Major Section: NOTE-2-8
WARNING: You may find that control-d
(in emacs, control-c control-d
)
can throw you completely out of Lisp where it had not formerly done so.
(CLISP and Allegro CL only) ACL2 now starts up inside the ACL2 loop -- that
is, (
LP
)
is executed automatically -- when built on CLISP or
Allegro CL. This was already the case for GCL and CMUCL, and it still is not
true for LispWorks. Thanks to Joe Corneli for bringing the CLISP
command-line option "-i"
to our attention, which led to this CLISP
change and inspired reconsideration of how to do this for Allegro CL.
Pete Manolios and Daron Vroon have changed the representation of ordinals in ACL2, defined algorithms for ordinal arithmetic, and created a library of theorems to reason about ordinal arithmetic. We thank them for these nice contributions. See note-2-8-ordinals for details, in particular, for how to preserve existing proofs that depend on the previous ordinal representation.
Sometimes users create rules of class :
rewrite
that cause an
infinite loop in the ACL2 rewriter. This has lead to Lisp stack overflows
and even segmentation faults. Now, the depth of calls of functions in the
ACL2 rewriter is limited, and under user control. See rewrite-stack-limit.
Macros mbe
(``must be equal'') and mbt
(``must be true'') have
been introduced, which allow the user to attach fast executable definitions
to (presumably slower) :
logic
mode functions. Thanks to Vernon
Austel for a key idea. Also provided is a macro defexec
, which employs
mbe
but enforces the requirement that the executable definition also
terminates. Thanks to Jose Luis Ruiz Reina for collaborating in the design
and development of defexec
, and for useful comments from a number of
others as well in the development of mbe
including Joe Hendrix and Rob
Sumners.
Definitions have been added for functions rassoc-eq
and
rassoc-equal
, which are like rassoc
but use different tests
and have different guards. (Compare assoc-eq
and assoc-equal
,
which are in similar relation to assoc
.)
The user can now control multiple matching for free variables in hypotheses
for :
forward-chaining
rules, as has already been supported for
:
rewrite
and :
linear
rules. For :forward-chaining
rules, ``free variables'' are those in the hypotheses not bound by a given
trigger term. As for :rewrite
and :linear
rules, free-variable
matching may be limited to the first successful attempt by specifying
:match-free :once
with :forward-chaining
in the
:
rule-classes
, and add-match-free-override
may be used to
modify the behavior of an existing rule. Thanks to Erik Reeber for most of
the implementation of these new capabilities, as well as significant
assistance with a corresponding new documentation topic
(see free-variables-examples-forward-chaining).
It is no longer necessary to specify (set-match-free-error nil)
in order
to avoid errors when a rule with free variables in its hypotheses is missing
the :match-free
field. (This was already true during book certification,
but now it is the case in interactive sessions as well.)
The form (break-on-error)
causes, at least for most Lisps, entry into
the Lisp debugger whenever ACL2 causes an error. See break-on-error. Thanks
to John Erickson for providing encouragement to provide this feature.
A new table
has been provided so that advanced users can override the
built-in untranslate
functionality. See user-defined-functions-table.
The pstack
mechanism (formerly denoted checkpoints
) has been
improved. The ``process [prover] stack,'' or pstack, is automatically
printed when proofs abort. Evaluation of function calls on explicit
arguments during proofs is now tracked. Actual parameters are shown with
(pstack t)
rather than formals. Thanks to Bill Legato for
suggesting the first two of these improvements and, in general, encouraging
changes that make ACL2 easier to use.
The defstobj
event is now allowed to take an :inline
argument,
which can speed up execution. Thanks to Rob Sumners for suggesting and
implementing this new feature.
Macro assert$
has been added in order to make it easy to write
assertions in one's code. Semantically, (assert$ test form)
is the same
as form
, but it causes a hard error (using illegal
) if test
evaluates to nil
.
Macro cw-gstack
no longer takes arguments for the gstack or state
.
However, it now takes a keyword argument (which is optional),
:evisc-tuple
, that can be used to control how it prints terms. In
particular, cw-gstack
abbreviates large terms by default, but
(cw-gstack :evisc-tuple nil)
causes terms to be printed in full.
Thanks to Robert Krug and Eric Smith for requesting this improvement.
The advanced user now has more control over the evisceration of terms. See ld-evisc-tuple, in particular the new paragraph on ``The printing of error messages and warnings.''
The include-book
event now has an additional (optional) keyword,
:dir
. The value of :dir
should be a keyword that is associated with
an absolute directory pathname to be used in place of the current book
directory (see cbd) for resolving the first argument of include-book
to
an absolute pathname. At start-up, the only such keyword is :system
, so
that for example (include-book "arithmetic/top" :dir :system)
will
include the book "arithmetic/top"
under the "books/"
directory of
your ACL2 installation. But you can associate ``projects'' with keywords
using add-include-book-dir
, e.g.,
(add-include-book-dir :my-project "/u/smith/project0/")
.
See add-include-book-dir and also see delete-include-book-dir and
see include-book. Note: You will probably not find :dir :system
to be
useful if the distributed books are not placed in the path of their original
location, pointed to by :dir :system
, which will often happen if the
executable image is obtained from another site. Also see include-book, in
particular its ``soundness warning''.
The printing of results in raw mode (see set-raw-mode) may now be partially controlled by the user: see add-raw-arity. Also, newlines are printed when necessary before the value is printed.
For those using Unix/Linux make
: A cert.acl2
file can contain forms
to be evaluated before an appropriate certify-book
command is invoked
automatically (not included in cert.acl2
).
Jared Davis has contributed a new set of books for ordered finite set theory
to the standard distribution, books/finite-set-theory/osets-0.81/
. See
the README
file in that directory. Thanks, Jared.
Robert Krug has contributed two related changes (thanks, Robert!) in support
of stronger arithmetic reasoning. First, one can now enable and disable
nonlinear arithmetic with a :nonlinearp
hint, which will override the
default provided by set-non-linearp
(initially, nil
). See hints.
Second, computed-hints can now have access to the HISTORY
, PSPV
,
and CTX
variables of the waterfall, which (for example) allows the
writing of a hint which will enable nonlinear arithmetic on precisely those
goals that are stable-under-simplificationp
. See computed-hints.
Robert Krug has contributed a new set of arithmetic books to the standard
distribution, books/arithmetic-3/
. See the README
file in that
directory. Thanks, Robert.