondence
; ; with x. We wish to reorder the literals of x according to term-size and to
; ; apply the same permutation to y, so that the correspondence of literals to
; ; ttrees is preserved. We do this by constructing a list of elements (size xi
; ; . yi), where xi and yi are corresponding elements of x and y, sorting that
; ; list by its cars, and then stripping out the xi to get the new x' and the yi
; ; to get the new yi.
;
; (defun pairlis-with-rankings (x y ans)
; ; See comment above. If y is too short, we extend it with nils to match x.
; (cond ((endp x) ans)
; (t (pairlis-with-rankings
; (cdr x) (cdr y)
; (cons (cons (term-size (car x)) (cons (car x) (car y)))
; ans)))))
;
; (defun reorder-lits-and-ttrees-for-type-alist-clause
; (lits1 ttree-lst1 lits2 ttree-lst2 lits3 ttree-lst3)
; (let ((triples
; (merge-sort-car-<
; (pairlis-with-rankings
; lits1 ttree-lst1
; (pairlis-with-rankings
; lits2 ttree-lst2
; (pairlis-with-rankings lits3 ttree-lst3 nil))))))
; (mv (strip-cadrs triples)
; (strip-cddrs triples))))
; End Experimental Code
; We started (back in 1989) with the Nqthm idea of just concatenating
; new-clause and (cdr tail); at that time, forward chaining lits didn't exist.
; When forward-chaining was introduced, we experimented and ultimately decided
; to try the order (append lits new-clause (cdr tail)). We did not use (or
; even have) the function reorder-lits-and-ttrees-for-type-alist-clause and
; simply appended the ttree lists in the same order. The following comment is
; preserved from versions dating back to the mid-1990s through Version_6.1:
; Historical Comment:
; Observe below that we put the forward-chained concls first. The problem that
; led us to do this was the toy example shown below (extracted from a harder
; failed proof attempt). The thm below fails if you process the literals in
; the order (append new-clause (cdr tail) lits).
; (defstub p (x) t)
; (defstub r (x) t)
; (defaxiom p->r
; (implies (p x)
; (r x))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
; (defstub my-assoc (name l) t)
; (defaxiom blob
; (implies (r l)
; (or (consp (my-assoc name l))
; (equal (my-assoc name l) nil)))
; :rule-classes :type-prescription)
; (thm
; (implies (p l)
; (or (consp (my-assoc name l))
; (equal (my-assoc name l) nil))))
; As a clause the theorem is
; (implies (and (p l)
; (not (consp (my-assoc name l))))
; (equal (my-assoc name l) nil)).
; Consider what happens when we rewrite the conclusion assuming the hyps. We
; have (p l) and (not (consp (my-assoc name l))). We do indeed forward chain
; and get (r l) also. But the (not (consp (my-assoc name l))) puts the
; following pair on the type-alist:
; ((my-assoc name l) -1537) ; ts-complement of consp
; Thus, when we go to get the type-set of (my-assoc name l) we don't even look
; at the rules about my-assoc, we just return -1537.
; Three fixes are possible. First, process lits first so that (r l) is
; available when we do the (consp (my-assoc name l)). Second, change type-set
; so that it uses rules about my-assoc even if the term (my-assoc name l) is
; bound on the type-alist. Third, modify type-alist-clause so that it iterates
; as long as the type-alist changes so that it is not important in what order
; the lits are processed. The second alternative seems potentially very slow,
; though we have done no experiments. The third alternative is hard because
; one must ignore known types on the type-alist when reprocessing the lits.
; Feb 9, 1995. We are trying a version of the third alternative, with
; reconsider-type-alist and the double whammy flag.
; End of Historical Comment
; In April, 2013, we experimented with the ``smart'' approach and temporarily
; introduced reorder-lits-and-ttrees-for-type-alist-clause into what would
; become Version_6.2. In all the examples we looked at, the type-alists
; produced by this method were at least as strong as those produced by the
; earlier method. Sometimes they are actually better, especially when the
; conclusions produced by forward-chained are disjunctions, e.g., (IF a a b),
; where earlier assumptions about a or b may give us stronger type-sets about b
; or a.
; The warning above about the effects of changing the order of the type-alist
; came to the fore in this experiment. We found that 500 of the 3100+ books
; failed the regression. (Of course, presumably many failed because they
; merely depended on books that failed for type-alist reasons.) In any case,
; we abandoned the smart approach.
; But then we moved back to the (append new-clause (cdr tail) lits) approach
; dismissed earlier in the Historical Comment above. The reasons for this
; ordering are fairly compelling: if one is to forward-chain to disjunctions
; they ought to be processed last so we can take advantage of known-false
; disjuncts within them. We tried the old example cited in the Historical
; Comment above and it works under this approach -- presumably because in the
; ~20 years since that example was recorded, the system has changed in other
; ways (e.g., the sophistication now in assume-true-false-if and
; reconsider-type-alist). But, not withstanding the Warning above about the
; dangers of reordering the type-alist, only three contemporary (April, 2013)
; books failed due to reordering reasons:
; books/centaur/bitops/congruences.lisp
; books/models/y86/y86-basic/common/read-over-write-proofs.lisp
; books/demos/modeling/network-state.lisp
; We decided to ``patch'' these proof scripts and stay with the ``forward-chained
; lits last'' reordering strategy.
; Search those books for: "; Reordering the rewrite-clause-type-alist" to see
; the three patched events. Only one event in each book had to modified. In
; two of the books one rune had to be disabled in each event (because that rule
; was able to fire in the new reordering but the proof had been designed when
; that rule was not firing). The runes are obscure (if trying to reconstruct
; the proof via The Method) but were obtained simply by determining the runes
; for the failed subgoal under reordering that were not fired by the successful
; proof of that same subgoal. Once the set of such runes was identified we
; could experiment to determine a ``minimal'' sufficient set (in each case a
; set of size 1). In the third book (network-state.lisp) we proved a lemma
; that drastically simplified the affected proof.
; Our decision to change after Version_6.1 to using (append new-clause (cdr
; tail) lits) instead of the former (append lits new-clause (cdr tail)) was
; motivated by the following example from Dave Greve. In this example, Dave
; expected the rewrite rule to suffice, but it did not. It does now.
; (defstub a-p (x) nil)
; (defstub b-p (x) nil)
; (defstub c-p (x) nil)
; (defstub d-p (x) nil)
;
; (defun x-p (x)
; (or (a-p x)
; (b-p x)
; (c-p x)
; (d-p x)))
;
; (defthm forward
; (implies
; (x-p x)
; (or (a-p x)
; (b-p x)
; (c-p x)
; (d-p x)))
; :rule-classes (:forward-chaining))
;
; (in-theory (disable x-p))
;
; (defun z-p (x)
; (c-p x))
;
; (defthm goo
; (implies
; (c-p x)
; (z-p x))
; :rule-classes (:rewrite :type-prescription))
;
; (in-theory (disable z-p))
;
; (in-theory (disable (:type-prescription goo)))
;
; ; Fails, but Dave expected that (:rewrite goo) would suffice.
;
; (defthm zoo
; (implies
; (and
; (x-p x)
; (not (a-p x))
; (not (b-p x))
; (not (d-p x)))
; (z-p x)))
(defun rewrite-clause-type-alist (tail new-clause fc-pair-lst rcnst wrld
pot-lst pt)
; We construct a type alist in which we assume (a) the falsity of every literal
; in tail except the first, (b) the falsity of every literal in new-clause, and
; (c) the truth of every concl in fc-pair-lst that is not dependent upon
; any literal noted in the parent tree (:pt) of rcnst.
; We do this by constructing a clause containing the literals in question
; (negating the concls in fc-pair-lst) and calling our general purpose
; type-alist-clause. As of v2-8, we also pass in the simplify-clause-pot-lst
; to aid in the endeavor since type-set and assume-true-false can now
; (weakly) use linear arithmetic.
; We return a four-tuple, (mv contradictionp type-alist ttree current-clause),
; where contradictionp is t or nil and indicates whether we derived a
; contradiction. Type-alist is the constructed type-alist (or nil if we got a
; contradiction). Ttree is a ttree explaining the contradiction (or nil if got
; no contradiction). Current-clause is the clause used in the computation
; described immediately above.
; Note: The type-alist returned may contain 'assumption tags. In addition, the
; type-alist may contain some 'pt tags -- the conclusions derived by forward
; chaining will have their respective ttrees attached to them and these will
; have 'pt tags and could have 'assumptions. We could throw out the 'pt tags
; if we wanted -- we are allowed to use everything in this type-alist because
; we only put accessible assumptions in it -- but we don't. We must record the
; ttrees because of the possible 'assumption tags.
(mv-let
(lits ttree-lst)
(select-forward-chained-concls-and-ttrees fc-pair-lst
(access rewrite-constant rcnst :pt)
nil nil)
(mv-let (current-clause current-ttree-lst)
; The ``smart'' approach was this:
; (reorder-lits-and-ttrees-for-type-alist-clause new-clause nil
; (cdr tail) nil
; lits ttree-lst)
; See the essay above for explanations.
(mv (append new-clause (cdr tail) lits)
(make-list-ac (+ (len new-clause) (len (cdr tail)))
nil
ttree-lst))
(mv-let (contradictionp type-alist ttree)
(type-alist-clause
current-clause
current-ttree-lst
nil ; force-flg
nil ; initial type-alist
(access rewrite-constant rcnst :current-enabled-structure)
wrld
pot-lst pt)
(mv contradictionp type-alist ttree current-clause)))))
; Historical Plaque on Forward Chaining
; General purpose forward chaining was not implemented in Nqthm, although
; the linear arithmetic package and :COMPOUND-RECOGNIZER lemmas were (and
; still are) examples of forward-chaining reasoning. The first two
; implementations of general purpose forward chaining in ACL2 occurred
; last week (April 9-13, 1990). They were both implemented one level
; below where the current forward chaining module sits: we did forward
; chaining just before rewriting each literal of the clause, rather
; than doing all the forward chaining once and tracking dependencies.
; They were both abandoned because of inefficiency. The killer was -- we
; think -- the repeated duplication of forward chaining derivations. For
; example, if the clause to be rewritten was {~a ~b c1 ... ck} and an
; elaborate forward chaining tree can be built from a and b, then that
; tree was built when we began to rewrite c1 and that tree was built
; again when we began to rewrite c2, etc. In addition, the old forward
; chaining scheme did not include the idea of triggers, it forward
; chained off the first hypothesis of a :FORWARD-CHAINING rule. Finally,
; the old scheme used full fledged relieve-hyps to relieve the other hyps
; of the rules -- another potential killer but one that didn't get us
; simply because we had no forward chaining rules with more than one hyp
; in our tests.
; However, in an effort to help software archeologists (not to mention
; the possibility that we might help ourselves avoid repetition of past
; mistakes) we inscribe here an extensive comment written last week:
; The Forward Chaining Essay - Version II (This essay is of at most historic
; interest. For the current version of forward chaining, search for
; Forward Chaining from the top of this file.)
; We are about to start rewriting the current literal under the
; assumption of the negations of the literals in clause-seg. We wish to
; forward chain off of these assumptions to generate a type-alist
; suitable for use during the rewriting.
; We return three values: t or nil indicating whether a contradiction was
; found while forward chaining, a new type-alist, and a ttree recording
; the forward-chaining-rules used.
; The form of a :FORWARD-CHAINING rule is:
; (defrec forward-chaining-rule
; ((rune . nume) key-hyp other-hyps . concls) nil)
; If a lemma such as
; (implies (and hyp1 hyp2 ... hypn) (and concl1 ... conclk))
; is processed as a :FORWARD-CHAINING rule named name we will generate:
; (make forward-chaining-rule
; :rune rune
; :nume &
; :key-hyp hyp1
; :other-hyps (hyp2 ... hypn)
; :concls (concl1 ... conclk)
; :match-free once_or_all)
; which is stored under the 'forward-chaining-rules property of the top
; function symbol of hyp1. By "top function symbol" we mean the outer
; most function symbol after stripping away any top-level NOT.
; When we apply a forward-chaining-rule we have a context defined by the
; set of assumptions off of which we are forward chaining (which is
; initially obtained by negating the literals of clause-seg) and a
; type-alist encoding those assumptions. Our main result is, of course,
; the final type-alist. But the set of assumptions is represented
; explicitly (indeed, somewhat elaborately) to support heuristics
; designed to avoid infinite loops while permitting the desired forward
; chaining.
; The list of assumptions is more properly thought of as the history of
; this forward chaining problem and is held in the variable fc-history.
; More on its structure later.
; Roughly speaking, one applies a :FORWARD-CHAINING rule to a term, hyp1',
; as follows: unify :key-hyp with hyp1' and then relieve-hyps the
; :other-hyps. If those two steps do not succeed, the application fails.
; If they work, then make a heuristic decision about whether the
; resulting instance of :concls is worthwhile. If it is not, the
; application fails. If it is, add concl to the fc-history and
; type-alist and say the application succeeded.
; The structure of fc-history sufficient to support our current
; heuristics has evolved from a naive structure that just listed the
; assumptions made so far. Initially, our heuristic decision was simply
; whether the candidate concl was worse-than any existing assumption.
; But imagine that among the initial hypotheses are (ASSOC & &) and
; (STATE-P1 S). And imagine that some forward chaining rule lets you
; pump forward from (STATE-P1 S) to (P (CDR (ASSOC & &))). Then you
; wouldn't get to use that rule because its conclusion is worse than
; (ASSOC & &). This was the first indication that worse-than alone was
; too restrictive. We fixed this by distinguishing the initial
; assumptions from those produced by forward chaining and we did the
; worse-than check only on the newly added ones.
; However, the next problem was illustrated by having two forward
; chaining rules:
; name1: (state-p1 x) -> (p (nth 2 state))
; name2: (state-p1 x) -> (p (nth 3 state)),
; that can get in eachother's way. If the first is used to add its
; conclusion then the second cannot be used because its conclusion is
; worse than that just added.
; So the structure of fc-history is now a list of pairs, each of the form
; (term . hist), where term is one of our assumptions and hist is the
; history of term. If term is among the initial assumptions, then hist
; is nil. If term was produced by the rule named name from some term'
; with history hist', then hist is (name term' . hist').
; Thus, another way to view it is that each entry in fc-history is of the
; form (term namek termk ... name2 term2 name1 term1) and means that term
; was produced by a chain of k forward chaining steps: starting with
; term1 (which is in the initial set of assumptions) use name1 to derive
; term2, use name2 to dervie term3, ..., and use namek to derive term.
; Our heuristic for deciding whether to keep a conclusion, concl, is if
; namek has not been used in this chain, keep concl; otherwise, if namek
; has been used, then concl must be worse than nor equal to no termi in
; its chain.
; It is very inefficient to repeatedly hit all the assumptions with all
; the rules until no change occurs. We have therefore taken steps to
; avoid unnecessary work. First, if a rule has been successfully applied
; to a term then there is no need to apply it again (only to learn that
; its conclusion is rejected). Second, if a conclusion has ever been
; produced before, there is no need to add it again (although technically
; it is probably possible to rederive it in a way that permits further
; chaining not permitted by the original derivation). Third, if a rule
; named name is applied to a term term with derivation d and produces a
; concl that is rejected because of its ancestry, then don't apply name
; to term and d again. To support this heuristic we have to keep track
; of the failed applications, which we do in the variable bad-appls.
; End of Historical Plaque
; Essay on Lambda Abstraction
; We will do some lambda abstraction when we rewrite literals. That
; is implemented here.
; The original idea here was to expand lambdas by ordinary rewriting
; and then to fold them back up, removing duplicate occurrences of
; subterms. Consider
; ((lambda (x y) (foo x (car y) x))
; alpha
; (cons b c))
; This would normally expand to
; (foo alpha b alpha)
; Suppose alpha is very large. Then this is a problem. I will
; fold it back up, to get:
; (let* ((u alpha))
; (foo u b u))
; I have abandoned this idea as far as rewriting goes, though it
; probably still bears a closer look. But I have adopted it as an
; option for prettyprinting clauses.
; The first sub-problem is identifying the common subterms (e.g.,
; alpha in (foo alpha b alpha)) to abstract away. I call this the
; multiple subterm problem.
; We say that x is a "multiple subterm" of y if x occurs more than
; once in y. We say x is a "maximal multiple subterm" of y if x is a
; multiple subterm of y and no other multiple subterm of y contains an
; occurrence of x.
; Our interest in maximal subterms is illustrated by (f (g (m x)) (g
; (m x))). (M x) is a multiple subterm. We might abstract this term
; to (let* ((v1 (m x)) (v2 (g v1))) (f v2 v2)). But if (g (m x)) is
; identified as the first multiple subterm, then we get (let ((v1 (g
; (m x)))) (f v1 v1)) and there is only one let-binding, which we
; prefer. So we wish to find a maximal multiple subterm. We will
; eliminate them one at a time. That way we will find smaller
; terms that still appear more than once. For example:
; The term (f (g (m x)) (h (m x)) (g (m x))) may give rise first
; to (let* ((v1 (g (m x)))) (f v1 (h (m x)) v1)), but upon abstracting
; that we get (let* ((v2 (m x)) (v1 (g v2))) (f v1 v2 v1)).
; We are only interested in "non-atomic" multiple subterms, i.e.,
; function applications. Our interest in non-atomic subterms is
; because otherwise we will infinitely recur ``eliminating'' multiple
; occurrences of variable symbols by introducing new variable symbols
; that occur multiple times.
; So to do lambda abstraction on term we will find a non-atomic
; maximal multiple subterm, e1, in term. If successful, we will
; replace all occurrences of e1 in term by some new variable, say v1,
; producing, say, term1. Now consider (f e1 term1), where f is some
; irrelevant made-up symbol. This term has one less non-atomic
; multiple subterm, since e1 occurs only once in it and v1 is atomic.
; Repeat the process on this term until no multiple subterms are
; found. The result is (f ek ... (f e1 termk)), which we can abstract
; to (let ((vk ek) ... (v1 e1)) termk).
; We would like to carry out this process without manufacturing the
; irrelevant function symbol f. So we are really interested in
; multiple occurrences of a term in a list of terms.
(mutual-recursion
(defun foccurrences (term1 term2 ans)
; We ``count'' the number of occurrences of term1 in term2,
; ``summing'' the result into ans to be tail recursive, except:
; ans = nil means we've seen 0
; ans = t means we've seen 1
; ans = > means we've seen 2 or more
; Thus, nil + 1 = t
; t + 1 = >
; > + 1 = >
; so (+ ans 1) is (if ans '> t) and we can short-circuit whenever ans
; is >.
; Observe that if (eq (foccurrences term1 term2 t) '>) is t, then term1
; occurs at least once in term2. This could also be tested by asking
; whether (foccurrences term1 term2 nil) is non-nil, but that idiom is
; less efficient because the former short-circuits as soon as the
; first occurrence is found, while the latter doesn't short-circuit
; until the second occurrence (if any) is found.
(cond
((equal term1 term2) (if ans '> t))
((eq ans '>) '>)
((variablep term2) ans)
((fquotep term2) ans)
(t (foccurrences-lst term1 (fargs term2) ans))))
(defun foccurrences-lst (term lst ans)
(cond ((endp lst) ans)
((eq ans '>) '>)
(t (foccurrences-lst term
(cdr lst)
(foccurrences term (car lst) ans))))))
(mutual-recursion
(defun maximal-multiple (x term-lst winner)
; In this definition, x is a term, but I am using it as though it were
; just the set of all of its subterms. I wish to find a non-atomic
; subterm, e, of x that is a maximal multiple subterm in the list of
; terms term-lst. Winner is either nil or the maximal multiple found
; so far.
(cond
((or (variablep x)
(fquotep x))
winner)
((eq (foccurrences-lst x term-lst nil) '>)
(cond ((equal winner nil) x)
((eq (foccurrences x winner t) '>) winner)
((eq (foccurrences winner x t) '>) x)
(t winner)))
(t (maximal-multiple-lst (fargs x) term-lst winner))))
(defun maximal-multiple-lst (x-lst term-lst winner)
(cond ((endp x-lst) winner)
(t (maximal-multiple-lst (cdr x-lst)
term-lst
(maximal-multiple (car x-lst)
term-lst
winner))))))
; So, to find a non-atomic maximal multiple subterm of a single term,
; term, do (maximal-multiple term (list term) nil). More generally,
; to find a non-atomic maximal multiple in a list of terms, lst, do
; (maximal-multiple lst lst nil). If the result is nil, there is no
; such subterm. Otherwise, the result is one.
; To carry out the algorithm sketched above, we must iteratively
; find and replace the maximal multiples by new variable symbols.
(defun maximal-multiples1 (term-lst new-vars avoid-vars pkg-witness)
(let ((e (maximal-multiple-lst term-lst term-lst nil)))
(cond
((equal e nil)
(mv new-vars term-lst))
(t (let ((var (genvar pkg-witness "V"
(+ 1 (len new-vars))
avoid-vars)))
(maximal-multiples1
(cons e (subst-expr1-lst var e term-lst))
(cons var new-vars)
(cons var avoid-vars)
pkg-witness))))))
(defun maximal-multiples (term pkg-witness)
; This function returns (mv vars terms), where terms is one longer
; than vars. Suppose vars is (v3 v2 v1) and terms is (e3 e2 e1
; term3). Then term is equivalent to
; (let* ((v3 e3) (v2 e2) (v1 e1)) term3).
; Observe that if vars is nil there are no multiple subterms and terms
; is the singleton containing term.
(maximal-multiples1 (list term) nil (all-vars term) pkg-witness))
; We also will clean up certain IF-expressions.
(defun mutually-exclusive-tests (a b)
; We return t if terms (and a b) cannot be true. We just recognize
; the case where each is (EQUAL x 'constant) for different constants.
(and (ffn-symb-p a 'equal)
(ffn-symb-p b 'equal)
(or (and (quotep (fargn a 1))
(quotep (fargn b 1))
(not (equal (cadr (fargn a 1)) (cadr (fargn b 1))))
(equal (fargn a 2) (fargn b 2)))
(and (quotep (fargn a 2))
(quotep (fargn b 2))
(not (equal (cadr (fargn a 2)) (cadr (fargn b 2))))
(equal (fargn a 1) (fargn b 1)))
(and (quotep (fargn a 1))
(quotep (fargn b 2))
(not (equal (cadr (fargn a 1)) (cadr (fargn b 2))))
(equal (fargn a 2) (fargn b 1)))
(and (quotep (fargn a 2))
(quotep (fargn b 1))
(not (equal (cadr (fargn a 2)) (cadr (fargn b 1))))
(equal (fargn a 1) (fargn b 2))))))
(defun mutually-exclusive-subsumptionp (a b c)
; This is a generalized version of (if x y y). Suppose we wish to
; form (if a b c) but that b is c. Then clearly, the result is equal
; to c. Now imagine that c is (if c1 c2 c3) and that a and c1 are
; mutually exclusive. Then we could form (if c1 c2 (if a b c3))
; instead. This would be a win if it turns out that after rippling
; down we find that b is equal to ck: (if a b c) is just c.
