ACL2 Version 6.1ACL2 is part of the Boyer-Moore family of provers, for which its authors have received the 2005 ACM Software System Award.
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There are libraries of books (files containing definitions and theorems)
that extend the code that we have written. Books are contributed and
maintained by the ACL2 community (see http://acl2-books.googlecode.com/
;
in particular, the [Source] tab near the top takes you to a search box)
and their authors are generally noted in each book or its
README
file. There is a combined manual that
incorporates not only The User's Manual
for ACL2 but also documentation for many books; thanks to Jared Davis
for building this view of the documentation.
Another extension of ACL2 is the Eclipse-based ACL2 Sedan (ACL2s). Unlike the systems above, ACL2s is distributed and maintained by Pete Manolios and his research group. ACL2s comes with a standard executable ACL2 image for Windows, but it also comes with pre-certified community books and an extension of ACL2 with additional features, including extra automation for termination proofs as well as counterexample generation.
Here are the two common entries to the documentation graph:
Major Topics (Table of Contents) | |
Index of all documented topics |
Here is how we recommend you use this documentation.
If you are a newcomer to ACL2, we do not recommend that you wander off into the full documentation. Instead start with the ACL2-TUTORIAL documentation topic. Experienced users tend mostly to use the ``Index'' to look up concepts mentioned in error messages or vaguely remembered from their past experiences with ACL2.
Note: The documentation is available for reading in a Web
browser (recommended), in Emacs Info, using the ACL2 :DOC
command,
or as a printed book (over 2100 pages). These are available as follows.
acl2-sources/
diretory at
doc/HTML/acl2-doc.html
.books/xdoc-impl/manual/preview.html
.
emacs/emacs-acl2.el
distributed with ACL2 (under
the acl2-sources
directory), and then evaluating
meta-x acl2-info
. Alternatively, within Emacs Info press
g
and then enter the following path (of course, replacing
PATH_TO_ACL2-SOURCES
by the path of your acl2-sources
directory):(PATH_TO_ACL2-SOURCES/doc/EMACS/acl2-doc-emacs.info)top
.We strongly encourage users to submit additional books by following the instructions for contributing books to ACL2.
We also distribute a few interface
tools, such as support for infix printing. For these, see the Utilities
section of
Books and Papers about ACL2 and Its Applications. Some of the
papers mentioned in that collection contain utilities, scripts, or
ACL2 books for the problem domains in question.
Also, if you have written up (or are interested in writing) text that
may be helpful to other ACL2 users, we invite you to contribute it to
the community. Such user documentation may be in any format that is
readable by web browsers (for example html, pdf, and plain text).
User-contributed documentation can link back to the ACL2 documentation
proper, by using links such as:
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/moore/acl2/current/MAKE-EVENT.html
(In general, substitute the upper-case of the documentation topic for
"MAKE-EVENT
" in the example above.)
To contribute user documentation, send email to the ACL2 developers, Matt Kaufmann and J Strother Moore.
search_term site:http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/moore/acl2/v6-1Now simply replace the word `search_term' with your topic. For example, replace `
search_term
' by `tail recursion
' to get
documentation about tail recursion.
tail recursion site:http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/moore/acl2/v6-1Now you are ready to follow the link.
tail recursion
'
and then <RETURN>
, you will see text from several books in
the svn trunk that deal with the topic of tail recursion, with an
accompanying ``File Path'' shown at the end of each book's text.