Major Section: EVENTS
Example Forms: try guard verification? (set-verify-guards-eagerness 0) ; no, unless :verify-guards t (set-verify-guards-eagerness 1) ; yes if a :guard is supplied (set-verify-guards-eagerness 2) ; yes, unless :verify-guards nilNote: This is an event! It does not print the usual event summary but nevertheless changes the ACL2 logical world and is so recorded.
General Form: (set-verify-guards-eagerness n)where
n
is a variable-free term that evaluates to 0
, 1
, or
2
. This macro is equivalent to
(table acl2-defaults-table :verify-guards-eagerness term).However, unlike that simple call of the
table
event function
(see table), no output results from a
set-verify-guards-eagerness
event.
Set-verify-guards-eagerness
may be thought of as an event that
merely sets a flag to 0
, 1
, or 2
. The flag is used by
certain defun
events to determine whether guard verification is
tried. The flag is irrelevant to those defun
events in
:
program
mode and to those defun
events in which an explicit
:
verify-guards
setting is provided among the xargs
. In the
former case, guard verification is not done because it can only be
done when logical functions are being defined. In the latter case,
the explicit :
verify-guards
setting determines whether guard
verification is tried. So consider a :
logic
mode defun
in
which no :
verify-guards
setting is provided. Is guard
verification tried? The answer depends on the eagerness setting as
follows. If the eagerness is 0
, guard verification is not tried.
If the eagerness is 1
, it is tried iff a :
guard
is explicitly
provided in the defun
. If the eagerness is 2
, guard
verification is tried.
The default behavior of the system is as though the
:verify-guards-eagerness
is 1
.