(cond
((equal b c) t)
((and (ffn-symb-p c 'IF)
(mutually-exclusive-tests a (fargn c 1)))
(mutually-exclusive-subsumptionp a b (fargn c 3)))
(t nil)))
(mutual-recursion
(defun cleanup-if-expr (x trues falses)
(cond
((variablep x) x)
((fquotep x) x)
((eq (ffn-symb x) 'IF)
(let ((a (cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 1) trues falses)))
(cond
((quotep a)
(if (cadr a)
(cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 2) trues falses)
(cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 3) trues falses)))
((member-equal a trues)
(cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 2) trues falses))
((member-equal a falses)
(cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 3) trues falses))
(t (let ((b (cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 2) (cons a trues) falses))
(c (cleanup-if-expr (fargn x 3) trues (cons a falses))))
(cond ((equal b c) b)
((mutually-exclusive-subsumptionp a b c)
c)
(t (mcons-term* 'if a b c))))))))
(t (mcons-term (ffn-symb x)
(cleanup-if-expr-lst (fargs x) trues falses)))))
(defun cleanup-if-expr-lst (x trues falses)
(cond ((endp x) nil)
(t (cons (cleanup-if-expr (car x) trues falses)
(cleanup-if-expr-lst (cdr x) trues falses)))))
)
(defun all-type-reasoning-tags-p1 (lemmas)
(cond ((endp lemmas) t)
((or (eq (car (car lemmas)) :FAKE-RUNE-FOR-TYPE-SET)
(eq (car (car lemmas)) :TYPE-PRESCRIPTION))
(all-type-reasoning-tags-p1 (cdr lemmas)))
(t nil)))
(defun all-type-reasoning-tags-p (ttree)
(all-type-reasoning-tags-p1 (tagged-objects 'lemma ttree)))
(defun try-clause (atm clause wrld)
; We assume that atm rewrites to t or nil. We return t if we are to keep that
; rewrite, else nil.
(cond ((endp clause)
nil)
((and (eq (fn-symb (car clause)) 'not)
(equal-mod-commuting atm (fargn (car clause) 1) wrld))
t)
((equal-mod-commuting atm (car clause) wrld)
t)
(t
(try-clause atm (cdr clause) wrld))))
(defconst *trivial-non-nil-ttree*
(puffert nil))
(defun make-non-nil-ttree (ttree)
(or ttree
*trivial-non-nil-ttree*))
(defun try-type-set-and-clause (atm ans ttree ttree0 current-clause wrld ens
knownp)
; We are finishing off a call to rewrite-atm on atm that is about to return ans
; with associated ttree, which is assumed to extend ttree0. Ans is *t* or
; *nil*, but in a context in which this would produce a removal of ans rather
; than a win. We have found it heuristically useful to disallow such removals
; except when atm is trivially known to be true or false. We return the
; desired rewritten value of atm and associated justifying ttree that extends
; ttree0.
(mv-let (ts ttree1)
(type-set atm nil nil nil ens wrld nil nil nil)
(cond ((ts= ts *ts-nil*)
; Type-set was able to reduce atm to nil, by examining atm in isolation. This
; would happen, for instance to an atm such as (not (acl2-numberp (+ x y))) or
; (not (consp (cons x y))). We want to allow such trivial facts to be removed
; from the clause to reduce clutter. We certainly do not lose anything by
; allowing such removals.
(mv *nil* (cons-tag-trees ttree1 ttree0) nil))
((ts-subsetp ts *ts-non-nil*)
(mv *t* (cons-tag-trees ttree1 ttree0) nil))
((try-clause atm current-clause wrld)
(mv ans ttree nil))
(t
(mv atm ttree0 (and knownp (make-non-nil-ttree ttree)))))))
(mutual-recursion
(defun lambda-subtermp (term)
; We determine whether some lambda-expression is used as a function in term.
(if (or (variablep term)
(fquotep term))
nil
(or (flambdap (ffn-symb term))
(lambda-subtermp-lst (fargs term)))))
(defun lambda-subtermp-lst (termlist)
(if termlist
(or (lambda-subtermp (car termlist))
(lambda-subtermp-lst (cdr termlist)))
nil))
)
(defun rewrite-atm (atm not-flg bkptr gstack type-alist wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst current-clause state
step-limit ttree0)
; This function rewrites atm with rewrite, in the given context, maintaining
; iff.
; Note that not-flg is only used heuristically, as it is the responsibility of
; the caller to account properly for it. Current-clause is also used only
; heuristically.
; It is used to rewrite the atoms of a clause as we sweep across. It is
; essentially a call of rewrite -- indeed, it didn't exist in Nqthm and rewrite
; was called in its place -- but with a couple of exceptions. For one thing,
; it first gives type-set a chance to decide things.
; But a more complex exception is that instead of the usual result from
; rewrite, (mv step-limit rewritten-atm ttree), we return a fourth value as
; well: when non-nil, it is a ttree justifying the rewriting of atm to *t* or
; *nil* according to not-flg having value t or nil, respectively. We use this
; additional information to rewrite a clause to *false-clause* when every
; literal simplifies to nil even when our heuristics (documented rather
; extensively below) would normally refuse to simplify at least one of those
; literals; see parameter fttree in rewrite-clause. The following example from
; Pete Manolios illustrates this situation: (thm (<= (+ 1 (acl2-count x)) 0)).
; In this case, there is only one literal, which simplifies to nil; and our
; heuristics would normally refuse to take advantage of that simplification.
; But since every literal (i.e., this one) simplifies to nil, then even if we
; wouldn't normally take advantage of that information, we nevertheless rewrite
; the clause to false. As Pete points out, this helps the user to see the
; likely falsehood of the conjecture, which otherwise can trigger a useless but
; distracting proof by induction.
; Another example like the one above, but involving two literals, is:
; (thm (or (<= (+ 1 (acl2-count x)) -1) (< (acl2-count x) 0))). It seems not
; quite trivial to come up with such two-literal examples that generate
; inductions in Version_3.6.1, before this improvement; for example, the thm
; just above fails to be such an example if we switch the order of arguments to
; OR.
(mv-let (knownp nilp ttree)
(known-whether-nil atm type-alist
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
(ok-to-force rcnst)
; The use of dwp = t here, together with the passing of dwp down to
; the calls of type-set-with-rules in type-set-rec, enables the proof of the
; thm below to go through. This example is a distillation of an example that
; arose during a proof attempt by Matt Kaufmann.
; (defstub f1 (x) t)
; (defstub f2 (x) t)
; (defstub f3 (x) t)
; (defaxiom ax1
; (implies (f1 x)
; (f2 x)))
; (defaxiom ax2
; (implies (force (f2 x))
; (natp (f3 x)))
; :rule-classes :type-prescription)
; (thm (implies (and (f1 x)
; (f3 x))
; (<= 0 (f3 x))))
t ; dwp
wrld
ttree0)
(cond
; Before Version 2.6 we had
; (knownp
; (cond (nilp (mv *nil* ttree))
; (t (mv *t* ttree))))
; but this allowed type-set to remove ``facts'' from a theorem which
; may be needed later. The following transcript illustrates the previous
; behavior:
; ACL2 !>(defthm fold-consts-in-+
; (implies (and (syntaxp (consp c))
; (syntaxp (eq (car c) 'QUOTE))
; (syntaxp (consp d))
; (syntaxp (eq (car d) 'QUOTE)))
; (equal (+ c d x)
; (+ (+ c d) x))))
; ACL2 !>(defthm helper
; (implies (integerp x)
; (integerp (+ 1 x))))
; ACL2 !>(thm
; (implies (integerp (+ -1/2 x))
; (integerp (+ 1/2 x)))
; :hints (("Goal" :use ((:instance helper
; (x (+ -1/2 x)))))))
;
; [Note: A hint was supplied for our processing of the goal above.
; Thanks!]
;
; ACL2 Warning [Use] in ( THM ...): It is unusual to :USE an enabled
; :REWRITE or :DEFINITION rule, so you may want to consider disabling
; (:REWRITE HELPER).
;
;
; We now augment the goal above by adding the hypothesis indicated by
; the :USE hint. The hypothesis can be derived from HELPER via instantiation.
; The augmented goal is shown below.
;
; Goal'
; (IMPLIES (IMPLIES (INTEGERP (+ -1/2 X))
; (INTEGERP (+ 1 -1/2 X)))
; (IMPLIES (INTEGERP (+ -1/2 X))
; (INTEGERP (+ 1/2 X)))).
;
; By case analysis we reduce the conjecture to
;
; Goal''
; (IMPLIES (AND (OR (NOT (INTEGERP (+ -1/2 X)))
; (INTEGERP (+ 1 -1/2 X)))
; (INTEGERP (+ -1/2 X)))
; (INTEGERP (+ 1/2 X))).
;
; This simplifies, using primitive type reasoning, to
;
; Goal'''
; (IMPLIES (INTEGERP (+ -1/2 X))
; (INTEGERP (+ 1/2 X))).
;
; Normally we would attempt to prove this formula by induction. However,
; we prefer in this instance to focus on the original input conjecture
; rather than this simplified special case. We therefore abandon our
; previous work on this conjecture and reassign the name *1 to the original
; conjecture. (See :DOC otf-flg.)
;
; No induction schemes are suggested by *1. Consequently, the proof
; attempt has failed.
;
; Summary
; Form: ( THM ...)
; Rules: ((:DEFINITION IMPLIES)
; (:DEFINITION NOT)
; (:FAKE-RUNE-FOR-TYPE-SET NIL))
; Warnings: Use
; Time: 0.03 seconds (prove: 0.02, print: 0.01, other: 0.00)
;
; ******** FAILED ******** See :DOC failure ******** FAILED ********
; ACL2 !>
; Note that in the transition from Goal'' to Goal''', the needed
; fact --- (INTEGERP (+ 1 -1/2 X)) --- was removed by type reasoning.
; This is not good. We now only use type reasoning at this point if
; it will give us a win.
; One might ask why we only disallow type-set from removing facts here.
; Why not elswhere, and what about rewrite? We do it this way because
; it is only here that the user cannot prevent this removal from
; happening by manipulating the enabled structure.
((and knownp not-flg nilp)
; We have reduced the atm to nil but it occurs negated in the
; clause and so we have reduced the literal to t, proving the clause.
; So we report this reduction.
(mv step-limit *nil* ttree nil))
((and knownp (not not-flg) (not nilp))
(mv step-limit *t* ttree nil))
(t
(let ((lemmas0 (tagged-objects 'lemma ttree0))
(ttree00 (remove-tag-from-tag-tree 'lemma ttree0)))
(sl-let (ans1 ans2)
(rewrite-entry
(rewrite atm
nil
bkptr)
:rdepth (rewrite-stack-limit wrld)
:step-limit step-limit
:type-alist type-alist
:obj '?
:geneqv *geneqv-iff*
:pequiv-info nil
:wrld wrld
:fnstack nil
:ancestors nil
:backchain-limit (access rewrite-constant rcnst
:backchain-limit-rw)
:simplify-clause-pot-lst simplify-clause-pot-lst
:rcnst rcnst
:gstack gstack
:ttree ttree00)
(let* ((old-lemmas lemmas0)
(new-lemmas (tagged-objects 'lemma ans2))
(final-lemmas (if old-lemmas
(union-equal new-lemmas
old-lemmas)
new-lemmas))
(ttree (maybe-extend-tag-tree
'lemma
final-lemmas
(remove-tag-from-tag-tree 'lemma ans2))))
; But we need to do even more work to prevent type-set from removing
; ``facts'' from the goal. Here is another (edited) transcript:
; ACL2 !>(defun foo (x y)
; (if (acl2-numberp x)
; (+ x y)
; 0))
;
; ACL2 !>(defthm foo-thm
; (implies (acl2-numberp x)
; (equal (foo x y)
; (+ x y))))
; ACL2 !>(in-theory (disable foo))
; ACL2 !>(thm
; (implies (and (acl2-numberp x)
; (acl2-numberp y)
; (equal (foo x y) x))
; (equal y 0)))
;
; This simplifies, using the :type-prescription rule FOO, to
;
; Goal'
; (IMPLIES (AND (ACL2-NUMBERP Y)
; (EQUAL (FOO X Y) X))
; (EQUAL Y 0)).
;
; Name the formula above *1.
;
; No induction schemes are suggested by *1. Consequently, the proof
; attempt has failed.
;
; Summary
; Form: ( THM ...)
; Rules: ((:TYPE-PRESCRIPTION FOO))
; Warnings: None
; Time: 0.00 seconds (prove: 0.00, print: 0.00, other: 0.00)
;
; ******** FAILED ******** See :DOC failure ******** FAILED ******** ; |
; Note that in the transition from Goal to Goal' we removed the critical fact
; that x was an acl2-numberp. This fact can be derived from the third
; hypothesis --- (equal (foo x y) x) --- via :type-prescription rule FOO as
; indicated. However, when we then go on to rewrite the third hypothesis, we
; are not able to rederive this fact, since the type-alist used at that point
; does not use use the third hypothesis so as to prevent tail biting.
; Robert Krug has seen this sort of behavior in reasoning about floor and mod.
; In fact, that experience motivated him to provide the original version of the
; code below not to remove certain additional facts.
; Finally, note that even before this additional care, the lemma
; (thm
; (implies (and (acl2-numberp y)
; (equal (foo x y) x)
; (acl2-numberp x))
; (equal y 0)))
; does succeed, since the (acl2-numberp x) hypothesis now appears after the
; (equal (foo x y) x) hypothesis, hence does not get removed until after it has
; been used to relieve the hypothesis of foo-thm. This kind of situation in
; which a proof succeeds or fails depending on the order of hypotheses really
; gets Robert's goat.
(cond ((not (or (equal ans1 *nil*)
(equal ans1 *t*)))
; We have, presumably, not removed any facts, so we allow this rewrite.
(mv step-limit ans1 ttree
(and knownp *trivial-non-nil-ttree*)))
((and (nvariablep atm)
(not (fquotep atm))
(equivalence-relationp (ffn-symb atm)
wrld))
; We want to blow away equality (and equivalence) hypotheses, because for
; example there may be a :use or :cases hint that is intended to blow away (by
; implication) such hypotheses.
(mv step-limit ans1 ttree nil))
((equal ans1 (if not-flg *nil* *t*))
; We have proved the original literal from which atm is derived; hence we have
; proved the clause. So we report this reduction.
(mv step-limit ans1 ttree nil))
((all-type-reasoning-tags-p ans2)
; Type-reasoning alone has been used, so we are careful in what we allow.
(cond ((lambda-subtermp atm)
; We received an example from Jared Davis in which a hypothesis of the form
; (not (let ...)) rewrites to true with a tag-tree of nil, and hence was kept
; without this lambda-subtermp case. The problem with keeping that hypothesis
; is that it has calls of IF in a lambda body, which do not get eliminated by
; clausification -- and this presence of IF terms causes the :force-info field
; to be set to 'weak in the rewrite constant generated under simplify-clause.
; That 'weak setting prevented forced simplification from occurring that was
; necessary in order to make progress in Jared's proof!
; A different solution would be to ignore IF calls in lambda bodies when
; determining whether to set :force-info to 'weak. However, that change caused
; a regression suite failure: in community book
; books/symbolic/tiny-fib/tiny-rewrites.lisp, theorem next-instr-pop. The
; problem seemed to be premature forcing, of just the sort we are trying to
; prevent with the above-mentioned check for IF terms.
; Robert Krug points out to us, regarding the efforts here to keep hypotheses
; that rewrote to true, that for him the point is simply not to lose Boolean
; hypotheses like (acl2-numberp x) in the example above. Certainly we do not
; expect terms with lambda calls to be of that sort, or even to make any sorts
; of useful entries in type-alists. If later we find other reasons to keep *t*
; or *nil*, we can probably feel comfortable in adding conditions as we have
; done with the lambda-subtermp test above.
(mv step-limit ans1 ttree nil))
((eq (fn-symb atm) 'implies)
; We are contemplating throwing away the progress made by the above call of
; rewrite. However, we want to keep progress made by expanding terms of the
; form (IMPLIES x y), so we do that expansion (again) here. It seems
; reasonable to keep this in sync with the corresponding use of subcor-var in
; rewrite.
(prepend-step-limit
3
(try-type-set-and-clause
(subcor-var (formals 'implies wrld)
(list (fargn atm 1)
(fargn atm 2))
(body 'implies t wrld))
ans1 ttree ttree0 current-clause wrld
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
knownp)))
(t
; We make one last effort to allow removal of certain ``trivial'' facts from
; the goal.
(prepend-step-limit
3
(try-type-set-and-clause
atm
ans1 ttree ttree0 current-clause wrld
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
knownp)))))
(t
(mv step-limit ans1 ttree nil))))))))))
; Now we develop the functions for finding trivial equivalence hypotheses and
; stuffing them into the clause, transforming {(not (equal n '27)) (p n x)},
; for example, into {(p '27 x)} and running p if x is constant too.
(mutual-recursion
(defun every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1
(equiv old geneqv term in-hide-flg ens wrld)
; This function determines whether every occurrence of old in term is ``equiv
; hittable'' while maintaining geneqv. This is just an optimization of a call
; to subst-equiv-expr followed by an occur check.
; NOTE: We ignore occurrences of old inside arguments to HIDE.
(cond ((equal term old)
; If term is old, then we return non-nil or nil according to whether
; equiv refines geneqv. If it does refine geneqv, this occurrence
; will be hit; if not, this occurrence won't be hit. Actually, if
; we are inside a call of hide then this occurrence won't be hit
; either way.
(and (not in-hide-flg)
(geneqv-refinementp equiv geneqv wrld)))
((or (variablep term)
(fquotep term))
; If term is different from old and doesn't contain old, e.g., term is a
; variable or a quote, then all occurrences of old in term are equiv
; hittable. Hide is handled below.
t)
(t (every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp
equiv
old
(geneqv-lst (ffn-symb term)
geneqv
ens
wrld)
(fargs term)
(or in-hide-flg
(eq (ffn-symb term) 'hide))
ens wrld))))
(defun every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp
(equiv old geneqv-lst args in-hide-flg ens wrld)
(cond ((null args) t)
(t (and
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1
equiv old
(car geneqv-lst)
(car args)
in-hide-flg
ens wrld)
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp
equiv old
(cdr geneqv-lst)
(cdr args)
in-hide-flg
ens wrld)))))
)
(defun every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep (equiv old geneqv term ens wrld)
; This function determines whether every occurrence of old in term is ``equiv
; hittable'' while maintaining geneqv. This means that (subst-equiv-expr equiv
; new old genequv term ens wrld state ttree) will remove all occurrences of old
; from term (assuming there are no occurrences of old in new and old is a
; variable).
; We here enforce the rule that we don't know how to substitute for explicit
; constants. We also build in the fact that everything is equal-hittable
; (i.e., equal refines all equivalence relations).
; NOTE: We ignore occurrences of old inside arguments to HIDE.
(cond
((and (nvariablep old)
(fquotep old))
(subst-expr-error old))
((eq equiv 'equal) t)
(t (every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1 equiv old geneqv term nil ens wrld))))
(defun every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep-in-clausep (equiv old cl ens wrld)
; This checks that every occurrence of old in cl is equiv hittable
; while maintaining 'iff on each literal. This is just a special case
; in which we are checking every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp where
; geneqv-lst is a list, as long as cl, of *geneqv-iff*s. Rather than
; manufacture the suitable geneqv-lst we just supply *geneqv-iff* as
; needed.
(cond ((null cl) t)
(t (and
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1
equiv old
*geneqv-iff*
(car cl)
nil
ens wrld)
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep-in-clausep
equiv old (cdr cl) ens wrld)))))
(mutual-recursion
(defun some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1 (equiv old geneqv term ens wrld)
; This function determines whether there exists an equiv-hittable occurrence of
; old in term maintaining geneqv.
(cond ((equal term old)
; If term is old, then we return non-nil or nil according to whether
; equiv refines geneqv. If it does refine geneqv, this occurrence
; will be hit; if not, this occurrence won't be hit.
(geneqv-refinementp equiv geneqv wrld))
((or (variablep term)
(fquotep term)
(eq (ffn-symb term) 'hide))
; If term is different from old and doesn't contain old, e.g., term is
; a variable or a quote, then there is no occurrence of old in term.
; Calls of hide are included, since substitution (subst-equiv-expr)
; does not go inside calls of hide.
nil)
(t (some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp
equiv
old
(geneqv-lst (ffn-symb term)
geneqv
ens
wrld)
(fargs term)
ens wrld))))
(defun some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp
(equiv old geneqv-lst args ens wrld)
(cond ((null args) nil)
(t (or
(some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1
equiv old
(car geneqv-lst)
(car args)
ens wrld)
(some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1-listp
equiv old
(cdr geneqv-lst)
(cdr args)
ens wrld)))))
)
(defun some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep (equiv old geneqv term ens wrld)
; This function determines whether some occurrence of old in term is ``equiv
; hittable'' while maintaining geneqv. This means that (subst-equiv-expr equiv
; new old geneqv term ens wrld state ttree) changes term.
; We here enforce the rule that we don't know how to substitute for explicit
; constants.
; NOTE: We ignore occurrences of old inside arguments to HIDE.
(cond
((and (nvariablep old)
(fquotep old))
(subst-expr-error old))
(t (some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep1 equiv old geneqv term ens wrld))))
(defun equiv-hittable-in-some-other-lit (equiv term n cl i ens wrld)
; We determine whether term occurs in an equiv-hittable slot (maintaining iff)
; in some lit of clause cl other than the nth. The number of the first literal
; of cl is i.
