Major Section: MISCELLANEOUS
This is an advanced feature, originally implemented to help system designers to create ``modes'' that control the way hints are supplied to the theorem prover. Please see default-hints for the much more usual way to install hints that may be applied by default.
Examples: ACL2 !>(override-hints (w state)) ((computed-hint-1 clause keyword-alist processor) (computed-hint-2 clause keyword-alist stable-under-simplificationp))
Override-hints
returns a list of computed hints (see computed-hints)
which, unlike other computed hints, may mention the variable
KEYWORD-ALIST
.Before reading further, please see hints-and-the-waterfall to review the
basics of how hints are applied during a proof. In particular, we
assume familiarity with the notion of selecting a hint to be applied to the
current goal. If there are override-hints, that hint selection is tentative,
because if it reduced to nil
after the application of override-hints,
then that hint will be skipped and the attempt will continue for selecting an
applicable hint. (Craft your override-hints so that :no-op t
is returned
in such cases instead of nil
, if you don't want the hint to be skipped.)
But we must explain what is meant by ``the application of override-hints'',
and we do that now.
Suppose that there are override-hints when a hint is selected for the current
goal. That selected hint is a keyword-alist, which is an alternating list of
hint keywords and their values, whose source is either an explicit hint
(goal-name :key1 val1 ... :keyn valn)
where the :keyi
are allowed to
be custom hint keywords (which are expanded away; see custom-keyword-hints),
or else is the non-nil
keyword-alist produced by evaluating a computed
hint. Then the override-hints are applied to that keyword-alist as follows,
one at a time, in order of their occurrence in the list of override-hints (as
determined by the use of set-override-hints
and
add-override-hints
). The first override-hint is evaluated, in the
usual manner of evaluating computed hints but with the variable
KEYWORD-ALIST
bound to the above keyword-alist. That evaluation produces
a result that should also be a keyword-alist, or else an error occurs. Any
custom keyword hints are then eliminated from that keyword-alist. The
resulting keyword-alist must not contain the :ERROR
hint keyword and must
not start with the :COMPUTED-HINT-REPLACEMENT
keyword; otherwise an error
occurs. With KEYWORD-ALIST
bound to this result, the second
override-hint is similarly evaluated. This process continues, and the
keyword-alist returned by the final override-hint is the one used when
processing the goal at hand. Except: If that keyword-alist is nil
, then
the next hint among the pending hints is tentatively selected and the process
repeats, applying each override hint to that new tentative selection. Of
course we might obtain nil
again, in which case we tentatively select the
next pending hint; and so on.
If finally no hint is selected for the current goal, then KEYWORD-ALIST
is bound to nil
and the override-hints are applied as described above.
But note that this final step is skipped if hint selection is being performed
because stable-under-simplificationp
has just become true, rather than at
the top of the waterfall. (Otherwise the override-hints could easily keep
firing uselessly yet putting us back at the top of the waterfall, with no
change to the given goal, resulting in an infinite loop.)
As mentioned above, the :COMPUTED-HINT-REPLACEMENT
keyword is illegal for
the value of an override-hint. But a selected hint may be a computed hint
that evaluates to a keyword-alist beginning with prefix
:COMPUTED-HINT-REPLACEMENT val
. What value does ACL2 return for such a
computed hint in the presence of override-hints? First, this prefix is
stripped off before passing the resulting keyword-alist to the override-hints
as described above. If the result of applying override-hints to that
keyword-alist is not nil
, then the prefix is put back on the front of
that resulting keyword-alist after doing internal processing of the hint,
including expansion of any custom keyword hints. Otherwise, the application
of override-hints to the computed hint is nil
, so this hint is not
selected after all.
WARNING: Unlike ordinary computed hints, a value of nil
for an
override-hint is not ignored. That is: When an ordinary computed hint
evaluates to nil
, it is deemed not to apply, and the next available hint
is consulted. But when an override-hint is evaluated, the result is always
supplied for the next binding of the variable KEYWORD-ALIST
, even if that
result is nil
. If you want an override-hint to be a no-op, return as the
expression the variable KEYWORD-ALIST
rather than an expression that
evaluates to nil
.
This feature can be used in order to implement a form of additive hints. Suppose for example that you want a hint that turns off generalization. A simple but inadequate solution is:
(add-default-hints '((quote (:do-not '(generalize)))))The problem is that if there is any explicit hint supplied for a given goal, then it will be the one selected, and the above will be ignored. But suppose that the explicit hint supplied is of the form
("Subgoal x.y" :do-not '(fertilize))
. What we would really want in
this case is to generate the hint for the indicated subgoal that binds
:do-not
to a list indicating that both fertilization _and_ generalization
are disabled for that goal. A solution is to merge, for example as follows.
(The use of prog2$
and cw
is of course optional, included here to
provide debug printing.)
(add-override-hints '((let* ((tmp (assoc-keyword :do-not KEYWORD-ALIST)) (new-keyword-alist (cond (tmp (list* :do-not `(cons 'generalize ,(cadr tmp)) (remove-keyword :do-not KEYWORD-ALIST))) (t (list* :do-not ''(generalize) KEYWORD-ALIST))))) (prog2$ (cw "New: ~x0~|" new-keyword-alist) new-keyword-alist))))
REMARKS
(1) The utilities add-override-hints
, add-override-hints!
,
set-override-hints
, set-override-hints!
,
remove-override-hints
, and remove-override-hints!
are also
available, in complete analogy to their default-hints versions.
(2) The community book hints/basic-tests.lisp
illustrates the use of
override-hints and illuminates a number of corner cases; search in that file
for ``Test override-hints.''
(3) The community book hints/merge-hint.lisp
provides support for merging
hints that might be useful for writers of override-hint expressions
(see the examples at the end of that file).
(4) Override-hints are used in the processing of :BACKTRACK
hints
(see hints).