Major Section: INTRODUCTION-TO-THE-THEOREM-PROVER
This answer is in the form of a script sufficient to lead ACL2 to a proof.
; Tryingdupsp-rev
at this point produces the key checkpoint:; (IMPLIES (AND (CONSP X) ; (NOT (MEMBER (CAR X) (CDR X))) ; (EQUAL (DUPSP (REV (CDR X))) ; (DUPSP (CDR X)))) ; (EQUAL (DUPSP (APPEND (REV (CDR X)) (LIST (CAR X)))) ; (DUPSP (CDR X))))
; which suggests the lemma
; (defthm dupsp-append ; (implies (not (member e x)) ; (equal (dupsp (append x (list e))) ; (dupsp x))))
; However, attempting to prove that, produces a key checkpoint ; containing
(MEMBER (CAR X) (APPEND (CDR X) (LIST E)))
. ; So we prove the lemma:(defthm member-append (iff (member e (append a b)) (or (member e a) (member e b))))
; Note that we had to use
iff
instead ofequal
sincemember
is not a ; Boolean function.; Having proved this lemma, we return to
dupsp-append
and succeed:(defthm dupsp-append (implies (not (member e x)) (equal (dupsp (append x (list e))) (dupsp x))))
; So now we return to
dups-rev
, expecting success. But it fails ; with the same key checkpoint:; (IMPLIES (AND (CONSP X) ; (NOT (MEMBER (CAR X) (CDR X))) ; (EQUAL (DUPSP (REV (CDR X))) ; (DUPSP (CDR X)))) ; (EQUAL (DUPSP (APPEND (REV (CDR X)) (LIST (CAR X)))) ; (DUPSP (CDR X))))
; Why wasn't our
dupsp-append
lemma applied? We have two choices here: ; (1) Think. (2) Use tools.; Think: When an enabled rewrite rule doesn't fire even though the left-hand ; side matches the target, the hypothesis couldn't be relieved. The
dups-append
; rule has the hypothesis(not (member e x))
and after the match with the left-hand side, ;e
is(CAR X)
andx
is(REV (CDR X))
. So the system couldn't rewrite ;(NOT (MEMBER (CAR X) (REV (CDR X))))
to true, even though it knows that ;(NOT (MEMBER (CAR X) (CDR X)))
from the second hypothesis of the checkpoint. ; Obviously, we need to provemember-rev
below.; Use tools: We could enable the ``break rewrite'' facility, with
; ACL2 !>:brr t
; and then install an unconditional monitor on the rewrite rule ;
dupsp-append
, whose rune is (:REWRITE DUPSP-APPEND), with:; :monitor (:rewrite dupsp-append) t
; Then we could re-try our main theorem, dupsp-rev. At the resulting ; interactive break we type :eval to evaluate the attempt to relieve the ; hypotheses of the rule.
; (1 Breaking (:REWRITE DUPSP-APPEND) on ; (DUPSP (BINARY-APPEND (REV #) (CONS # #))): ; 1 ACL2 >:eval
; 1x (:REWRITE DUPSP-APPEND) failed because :HYP 1 rewrote to ; (NOT (MEMBER (CAR X) (REV #))).
; Note that the report above shows that hypothesis 1 of the rule ; did not rewrite to T but instead rewrote to an expression ; involving
(member ... (rev ...))
. Thus, we're led to the ; same conclusion that Thinking produced. To get out of the ; interactive break we type:; 1 ACL2 >:a! ; Abort to ACL2 top-level
; and then turn off the break rewrite tool since we won't need it ; again right now, with:
; ACL2 !>:brr nil
; In either case, by thinking or using tools, we decide to prove:
(defthm member-rev (iff (member e (rev x)) (member e x)))
; which succeeds. Now when we try to prove dups-rev, it succeeds.
(defthm dupsp-rev (equal (dupsp (rev x)) (dupsp x)))
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