(cond ((null cl) nil)
((int= n i)
(equiv-hittable-in-some-other-lit equiv term n (cdr cl) (1+ i) ens wrld))
((some-occurrence-equiv-hittablep equiv term *geneqv-iff* (car cl) ens wrld)
t)
(t (equiv-hittable-in-some-other-lit equiv term n (cdr cl) (1+ i) ens wrld))))
(defun find-trivial-equivalence1
(not-just-quotep-flg tail i cl ens wrld avoid-lst)
; Cl is a clause. Tail is a tail of cl and i is the position number
; of its first literal, starting from 0 for the first lit in cl. See
; find-trivial-equivalence for the rest of the spec.
; It is important to keep in mind that the clause upon which we are working has
; not necessarily been rewritten. Indeed, it is often the product of previous
; substitutions by the driver of this very function. (Aside: once upon a time,
; the driver did not evaluate literals as they got stuffed with constants. At
; the moment it does evaluate enabled fns on constant args. But that may
; change and so this function is written in a way that assumes the worst: there
; may be reducible terms in the clause.) Thus, for example, a clause like
; {(not (equal x 'a)) (not (equal y 'b)) (not (equal x y)) y ...}
; may first produce
; {(not (equal y 'b)) (not (equal 'a y)) y ...}
; and then
; {(not (equal 'a 'b)) 'b ...}
; which contains two unexpected sorts of literals: an equivalence with constant
; args and a constant literal. We must therefore not be surprised by such
; literals. However, we do not expect them to arise often enough to justify
; making our caller cope with the possibility that we've proved the clause. So
; if we find such a literal and can decide the clause, we will just immediately
; report that there are no more usable equivalences and let the simplifier
; rediscover the literal. If we find such a literal and can't decide the
; clause quickly based on equal and iff facts (we are not going to eval
; user-defined equivs) then we will just continue looking for usable
; equivalences. The idea is that if the discovered lit makes the clause true,
; we don't expect to have screwed it up by continuing to substitute; and if the
; discovered lit just drops out, then our continued substitution is what we
; should have done. (Aside: If we persist in our decision to reduce literals
; when they are suffed with constants, then these cases will not arise and all
; of the above is irrelevant.)
; Recall our output spec from find-trivial-equivalence. The six results we
; return are the name of the condition detected (disposable or keeper), the
; location i of the literal, equiv, lhs, rhs and the literal itself. Otherwise
; we return 6 nils. (When we succeed, the "lhs" of our result is the term for
; which we are to substitute and "rhs" is the term by which we replace lhs.
; They may in fact come from the opposite sides of the equivalence term.)
(cond ((null tail) (mv nil nil nil nil nil nil))
((member-equal (car tail) avoid-lst)
(find-trivial-equivalence1
not-just-quotep-flg (cdr tail) (1+ i) cl ens wrld avoid-lst))
; Handle variable V as though it is the literal (not (equal V nil)).
((quotep (car tail))
; If the discovered lit is nil, then we just ignore it because it will drop
; out. If the discovered lit is non-nil, this clause is true. So we signal
; that there are no more usable equivs and let the simplifier get its hands
; on the clause to rediscover that it is true.
(if (equal (car tail) *nil*)
(find-trivial-equivalence1
not-just-quotep-flg (cdr tail) (1+ i) cl ens wrld avoid-lst)
(mv nil nil nil nil nil nil)))
((or (variablep (car tail))
(and (eq (ffn-symb (car tail)) 'not)
(or (variablep (fargn (car tail) 1))
(and (not (fquotep (fargn (car tail) 1)))
(equivalence-relationp (ffn-symb (fargn (car tail) 1)) wrld)))))
(let* ((atm
(if (variablep (car tail))
(fcons-term* 'equal (car tail) *nil*)
(fargn (car tail) 1)))
(equiv (if (variablep atm)
'iff
(ffn-symb atm)))
(lhs (if (variablep atm)
atm
(fargn atm 1)))
(rhs (if (variablep atm)
*t*
(fargn atm 2))))
; We have discovered an equiv hyp (not (equiv lhs rhs)) that is not on avoid-lst.
(cond ((and (quotep lhs)
(quotep rhs))
; Oh! It has constant args. If equiv is equal we decide which way this lit
; goes and act accordingly, as we did for a quotep lit above. If the equiv is
; not equal then we just assume this lit will eventually drop out (we bet it is
; nil) and go on looking for other usable equivs before giving the result to
; the simplifier to decide.
(cond ((eq equiv 'equal)
(if (equal lhs rhs)
(find-trivial-equivalence1
not-just-quotep-flg
(cdr tail) (1+ i) cl ens wrld avoid-lst)
(mv nil nil nil nil nil nil)))
(t (find-trivial-equivalence1
not-just-quotep-flg
(cdr tail) (1+ i) cl ens wrld avoid-lst))))
; So below we know that if one side is a quotep then the other side is not (but
; we don't yet know that either side is a quotep). Observe that if one side is
; a quotep we are always safe in answering that we can equiv substitute for the
; other side and it is only a question of whether we have a disposable lit or a
; keeper.
((and not-just-quotep-flg
(variablep lhs)
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep-in-clausep
equiv lhs cl ens wrld)
(not (dumb-occur lhs rhs)))
; The 'disposable condition is met: lhs is an everywhere hittable variable not in rhs.
; But it could be that rhs is also an everywhere hittable variable not in lhs.
; If so, we'll substitute the term-order smaller for the bigger just so the
; user knows which way the substitutions will go.
(cond ((and (variablep rhs)
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep-in-clausep
equiv rhs cl ens wrld))
(cond
((term-order lhs rhs)
(mv 'disposable i equiv rhs lhs (car tail)))
(t (mv 'disposable i equiv lhs rhs (car tail)))))
(t (mv 'disposable i equiv lhs rhs (car tail)))))
((and not-just-quotep-flg
(variablep rhs)
(every-occurrence-equiv-hittablep-in-clausep
equiv rhs cl ens wrld)
(not (dumb-occur rhs lhs)))
; This is the case symmetric to that above.
(mv 'disposable i equiv rhs lhs (car tail)))
((and (quotep rhs) ; thus lhs is a non-quotep
(equiv-hittable-in-some-other-lit equiv lhs i cl 0 ens wrld))
; The 'keeper conditions are met: lhs is a non-quote with at least one
; equiv-hittable occurrence in another lit and rhs is a quote. Note that in
; the case that not-just-quotep-flg is nil, we might be giving the ``wrong''
; first answer, since if lhs is a variable then 'keeper should be 'disposable.
; However, if not-just-quotep-flg is nil, then we will be ignoring that answer
; anyhow; see the call of subst-equiv-and-maybe-delete-lit in
; remove-trivial-equivalences.
(mv 'keeper i equiv lhs rhs (car tail)))
((and (quotep lhs) ; thus rhs is a non-quotep
(equiv-hittable-in-some-other-lit equiv rhs i cl 0 ens wrld))
(mv 'keeper i equiv rhs lhs (car tail)))
(t (find-trivial-equivalence1
not-just-quotep-flg
(cdr tail) (1+ i) cl ens wrld avoid-lst)))))
(t (find-trivial-equivalence1
not-just-quotep-flg
(cdr tail) (1+ i) cl ens wrld avoid-lst))))
(defun find-trivial-equivalence (not-just-quotep-flg cl ens wrld avoid-lst)
; We look for a literal of cl of the form (not (equiv lhs rhs)) where
; either of two conditions apply.
; name condition
; disposable: lhs is a variable, all occurrences of lhs in cl
; are equiv-hittable, and rhs does not contain lhs.
; keeper: lhs is any non-quotep and rhs is a quotep and lhs has
; an equiv-hittable occurrence in some other literal
; of the clause
; Note that in the keeper case, there may be some non-hittable occurrences of
; lhs in the clause. In addition, we accept commuted version of the equivalence
; and we treat each variablep literal, var, as the trivial equivalence (not
; (equal var 'NIL)).
; If we find such a literal we return 6 values: the name of the condition
; detected, the location i of the literal, equiv, lhs, rhs and the literal
; itself. Otherwise we return 6 nils.
; The driver of this function, remove-trivial-equivalences, will substitute rhs
; for lhs throughout cl, possibly delete the literal, and then call us again to
; look for the next trivial equivalence. This raises a problem. If the driver
; doesn't delete the literal, then we will return the same one again and loop.
; So the driver supplies us with a list of literals to avoid, avoid-lst, and
; will put onto it each of the literals that has been used but not deleted.
; So consider a clause like
; (implies (and (equal (foo b) 'evg) [1]
; (equal a b)) [2]
; (p (foo a) (foo b)))
; The first trivial equivalence is [1]. The driver substitutes 'evg
; for (foo b) but doesn't delete the literal. So we get:
; (implies (and (equal (foo b) 'evg) [1]
; (equal a b)) [2]
; (p (foo a) 'evg))
; and the admonition against using (equal (foo b) 'evg). But now we see
; [2] and the driver substitutes a for b (because a is smaller) and deletes
; [2]. So we get:
; (implies (equal (foo a) 'evg) [1]
; (p (foo a) 'evg))
; and the old admotion against using (equal (foo b) 'evg). Here we find [1]
; ``again'' because it is no longer on the list of things to avoid. Indeed, we
; can even use it to good effect. Of course, once it is used both it and the
; old avoided literal are to be avoided.
; So can this loop? No. Every substitution reduces term-order.
(find-trivial-equivalence1 not-just-quotep-flg cl 0 cl ens wrld avoid-lst))
(defun add-literal-and-pt1 (cl-tail pt cl pt-lst)
; Imagine that lit is a literal with pt as its parent tree. Cl is a clause and
; the parent tree of each literal is given by the corresponding element of
; pt-lst. We were about to add lit to cl when we noticed that lit (possibly
; commuted) is already an element of cl, namely the one in the car of cl-tail,
; which is a tail of cl. Thus, we wish to update pt-lst so that the
; corresponding parent tree in the new pt-lst includes pt.
(cond
((null cl)
(er hard 'add-literal-and-pt1 "We failed to find the literal!"))
((equal cl-tail cl)
(cond ((null (car pt-lst)) (cons pt (cdr pt-lst)))
(t (cons (cons pt (car pt-lst)) (cdr pt-lst)))))
(t (cons (car pt-lst)
(add-literal-and-pt1 cl-tail pt (cdr cl) (cdr pt-lst))))))
(defun add-literal-and-pt (lit pt cl pt-lst ttree)
; Very roughly speaking, this is just:
; (mv (add-literal lit cl nil) ; add lit to clause cl
; (cons pt pt-lst) ; add lit's parent tnree to pt-lst
; ttree) ; and pass up the ttree
; But it is complicated by the fact that the add-literal might not actually
; cons lit onto cl but reduce the clause to {t} or merge the literal with
; another. If that happened and we had actually used the code above, then the
; pt-lst returned would no longer be in 1:1 correspondence with the new
; clause.
(cond
((quotep lit)
(cond ((equal lit *nil*) (mv cl pt-lst ttree))
(t (mv *true-clause* nil ttree))))
((or (equal cl *true-clause*)
(member-complement-term lit cl))
(mv *true-clause* nil ttree))
(t (let ((cl0 (member-term lit cl)))
(cond
((null cl0)
(mv (cons lit cl)
(cons pt pt-lst)
ttree))
((null pt)
(mv cl pt-lst ttree))
(t (mv cl
(add-literal-and-pt1 cl0 pt cl pt-lst)
ttree)))))))
(defun add-binding-to-tag-tree (var term ttree)
; Note that var need not be a variable; see the call in fertilize-clause1.
(let* ((tag 'binding-lst)
(binding (cons var term))
(old (tagged-object tag ttree)))
(cond (old (extend-tag-tree tag
(list (cons binding old))
(remove-tag-from-tag-tree! tag ttree)))
(t (extend-tag-tree tag
(list (cons binding nil))
ttree)))))
(defun subst-equiv-and-maybe-delete-lit
(equiv new old n cl i pt-lst delete-flg ens wrld state ttree)
; Substitutes new for old (which are equiv) in every literal of cl (maintaining
; iff) except the nth one. The nth literal is deleted if delete-flg is t and
; is skipped but included in the if delete-flg is nil. Pt-lst is in 1:1
; correspondence with cl. We return the new clause, a new pt-lst and a ttree
; recording the congruence and executable counterpart rules used. It is
; possible that this fn will return a clause dramatically shorter than cl,
; because lits may evaporate upon evaluation or merge with other literals. We
; may also prove the clause.
(cond
((null cl) (mv nil nil ttree))
((int= n i)
(mv-let (cl1 pt-lst1 ttree)
(subst-equiv-and-maybe-delete-lit equiv new old n
(cdr cl) (1+ i)
(cdr pt-lst)
delete-flg
ens wrld state ttree)
(cond
(delete-flg (mv cl1
pt-lst1
(add-binding-to-tag-tree old new ttree)))
(t (add-literal-and-pt (car cl) (car pt-lst)
cl1 pt-lst1 ttree)))))
((dumb-occur old (car cl))
(mv-let (hitp lit ttree)
(subst-equiv-expr equiv new old
*geneqv-iff*
(car cl)
ens wrld state ttree)
(declare (ignore hitp))
; Hitp may be nil even though old occurs in the lit, because it may not occur
; in an equiv-hittable place. But we don't really care whether it's t or nil.
(mv-let (cl1 pt-lst1 ttree)
(subst-equiv-and-maybe-delete-lit equiv new old n
(cdr cl) (1+ i)
(cdr pt-lst)
delete-flg
ens wrld state ttree)
(add-literal-and-pt lit (car pt-lst)
cl1 pt-lst1 ttree))))
(t (mv-let (cl1 pt-lst1 ttree)
(subst-equiv-and-maybe-delete-lit equiv new old n
(cdr cl) (1+ i)
(cdr pt-lst)
delete-flg
ens wrld state ttree)
(add-literal-and-pt (car cl) (car pt-lst)
cl1 pt-lst1 ttree)))))
(defun remove-trivial-equivalences
(cl pt-lst remove-flg ens wrld state ttree hitp avoid-lst)
; This function looks for two kinds of equivalence hypotheses in cl and uses
; them to do substitutions. By "equivalence hypothesis" we mean a literal of
; the form (not (equiv lhs rhs)) that is not on avoid-lst. The two kinds are
; called "trivial var equivalences" and "trivial quote equivalences." If we
; find an equation of the first sort we substitute one side for the other and
; delete the equivalence (provided remove-flg is t). If we find an equation of
; the second sort, we substitute one side for the other but do not delete the
; equivalence. See find-trivial-equivalence for more details, especially
; concerning avoid-lst. Hitp is an accumulator that records whether we did
; anything.
; Pt-lst is a list of parent trees in 1:1 correspondence with cl. Since we
; return a modified version of cl in which some literals may have been deleted,
; we must also return a modified version of pt-lst giving the parent trees for
; the surviving literals.
; The justification for deleting (not (equiv var term)) when var occurs nowhere
; in the clause is (a) it is always sound to throw out a literal, and (b) it is
; heuristically safe here because var is isolated and equiv is reflexive: if
; (implies (equiv var term) p) is a theorem so is p because (equiv term term).
; We return four values: hitp, cl, pt-lst and ttree.
; No Change Loser.
; Note: We have briefly considered the question of whether we should do
; anything with hypotheses of the form (equiv var term), where var does not
; occur in term, and some (but not all) occurrences of var are equiv-hittable.
; Perhaps we should hit those occurrences but not delete the hypothesis? We
; think not. After all, if term is larger than var (as it generally is here),
; why should we replace some occurrences of the small term by the big one?
; They will just be zapped back by rewrite-solidify if the hyp is not deleted.
; However, an exception to this rule is if we see a hypothesis of the form
; (equal lhs 'const) where not every occurrence of lhs is equiv-hittable.
; Such a hyp is not a trivial var equivalence, even if lhs is a variable,
; because of the un-hittable occurrence of var. But we do count it as a
; trivial quote equivalence and hit var where we can (but don't delete the
; hypothesis).
(mv-let (condition lit-position equiv lhs rhs lit)
(find-trivial-equivalence remove-flg cl ens wrld avoid-lst)
(cond
(lit-position
(mv-let (new-cl new-pt-lst ttree)
(subst-equiv-and-maybe-delete-lit
equiv rhs lhs lit-position cl 0 pt-lst
(and remove-flg (eq condition 'disposable))
ens wrld state ttree)
(remove-trivial-equivalences new-cl new-pt-lst remove-flg
ens wrld state
ttree t
(cons lit avoid-lst))))
(t (mv hitp cl pt-lst ttree)))))
; In a break with nqthm, we implement a really trivial theorem prover which
; gets the first shot at any conjecture we have to prove. The idea is to build
; into this function whatever is necessary for boot-strap to work. It will
; also speed up the acceptance of commonly used recursive schemas. The idea is
; simply to recognize instances of a small number of known truths, stored in
; clausal form on the world global 'built-in-clauses, whose initial value is
; set up below.
; To be predictable, we have to include commutative variants of the
; recognized clauses. In addition, because subsumption works by first
; trying to find (an instance of) the first literal and then trying to
; find the rest, it is faster to put the most unusual literal first in
; each built-in clause.
(defrec built-in-clause ((nume . all-fnnames) clause . rune) t)
; Note: The :all-fnnames field must be set as it would be by
; all-fnnames-subsumer. This setting cannot be done automatically because we
; do not know the initial world until we have set up the built-in-clauses. But
; we do check, with chk-initial-built-in-clauses which is called and reported
; in check-built-in-constants, that the setting below is correct for the actual
; initial world. When adding new records, it is best to use
; (all-fnnames-subsumer cl (w state)) to get the :all-fnnames field below.
;; RAG - I changed the clauses about e0-ord-< [v2-8 and beyond: o<] reducing on
;; complex-rationalps to reducing on any complexp.
(defconst *initial-built-in-clauses*
(list
; acl2-count is an ordinal.
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o-p (acl2-count x)))
:all-fnnames '(o-p acl2-count))
; Car and cdr decrease on consps.
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (car x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (consp x)))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count car o< consp not))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (consp x)))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< consp not))
; Car and cdr decrease on non-atoms.
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (car x))
(acl2-count x))
(atom x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count car o< atom))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(atom x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< atom))
; Car and cdr decrease on non-endps.
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (car x))
(acl2-count x))
(endp x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count car o< endp))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(endp x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< endp))
; 1- decreases on positives and on non-negatives other than 0. But we
; represent (1- x) three different ways: (1- x), (+ x -1) and (+ -1 x). And to
; say "other than 0" we can use (not (zp x)) or (integerp x) together
; with the negations of any one of (equal x 0), (= x 0) or (= 0 x). The
; symmetry of equal is built into unification, but not so =, so we have
; two versions for each =.
; However, in Version 1.8 we made 1- a macro. Therefore, we have deleted the
; two built-in-clauses for 1-. If we ever make 1- a function again, we should
; add them again.
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ x '-1))
(acl2-count x))
(zp x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< zp))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ '-1 x))
(acl2-count x))
(zp x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< zp))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ x '-1))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(not (< '0 x)))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp < not))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ x '-1))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(< x '0)
(= x '0))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp not < =))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ x '-1))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(< x '0)
(= '0 x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp not < =))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ x '-1))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(< x '0)
(equal x '0))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp not < equal))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ '-1 x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(not (< '0 x)))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp < not))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ '-1 x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(< x '0)
(= x '0))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp not < =))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ '-1 x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(< x '0)
(= '0 x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp not < =))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (binary-+ '-1 x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (integerp x))
(< x '0)
(equal x '0))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count o< integerp not < equal))
; Realpart and imagpart decrease on complexps.
#+:non-standard-analysis
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (realpart x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (complexp x)))
:all-fnnames
'(acl2-count realpart o< complexp not))
#-:non-standard-analysis
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (realpart x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (complex-rationalp x)))
:all-fnnames
'(acl2-count realpart o< complex-rationalp not))
#+:non-standard-analysis
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (imagpart x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (complexp x)))
:all-fnnames
'(acl2-count imagpart o< complexp not))
#-:non-standard-analysis
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (imagpart x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (complex-rationalp x)))
:all-fnnames
'(acl2-count imagpart o< complex-rationalp not))
; Finally, cdr decreases on non-nil true-listps, but we can say
; "non-nil" as (eq x nil), (eq nil x), (null x) or (equal x nil)
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (true-listp x))
(eq x 'nil))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< true-listp not eq))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (true-listp x))
(null x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< true-listp not null))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (true-listp x))
(eq 'nil x))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< true-listp not eq))
(make built-in-clause
:nume nil
:rune *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*
:clause '((o< (acl2-count (cdr x))
(acl2-count x))
(not (true-listp x))
(equal x 'nil))
:all-fnnames '(acl2-count cdr o< true-listp not equal))))
(defun built-in-clausep2 (bic-lst cl fns ens)
(cond ((null bic-lst) nil)
((and (enabled-numep (access built-in-clause (car bic-lst) :nume)
ens)
(subsetp-eq (access built-in-clause (car bic-lst) :all-fnnames)
fns)
(eq (subsumes *init-subsumes-count*
(access built-in-clause (car bic-lst) :clause)
cl nil)
t))
(access built-in-clause (car bic-lst) :rune))
(t (built-in-clausep2 (cdr bic-lst) cl fns ens))))
(defun built-in-clausep1 (bic-alist cl fns ens)
; Bic-alist is the alist of built-in clauses, organized via top fnname. Cl is
; a clause and fns is the all-fnnames-lst of cl. This function is akin to
; some-member-subsumes in the sense of some built-in clause subsumes cl. We
; only try subsumption on enabled built-in clauses whose :all-fnnames field is
; a subset of fns. We return the rune of the subsuming clause, or nil.
(cond ((null bic-alist) nil)
((or (null (caar bic-alist))
(member-eq (caar bic-alist) fns))
; All the built-in clauses in this pot have the same top-fnname and that name
; occurs in cl. So these guys are all candidate subsumers. Note: if (car
; bic-alist) is null then this is the special pot into which we have put all
; the built-in clauses that have no "function symbols" in them, as computed by
; all-fnnames-subsumer. I don't see how this can happen, but if it does we're
; prepared!
(or (built-in-clausep2 (cdr (car bic-alist)) cl fns ens)
(built-in-clausep1 (cdr bic-alist) cl fns ens)))
(t (built-in-clausep1 (cdr bic-alist) cl fns ens))))
(defun possible-trivial-clause-p (cl)
(if (null cl)
nil
(mv-let (not-flg atm)
(strip-not (car cl))
(declare (ignore not-flg))
; Keep the following list of function names in sync with those in tautologyp.
