Hoare triple notation
The recent discussion of set notations re-motivates me to ask if anybody (Tej?) has a clever idea for getting Coq to accept a standard notation for Hoare triples -- something like this:
Notation " P c Q " :=
(hoare_triple P c Q)
(at level 0, P at level 99, c at level 99, Q at level 99)
: Hoare_scope.
Coq's error is "Error: A notation must include at least one symbol." Which I don't understand in light of the fact that
Notation " x " := (x) (at level 0, x at level 99).
does work.
Any advice?
coq
add a comment |
The recent discussion of set notations re-motivates me to ask if anybody (Tej?) has a clever idea for getting Coq to accept a standard notation for Hoare triples -- something like this:
Notation " P c Q " :=
(hoare_triple P c Q)
(at level 0, P at level 99, c at level 99, Q at level 99)
: Hoare_scope.
Coq's error is "Error: A notation must include at least one symbol." Which I don't understand in light of the fact that
Notation " x " := (x) (at level 0, x at level 99).
does work.
Any advice?
coq
add a comment |
The recent discussion of set notations re-motivates me to ask if anybody (Tej?) has a clever idea for getting Coq to accept a standard notation for Hoare triples -- something like this:
Notation " P c Q " :=
(hoare_triple P c Q)
(at level 0, P at level 99, c at level 99, Q at level 99)
: Hoare_scope.
Coq's error is "Error: A notation must include at least one symbol." Which I don't understand in light of the fact that
Notation " x " := (x) (at level 0, x at level 99).
does work.
Any advice?
coq
The recent discussion of set notations re-motivates me to ask if anybody (Tej?) has a clever idea for getting Coq to accept a standard notation for Hoare triples -- something like this:
Notation " P c Q " :=
(hoare_triple P c Q)
(at level 0, P at level 99, c at level 99, Q at level 99)
: Hoare_scope.
Coq's error is "Error: A notation must include at least one symbol." Which I don't understand in light of the fact that
Notation " x " := (x) (at level 0, x at level 99).
does work.
Any advice?
coq
coq
asked Nov 9 at 19:43
Benjamin Pierce
29419
29419
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
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I'd recommend using another symbol somewhere to make this parseable. I've seen Adam Chlipala use Notation " P c Q "
for example. You can also define P c Q
as a printing-only notation, although I imagine that's less useful and potentially confusing to new users.
Curly braces are special; some of the ways they're special are documented in the manual (scroll down to the third note), but I confess I don't really understand that note beyond "here be dragons, ask Hugo Herbelin".
I can tell you mechanically why you're getting the error while " x " works:
- curly braces don't count as symbols, because of a special
remove_curly_brackets
function - if the notation is already in the parsing table, it doesn't need to include new symbols
This is checked in metasyntax.ml, which I found by looking for how the error message is thrown. You can also confirm what the Coq grammar is using Print Grammar constr
(this is also how you figure out what level everything actually is).
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I'd recommend using another symbol somewhere to make this parseable. I've seen Adam Chlipala use Notation " P c Q "
for example. You can also define P c Q
as a printing-only notation, although I imagine that's less useful and potentially confusing to new users.
Curly braces are special; some of the ways they're special are documented in the manual (scroll down to the third note), but I confess I don't really understand that note beyond "here be dragons, ask Hugo Herbelin".
I can tell you mechanically why you're getting the error while " x " works:
- curly braces don't count as symbols, because of a special
remove_curly_brackets
function - if the notation is already in the parsing table, it doesn't need to include new symbols
This is checked in metasyntax.ml, which I found by looking for how the error message is thrown. You can also confirm what the Coq grammar is using Print Grammar constr
(this is also how you figure out what level everything actually is).
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
add a comment |
I'd recommend using another symbol somewhere to make this parseable. I've seen Adam Chlipala use Notation " P c Q "
for example. You can also define P c Q
as a printing-only notation, although I imagine that's less useful and potentially confusing to new users.
Curly braces are special; some of the ways they're special are documented in the manual (scroll down to the third note), but I confess I don't really understand that note beyond "here be dragons, ask Hugo Herbelin".
I can tell you mechanically why you're getting the error while " x " works:
- curly braces don't count as symbols, because of a special
remove_curly_brackets
function - if the notation is already in the parsing table, it doesn't need to include new symbols
This is checked in metasyntax.ml, which I found by looking for how the error message is thrown. You can also confirm what the Coq grammar is using Print Grammar constr
(this is also how you figure out what level everything actually is).
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
add a comment |
I'd recommend using another symbol somewhere to make this parseable. I've seen Adam Chlipala use Notation " P c Q "
for example. You can also define P c Q
as a printing-only notation, although I imagine that's less useful and potentially confusing to new users.
Curly braces are special; some of the ways they're special are documented in the manual (scroll down to the third note), but I confess I don't really understand that note beyond "here be dragons, ask Hugo Herbelin".
I can tell you mechanically why you're getting the error while " x " works:
- curly braces don't count as symbols, because of a special
remove_curly_brackets
function - if the notation is already in the parsing table, it doesn't need to include new symbols
This is checked in metasyntax.ml, which I found by looking for how the error message is thrown. You can also confirm what the Coq grammar is using Print Grammar constr
(this is also how you figure out what level everything actually is).
I'd recommend using another symbol somewhere to make this parseable. I've seen Adam Chlipala use Notation " P c Q "
for example. You can also define P c Q
as a printing-only notation, although I imagine that's less useful and potentially confusing to new users.
Curly braces are special; some of the ways they're special are documented in the manual (scroll down to the third note), but I confess I don't really understand that note beyond "here be dragons, ask Hugo Herbelin".
I can tell you mechanically why you're getting the error while " x " works:
- curly braces don't count as symbols, because of a special
remove_curly_brackets
function - if the notation is already in the parsing table, it doesn't need to include new symbols
This is checked in metasyntax.ml, which I found by looking for how the error message is thrown. You can also confirm what the Coq grammar is using Print Grammar constr
(this is also how you figure out what level everything actually is).
answered Nov 9 at 20:59
Tej Chajed
2,740715
2,740715
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
add a comment |
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
Thanks -- that's super helpful. Software Foundations uses PcQ currently, and from this exchange it appears this is a local optimum. My compromise is that when I typeset them in HTML I move them closer together so they look a bit like a blackboard-bold single brace.
– Benjamin Pierce
Nov 10 at 0:21
add a comment |
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