; It should be, in fact, just the list in tautologyp plus IF and NOT. Note
; that although tautologyp does not expand NOT, if-tautologyp (and hence
; tautologyp) knows about NOT, so we look for it here.
(or (ffnnamesp '(if not
iff
;not
implies eq atom eql = /= null
; If we ever make 1+ and 1- functions again, they should go back on this list.
zerop plusp minusp listp mv-list return-last
wormhole-eval force case-split double-rewrite)
atm)
(possible-trivial-clause-p (cdr cl))))))
(defun trivial-clause-p (cl wrld)
(or (member-equal *t* cl)
(and (possible-trivial-clause-p cl)
(tautologyp (disjoin cl) wrld))))
(defun built-in-clausep (caller cl ens match-free-override wrld state)
; We return two results. The first indicates whether cl is a ``built
; in clause,'' i.e., a known truth. The second is the supporting
; ttree (or nil). This ttree is guaranteed to be assumption-free.
; Caller is just a token that indicates what function (possibly indirectly) is
; responsible for calling built-in-clausep.
; Once upon a time, this function used force-flg = t in the
; type-alist-clause call below. Thus, the callers of this function
; anticipate splitting. We have backed off force-flg = t here because
; it seems likely to cause loops due to assuming literals that are
; explicitly denied later in the clause (see the warning in
; type-alist-clause). But this condition has never been witnessed and
; the change was made without significant testing of the force-flg = t
; case. However, the callers of this function do not now anticipate
; the presence of 'assumption tags in the ttree. Thus, if you make
; this function force or case-split, you must change its callers!
; Starting with Version_2.7, this function uses forward-chaining. This idea
; arose when changing translate-declaration-to-guard to output calls of
; signed-byte-p, unsigned-byte-p, and integer-range-p. Suddenly some guards
; proofs needed to be done that formerly were handled by built-in-clausep. But
; that problem is reduced or eliminated when we forward-chain and have suitable
; forward-chaining rules from those new predicates.
; When this function is allowed to return t, it is also allowed to return nil.
; In particular, the limit on one-way-unify1 calls in the call of subsumes in
; built-in-clausep2 can cause this predicate to fail.
(let ((rune (built-in-clausep1 (global-val 'built-in-clauses wrld)
cl
(all-fnnames-lst cl)
ens)))
(cond
(rune (mv t (push-lemma rune nil)))
(t (mv-let (contradictionp type-alist ttree)
(forward-chain-top caller
cl
nil ; pts
nil ; ok-to-force
nil ; do-not-reconsiderp
wrld
ens
match-free-override
state)
(declare (ignore type-alist))
(cond ((not contradictionp)
; At one time we checked trivial-clause-p before doing anything else. But Sol
; Swords sent an example defun whose body was a big if-then-else term that
; generated 42 guard obligations, some of which were very expensive to check
; with trivial-clause-p, but all of which were very quickly found contradictory
; by forward-chain.
(cond ((trivial-clause-p cl wrld) (mv t nil))
(t (mv nil nil))))
((tagged-objectsp 'assumption ttree)
(mv (er hard 'built-in-clausep
"It was thought that the forward-chain call in ~
this function could not produce an ~
'assumption but it did! Try running ~
forward-chain on ~X01 with ~
match-free-override = ~x2. The ens and wrld ~
used here must be recovered by other means if ~
(ens state) and (w state) don't work."
(kwote cl)
nil
(kwote match-free-override))
nil))
(t (mv t ttree))))))))
(defun crunch-clause-segments1 (seg1 pts1 cl pts)
; This function reverses seg1 and appends it to cl, and does the analogous
; thing to pts1 and pts. However, if a literal in seg1 already occurs in
; cl, it is merged into that literal and its pt is consed onto the
; pt of the literal in cl.
; Note: It is a mystery how the opportunity for this merging should arise. It
; appears to be impossible because seg1 was rewritten under the assumption of
; the falsity of the literals in cl and hence any such literal of seg1 would
; have evaporated. Nevertheless, in the days before we used pts this function
; had been modified from the rev-append approach to a careful use of
; member-equal and hence duplicate literals do, apparently, arise.
; Note: In normal use, the first literal in cl at the beginning will be the
; marker literal dealt with by crunch-clause-segments2 and
; crunch-clause-segments. Observe that the pts of literals occurring after
; that marker in cl are completely irrelevant to the behavior of
; crunch-clause-segment, even though we are here careful to move pts from pts1
; into that section of pts when merging occurs. They are irrelevant because
; crunch-clause-segments2 just collects the pts up to the marker. It might
; still be important for us to catch merges, since it is possible that two
; literals within seg1 itself will merge and thus we will create a consp pt for
; that literal and that consp pt will be collected by crunch-clause-segments2
; and find its way into the main computation. Stranger things have happened in
; this code!
(cond ((null seg1) (mv cl pts))
(t (mv-let (cl pts ttree)
(add-literal-and-pt (car seg1) (car pts1) cl pts nil)
; Add-literal-and-pt just passes its last argument through as the ttree and we
; simply ignore the resulting nil. This is just an easy way to cons the first
; literal of seg1 onto cl and the first pt of pts1 onto pts -- provided the
; literal doesn't already occur in cl -- and to merge the pt into the
; appropriate element of pts if it does.
(declare (ignore ttree))
(crunch-clause-segments1 (cdr seg1) (cdr pts1) cl pts)))))
(defun crunch-clause-segments2 (cl pts seg1 pts1)
; See crunch-clause-segments.
(cond ((null cl) (mv seg1 pts1 nil))
((and (consp (car cl))
(eq (ffn-symb (car cl)) 'car)
(eq (fargn (car cl) 1) :crunch-clause-segments-marker))
(mv seg1 pts1 (cdr cl)))
(t (crunch-clause-segments2 (cdr cl)
(cdr pts)
(cons (car cl) seg1)
(cons (car pts) pts1)))))
(defun crunch-clause-segments (seg1 pts1 seg2 ens wrld state ttree)
; This function is a special purpose subroutine of rewrite-clause. Seg1 and
; seg2 are just lists of literals. Pts1 is in weak 1:1 correspondence with
; seg1 and enumerates the parent trees of the corresponding literals of seg1.
; Consider the clause obtained by appending these two segments.
; {lit4 ... lit7 lit1' ... lit2' lit3a ... lit3z} ; cl
; | <- seg1 -> | <- seg2 -> |
; unrewritten | rewritten
; Context: The rewriter is sweeping through this clause, rewriting each literal
; and assembling a new clause. It has rewritten none of the seg1 literals and
; all of the seg2 literals. It has just rewritten some literal called lit3.
; After clausifying the result (and getting in this case lit3a ... lit3z) it is
; about to start rewriting the first literal of seg1, lit4. It has already
; rewritten lit1'...lit2'. The rewriter actually keeps the unrewritten part of
; the clause (seg1) separate from the rewritten part (seg2) so that it knows
; when it is done. In the old days, it would just proceed to rewrite the first
; literal of seg1.
; But we are trying something new. Suppose lit3 was something like (not
; (member x '(...))). Then we will get lots of segs, each of the form (equal x
; '...). We are trying to optimize our handling of this by actually stuffing
; the constant into the clause and running any terms we can. We do this in
; what we think is a very elegant way: We actually create cl and call
; remove-trivial-equivalences on it. Then we recover the two parts,
; unrewritten and rewritten. The trick is how we figure out which is which.
; We put a marker literal into the clause, after seg1 and before
; seg2. Remove-trivial-equivalences may do a lot of literal evaluation
; and deletion. But then we find the marker literal and consider everything to
; its left unrewritten and everything else rewritten.
; We return three values: The unrewritten part of cl, the rewritten part of cl,
; and an extension of ttree.
(let ((marker '(car :crunch-clause-segments-marker)))
(mv-let (cl pts)
(crunch-clause-segments1 seg1 pts1 (cons marker seg2) nil)
(mv-let (hitp cl pts ttree)
(remove-trivial-equivalences cl pts nil ;;; see Note
ens wrld state ttree nil nil)
; Note: In the call of remove-trivial-equivalences above we use remove-flg =
; nil. At one time, we used remove-flg = t, thinking that our cl here was the
; entire problem and thus we could delete the literal after using it. However,
; because of the fc-pair-lst and the simplify-clause-pot-lst -- both of which
; may contain terms that mention the "eliminated" variable and both of which
; may introduce such terms into the clause later -- we believe it best to keep
; the equality until we are at the top of the waterfall again.
(cond
((null hitp)
(mv seg1 pts1 seg2 ttree))
(t (mv-let (seg1 pts1 seg2)
(crunch-clause-segments2 cl pts nil nil)
(mv seg1 pts1 seg2 ttree))))))))
; We now develop code to deal with the unrewritten assumptions generated by
; rewriting a literal of a clause. We would like to implement the illusion
; that all 'assumptions produced while rewriting a literal have actually been
; rewritten. We achieve that by stripping such assumptions out of the returned
; ttree, rewriting them, and putting them back. See
; resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting1, below, for the details.
(defun strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions1 (recs acc)
; See strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions. We move non-rewritten assumptions from
; recs to acc to obtain recs' and acc, and return (mv recs' acc').
(cond ((endp recs) (mv nil acc))
(t (mv-let (rest acc)
(strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions1 (cdr recs) acc)
(cond ((access assumption (car recs) :rewrittenp)
(cond (acc ; a record was removed: (cdr recs) != rest
(mv (cons (car recs) rest)
acc))
(t (mv recs nil))))
(t (mv rest (cons (car recs) acc))))))))
(defun strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions (ttree)
; Strip out all 'assumption records that have :rewrittenp nil and accumulate
; them into ans. Return (mv ttree' ans'), where ttree' is the result of
; removing the records in ans from ttree.
(let ((recs (tagged-objects 'assumption ttree)))
(cond (recs
(let ((ttree0 (remove-tag-from-tag-tree! 'assumption ttree)))
(mv-let (rewritten unrewritten)
(strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions1 recs nil)
(mv (cond (rewritten
(extend-tag-tree 'assumption rewritten ttree0))
(t ttree0))
unrewritten))))
(t (mv ttree nil)))))
(defun assumnote-list-to-token-list (assumnote-list)
(if (null assumnote-list)
nil
(cons (access assumnote (car assumnote-list) :rune)
(assumnote-list-to-token-list (cdr assumnote-list)))))
(defun resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting1
(assumptions ancestors gstack simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst wrld state
step-limit ttree)
; A simple view of this function then is that it rewrites each assumption in
; assumptions and puts the rewritten version into ttree, reporting the first
; false assumption if finds.
; Assumptions is a list of unrewritten assumptions that were generated while
; rewriting with the rewrite arguments given to this function. We return two
; results, (mv bad-ass ttree), where bad-ass is either nil or an assumption
; whose :term can be rewritten to false in the current context and ttree is a
; ttree extending the input tree, justifying all the rewriting done (including
; that to false, if bad-ass), containing 'assumption tags for all the
; assumptions in assumptions, and containing no unrewritten assumptions
; (assuming the initial ttree contained no unrewritten assumptions).
; The complication is that rewriting an assumption generates assumptions which
; we must also rewrite. The process could in principle loop if rewriting an
; assumption can re-generate the assumption. We break this potential loop via
; the use of ancestors. We imagine we are just backchaining.
; It is perhaps worth reminding the reader that these assumptions cannot be
; rewritten before they are forced because they come from type-set, which is
; defined before the rewriter is defined. Thus, we are really implementing a
; kind of delayed mutual recursion: type-set is reporting some assumptions it
; would like rewritten and we are doing it.
(cond
((endp assumptions) (mv step-limit nil ttree))
(t (let* ((assn (car assumptions))
(term (access assumption assn :term)))
(mv-let
(on-ancestorsp assumed-true)
(ancestors-check term ancestors
(assumnote-list-to-token-list
(access assumption assn :assumnotes)))
(cond
(on-ancestorsp
; If the assumption's term is assumed true, we may omit it from the answer. If
; it is not assumed-true, we don't know that it is false: it might merely be
; worse than some ancestor. We therefore just move the now rewritten
; assumption into the ttree and go on. Once upon a time we considered
; aborting, reporting assn as a bad-ass. Observe that if the complement of
; term is on ancestors, then term is being assumed nil (because (not term) is
; assumed true). Doesn't that mean we coul rewrite term to nil? No. All we
; really know is that term is impossible to prove by rewriting using whatever
; lemmas we did this time. Term might be provable. Consider the fact that
; the user could have proved (implies term term) for any term, even a provable
; one. Then in trying to prove term we'd assume it false by putting (not term)
; on ancestors and backchain to term, which would lead us here, with the
; complement of term on ancestors. That doesn't mean term can't be proved!
(resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting1
(cdr assumptions)
ancestors gstack simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst
wrld state step-limit
(if assumed-true
ttree
(add-to-tag-tree 'assumption
(change assumption assn
:rewrittenp term)
ttree))))
(t
; We are about to rewrite term, just as in relieve-hyp, and so we add its
; negation to ancestors. This is equivalent to assuming term false.
(let ((new-ancestors
(push-ancestor (dumb-negate-lit term)
(assumnote-list-to-token-list
(access assumption assn :assumnotes))
ancestors)))
(mv-let
(not-flg atm)
(strip-not term)
(sl-let
(val ttree1)
(rewrite-entry (rewrite atm nil 'forced-assumption)
:rdepth (rewrite-stack-limit wrld)
:step-limit step-limit
:type-alist (access assumption assn :type-alist)
:obj '?
:geneqv *geneqv-iff*
:pequiv-info nil
:wrld wrld
:fnstack nil
:ancestors new-ancestors
:backchain-limit (access rewrite-constant rcnst
:backchain-limit-rw)
:simplify-clause-pot-lst simplify-clause-pot-lst
:rcnst rcnst
:gstack gstack
:ttree nil)
(let ((val (if not-flg (dumb-negate-lit val) val)))
(cond
((equal val *nil*)
; If term rewrote to nil, we return assn as a bad assumption. We
; assume the proof attempt is doomed. We accumulate into ttree the
; ttree supporting the final rewrite to nil. This is a little odd.
; The bad-ass returned is the unrewritten assumption generated by
; (force term) or (case-split term). But the ttree returned may
; contain work done on other forces as well as the work done to show
; that term reduces to nil, even though we are returning term, not
; nil.
(mv step-limit assn (cons-tag-trees ttree1 ttree)))
(t
; If term rewrote to non-nil, we must process the unrewritten assumptions in
; the ttree, ttree1, produced by rewriting term. We do that with a separate
; recursive call of this function, because we must pass in the new-ancestors so
; that we don't loop. Think of us as having assumed term false, rewritten it
; while making certain assumptions, and now -- still in that context of having
; assumed it false -- we will work on those assumptions.
(mv-let
(ttree1 assumptions1)
(strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions ttree1)
; Observe that if ttree1 contains any assumptions, they are of the rewrittenp t
; variety. We accumulate ttree1 into our answer ttree. Unless term rewrote to
; t, we accumulate the rewritten version of assn into our answer. Note that
; since the :geneqv used above is iff, we can rely on the fact that if val is
; known not to be nil then it is actually t. Finally, we rewrite all of the
; unrewritten assumptions (assumptions1) generated by rewriting term to val
; accumulate them into our answer as well.
(sl-let
(bad-ass ttree)
(resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting1
assumptions1
new-ancestors ; the critical difference
gstack simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst
wrld state step-limit
(cons-tag-trees
ttree1
(if (equal val *t*)
ttree
(add-to-tag-tree 'assumption
(change assumption assn
:term val
:rewrittenp term)
ttree))))
(cond
(bad-ass (mv step-limit bad-ass ttree))
(t
; Having taken care of assn and all the unrewritten assumptions generated when
; we rewrote it, we now do the rest of assumptions.
(resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting1
(cdr assumptions)
ancestors gstack simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst
wrld state step-limit
ttree))))))))))))))))))
(defun resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting
(ttree ancestors gstack simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst wrld state step-limit)
; We copy ttree and rewrite all the non-rewrittenp assumptions in it, deleting
; any thus established. We return (mv bad-ass ttree'), where bad-ass is either
; nil or an assumption in ttree whose :term can be rewritten to nil. Ttree' is
; an extension of the result of removing all non-rewrittenp assumptions from
; ttree and then replacing them by their rewritten versions plus the ttrees
; produced by that rewriting. There are no non-rewrittenp assumptions in
; ttree'.
(mv-let (ttree assumptions)
(strip-non-rewrittenp-assumptions ttree)
(resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting1
assumptions
ancestors gstack simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst wrld state step-limit
ttree)))
; Essay on Case Limit
; The case-limit component in the case-split-limitations is a number
; used by rewrite-clause to shut down case splitting after a certain
; point is reached.
; The informal heuristic implemented here is ``don't continue to
; rewrite literals once the estimated number of output clauses exceeds
; some limit.'' We call the limit the ``case-limit.'' There are many
; interpretations of this heuristic. We discuss them here. In this
; discussion we abstract away from the particulars of given call of
; rewrite-clause and instead consider all the calls of that function
; on the Common Lisp control stack. Each of those calls can be
; characterized by a picture like this {h1 ... hk ! lit1 ... litn}
; where the hi are already-rewritten terms generated by splitting on
; the literals that we've already rewritten, the ! signifies where we
; are in this case, and the liti are the unrewritten literals from the
; tail of the original clause. Suppose there are now more than
; case-limit of these cases; we will handle each with the same
; approach. Here are the approaches that come to mind. We have
; chosen to implement (1) after some experimentation with (3).
; (0) Stop now and process no further literals. Return the clause
; {h1 ... hk lit1 ... litn}.
; The advantage to (0) is that it is the cheapest thing we could do.
; But it dooms us to revisit each of the hi with the rewriter before
; we even look at their combination or their effects on the liti. The
; other interpretations below all do some work on the liti in hopes
; that we will have less work to do later.
; (1) It is possible that -h1 ... -hk is contradictory, or that -h1
; ... -hk together with -lit2, ..., -litn, are contradictory.
; Such contradictions will be found by type-set when we try to
; assume all of them false in order to rewrite lit1. So we could
; proceed to do the type-alist work to set up the ``rewrite'' of
; each liti, detect the contradiction if it happens, but
; short-circuit the rewrite at the last minute if no contradiction
; arises. In the short-circuit we would just have the rewrite-atm
; call return liti (i.e., each liti would rewrite to itself).
; This is actually the simplest change to the code.
; As noted above, if we find a type-set contradiction in (1), we won't
; have to rewrite the hi again for this case. Otherwise, we will.
; This kind of observation applies to the other ideas below.
; (2) Build the type-alist and actually rewrite each liti while we have
; all this context in our hands. If rewriting liti generates an IF-free
; term (e.g., T or no change or simple normalization), just proceed.
; But if it generates an IF, pretend we did nothing and rewrite it
; to itself.
; (3) As (2) above, but if it generates an IF, use the IF without clausifying
; it. This has the effect of possibly stripping out of liti all the
; cases that are precluded by the hi, without generating any more cases.
; We will eventually see the IFs in this literal again and split them
; out.
; Once upon a time we implemented a ``creep up to the limit''
; heuristic here: If we have not yet exceeded the case limit but the
; current literal's clausification does exceed the limit, then we left
; that literal in IF form and went on. We are afraid that when the
; limit is exceeded it is exceeded by some hideous amount, e.g., 2^32
; clauses are produced. We call such a literal a ``big splitter.''
; The IF form probably tells the user more about what opened than the
; clauses do. Furthermore, little splitters further on down the
; clause might be allowed to open and may ultimately allow us to
; simplify the big splitter. This heuristic had to be implemented in
; such a way that the big splitter was eventually split out. (The
; user might have set the case limit rather low and might be using it
; to introduce cases slowly.) Our idea was just to allow the split
; when it is the first literal to split. It eventually will be. We
; abandoned this creepy idea because it put unsplit big-splitters on
; the type-alist, where they were essentially useless, and then all
; the downstream literals simplified in the empty context, introducing
; many bogus case splits.
(defun helpful-little-ecnt-msg (case-limit ecnt)
(cond
((and (null case-limit)
(> ecnt 1000))
(prog2$
(cw "~%~%Helpful Little Message: The simplifier is now expected to ~
produce approximately ~n0 subgoals. See :DOC ~
case-split-limitations and see :DOC splitter.~%~%"
ecnt)
ecnt))
(t ecnt)))
(mutual-recursion
(defun rewrite-clause (tail pts bkptr gstack new-clause fc-pair-lst wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst flg ecnt ans ttree
fttree splitp state step-limit)
; In nqthm this function was called SIMPLIFY-CLAUSE1.
; We are to rewrite the literals of the clause cl formed by appending tail to
; new-clause. We assume rcnst has the correct top-clause and pt and the
; current-clause is the correct clause. We assume the simplify-clause-pot-lst
; is set up for the current-clause. We assume fc-pair-lst is a list of pairs
; of the form (concl . ttree) of conclusions derived by forward chaining from
; negations of literals in current-clause. The ttrees indicate dependence on
; parents (via 'pt tags) and we may use any concl not dependent upon the
; literals contained in the :pt of rcnst (to which we add the current literal's
; pt). Ecnt is the estimated number of output clauses. We refine it as we go
; and it is ultimately returned and is the length of ans. Fttree (``false
; tag-tree'') is either nil or else is a non-nil tag-tree justifying the
; falsity of every literal in new-clause; see the comment in rewrite-atm about
; the third argument returned by that function. Note that it is always legal
; to return the false clause in place of any other clause, so our use of fttree
; may be viewed as heuristic, i.e., it is clearly sound.
; We return 5 values: a new step-limit; a flag indicating whether anything was
; done; the final ecnt; a set, ans, of clauses whose conjunction implies cl
; under our assumptions; and a ttree that describes what we did. Our answers
; are accumulated onto flg, ecnt, ans, and ttree as we recur through the
; literals of tail.
; Finally, we comment on parameter splitp, which controls the rw-cache in the
; case that the rw-cache-state is t. (See the Essay on Rw-cache.) This
; parameter is true when we are part of a split into two or more clauses, which
; case (if the rw-cache-state is t) we think of the split into children the way
; we think of entering branches of an IF expression, discarding the "any" cache
; since we do not trust its use in a stronger context. If there is just one
; child, our heuristic is to keep the rw-cache, with the (perhaps bold)
; expectation that because there is no case-split, we can continue to trust its
; full rw-cache. While this assumption may be bold, it might be true in many
; cases, and we are willing to make it since the default rw-cache-state is
; :atom, not t.
(cond
((null tail)
(let ((rune
(built-in-clausep1 (global-val 'built-in-clauses wrld)
new-clause
(all-fnnames-lst new-clause)
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure))))
(cond
(rune
(mv step-limit t (- ecnt 1) ans (push-lemma rune ttree)))
((and fttree
; Avoid considering it a "change" to rewrite the empty (false) clause to
; itself. Note that we already know (null tail) in this context.
(not (and (null ans)
(null new-clause))))
(mv step-limit t 1
(list *false-clause*)
(cons-tag-trees fttree ttree)))
(t (mv step-limit flg ecnt (cons new-clause ans) ttree)))))
(t
(mv-let
(not-flg atm)
(strip-not (car tail))
(let* ((new-pts (cons (car pts)
(access rewrite-constant rcnst :pt)))
(local-rcnst
(change rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-literal
(make current-literal
:not-flg not-flg
:atm atm)
:pt
new-pts))
(case-split-limitations (access rewrite-constant rcnst
:case-split-limitations))
; Warning: Keep the following bindings in sync with the definitions of macros
; case-limit and sr-limit.
(case-limit (cadr case-split-limitations))
(sr-limit (car case-split-limitations)))
; Note that in local-rcnst we declared inactive the polys descending
; from the current lit.
; The use of simplify-clause-pot-lst below is new to Version_2.8. This
; is in support of type-set using linear arithmetic --- we use the
; simplify-clause-pot-lst when building the type-alist. Note that we
; also pass in a parent-tree to declare inactive the polys descending
; from the current lit.
(mv-let
(contradictionp type-alist ttree0 current-clause)
(rewrite-clause-type-alist tail
new-clause
fc-pair-lst
local-rcnst
wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst
new-pts)
; Ttree0 is relevant only if we got a contradiction.
(cond
(contradictionp
(mv step-limit
t
(- ecnt 1)
ans
(cons-tag-trees ttree0 ttree)))
(t
(let ((skip-rewrite-atm (and case-limit
(> ecnt case-limit)))
(rw-cache-state (access rewrite-constant rcnst
:rw-cache-state)))
(sl-let
(val ttree1 fttree1)
; Note: Nqthm used a call of (rewrite atm ...) here, while we now look on the
; type-alist for atm and then rewrite. See the Nqthm note below.
; Note: Here is our ``short circuit'' implementation of case limit
; interpretation (2). We just bail out if we have exceeded the case
; limit.
(if skip-rewrite-atm
(mv step-limit
atm
(add-to-tag-tree! 'case-limit t ttree)
nil)
(pstk
(rewrite-atm atm not-flg bkptr gstack type-alist wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst local-rcnst
current-clause state step-limit
(cond ((eq rw-cache-state :atom)
(erase-rw-cache ttree))
((and (eq rw-cache-state t)
splitp)
(rw-cache-enter-context ttree))
(t ttree)))))
(let* ((ttree1 (cond (skip-rewrite-atm ttree1)
((eq rw-cache-state :atom)
(erase-rw-cache ttree1))
((and (eq rw-cache-state t)
splitp)
(rw-cache-exit-context ttree ttree1))
(t ttree1)))
(val (if not-flg
(dumb-negate-lit val)
val))
(branches (pstk
(clausify val
(convert-clause-to-assumptions
(cdr tail)
(convert-clause-to-assumptions
new-clause nil))
nil
sr-limit)))
(ttree1 (if (and sr-limit
(> (length branches)
sr-limit))
(add-to-tag-tree 'sr-limit
t
ttree1)
ttree1))
(action (rewrite-clause-action (car tail) branches))
(segs
; Perhaps we can simply use branches below. But that requires some thought,
; because the form below handles true clauses (including *true-clause*) with
; special care. This issue arose as we removed old-style-forcing from the
; code.
(disjoin-clause-segment-to-clause-set nil branches))
(nsegs (length segs)))
(sl-let
(bad-ass ttree1)
(resume-suspended-assumption-rewriting
ttree1
nil ;ancestors - the fact that this isn't what it was when
;we pushed the assumption could let rewriting go deeper
gstack
simplify-clause-pot-lst
local-rcnst
wrld
state
step-limit)
(cond
(bad-ass
; When we rewrote the current literal of the clause we made an assumption
; that we now know to be false. We must abandon that rewrite. We
; act just as though the literal rewrote to itself: we pretend we have just
; done the rewrite-atm above and obtained atm instead of val. We just
; reproduce the code, except we don't worry about assumptions.
(let* ((val (if not-flg (dumb-negate-lit atm) atm))
(branches (pstk
(clausify val
(convert-clause-to-assumptions
(cdr tail)
(convert-clause-to-assumptions
new-clause nil))
nil
sr-limit)))
(ttree2 (if (and sr-limit
(> (length branches)
sr-limit))
(add-to-tag-tree 'sr-limit
t
ttree)
ttree))
(action (rewrite-clause-action (car tail) branches))
(segs branches)
(nsegs (length segs)))
; For an explanation of the following call of rewrite-clause-lst, see
; the standard call below. This is just like it, except we are ignoring
; ttree1. Note that ttree2 is an extension of ttree.
(rewrite-clause-lst segs
(1+ bkptr)
gstack
(cdr tail)
(cdr pts)
new-clause
fc-pair-lst
wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst
(if (eq action 'shown-false)
local-rcnst
rcnst)
(or flg (not (eq action 'no-change)))
(helpful-little-ecnt-msg
case-limit
(+ ecnt -1 nsegs))
ans
ttree2
nil ; literal is not known to be false
(cdr segs) ; splitp
state
step-limit)))
; Here, once upon a time, we implemented the ``creep up on the limit''
; twist of case limit interpretation (3). Instead of short-circuiting
; above we rewrote the atm. We either clausified the result or just
; turned it into a singleton clause possibly containing IFs, depending
; on whether we were already above the case-limit. We had to handle
; ttree1 appropriately to record the case limit restriction. We then
; continued on to here.
; The following test determines that we're about to exceed the
; case-limit.
; (and case-limit
; (<= ecnt case-limit)
; (< case-limit (+ ecnt -1 nsegs))
; (< 1 ecnt))
; It says we are currently at or below the case limit but the segs
; generated for this literal would push us over it. Furthermore, this
; is not the very first literal to produce segs (ecnt exceeds 1). In
; this case, we ignored segs. That is, we just put the un-clausified
; val in as a single literal. We hold ecnt the fixed and show the
; user this rewritten goal in IF form. Eventually this IF would
; become the first literal that produces segs and the (< 1 ecnt) would
; fail, so we would split it out then.
; But as we've abandoned the whole idea of rewriting after the limit
; has been exceeded, we no longer implement this creepy idea.
; Instead, we just blast past the limit and then shut 'er down.
(t
; In the case that there is no bad assumption, then ttree1 is a ttree in which
; all assumptions have been rewritten.
(rewrite-clause-lst segs
(1+ bkptr)
gstack
(cdr tail)
(cdr pts)
new-clause
fc-pair-lst
wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst
; If the current lit rewrote to false, or even if it rewrote at all
; (since critical information may be lost), then we should continue to
; ignore polys and forward-chaining facts that descend from it. We
; therefore pass to lower level calls the local-rcnst, which has the
; current literal's index in its :pt. The current-literal in that
; local-rcnst will be reset and the :pt will be extended locally
; there. If the current lit did not change upon rewrite, then we want
; to restore :pt to what it was at entry, so we pass the original
; rcnst. One could consider this as (change rewrite-constant rcnst
; :pt ...) to add to the old rcnst the pt of the literal just
; rewritten. Before v2-9, we only used local-rcnst when action is
; 'shown-false, which resulted in dropping important information, as
; shown in the following example derived from one provided by Art
; Flatau. Before the change, the goal ("Goal'") produced was
; (IMPLIES (AND (< 30 N) (<= 30 N)) (FOO N)); after the change, the
; (INTEGERP N) hypothesis was preserved.
; (defstub foo (n) t)
; (defthm natp-fc-2
; (implies (natp x) (integerp x))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
; (thm (implies (and (not (or (not (natp n)) (<= n 30)))
; (integerp n)
; (<= 30 n))
; (foo n)))
(if (eq action 'no-change)
rcnst
local-rcnst)
(or flg
(not (eq action 'no-change)))
; Prior to this literal, we estimated the number of output clauses to
; be ecnt. This literal of this clause rewrote to nsegs segments. So
; now we have ecnt-1+nsegs clauses. This will be correct if no other
; literal (anywhere on the call stack) splits.
; We could estimate differently. We could suppose that this literal
; will split nsegs ways every time it occurs in the call stack.
; Essentially we would let the new ecnt be (* ecnt (max 1 nsegs)).
; (Note that if nsegs is 0, we keep ecnt fixed; the lit rewrote to
; nil.) That estimate will grow faster and probably is an upper bound
; on the actual number that would be created (e.g., some would almost
; certainly be tautologies). If we used such a method, we would start
; to cut off case splitting earlier, we would get more literals with
; IFs in them, and fewer overall clauses because the estimate would be
; too large and kick in even though some of the previous splitting was
; tautologous.
(helpful-little-ecnt-msg
case-limit
(+ ecnt -1 nsegs))
ans
(if (eq action 'no-change)
(if (eq rw-cache-state :atom)
ttree
(accumulate-rw-cache t
ttree1
ttree))
ttree1)
(and fttree1
fttree
(cons-tag-trees fttree1 fttree))
(cdr segs) ; splitp
state
step-limit)))))))))))))))
(defun rewrite-clause-lst (segs bkptr gstack cdr-tail cdr-pts new-clause
fc-pair-lst wrld simplify-clause-pot-lst rcnst
flg ecnt ans ttree fttree splitp state
step-limit)
; Fttree is either nil or else is a tag-tree justifying the falsity of every
; literal in segs and every literal in new-clause; see the comment in
; rewrite-atm about the third argument returned by that function.
; Splitp is true when we do not want to trust the "any" cache of ttree; for
; more explanation, see rewrite-clause.
(cond ((null segs)
(mv step-limit flg ecnt ans ttree))
(t
(sl-let (flg1 ecnt1 ans1 ttree1)
(rewrite-clause-lst (cdr segs)
bkptr
gstack
cdr-tail
cdr-pts
new-clause
fc-pair-lst
wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst
rcnst
flg
ecnt
ans
ttree
fttree
splitp
state
step-limit)
(mv-let (unrewritten unwritten-pts rewritten ttree2)
(crunch-clause-segments
cdr-tail
cdr-pts
(append new-clause
(set-difference-equal (car segs)
new-clause))
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
wrld state ttree1)
(rewrite-clause unrewritten
unwritten-pts
bkptr
gstack
rewritten
fc-pair-lst
wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst
rcnst
flg1
ecnt1
ans1
ttree2
fttree
splitp
state
step-limit))))))
)
; After removing trivial equations, simplify-clause must set up
; the context in which the rewriting of the clause is done. This
; mainly means setting up the simplify-clause-pot-lst.
(defun setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst1 (cl ttrees type-alist rcnst wrld state
step-limit)
(sl-let (contradictionp simplify-clause-pot-lst)
(let ((gstack (initial-gstack 'setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst
nil cl)))
(rewrite-entry
(add-terms-and-lemmas cl ;term-lst to assume
ttrees ;corresponding tag-trees
nil ;positivep (terms assumed false)
)
:rdepth (rewrite-stack-limit wrld)
:step-limit step-limit
:type-alist type-alist
:obj nil
:geneqv nil
:pequiv-info nil
:wrld wrld
:fnstack nil
:ancestors nil
:backchain-limit (access rewrite-constant rcnst
:backchain-limit-rw)
:simplify-clause-pot-lst nil
:pot-lst-terms nil
:rcnst rcnst
:gstack gstack
:ttree nil))
(cond
(contradictionp
#-acl2-loop-only (dmr-flush t)
(mv step-limit contradictionp nil))
(t
#-acl2-loop-only (dmr-flush t)
(mv step-limit nil simplify-clause-pot-lst)))))
(defun setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst (cl ttrees fc-pair-lst
type-alist rcnst wrld state step-limit)
; We construct the initial value of the simplify-clause-pot-lst in preparation
; for rewriting clause cl. We assume rcnst contains the user's hint settings,
; the correct top-clause and current clause, and a null :pt.
; We return three values. The first is a new step-limit. If the second is
; non-nil it indicates that we have proved cl and the other value is
; irrelevant. In the case that we prove clause the second result is a poly,
; meaning it was proved by linear arithmetic. The assumptions in the ttree of
; that poly must be considered before cl is declared proved. When the second
; answer is nil the third is the constructed simplify-clause-pot-lst.
; As of Version_2.8, we start by adding the (negations of) any forward-chaining
; conclusions to the head of cl and the corresponding ttrees to ttrees. We
; then call the original setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst on the resultant
; expanded clause. This will allow us to use forward-chaining conclusions in
; linear arithmetic.
; Here is one example of why we might want to do this:
; (defun bytep (n)
; (and (integerp n)
; (<= -128 n)
; (< n 128)))
;
; (defthm bytep-thm
; (implies (and (integerp n)
; (<= -128 n)
; (< n 128))
; (bytep n)))
;
; (defthm bytep-fc-thm
; (implies (bytep n)
; (and (integerp n)
; (<= -128 n)
; (< n 128)))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (in-theory (disable bytep))
;
; (defthm tricky
; (implies (and (bytep n)
; (bytep (+ 7 n)))
; (bytep (+ 3 n))))
; Before linear arithmetic used the conclusions of forward-chaining rules, one
; would have to re-enable the definition of bytep in order to prove tricky.
; But if this appeared in a larger context, in which one had proved a bunch of
; lemmas about bytep, one could find oneself in a pickle. By enabling bytep,
; one loses the ability to use all the lemmas about it. Without enabling
; bytep, tricky is hard to prove.
; And here is another example:
; (defun bvecp (x n)
; (and (integerp x)
; (<= 0 x)
; (< x (expt 2 n))))
;
; (defthm bvecp-2-<-4
; (implies (bvecp x 2)
; (and (integerp x)
; (<= 0 x)
; (< x 4)))
; :rule-classes :forward-chaining)
;
; (in-theory (disable bvecp))
;
; (thm (implies (and (bvecp x 2)
; (not (equal x 0))
; (not (equal x 1))
; (not (equal x 2)))
; (equal x 3)))
(cond ((null fc-pair-lst)
(setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst1 cl ttrees type-alist rcnst wrld state
step-limit))
(t
(setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst (cons (dumb-negate-lit
(caar fc-pair-lst)) cl)
(cons (cdar fc-pair-lst) ttrees)
(cdr fc-pair-lst)
type-alist rcnst wrld state
step-limit))))
(defun sequential-subst-var-term (alist term)
; Each element of alist is of the form (vari . termi). We replace
; vari by termi in term and then sequentially apply the remaining
; pairs to the result.
(cond ((null alist) term)
(t (sequential-subst-var-term (cdr alist)
(subst-var (cdar alist)
(caar alist)
term)))))
(defun process-equational-polys
(cl hist rcnst type-alist wrld pot-lst flg ttree)
; We deduce from pot-lst all the interesting equations in it and add
; them to cl unless they have already been generated and recorded in
; hist. The flg and ttree are merely accumulators where we construct
; our answers. In the top-level call, flg should be nil and ttree
; should be any ttree we want to infect with our answer. Nil would do.
; We return three results, flg, cl and ttree. The first indicates
; whether we did anything. The second is the final value of cl and
; the third is the final ttree. That ttree will record the equations
; we generated and used in this step. It should become part of the
; history of our output cl so that we do not loop.
; We merely scan down pot-lst. At every pot we find the first
; acceptable equational poly (if any) and change flg, cl and ttree
; appropriately.
; Historical note: Previous to Version_2.7, rather than add certain
; equalities to cl we performed the substitution suggested by that
; equality. This substitution forced us to carry along another
; argument, which was the list of all such substitutions made to date.
; That was called var-term-substs. Here is a Historical Comment that
; deals with the necessity for this now eliminated argument.
; Historical Comment
; The argument var-term-substs is a list of pairs of the form (var
; . term). These represent some of the equations already found, with
; the first pair on the list representing the earliest such equation.
; (That is, the list is in chronology order, not reverse chronological
; order.) When a new equation is found and that equation relates a
; var to a term (instead of two non-var terms), we do not really add
; the equation to the clause but rather just substitute the term for
; the var, eliminating that variable. This can raise problems if, for
; example, we find A = B and replace all the B's by A, and then later
; find B = C. Had we actually added (equal A B) in response to the
; first equation, this would not be a problem. But since we didn't
; add that equation but just eliminated all the B's in favor of A, we
; now find B = C unconnected to A. So every time we find a new
; equation from the pot we first apply each of the substitution pairs
; to it, sequentially.
; Here is an example that failed under Version_2.4 (which did not
; have the var-term-substs argument) but succeeded in Version_2.5
; (which introduced the argument to fix such problems).
; (defstub bar (x) t)
;
; (thm (implies (and (rationalp a)(rationalp b)(rationalp c)
; (<= a b) (<= b a)
; (<= b c) (<= c b))
; (equal (bar a) (bar c))))
; End of Historical Comment
; We think we avoid the need for this argument by eliminating all
; substitutions from this function and instead producing the literal
; equalities we deduce.
(cond ((null pot-lst)
(mv flg cl ttree))
(t
(mv-let (ttree1 lhs rhs)
(find-equational-poly (car pot-lst) hist)
(if (null ttree1) ; no equation was found
(process-equational-polys cl hist rcnst type-alist wrld
(cdr pot-lst) flg ttree)
; From lhs <= rhs and rhs <= lhs we can actually derive the equality
; of their fixes, (fix lhs) = (fix rhs). We could generate that
; equation and let the system split on the numericity of the two sides
; by conventional opening of fix. But we don't do that, partly for
; cosmetic reasons but mainly because it is possible the two sides
; have been assumed numeric in ttree1 and rather than force a
; premature split, we just use the existing mechanism to cause the
; split later on below, and thus avoid an identical split.
; The derived-equation, below, is used for two purposes: It is
; advertised as the :target of the assumnote we generate to force an
; assumption, and it is possibly added to the clause. (We say "possibly"
; because the equality may be manifest in some sense. See hitp below.)
; The :target of an assumnote is used just in reporting the force.
(let ((derived-equation ; orient the equality
(cond ((and (variablep lhs)
(not (dumb-occur lhs rhs)))
(cons-term 'equal (list lhs rhs)))
((and (variablep rhs)
(not (dumb-occur rhs lhs)))
(cons-term 'equal (list rhs lhs)))
(t (cons-term 'equal (list lhs rhs)))))
(ok-to-force (ok-to-force rcnst))
(ens (access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)))
(mv-let (flag1 ttree2)
(add-linear-assumption derived-equation
(mcons-term* 'acl2-numberp lhs)
type-alist ens
(immediate-forcep nil ens)
ok-to-force wrld ttree1)
(mv-let
(flag2 ttree3)
(cond
((eq flag1 :failed)
(mv :failed ttree1))
(t (add-linear-assumption derived-equation
(mcons-term* 'acl2-numberp rhs)
type-alist ens
(immediate-forcep nil ens) ok-to-force wrld
ttree2)))
; Note lhs and rhs below are bogus if flag2 is :failed; they should not be
; used. Also, note that up through Version_2.9.3, lhs was set to 0 even when
; (acl2-numberp lhs) was indeterminate with forcing off, but now we do not set
; to 0 in that case (flag1 = :failed); similarly for rhs.
(let* ((lhs (if (eq flag1 :known-false) *0* lhs))
(rhs (if (eq flag2 :known-false) *0* rhs))
(new-lit (dumb-negate-lit (mcons-term* 'equal lhs rhs)))
; So at this point, if either side is definitely nonnumeric, it has
; defaulted to 0, just as though we generated (equal (fix lhs) (fix
; rhs)) and then opened the corresponding fix to 0. Furthermore,
; ttree3 contains the assumptions that both are numeric (when those
; assumptions are not trivially true or trivially false). In addition
; ttree3 extends ttree1.
; If hitp, below, is true then we will change the cl we are working on. In
; particular, we will NOT change it if either of our numeric assumptions
; :failed or if both lhs and rhs are trivially 0 -- e.g., as would happen if
; one was 0 and the other was known non-numeric.
(hitp (not (or (eq flag2 :failed)
; The following case is new after ACL2_2.9.3. The following example was
; provided by Robert Krug, inspired by an example from Dave Greve. Dave didn't
; want a bogus forcing round in such cases (i.e., cases where we don't know
; that at least one side is numeric).
; (thm (implies (and (equal (foo z) (foo y))
; (equal (foo x) (foo z)))
; (foo (+ x y z))))
(and (eq flag1 :added)
(eq flag2 :added))
(and (equal lhs *0*)
(equal rhs *0*))
(member-term new-lit cl)))))
; Note: Robert Krug found a soundness bug in an earlier version of
; this code. We used derived-equation instead of (mcons-term* 'equal
; lhs rhs) below. But derived-equation has the original lhs and rhs
; in them, not the FIXed versions!
(process-equational-polys
(if hitp
(add-literal new-lit cl nil)
cl)
hist rcnst type-alist wrld
(cdr pot-lst)
; We got a hit if either we already had a hit or we hit this time.
(or flg hitp)
(cons-tag-trees (cond
(hitp ttree3)
(t
; If we do not change the clause, we do not record a dependence on the
; type-set information recorded in ttree3. However, we still record
; ttree1 because it contains the note that prevents us from rederiving
; this same inequality. Recall that ttree3 includes ttree1.
ttree1))
ttree)))))))))))
; We are finally ready to begin the final assault on simplify-clause.
(defun enumerate-elements (lst i)
(cond ((null lst) nil)
(t (cons i (enumerate-elements (cdr lst) (1+ i))))))
(defun already-used-by-fertilize-clausep (lit hist get-clause-id)
; We determine whether the literal lit, which is presumably of the form (not
; (equiv lhs rhs)), has already been used by fertilization in the history hist
; of the current clause. If not, then we return nil. Otherwise, we return the
; clause id of that previous use if get-clause-id is true, else we return t.
(cond ((null hist) nil)
((and (eq (access history-entry (car hist) :processor)
'fertilize-clause)
(tag-tree-occur 'literal lit
(access history-entry (car hist) :ttree)))
(or get-clause-id
(tagged-object 'clause-id (access history-entry (car hist)
:ttree))))
(t (already-used-by-fertilize-clausep lit (cdr hist) get-clause-id))))
(defun unhidden-lit-info (hist clause pos wrld)
(cond
((null clause)
(mv nil nil nil))
(t (let ((lit (car clause)))
(case-match lit
(('not ('hide (equiv & &))) ; (not (hide (equiv x y)))
(cond ((equivalence-relationp equiv wrld)
(let* ((new-lit (fcons-term* 'not (fargn (fargn lit 1) 1)))
(cl-id
(already-used-by-fertilize-clausep
new-lit
hist nil)))
(cond (cl-id (mv pos new-lit cl-id))
(t (unhidden-lit-info hist (cdr clause) (1+ pos)
wrld)))))
(t (unhidden-lit-info hist (cdr clause) (1+ pos) wrld))))
(& (unhidden-lit-info hist (cdr clause) (1+ pos) wrld)))))))
(defun tilde-@-hyp-phrase (len-tail cl)
; This tilde-@ phrase describes a literal of the given clause, cl, as a
; hypothesis in the prettyification of cl, where len-tail is the length of the
; tail of cl following that literal (but if somehow the literal is in cl, this
; function acts like it is the last element). This phrase will, for example,
; complete the sentence "We now use ~@0." One possible completion is "We now
; use the hypothesis." Another is, "We now use the conclusion." A more common
; one is "We now use the third hypothesis."
; Warning: The function fertilize-clause-msg knows that this function
; either refers to the lit as a "conclusion" or as a "hypothesis" and
; can tell which by asking whether the result here is a consp whose
; cdr is nil! So don't change this function without considering that.
(let* ((len (length cl))
(n (- len len-tail)))
(cond
((int= n len)
; See the warning above.
'("the conclusion"))
((and (int= len 2)
(int= n 1))
"the hypothesis")
(t (msg "the ~n0 hypothesis"
(cons n 'th))))))
(defun simplify-clause1 (top-clause hist rcnst wrld state step-limit)
; In Nqthm, this function was called SIMPLIFY-CLAUSE0.
; Top-clause is a clause with history hist. We assume that rcnst has a null pt
; and contains whatever hint settings the user wants in it, as well as the
; :force-info based on whether there is a call of IF in top-clause.
; We return 4 values. The first is a new step-limit. The next indicates
; whether we changed top-clause and, if so, whether we went through the
; rewriter; it will help determine signal returned by simplify-clause (and
; hence will be used, ultimately, to create the 'simplify-clause hist entry).
; If we did not change top-clause, the third is; otherwise, it is a list of new
; clauses whose conjunction implies top-clause. The last argument is a ttree
; that explains what we did, and is used in the 'simplify-clause hist entry.
(mv-let (hitp current-clause pts remove-trivial-equivalences-ttree)
(remove-trivial-equivalences top-clause
nil
t
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
wrld state nil nil nil)
(declare (ignore pts))
(let ((local-rcnst (change rewrite-constant rcnst
:top-clause top-clause
:current-clause current-clause))
(current-clause-pts (enumerate-elements current-clause 0)))
(mv-let
(contradictionp type-alist fc-pair-lst)
(forward-chain-top 'simplify-clause
current-clause
current-clause-pts
(ok-to-force local-rcnst)
nil ; do-not-reconsiderp
wrld
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
(access rewrite-constant rcnst
:oncep-override)
state)
; Either we forward chained to a contradiction, in which case we are
; done, or else we have a type-alist assuming the negation of every
; literal in the current-clause and a list of pairs of the form (concl
; . ttree) indicating that each concl can be derived from the parent
; literals indicated by the 'pt tags.
(cond
(contradictionp
; Note: When forward-chain returns with contradictionp = t, then the
; "fc-pair-lst" is really a ttree. We must add the remove-trivial-
; equivalences ttree to the ttree returned by forward-chain and we must
; remember our earlier case splits.
(mv step-limit
'hit
nil
(cons-tag-trees
remove-trivial-equivalences-ttree
fc-pair-lst)))
(t
; We next construct the initial simplify-clause-pot-lst.
; The construction might prove current-clause, in which case the
; contradictionp answer is non-nil.
(sl-let
(contradictionp simplify-clause-pot-lst)
(pstk
(setup-simplify-clause-pot-lst current-clause
(pts-to-ttree-lst
current-clause-pts)
fc-pair-lst
type-alist
local-rcnst wrld state
step-limit))
(cond
(contradictionp
; A non-nil contradictionp is a poly meaning linear proved current-clause
; (modulo the assumptions in the tag-tree of the poly).
(mv step-limit
'hit
nil
(cons-tag-trees
remove-trivial-equivalences-ttree
(push-lemma
*fake-rune-for-linear*
(access poly contradictionp :ttree)))))
(t
(mv-let
(flg new-current-clause ttree)
(pstk
(process-equational-polys
current-clause hist local-rcnst type-alist wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst nil
remove-trivial-equivalences-ttree))
(cond
(flg
; Here is where we now perform the substitutions previously done
; within process-equational-polys. See the historical remarks in that
; function.
(mv-let
(hitp newest-current-clause pts ttree1)
(pstk
(remove-trivial-equivalences
new-current-clause
nil
t
(access rewrite-constant local-rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
wrld state ttree nil nil))
(declare (ignore pts hitp))
(mv step-limit
'hit
(list newest-current-clause)
(push-lemma *fake-rune-for-linear*
ttree1))))
(t
; When we call rewrite-clause, below, we pass in as the initial value
; of its ``did we change anything?'' accumulator the flg, hitp, that
; indicates whether remove-trivial-equations changed anything. Thus,
; this call may answer ``yes, something was changed'' when in fact,
; nothing was done by rewrite-clause itself. Note that since we are
; calling rewrite-clause here, we return 'hit-rewrite rather than 'hit
; if we return a non-nil signal; see the comments in simplify-clause.
(sl-let
(flg ecnt ans ttree)
(rewrite-clause current-clause
current-clause-pts
1
(initial-gstack 'simplify-clause
nil current-clause)
nil fc-pair-lst wrld
simplify-clause-pot-lst
local-rcnst
hitp
1
nil
remove-trivial-equivalences-ttree
*trivial-non-nil-ttree*
nil ; splitp
state
step-limit)
(declare (ignore ecnt))
(cond
((null flg)
#-acl2-loop-only (dmr-flush t)
(mv-let
(pos unhidden-lit old-cl-id)
(unhidden-lit-info hist top-clause 0 wrld)
(cond (pos (let ((tail (nthcdr (1+ pos) top-clause)))
(mv step-limit
'hit-rewrite
(list (append (take pos top-clause)
(cons unhidden-lit
tail)))
(add-to-tag-tree!
'hyp-phrase
(tilde-@-hyp-phrase (len tail)
top-clause)
(add-to-tag-tree!
'clause-id old-cl-id
(push-lemma (fn-rune-nume 'hide nil
nil wrld)
(rw-cache ttree)))))))
(t (mv step-limit nil ans ttree)))))
(t
#-acl2-loop-only (dmr-flush t)
(mv step-limit 'hit-rewrite ans ttree))))))))))))))))
(defun some-element-dumb-occur-lst (lst1 lst2)
(cond ((null lst1) nil)
((dumb-occur-lst (car lst1) lst2) t)
(t (some-element-dumb-occur-lst (cdr lst1) lst2))))
; The Spec Vars of Prove -- pspv
; The theorem prover, prove, uses so many special variables that are rarely
; modified that we bundle them up. Because simplify-clause, below, is a
; clause processor in the waterfall, it is the first function in this
; development that is high enough up in the hierarchy to see prove's
; bundle of variables. So it is time to lay out prove's spec vars:
(defrec prove-spec-var
; Warning: Keep this in sync with #+acl2-par function
; pspv-equal-except-for-tag-tree-and-pool.
; WARNING: If you change the layout of the prove-spec-var in a way that affects
; the position on :rewrite-constant you must change the guard on the
; definitions of nonlinearp-default-hint in (at least) the following community
; books:
; books/arithmetic-5/lib/basic-ops/default-hint.lisp -- one occurrence
; books/hints/basic-tests.lisp -- two occurrences
; Note: displayed-goal might no longer be necessary in our own sources. But
; community books have been using them, in particlar, books/acl2s/ccg/ccg.lisp.
; So we keep that field. To search the community books for "displayed-goal"
; (or other strings, by analogy):
; find . -name '*.l*sp' -exec fgrep -i -H displayed-goal {} \;
; find . -name '*.acl2' -exec fgrep -i -H displayed-goal {} \;
((rewrite-constant induction-hyp-terms . induction-concl-terms)
(tag-tree hint-settings . tau-completion-alist)
(pool . gag-state)
user-supplied-term displayed-goal orig-hints . otf-flg)
t)
; The orig-hints setting is the list of clause-ids and hint-settings supplied
; to prove. The hint-settings is the particular hint settings for the current
; clause. The only reason we have the orig-hints field is so that we can
; compute the hints appropriate for the top-level goal if we have to abandon
; the initial work and revert to the user-supplied term. To understand the
; need for the tau-completion-alist read mini-essay On the Tau Completion Alist
; (calist) in tau.lisp.
(defrec gag-info
; This record corresponds to a key checkpoint, but not necessarily the active
; checkpoint. Suppose for example we see a goal that is hit by an elim before
; any other checkpoint. Then we push an instance of this record on the
; appropriate stack. When a goal is pushed for induction and this record is
; for the active checkpoint, then we add the clause-id and pool-lst for that
; goal.
(clause-id ; could be nil
clause ; nil iff clause-id is nil
. ; list of pairs (clause-id . pool-lst); see above
pushed
)
t)
(defrec gag-state
((top-stack . sub-stack) ; each a list of gag-info records
(active-cl-id ; for active key checkpoint if any, else nil
. active-printed-p) ; true when active key checkpoint has been printed
forcep ; true after next forcing round has been announced
. abort-stack) ; top-stack when reverting; 'empty-clause on abort
t)
(defconst *initial-gag-state*
(make gag-state
:top-stack nil
:sub-stack nil
:active-cl-id nil
:active-printed-p nil
:forcep nil))
(defconst *empty-prove-spec-var*
(make prove-spec-var
:rewrite-constant nil
:induction-hyp-terms nil
:induction-concl-terms nil
:tag-tree nil
:hint-settings nil
:tau-completion-alist nil
:orig-hints nil
:pool nil
:gag-state *initial-gag-state*
:user-supplied-term *t*
:displayed-goal nil
:otf-flg nil))
(defun controller-unify-subst2 (vars acc)
(cond ((endp vars) acc)
((assoc-eq (car vars) acc)
acc)
(t (controller-unify-subst2 (cdr vars)
(acons (car vars) (car vars) acc)))))
(defun controller-unify-subst1 (actuals controllers acc)
(cond ((endp actuals) acc)
((car controllers)
(controller-unify-subst2
(all-vars (car actuals))
(controller-unify-subst1 (cdr actuals) (cdr controllers) acc)))
(t (controller-unify-subst1 (cdr actuals) (cdr controllers) acc))))
(defun controller-unify-subst (name term def-body)
(let* ((controller-alist (access def-body def-body :controller-alist))
(controllers (cdr (assoc-eq name controller-alist))))
(cond (controllers
(controller-unify-subst1 (fargs term) controllers nil))
(t :none))))
(defun filter-disabled-expand-terms (terms ens wrld)
; We build expand hint structures, throwing certain terms out of terms.
; Variables and constants are kept (but they should never be there). Lambda
; applications are kept. Function symbol applications are kept provided the
; symbol has a non-nil, enabled def-body. There is no point in keeping on
; :expand-lst a term whose function symbol has no def-body, because it is there
; that we go when we decide to force an expansion (from other than
; user-provided :expand hints).
; Note: It is good that HIDE has a body because we allow HIDE terms to be put
; on :expand-lst and we wouldn't want to throw them off.
(cond
((null terms)
nil)
((or (variablep (car terms))
(fquotep (car terms)))
nil)
(t
(cond ((flambdap (ffn-symb (car terms)))
(cons (make expand-hint
:pattern (car terms)
:alist :none
:rune nil
:equiv 'equal
:hyp nil
:lhs (car terms)
:rhs (subcor-var (lambda-formals (ffn-symb (car terms)))
(fargs (car terms))
(lambda-body (ffn-symb (car terms)))))
(filter-disabled-expand-terms (cdr terms) ens wrld)))
(t
(let* ((term (car terms))
(name (ffn-symb term))
(def-body (def-body name wrld))
(formals (access def-body def-body :formals)))
(cond
((and def-body
(enabled-numep (access def-body def-body :nume)
ens))
(cons (make expand-hint
:pattern term
:alist
; Starting after Version_5.0, we use a more generous expansion heuristic during
; induction, in which only actuals in the controller positions must match
; exactly the actuals in induction terms; otherwise the latter may be instances
; of the former. With our first attempt at such a change, 8 proofs failed in
; an ACL2(h) regression, not including possible additional proofs that were not
; attempted because of include-book failures. That attempt didn't remove the
; expand hint when applying it, a heuristic discussed in a long comment in
; expand-permission-result.
; We restored that removal heuristic and the number of failures decreased from
; 8 to 5. But one of those failures was pretty nasty, still with the same
; behavior (as judging by output from :gag-mode :goals) and the same prove
; time: MAIN-LEMMA-3 in community book
; books/data-structures/memories/memtree.lisp. The prove time increased from
; 17 seconds for a successful proof to 20 seconds for (both versions of) this
; failure, with a notably different proof as compared to the successful proof
; (Subgoal *1/2' split into 15 subgoals in the failed proof but only generated
; one subgoal in the successful proof).
; So in addition to restoring the removal heuristic, we now limit the
; application of the expand-hint to instances for which each variable is bound
; either to itself or to a constant (a quotep). That is probably the common
; case in which users had supplied :expand hints because of the formerly weaker
; expand-hint created by the system, say because some non-controller argument
; in the pattern had simplified to 0 or nil.
(cons :constants
(controller-unify-subst name term def-body))
:rune (access def-body def-body :rune)
:equiv 'equal
:hyp (access def-body def-body :hyp)
:lhs (cons-term name formals)
:rhs (access def-body def-body :concl))
(filter-disabled-expand-terms (cdr terms) ens wrld)))
(t (filter-disabled-expand-terms (cdr terms) ens wrld)))))))))
(defun found-hit-rewrite-hist-entry (hist)
; Hist is a list of history-entry records. We search it to find a history
; entry with 'hit-rewrite or 'hit-rewrite2 signal. Note that if we
; find 'hit-rewrite, we know that no previous entry (i.e., later in
; hist when viewed as a list) has signal 'hit-rewrite2, due to the way
; we return signals in simplify-clause.
(if (endp hist)
nil
(or (car (member-eq (access history-entry (car hist) :signal)
'(hit-rewrite hit-rewrite2)))
(found-hit-rewrite-hist-entry (cdr hist)))))
(defun simplify-clause (cl hist pspv wrld state step-limit)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with function simplify-clause-rcnst defined in
; community book books/misc/computed-hint-rewrite.lisp.
; This is a "clause processor" of the waterfall. Its input and output spec is
; consistent with that of all such processors. See the waterfall for a general
; discussion.
; Cl is a clause with history hist. We can obtain a rewrite-constant from the
; prove spec var pspv. We assume nothing about the rewrite-constant except
; that it has the user's hint settings in it and that the pt is nil. We
; install our top-clause and current-clause when necessary.
; We return five values. The first is a new step-limit. The second is a
; signal that in general is 'miss, 'abort, 'error, or a "hit". In this case,
; it is always either 'miss or one of 'hit, 'hit-rewrite, or 'hit-rewrite2 (as
; described further below). When the signal is 'hit, the third result is the
; list of new clauses, the fourth is a ttree that will become that component of
; the history-entry for this simplification, and the fifth is the unmodified
; pspv. (We return the fifth thing to adhere to the convention used by all
; clause processors in the waterfall (q.v.).) When the signal is 'miss, the
; third and fifth results are irrelevant, but we return a ttree whose rw-cache
; may extend the ttree of the input pspv.
; If the second result is a "hit" then the conjunction of the new clauses
; returned implies cl. Equivalently, under the assumption that cl is false, cl
; is equivalent to the conjunction of the new clauses.
; On Tail Biting by Simplify-clause:
; Tail biting can occur at the simplify-clause level, i.e., we can return a set
; of clauses that is a generalization of the clause cl, e.g., a set whose
; conjunction is false even though cl is not. This is because of the way we
; manage the simplify-clause-pot-lst and pts. We build a single pot-lst and
; use parent trees to render inactive those polys that we wish to avoid. To
; arrange to bite our own tail, put two slightly different versions of the same
; inequality literal into cl. The poly arising from the second can be used to
; rewrite the first and the poly arising from first can be used to rewrite the
; second. If the first rewrites to false immediately our use of parent trees
; (as arranged by passing local-rcnst to the recursive call of rewrite-clause
; in rewrite-clause) will wisely prevent the use of its poly while rewriting
; the second. But if the first rewrites to some non-linear term (which will be
; rewritten to false later) then we'll permit ourselves to use the first's poly
; while working on the second and we could bite our tail.
; This would not happen if we produced a new linear pot-lst for each literal --
; a pot-lst in which the literal to be rewritten was not assumed false. Early
; experiments with that approach led us to conclude it was too expensive.
; If the specification of rewrite is correct, then tail biting cannot happen
; except via the involvement of linear arithmetic. To see this, consider the
; assumptions governing the rewriting of each literal in the clause and ask
; whether the literal being rewritten in in rewrite-clause is assumed false via
; any of those assumptions. There are five sources of assumptions in the
; specification of rewrite: (a) the type-alist (which is constructed so as to
; avoid that literal), (b) the assumptions in ancestors (which is initially
; empty), (c) the assumptions in the pot-lst (which we are excepting), and (d)
; 'assumptions in ttree (which we are excepting). Thus, the only place that
; assumption might be found is simplify-clause-pot-lst. If linear is
; eliminated, the only assumptions left are free of the literal being worked
; on.
; This is really an interface function between the rewriter and the rest of the
; prover. It has three jobs.
; The first is to convert from the world of pspv to the world of rcnst. That
; is, from the package of spec vars passed around in the waterfall to the
; package of constants known to the rewriter.
; The second job of this function is to control the expansion of the
; induction-hyp-terms and induction-concl terms (preventing the expansion of
; the former and forcing the expansion of the latter) by possibly adding them
; to terms-to-be-ignored-by-rewrite and expand-lst, respectively. This is done
; as part of the conversion from pspv (where induction hyps and concl are
; found) to rcnst (where terms-to-be-ignored-by-rewrite and expand-lst are
; found). They are so controlled as long as we are in the first simplification
; stages after induction. As soon as the clause has gone through the rewriter
; with some change, with input free of induction-concl-terms, we stop
; interfering. The real work horse of clause level simplification is
; simplify-clause1.
; The third job is to convert the simplify-clause1 answers into the kind
; required by a clause processor in the waterfall. The work horse doesn't
; return an pspv and we do.
(prog2$
(initialize-brr-stack state)
(cond ((assoc-eq 'settled-down-clause hist)
; The clause has settled down under rewriting with the induction-hyp-terms
; initially ignored and the induction-concl-terms forcibly expanded. We now
; stop treating those terms specially and continue simplifying.
; At one time we sometimes avoided simplifying again, in order to save a little
; time, when the clause just settled down -- i.e., the most recent hist entry
; is the one we just found.
; (eq 'settled-down-clause (access history-entry (car hist) :processor))
; In that case, we avoided simplifying again when no specially treated term
; occurs in the clause:
; (not (some-element-dumb-occur-lst
; (access prove-spec-var
; pspv
; :induction-hyp-terms)
; cl)))
; (Note that the induction-concl-terms also don't occur in the clause -- they
; would have been expanded. Or at least: if they do occur in the clause, then
; still, removing them from the expand-lst should not help the rewriter!)
; Later, we added a second condition that must also hold in order to avoid
; simplifying again. If the rw-cache-state is :disabled immediately after a
; hit from settled-down-clause, then we wanted to do the work of making a
; last-ditch attempt at simplification. So the following needed to be true in
; order to avoid simplifying again.
; (not (eq (access rewrite-constant
; (access prove-spec-var pspv :rewrite-constant)
; :rw-cache-state)
; :disabled))
; But now, we always make the extra pass through the simplifier immediately
; after settling down, in order to apply desperation heuristics. At this time
; the only such desperation heuristic is to arrange that add-linear-lemma
; always linearizes the unrewritten conclusion, even when normally only the
; rewritten conclusion would be linearized. See add-linear-lemma, where
; examples may be found that motivated this change.
(let* ((rcnst0 (access prove-spec-var pspv :rewrite-constant))
(local-rcnst (if (eq 'settled-down-clause
(access history-entry (car hist) :processor))
(change rewrite-constant
rcnst0
:force-info
(if (ffnnamep-lst 'if cl)
'weak
t)
:rewriter-state 'settled-down)
(change rewrite-constant
rcnst0
:force-info
(if (ffnnamep-lst 'if cl)
'weak
t)))))
(sl-let (changedp clauses ttree)
(simplify-clause1 cl hist local-rcnst wrld state step-limit)
(cond (changedp
; Note: It is possible that our input, cl, is a member-equal of our output,
; clauses! Such simplifications are said to be "specious." But we do not
; bother to detect that here because we want to report the specious
; simplification as though everything were ok and then pretend nothing
; happened. This gives the user some indication of where the loop is. In the
; old days, we just signalled a 'miss if (member-equal cl clauses) and that
; caused a lot of confusion among experienced users, who saw simplifiable
; clauses being passed on to elim, etc. See :DOC specious-simplification.
(mv step-limit 'hit clauses ttree pspv))
(t (mv step-limit 'miss nil ttree nil))))))
(t
; The clause has not settled down yet. So we arrange to ignore the
; induction-hyp-terms when appropriate, and to expand the induction-concl-terms
; without question. The local-rcnst created below is not passed out of this
; function.
(let* ((rcnst (access prove-spec-var pspv :rewrite-constant))
(new-force-info (if (ffnnamep-lst 'if cl)
'weak
t))
(induction-concl-terms
(access prove-spec-var pspv :induction-concl-terms))
(hist-entry-hit (found-hit-rewrite-hist-entry hist))
(hit-rewrite2 (or (eq hist-entry-hit 'hit-rewrite2)
(and (eq hist-entry-hit 'hit-rewrite)
(not (some-element-dumb-occur-lst
induction-concl-terms
cl)))))
; We arrange to expand the induction-concl-terms and ignore the
; induction-hyp-terms unless hit-rewrite2 above is set.
(local-rcnst
(cond (hit-rewrite2
; We have previously passed through the rewriter, and either a predecessor goal
; or this one is free of induction-concl-terms. In that case we stop meddling
; with the rewriter by inhibiting rewriting of induction-hyp-terms and forcing
; expansion of induction-concl-terms. Before Version_2.8 we waited until
; 'settled-down-clause before ceasing our meddling. However, Dave Greve and
; Matt Wilding reported an example in which that heuristic slowed down the
; prover substantially by needlessly delaying the rewriting of
; induction-hyp-terms. Notice that this heuristic nicely matches the induction
; heuristics: both consider only the goal, not the result of rewriting it. (We
; however ignore rewriting by preprocess-clause for the present purpose: we
; want to wait for a full-blown rewrite before allowing rewriting of
; induction-hyp-terms.)
; Initially we attempted to fix the slowdown mentioned above (the one reported
; by Greve and Wilding) by eliminating completely the special treatment of
; induction-hyp-terms. However, lemma psuedo-termp-binary-op_tree in community
; book books/meta/pseudo-termp-lemmas.lisp showed the folly of this attempt.
; The relevant goal was as follows.
; Subgoal *1/5'
; (IMPLIES (AND (CONSP L)
; (CONSP (CDR L))
; (CONSP (CDDR L))
; (PSEUDO-TERMP (BINARY-OP_TREE BINARY-OP-NAME
; CONSTANT-NAME FIX-NAME (CDR L)))
; (PSEUDO-TERM-LISTP L)
; (SYMBOLP BINARY-OP-NAME)
; (SYMBOLP FIX-NAME)
; (NOT (EQUAL BINARY-OP-NAME 'QUOTE))
; (NOT (CONSP CONSTANT-NAME)))
; (PSEUDO-TERMP (BINARY-OP_TREE BINARY-OP-NAME
; CONSTANT-NAME FIX-NAME L)))
; In this case induction-hyp-terms contained the single term (binary-op_tree
; binary-op-name constant-name fix-name (cdr l)). Without special treatment of
; induction-hyp-terms, the above binary-op_tree term was rewritten, and hence
; so was the pseudo-termp hypothesis. The result seemed to give permission to
; the next hypothesis, (pseudo-term-listp l), to be rewritten much more
; agressively than it was formerly, which bogged down the rewriter (perhaps
; even in an infinite loop).
; A later attempt used the simple algorithm that we stop meddling once we have
; made a pass through the rewriter, even if there are still
; induction-concl-terms around. Lemma flip-eq-subst-commute in community book
; books/workshops/1999/ivy/ivy-v2/ivy-sources/flip.lisp showed the problem with
; that approach. Subgoal *1/2' below was produced by preprocess-clause. It
; produces goal Subgoal *1/2.16, which has a new occurrence in the conclusion
; of the induction-concl-term (SUBST-FREE F X TM):
; Subgoal *1/2'
; (IMPLIES (AND (NOT (WFNOT F))
; (CONSP F)
; (CONSP (CDR F))
; (CONSP (CDDR F))
; (NOT (CDDDR F))
; (OR (EQUAL (CAR F) 'AND)
; (EQUAL (CAR F) 'OR)
; (EQUAL (CAR F) 'IMP)
; (EQUAL (CAR F) 'IFF))
; (EQUAL (SUBST-FREE (FLIP-EQ (CADR F) (CDR POS))
; X TM)
; (FLIP-EQ (SUBST-FREE (CADR F) X TM)
; (CDR POS)))
; (EQUAL (SUBST-FREE (FLIP-EQ (CADDR F) (CDR POS))
; X TM)
; (FLIP-EQ (SUBST-FREE (CADDR F) X TM)
; (CDR POS))))
; (EQUAL (SUBST-FREE (FLIP-EQ F POS) X TM)
; (FLIP-EQ (SUBST-FREE F X TM) POS))).
;
; This simplifies, using the :definitions FLIP-EQ, LEN, LIST2P, LIST3P,
; SUBST-FREE, TRUE-LISTP, WFBINARY, WFEQ and WFNOT, the :executable-
; counterparts of BINARY-+, EQUAL, LEN and TRUE-LISTP, primitive type
; reasoning and the :rewrite rules CAR-CONS and CDR-CONS, to the following
; 16 conjectures.
;
; Subgoal *1/2.16
; (IMPLIES (AND (CONSP F)
; (CONSP (CDR F))
; (CONSP (CDDR F))
; (NOT (CDDDR F))
; (EQUAL (CAR F) 'AND)
; (EQUAL (SUBST-FREE (FLIP-EQ (CADR F) (CDR POS))
; X TM)
; (FLIP-EQ (SUBST-FREE (CADR F) X TM)
; (CDR POS)))
; (EQUAL (SUBST-FREE (FLIP-EQ (CADDR F) (CDR POS))
; X TM)
; (FLIP-EQ (SUBST-FREE (CADDR F) X TM)
; (CDR POS)))
; (NOT (CONSP POS)))
; (EQUAL (SUBST-FREE F X TM)
; (LIST 'AND
; (SUBST-FREE (CADR F) X TM)
; (SUBST-FREE (CADDR F) X TM))))
; If we stop meddling after Subgoal *1/2', then hypothesis rewriting in Subgoal
; *1/2.16 is so severe that we are subject to case-split-limitations and never
; reach the conclusion! If memory serves, an attempt to turn off
; case-split-limitations just led the prover off the deep end.
(change rewrite-constant
rcnst
:force-info new-force-info
; We also tried a modification in which we use the same :expand-lst as below,
; thus continuing to meddle with induction-concl-terms even after we are done
; meddling with induction-hyp-terms. However, that caused problems with, for
; example, the proof of exponents-add-1 in community book
; books/arithmetic-2/pass1/expt-helper.lisp. Apparently the forced expansion
; of (EXPT R J) looped with rule exponents-add-2 (rewriting r^(i+j)). At any
; rate, it seems reasonable enough to keep suppression of induction-hyp-terms
; rewriting in sync with forced expansion of induction-concl-terms.
; And we tried one more idea: removing the test on whether the clause had been
; rewritten. We got one failure, on collect-times-3b in v2-8 in community book
; books/arithmetic-2/meta/common-meta.lisp.
; What happens in the proof attempt is that the induction-concl-terms have been
; eliminated in Subgoal *1/7''. If we check for rewriting, no further meddling
; occurs, and the next subgoal (Subgoal *1/7''') is pushed for proof by
; induction. That's what we want in this case.
; But if we don't check for rewriting then when the induction-concl-term (EXPT
; X J) surprisingly reappears in Subgoal *1/7''', we again expand it. It
; continues to appear in every other goal, causing a loop.
; Now, the suggestion was not to check whether the goal was rewritten, and
; we've given that one interpretation. Another interpretation is to record in
; the history the first time we see a disappearance of induction-concl-terms,
; so that we never again try to expand them (or ignore induction-hyp-terms).
; But it seems that the natural way to record such information still involves
; saving extra information (e.g., the signal) in a history entry. So even
; though it may be redundant, we might as well check that we've done some
; rewriting. That way we don't have to rely on the immediate appearance of
; induction-concl-terms, and yet we are still guaranteed at least one pass
; through the rewriter before stopping the "meddling".
))
(t
(change rewrite-constant
rcnst
:force-info new-force-info
:terms-to-be-ignored-by-rewrite
(append
(access prove-spec-var
pspv :induction-hyp-terms)
(access rewrite-constant
rcnst
:terms-to-be-ignored-by-rewrite))
:expand-lst
(append? (access rewrite-constant
rcnst :expand-lst)
; We give the user's expand-lst priority, in case it specifies :with for a term
; that is also an enabled call in induction-concl-terms.
(filter-disabled-expand-terms
induction-concl-terms
(access rewrite-constant
rcnst
:current-enabled-structure)
wrld)))))))
(sl-let (hitp clauses ttree)
(simplify-clause1 cl hist local-rcnst wrld state step-limit)
(cond
(hitp (mv step-limit
(if hit-rewrite2 'hit-rewrite2 hitp)
clauses ttree pspv))
(t (mv step-limit 'miss nil ttree nil)))))))))
; Inside the waterfall, the following clause processor immediately follows
; simplify-clause.
(defun settled-down-clause (clause hist pspv wrld state)
; This is the processor in the waterfall just after simplify-clause.
; Its presence in the waterfall causes us to add a
; 'settled-down-clause hist-entry to the history of the clause when
; simplify-clause finishes with it. The "hit state" of the waterfall
; leads back to the simplifier, where the code above detects this
; settling down and turns off the handling of the induction hyp and
; concl terms. The "miss state" of the waterfall leads to the next
; processor.
; Note: There has been some consideration given to the question
; ``should this function claim a 'hit after SPECIOUS
; simplify-clauses?'' We say ``yes'' in the comment in
; previous-process-was-speciousp.
(declare (ignore wrld state))
(cond ((assoc-eq 'settled-down-clause hist)
(mv 'miss nil nil nil))
(t (mv 'hit (list clause) nil pspv))))
; We now develop the functions for reporting on the output of simplify.
(defun member-class-name-runes (class name runes)
(cond ((endp runes) nil)
((let ((rune (car runes)))
(and (eq (car rune) class)
(eq (base-symbol rune) name)))
t)
(t (member-class-name-runes class name (cdr runes)))))
(defun extract-and-classify-lemmas2 (names class ignore-lst if-intro case-split
immed-forced forced-runes)
(cond ((endp names) nil)
((member-eq (car names) ignore-lst)
(extract-and-classify-lemmas2 (cdr names) class ignore-lst if-intro
case-split immed-forced forced-runes))
(t
(let ((name (car names)))
(acons name
(append (if (member-class-name-runes class name if-intro)
'("if-intro")
nil)
(if (member-class-name-runes class name case-split)
'("case-split")
nil)
(if (member-class-name-runes class name immed-forced)
'("immed-forced")
nil)
(if (member-class-name-runes class name forced-runes)
'("forced")
nil))
(extract-and-classify-lemmas2 (cdr names) class ignore-lst
if-intro case-split
immed-forced forced-runes))))))
(defun extract-and-classify-lemmas1 (class-alist ignore-lst if-intro case-split
immed-forced forced-runes)
(cond ((endp class-alist) nil)
(t (let* ((class (caar class-alist))
(symbol-alist
(extract-and-classify-lemmas2
(cdar class-alist) ; names
class ignore-lst if-intro case-split immed-forced
forced-runes))
(rest
(extract-and-classify-lemmas1
(cdr class-alist) ignore-lst if-intro case-split
immed-forced forced-runes)))
(cond
(symbol-alist (acons class symbol-alist rest))
(t rest))))))
(defun runes-to-class-alist1 (runes alist)
(cond ((endp runes) alist)
(t (let* ((rune (car runes))
(type (car rune))
(sym (base-symbol rune))
(old (cdr (assoc-eq type alist))))
(runes-to-class-alist1 (cdr runes)
(put-assoc-eq type
(cons sym old)
alist))))))
; We admit the following sorting functions in :logic mode, verify their guards,
; and prove properties of them in community book books/misc/sort-symbols.lisp.
(defun strict-merge-symbol-< (l1 l2 acc)
; If l1 and l2 are strictly ordered by symbol-< and above acc, which is also
; thus strictly ordered, then the result is strictly ordered by symbol-<.
(declare (xargs :guard (and (symbol-listp l1)
(symbol-listp l2)
(true-listp acc))
; We admit this to the logic and prove termination in community book
; books/misc/sort-symbols.lisp.
:mode :program))
(cond ((endp l1) (revappend acc l2))
((endp l2) (revappend acc l1))
((eq (car l1) (car l2))
(strict-merge-symbol-< (cdr l1) (cdr l2) (cons (car l1) acc)))
((symbol-< (car l1) (car l2))
(strict-merge-symbol-< (cdr l1) l2 (cons (car l1) acc)))
(t (strict-merge-symbol-< l1 (cdr l2) (cons (car l2) acc)))))
(defun strict-merge-sort-symbol-< (l)
; Produces a result with the same elements as the list l of symbols, but
; strictly ordered by symbol-name.
(declare (xargs :guard (symbol-listp l)
; We admit this to the logic and prove termination in community book
; books/misc/sort-symbols.lisp.
:mode :program))
(cond ((endp (cdr l)) l)
(t (strict-merge-symbol-<
(strict-merge-sort-symbol-< (evens l))
(strict-merge-sort-symbol-< (odds l))
nil))))
(defun strict-symbol-<-sortedp (x)
(declare (xargs :guard (symbol-listp x)))
(cond ((or (endp x) (null (cdr x)))
t)
(t (and (symbol-< (car x) (cadr x))
(strict-symbol-<-sortedp (cdr x))))))
(defun sort-symbol-listp (x)
(declare (xargs :guard (symbol-listp x)))
(cond ((strict-symbol-<-sortedp x)
x)
(t (strict-merge-sort-symbol-< x))))
(defun strict-merge-sort-symbol-<-cdrs (alist)
(cond ((endp alist) nil)
(t (acons (caar alist)
(strict-merge-sort-symbol-< (cdar alist))
(strict-merge-sort-symbol-<-cdrs (cdr alist))))))
(defun runes-to-class-alist (runes)
(strict-merge-sort-symbol-<-cdrs
(runes-to-class-alist1
runes
(pairlis$ (strict-merge-sort-symbol-< (strip-cars runes))
nil))))
(defun extract-and-classify-lemmas (ttree ignore-lst forced-runes)
; We essentially partition the set of runes tagged as 'lemmas in ttree into
; partitions based on the type (i.e., the keyword token) for each rune. In
; addition, we indicate whether the rune was applied as a splitter rune, and if
; so, of which types. In our partitioning we actually throw away the runes and
; just report the corresponding base symbols.
; In particular, scan ttree for all the 'lemma tags and return an alist
; associating each type of rune used in the ttree with an alist associating
; runes with types of splitters, except that we ignore runes whose whose base
; symbols are in ignore-lst.
; An example alist returned is
; '((:DEFINITION (APP) (REV FORCED))
; (:REWRITE (LEMMA1) (LEMMA2 IF-INTRO FORCED) (LEMMA3 CASE-SPLIT))
; (:TYPE-PRESCRIPTION (FN1 FORCED) (FN2 FORCED) (FN3)))
; indicating that three :REWRITE runes were used, with base symbols
; LEMMA1, LEMMA2 (which was forced and also introduced a call of IF), and
; LEMMA3, etc.
; The alist is sorted by car. Each value is itself an alist that is itself
; sorted by car.
(extract-and-classify-lemmas1
(runes-to-class-alist (tagged-objects 'lemma ttree))
ignore-lst
(tagged-objects 'splitter-if-intro ttree)
(tagged-objects 'splitter-case-split ttree)
(tagged-objects 'splitter-immed-forced ttree)
forced-runes))
(defun tilde-*-conjunction-of-possibly-forced-names-phrase1 (alist)
(cond
((null alist) nil)
(t (cons (let ((name (caar alist))
(splitter-types (cdar alist)))
(cond ((null splitter-types)
(msg "~x0" name))
(t (msg "~x0 (~*1)"
name
(list "" "~s*" "~s*," "~s*,"
splitter-types)))))
(tilde-*-conjunction-of-possibly-forced-names-phrase1
(cdr alist))))))
(defun tilde-*-conjunction-of-possibly-forced-names-phrase (lst)
; Lst is a list of pairs of the form (flg . name). We build a tilde-* phrase
; that will print a conjoined list of names, with the parenthetical remark "forced"
; occurring just after those with flg t.
; For example, if lst is
; ((NIL . APP) (T . REV) (NIL . LEN) (T . MEM) (T . SQ))
; and the output of this function is bound to the fmt variable
; #\D, then ~*D prints "APP, REV (forced), LEN, MEM (forced) and SQ
; (forced)".
(list "" "~@*" "~@* and " "~@*, "
(tilde-*-conjunction-of-possibly-forced-names-phrase1 lst)))
(defconst *fake-rune-alist*
; We use this constant for dealing with fake runes in tag-trees. We ignore
; *fake-rune-for-anonymous-enabled-rule*, because push-lemma is careful not to
; put it into any tag-trees.
(list (cons (car *fake-rune-for-linear*)
"linear arithmetic")
(cons (car *fake-rune-for-type-set*)
"primitive type reasoning")))
(defun rune-< (x y)
(cond
((eq (car x) (car y))
(or (symbol-< (cadr x) (cadr y))
(and (eq (cadr x) (cadr y))
(cond ((null (cddr x))
(cddr y))
((null (cddr y))
nil)
(t (< (cddr x) (cddr y)))))))
((symbol-< (car x) (car y))
t)
(t
nil)))
(defun merge-runes (l1 l2)
(cond ((null l1) l2)
((null l2) l1)
((rune-< (car l1) (car l2))
(cons (car l1) (merge-runes (cdr l1) l2)))
(t (cons (car l2) (merge-runes l1 (cdr l2))))))
(defun merge-sort-runes (l)
(cond ((null (cdr l)) l)
(t (merge-runes (merge-sort-runes (evens l))
(merge-sort-runes (odds l))))))
(defun tilde-*-simp-phrase1 (alist abbreviations-flg)
(cond
((null alist) (mv nil nil))
(t
(let ((pair (assoc-eq (caar alist) *fake-rune-alist*)))
(cond
(pair
(mv-let (rest-msgs rest-pairs)
(tilde-*-simp-phrase1 (cdr alist) abbreviations-flg)
(mv (cons (cdr pair) rest-msgs)
rest-pairs)))
(t
(let ((names
(tilde-*-conjunction-of-possibly-forced-names-phrase
(cdar alist)))
; Note: Names is a tilde-* object that will print a conjoined list of names
; (possibly followed by parenthetical remarks for splitters). We must
; determine whether there is more than one name in the list. The names printe
; are just those in (cdar alist), which we know is a non-empty true list of
; pairs. Below we set pluralp to t if two or more names will be printed and to
; nil if exactly one name will be printed.
(pluralp (if (cdr (cdar alist)) t nil)))
(mv-let
(msg pair)
(case (caar alist)
(:DEFINITION
(mv (if abbreviations-flg
(if pluralp
"the simple :definitions ~*D"
"the simple :definition ~*D")
(if pluralp
"the :definitions ~*D"
"the :definition ~*D"))
(cons #\D names)))
(:EXECUTABLE-COUNTERPART
(mv (if pluralp
"the :executable-counterparts of ~*X"
"the :executable-counterpart of ~*X")
(cons #\X names)))
(:REWRITE
(mv (if abbreviations-flg
(if pluralp
"the simple :rewrite rules ~*R"
"the simple :rewrite rule ~*R")
(if pluralp
"the :rewrite rules ~*R"
"the :rewrite rule ~*R"))
(cons #\R names)))
(:LINEAR
(mv (if pluralp
"the :linear rules ~*L"
"the :linear rule ~*L")
(cons #\L names)))
(:BUILT-IN-CLAUSE
(mv (if pluralp
"the :built-in-clause rules ~*B"
"the :built-in-clause rule ~*B")
(cons #\B names)))
(:COMPOUND-RECOGNIZER
(mv (if pluralp
"the :compound-recognizer rules ~*C"
"the :compound-recognizer rule ~*C")
(cons #\C names)))
; We do not expect the following three cases to arise in the
; simplifier, but this function finds wider use.
(:ELIM
(mv (if pluralp
"the :elim rules ~*e"
"the :elim rule ~*e")
(cons #\e names)))
(:GENERALIZE
(mv (if pluralp
"the :generalize rules ~*G"
"the :generalize rule ~*G")
(cons #\G names)))
(:INDUCTION
(mv (if pluralp
"the :induction rules ~*I"
"the :induction rule ~*I")
(cons #\I names)))
(:META
(mv (if pluralp
"the :meta rules ~*M"
"the :meta rule ~*M")
(cons #\M names)))
(:FORWARD-CHAINING
(mv (if pluralp
"the :forward-chaining rules ~*F"
"the :forward-chaining rule ~*F")
(cons #\F names)))
(:EQUIVALENCE
(mv (if pluralp
"the :equivalence rules ~*E"
"the :equivalence rule ~*E")
(cons #\E names)))
(:REFINEMENT
(mv (if pluralp
"the :refinement rules ~*r"
"the :refinement rule ~*r")
(cons #\r names)))
(:CONGRUENCE
(mv (if pluralp
"the :congruence rules ~*c"
"the :congruence rule ~*c")
(cons #\c names)))
(:TYPE-PRESCRIPTION
(mv (if pluralp
"the :type-prescription rules ~*T"
"the :type-prescription rule ~*T")
(cons #\T names)))
(:TYPE-SET-INVERTER
(mv (if pluralp
"the :type-set-inverter rules ~*t"
"the :type-set-inverter rule ~*t")
(cons #\t names)))
(otherwise
(mv (er hard 'tilde-*-simp-phrase1
"We did not expect to see the simplifier report a rune ~
of type ~x0."
(caar alist))
nil)))
(mv-let (rest-msgs rest-pairs)
(tilde-*-simp-phrase1 (cdr alist) abbreviations-flg)
(mv (cons msg rest-msgs)
(cons pair rest-pairs)))))))))))
(defun tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase1 (runes forced-runes punct ignore-lst phrase
acc)
(cond
((null runes)
(cond ((null acc)
(mv nil (list (cons #\p (if phrase
(msg " " phrase)
"")))))
(t (mv (list (concatenate 'string
"~@Fthe list of runes,~|~% ~YRe"
(case punct
(#\, ",~|~%")
(#\. ".~|")
(otherwise "~|"))
"~@p"))
(list (cons #\F
(if forced-runes
(msg "(forcing with ~&0) "
forced-runes)
""))
(cons #\p (if phrase
(msg "~@0~|" phrase)
""))
(cons #\R (merge-sort-runes (reverse acc)))
(cons #\e nil))))))
(t
(let ((pair (assoc-eq (caar runes) *fake-rune-alist*)))
(cond
(pair
(mv-let (rest-msgs rest-pairs)
(tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase1 (cdr runes) forced-runes punct
ignore-lst phrase acc)
(mv (cons (if (null rest-msgs)
(concatenate 'string
(cdr pair)
(case punct
(#\, ",")
(#\. ".")
(otherwise "")))
(cdr pair))
rest-msgs)
rest-pairs)))
(t (tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase1 (cdr runes) forced-runes
punct ignore-lst phrase
(if (member-eq (base-symbol (car runes))
ignore-lst)
acc
(cons (car runes) acc)))))))))
(defun recover-forced-runes1 (recs ans)
(cond
((endp recs) ans)
(t (recover-forced-runes1
(cdr recs)
(let ((rune (access assumnote
(car (access assumption (car recs) :assumnotes))
:rune)))
(cond ((not (symbolp rune))
(add-to-set-equal rune ans))
(t ans)))))))
(defun recover-forced-runes (ttree)
; Every assumption in ttree has exactly one assumnote. Let the ":rune" of the
; assumption be the :rune field of the car of its assumnotes.
; We scan the tag-tree ttree for all occurrences of the 'assumption tag and
; collect into ans the :rune of each assumption, when the :rune is a rune. We
; ignore the symbolp :runes because we will be searching the resulting list for
; genuine runes and thus need not clutter it with symbols.
(recover-forced-runes1 (tagged-objects 'assumption ttree) nil))
(defun tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase (ttree punct phrase)
; See tilde-*-simp-phrase. But here, we print for the case that state global
; 'raw-proof-format is true. We supply the concluding punctuation msg, punct.
(let ((forced-runes (recover-forced-runes ttree)))
(let ((runes (all-runes-in-ttree ttree nil)))
(mv-let (message-lst char-alist)
(tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase1
runes
forced-runes
punct
nil
phrase
nil)
(list* (concatenate 'string "trivial ob~-ser~-va~-tions"
(case punct
(#\, ", ") ; Space not always needed?
(#\. ".")
(otherwise "")))
"~@*"
"~@* and "
"~@*, "
message-lst
char-alist)))))
(defun tilde-*-simp-phrase (ttree)
; This function determines from ttree whether linear arithmetic and/or
; primitive type reasoning was used and what lemmas and function symbols were
; used. Then it constructs and returns a tuple suitable for giving to the ~*
; fmt directive. I.e., if you fmt the string "The proof depends upon ~*S."
; and #\S is bound to the output of this function, then you will get something
; like:
; v
; The proof depends upon linear arithmetic, the lemma ASSOC-OF-APP
; (forced), and the definitions of APP (forced) and REVERSE.
; ^
; Note that the msg actually starts at the v above and stops at the ^.
; I.e., no space will be printed at the beginning, and no space or
; punctuation will be printed at the end.
; Note: Several functions know that if (nth 4 output) is nil, where
; output is the result of this function, then essentially nothing was
; done (i.e., "trivial observations" would be printed).
(let ((forced-runes (recover-forced-runes ttree)))
(mv-let (message-lst char-alist)
(tilde-*-simp-phrase1
(extract-and-classify-lemmas ttree nil forced-runes)
nil)
(list* "trivial ob~-ser~-va~-tions"
"~@*"
"~@* and "
"~@*, "
message-lst
char-alist))))
(defun tilde-@-pool-name-phrase (forcing-round pool-lst)
; We use this function to create the printed representation from the
; forcing-round and pool-lst. This function actually has two uses. First,
; pool-names are used within a single round to refer to local goals, such as
; when we say "Name the formula above *1." or, more suggestively "Name the
; formula above [2]*1.3.4." In such use, the forcing round is placed just
; before the star, in square brackets. But pool-names also play a role in
; "clause ids" such as [2]Subgoal *1.3.4/1.1'''. Observe that in clause ids
; the pool-name is printed here ^^^^^^ but the forcing-round is
; not printed in the normal place but before the word "Subgoal." Basically,
; the forcing-round is always leading. Thus, we need two versions of this
; function, one that puts the forcing-round in and another that does not.
; Confusingly but conveniently, if the forcing round is 0, we do not display it
; and so the two uses of this function -- to generate stand-alone pool names
; and to generate parts of clause ids -- appear somewhat hidden. But you will
; find calls of this function where the forcing-round supplied is 0 --
; signallying that we want a pool name to use within a clause id -- even though
; the actual forcing-round at the time of call is non-0.
(cond
((= forcing-round 0)
; Notes:
; 1. This asterisk is the one that appears in the printed name.
; 2. If you wanted trailing punctuation, you could put it before
; this close double gritch.
; 3. These two dots are the ones that separate numbers in the name.
; 1 2 3 3
; ! ! ! !
(cons "*~*0"
(list (cons #\0 (list "" "~x*" "~x*." "~x*." pool-lst)))))
(t
(cons "[~xr]*~*0"
(list (cons #\r forcing-round)
(cons #\0 (list "" "~x*" "~x*." "~x*." pool-lst)))))))
(defun tilde-@-pool-name-phrase-lst (forcing-round lst)
(cond ((null lst) nil)
(t (cons (tilde-@-pool-name-phrase forcing-round (car lst))
(tilde-@-pool-name-phrase-lst forcing-round (cdr lst))))))
(defun tilde-@-clause-id-phrase (id)
; Warning: Keep this in sync with string-for-tilde-@-clause-id-phrase (and its
; subfunctions).
; Id is a clause-id. This function builds a tilde-@ object that when printed
; will display the clause id in its external form.
; Warning: If this function is changed so as to print differently, change the
; associated parser, parse-clause-id. Also change the clone of
; this function, string-for-tilde-@-clause-id-phrase.
; For example, if id is
; (make clause-id
; :forcing-round 3
; :pool-lst '(2 1)
; :case-lst '(5 7 9 11)
; :primes 3)
; then the result of a tilde-@ on the returned object will be:
; [3]Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'''
; The parser noted above will parse "[3]Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'''" into the
; clause-id above. Will wonders never cease? Boyer and Moore wrote a parser?
; If the forcing-round is 0, then we do not print the [...] displaying the forcing-round.
; The sequence of id's printed as the primes field goes from 0 to 11 is
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11''
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'''
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'4'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'5'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'6'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'7'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'8'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'9'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'10'
; Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'11'
; If the pool-lst is nil (which is not a pool list ever produced by
; pool-lst but which is used before we have pushed anything into the
; pool), then we print
; Subgoal 5.7.9.11'''
; or
; [3]Subgoal 5.7.9.11'''
; depending on the forcing-round.
; And if the pool-lst is nil and the case-lst is nil we print
; Goal'''
; or
; [3]Goal'''
(cons (cond
((= (access clause-id id :forcing-round) 0)
(cond ((null (access clause-id id :pool-lst))
(cond ((null (access clause-id id :case-lst))
"Goal~#q~[~/'~/''~/'''~/'~xn'~]")
(t "Subgoal ~@c~#q~[~/'~/''~/'''~/'~xn'~]")))
(t "Subgoal ~@p/~@c~#q~[~/'~/''~/'''~/'~xn'~]")))
(t
(cond ((null (access clause-id id :pool-lst))
(cond ((null (access clause-id id :case-lst))
"[~xr]Goal~#q~[~/'~/''~/'''~/'~xn'~]")
(t "[~xr]Subgoal ~@c~#q~[~/'~/''~/'''~/'~xn'~]")))
(t "[~xr]Subgoal ~@p/~@c~#q~[~/'~/''~/'''~/'~xn'~]"))))
(list
(cons #\r (access clause-id id :forcing-round))
(cons #\p
(tilde-@-pool-name-phrase 0 (access clause-id id :pool-lst)))
(cons #\c
(cons "~*0"
(list (cons #\0 (list "" "~x*" "~x*." "~x*."
(access clause-id id :case-lst))))))
(cons #\q
(cond ((> (access clause-id id :primes) 3) 4)
(t (access clause-id id :primes))))
(cons #\n
(access clause-id id :primes)))))
(defrec bddnote
(cl-id goal-term mx-id err-string fmt-alist cst term bdd-call-stack ttree)
nil)
(defun tilde-@-bddnote-phrase (x)
; Bddnote is either a tagged bddnote pair or nil. This function returns a ~@
; phrase to be used just after "But simplification" or "This simplifies".
(cond ((null x) "")
(t (msg " with BDDs (~x0 nodes)"
(access bddnote x :mx-id)))))
; Clause-ids are typed as strings by the user when he wants to
; identify a clause to which some hint settings are attached. We now
; develop the machinery for parsing the user's strings into clause-id
; records.
(defun parse-natural1 (str i maximum ans)
; Starting at the ith position of string str we parse a natural
; number. We return the number read (or nil, if the first char we see
; is not a digit) and the position of the first non-digit. Ans should
; be initially nil.
(cond ((>= i maximum) (mv ans maximum))
(t (let* ((c (char str i))
(d (case c
(#\0 0)
(#\1 1)
(#\2 2)
(#\3 3)
(#\4 4)
(#\5 5)
(#\6 6)
(#\7 7)
(#\8 8)
(#\9 9)
(otherwise nil))))
(cond (d (parse-natural1 str (1+ i) maximum
(cond ((null ans) d)
(t (+ (* 10 ans) d)))))
(t (mv ans i)))))))
(defun parse-natural (dflg str i maximum)
; If dflg is nil, this is just parse-natural1, i.e., starting at the
; ith position of string str we parse a natural number. We return the
; number read (or nil, if the first char we see is not a digit) and
; the position of the first non-digit.
; If dflg is non-nil, we allow an initial D, which we add to the final
; answer with packn, thus returning a symbol rather than a natural.
; Thus, if D123 parses as that symbol, if dflg is non-nil.
(cond
((>= i maximum) (mv nil maximum))
((and dflg (eql (char str i) #\D))
(mv-let (ans k)
(parse-natural1 str (+ 1 i) maximum nil)
(cond ((null ans)
(mv nil i))
(t (mv (packn (list 'D ans)) k)))))
(t (parse-natural1 str i maximum nil))))
(defun parse-dotted-naturals (dflg str i maximum ans)
; For now, assume dflg is nil.
; Starting at the ith position of string str we parse a list of
; naturals separated by dots. We return the list of naturals (which
; may be nil) and the position of the first character not parsed.
; Here are some examples. In all cases, assume the initial i is 1.
; "*2.1.3 abc..." => (2 1 3) and 6 (which points to the #\Space)
; " Subgoal..." => nil and 1 (which points to the #\S)
; " 5.7.9" => (5 7 9) and 6 (which is just off the end)
; " 5.7ABC" => (5 7) and 4 (which points to the #\A)
; " 5.7.ABC" => (5 7) and 4 (which points to the #\.)
; The last example bears thinking about.
; If dflg is non-nil, we allow Dn where naturals are expected above.
; I.e., "*2.1.D23.4 abc" would parse to (2 1 D23 4). Thus, the
; variable nat below may sometimes hold a symbol, e.g., D23.
(cond
((>= i maximum) (mv (reverse ans) maximum))
(t (mv-let (nat j)
(parse-natural dflg str i maximum)
(cond ((null nat) (mv (reverse ans) i))
((>= j maximum) (mv (reverse (cons nat ans)) maximum))
((and (eql (char str j) #\.)
(< (1+ j) maximum)
(or (member
(char str (1+ j))
'(#\0 #\1 #\2 #\3 #\4 #\5 #\6 #\7 #\8 #\9))
(and dflg (eql (char str (1+ j)) #\D))))
(parse-dotted-naturals dflg str (1+ j) maximum
(cons nat ans)))
(t (mv (reverse (cons nat ans)) j)))))))
(defun parse-match (pat j patmax str i strmax)
; Starting at the ith char of string str we match each against its
; counterpart in pat, starting at j. If we exhaust pat we return the
; position of the first character in str past the match. Otherwise we
; return nil. This matching is case-insensitive.
(cond ((>= j patmax) i)
((>= i strmax) nil)
((or (eql (char pat j) (char str i))
(eql (char-downcase (char pat j)) (char-downcase (char str i))))
(parse-match pat (1+ j) patmax str (1+ i) strmax))
(t nil)))
(defun parse-primes (str i maximum)
; Starting at the ith char of string str we count the "number of primes."
; ', '', and ''' are 1, 2, and 3, respectively. '4' is 4, '5' is 5, etc.
; We return nil if the string we find is not of this form. We also return
; the index of the first character not parsed.
(cond
((>= i maximum) (mv 0 maximum))
((eql (char str i) #\')
(cond ((= (+ 1 i) maximum) (mv 1 maximum))
((eql (char str (+ 1 i)) #\')
(cond ((= (+ 2 i) maximum) (mv 2 maximum))
((eql (char str (+ 2 i)) #\') (mv 3 (+ 3 i)))
(t (mv 2 (+ 2 i)))))
(t (mv-let
(nat j)
(parse-natural nil str (+ 1 i) maximum)
(cond
((null nat) (mv 1 (+ 1 i)))
((< nat 4) (mv 1 (+ 1 i)))
((= j maximum) (mv 1 (+ 1 i)))
((eql (char str j) #\') (mv nat (+ 1 j)))
(t (mv 1 (+ 1 i))))))))
(t (mv 0 i))))
(defun parse-clause-id2 (forcing-round pool-lst str i maximum)
; Assume that pool-lst is a pool-lst. Suppose that at position i in
; string str there is a case-lst followed by some primes, e.g.,
; "...5.7.9.11'''". We parse them out and check that the string ends
; at the end of the primes. We return a clause-id composed of the
; pool-lst supplied above and the parsed case-lst and primes. If the
; parse fails, we return nil.
(mv-let
(case-lst j)
(parse-dotted-naturals t str i maximum nil) ; Allow D's.
(cond ((member 0 case-lst)
nil)
(t
; So we've seen "...5.7.9.11..." where ... may be empty.
; We look for the primes.
(mv-let
(n j)
(parse-primes str j maximum)
(cond ((= j maximum)
(make clause-id
:forcing-round forcing-round
:pool-lst pool-lst
:case-lst case-lst
:primes n))
(t nil)))))))
(defun parse-clause-id1 (forcing-round str i maximum)
; This function takes a string, e.g., "...Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'''" and an
; index i into it to indicate the terminal substring of interest. We parse
; that terminal substring into the internal clause id with forcing-round as its
; :forcing-round. For example, if i points to the S in subgoal above, then the
; result is
; (make clause-id
; :forcing-round forcing-round
; :pool-lst '(2 1)
; :case-lst '(5 7 9 11)
; :primes 3)
; We return nil if the substring does not parse.
(cond
((< maximum (+ i 4)) nil)
((member (char str i) '(#\G #\g))
; The only thing this string could be is something of the form "Goal'...". In
; particular, we know that the pool-lst and the case-lst are both nil and it is
; merely a question of counting primes.
(let ((k (parse-match "Goal" 0 4 str i maximum)))
(cond (k
(mv-let (n j)
(parse-primes str k maximum)
(cond ((= j maximum)
(make clause-id
:forcing-round forcing-round
:pool-lst nil
:case-lst nil
:primes n))
(t nil))))
(t nil))))
(t
(let ((k (parse-match "Subgoal " 0 8 str i maximum)))
(cond ((null k) nil)
((>= k maximum) nil)
((eql (char str k) #\*)
(mv-let
(pool-lst j)
(parse-dotted-naturals nil str (1+ k) maximum nil) ; disallow D's
(cond
((or (null pool-lst)
(member 0 pool-lst)
(> (+ 1 j) maximum)
(not (eql (char str j) #\/)))
; So we've seen "Subgoal *junk" and we return nil.
nil)
(t
; So we've seen "Subgoal *2.1/..." where ... is non-empty. We look for the
; case-lst now.
(parse-clause-id2 forcing-round pool-lst str (+ 1 j) maximum)))))
(t
; So we've seen "Subgoal ..." where ... doesn't begin with #\*. Thus it can
; only be a case-lst followed by primes.
(parse-clause-id2 forcing-round nil str k maximum)))))))
(defun parse-clause-id (str)
; This function takes a string, e.g., "[3]Subgoal *2.1/5.7.9.11'''" and either
; parses it into an internal clause id or returns nil. For example, on the
; string above the result is
; (make clause-id
; :forcing-round 3
; :pool-lst '(2 1)
; :case-lst '(5 7 9 11)
; :primes 3)
; We are case insensitive, but totally rigid about whitespace. We
; expect that the user will most often obtain these strings by
; grabbing the fmt output of a tilde-@-clause-id-phrase object. Users
; sometimes use Emacs to lowercase whole regions of events and that is
; why we are case insensitive.
; We recognize two special cases of clause-id's that are never printed
; by prove. "Goal" and the symbol T both denote the top-level
; clause-id.
(cond
((stringp str)
(let* ((maximum (length str)))
(cond
((< maximum 4) nil)
((eql (char str 0) #\[)
(mv-let (forcing-round i)
(parse-natural nil str 1 maximum)
(cond
((and forcing-round
(eql (char str i) #\]))
(parse-clause-id1 forcing-round str (1+ i) maximum))
(t nil))))
(t (parse-clause-id1 0 str 0 maximum)))))
((eq str t) *initial-clause-id*)
(t nil)))
(defun tilde-@-case-split-limitations-phrase (sr-flg case-flg prefix)
(if (or sr-flg case-flg)
(msg "~@0(By the way, the ~@1 affected this analysis. See :DOC ~
case-split-limitations.)"
prefix
(if sr-flg
(if case-flg
"subsumption/replacement and case limits"
"subsumption/replacement limit")
"case limit"))
""))
; And now we can define the output routine for simplify-clause, which is also
; used in apply-top-hints-clause-msg1.
(defun simplify-clause-msg1 (signal cl-id clauses speciousp ttree pspv state)
; The arguments to this function are NOT the standard ones for an
; output function in the waterfall because we are prepared to print a
; message about the simplification being specious and as of this
; writing simplification is the only process that may be specious.
; Exception: OBDD processing also uses this function, and can also
; produce specious simplification. Note that our current treatment of
; OBDDs does not create 'assumptions; however, we check for them
; anyhow here, both in order to share this code between
; simplify-clause and OBDD processing and in order to be robust (in
; case forcing enters the realm of OBDD processing later).
; See the discussion of the waterfall for more details about the
; standard arguments for processors.
(declare (ignore signal pspv))
(let ((raw-proof-format (f-get-global 'raw-proof-format state)))
(cond
(speciousp
; At one time had access to the clauses and could print a little more
; information here. But apparently the code was reorganized in Version_3.3
; such that clauses is nil at this point. It seems unimportant to report how
; many clauses there are in the specious case.
(fms "This ~#0~[~/forcibly ~]simplifies~@b, using ~*1~@pto a set of ~
conjectures including ~@3 itself! Therefore, we ignore this ~
specious simp~-li~-fi~-ca~-tion. See :DOC ~
specious-simplification.~@c~|"
(list (cons #\0 (if (tagged-objectsp 'assumption ttree) 1 0))
(cons #\1 (if raw-proof-format
(tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase ttree #\, "")
(tilde-*-simp-phrase ttree)))
(cons #\p (if raw-proof-format "" ", "))
(cons #\3 (tilde-@-clause-id-phrase cl-id))
(cons #\b (tilde-@-bddnote-phrase
(tagged-object 'bddnote ttree)))
(cons #\c (tilde-@-case-split-limitations-phrase
(tagged-objects 'sr-limit ttree)
(tagged-objects 'case-limit ttree)
" ")))
(proofs-co state)
state
(term-evisc-tuple nil state)))
((null clauses)
(cond
(raw-proof-format
(fms "But ~#0~[~/forced ~]simplification~@b reduces this to T, using ~
~*1~|"
(list (cons #\0 (if (tagged-objectsp 'assumption ttree) 1 0))
(cons #\1 (tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase
ttree
#\.
(tilde-@-case-split-limitations-phrase
(tagged-objects 'sr-limit ttree)
(tagged-objects 'case-limit ttree)
"")))
(cons #\b (tilde-@-bddnote-phrase
(tagged-object 'bddnote ttree))))
(proofs-co state)
state
(term-evisc-tuple nil state)))
(t
(fms "But ~#0~[~/forced ~]simplification~@b reduces this to T, using ~
~*1.~@c~|"
(list (cons #\0 (if (tagged-objectsp 'assumption ttree) 1 0))
(cons #\1 (tilde-*-simp-phrase ttree))
(cons #\b (tilde-@-bddnote-phrase
(tagged-object 'bddnote ttree)))
(cons #\c (tilde-@-case-split-limitations-phrase
(tagged-objects 'sr-limit ttree)
(tagged-objects 'case-limit ttree)
" ")))
(proofs-co state)
state
(term-evisc-tuple nil state)))))
(t
(let ((hyp-phrase (tagged-object 'hyp-phrase ttree)))
(cond (hyp-phrase
(fms "We remove HIDE from ~@0, which was used heuristically to ~
transform ~@1 by substituting into the rest of that ~
goal. This produces~|"
(list (cons #\0 hyp-phrase)
(cons #\1 (tilde-@-clause-id-phrase
(tagged-object 'clause-id ttree))))
(proofs-co state)
state
(term-evisc-tuple nil state)))
(raw-proof-format
(fms "This ~#0~[~/forcibly ~]simplifies~@b, using ~*1~
to~#2~[~/ the following ~n3 conjectures.~@c~]~|"
(list (cons #\0 (if (tagged-objectsp 'assumption ttree) 1 0))
(cons #\1 (tilde-*-raw-simp-phrase ttree #\, ""))
(cons #\2 clauses)
(cons #\3 (length clauses))
(cons #\b (tilde-@-bddnote-phrase
(tagged-object 'bddnote ttree)))
(cons #\c (tilde-@-case-split-limitations-phrase
(tagged-objectsp 'sr-limit ttree)
(tagged-objectsp 'case-limit ttree)
" ")))
(proofs-co state)
state
(term-evisc-tuple nil state)))
(t
(fms "This ~#0~[~/forcibly ~]simplifies~@b, using ~*1, ~
to~#2~[~/ the following ~n3 conjectures.~@c~]~|"
(list (cons #\0 (if (tagged-objectsp 'assumption ttree) 1 0))
(cons #\1 (tilde-*-simp-phrase ttree))
(cons #\2 clauses)
(cons #\3 (length clauses))
(cons #\b (tilde-@-bddnote-phrase
(tagged-object 'bddnote ttree)))
(cons #\c (tilde-@-case-split-limitations-phrase
(tagged-objectsp 'sr-limit ttree)
(tagged-objectsp 'case-limit ttree)
" ")))
(proofs-co state)
state
(term-evisc-tuple nil state)))))))))
(defun settled-down-clause-msg1 (signal clauses ttree pspv state)
; The arguments to this function are the standard ones for an output
; function in the waterfall. See the discussion of the waterfall.
(declare (ignore signal clauses ttree pspv))
state)
|