Recursive cases (rcases
) tactic and related tactics #
rcases
is a tactic that will perform cases
recursively, according to a pattern. It is used to
destructure hypotheses or expressions composed of inductive types like h1 : a ∧ b ∧ c ∨ d
or
h2 : ∃ x y, trans_rel R x y
. Usual usage might be rcases h1 with ⟨ha, hb, hc⟩ | hd
or
rcases h2 with ⟨x, y, _ | ⟨z, hxz, hzy⟩⟩
for these examples.
Each element of an rcases
pattern is matched against a particular local hypothesis (most of which
are generated during the execution of rcases
and represent individual elements destructured from
the input expression). An rcases
pattern has the following grammar:
- A name like
x
, which names the active hypothesis asx
. - A blank
_
, which does nothing (letting the automatic naming system used bycases
name the hypothesis). - A hyphen
-
, which clears the active hypothesis and any dependents. - The keyword
rfl
, which expects the hypothesis to beh : a = b
, and callssubst
on the hypothesis (which has the effect of replacingb
witha
everywhere or vice versa). - A type ascription
p : ty
, which sets the type of the hypothesis toty
and then matches it againstp
. (Of course,ty
must unify with the actual type ofh
for this to work.) - A tuple pattern
⟨p1, p2, p3⟩
, which matches a constructor with many arguments, or a series of nested conjunctions or existentials. For example if the active hypothesis isa ∧ b ∧ c
, then the conjunction will be destructured, andp1
will be matched againsta
,p2
againstb
and so on. - A
@
before a tuple pattern as in@⟨p1, p2, p3⟩
will bind all arguments in the constructor, while leaving the@
off will only use the patterns on the explicit arguments. - An alternation pattern
p1 | p2 | p3
, which matches an inductive type with multiple constructors, or a nested disjunction likea ∨ b ∨ c
.
The patterns are fairly liberal about the exact shape of the constructors, and will insert additional alternation branches and tuple arguments if there are not enough arguments provided, and reuse the tail for further matches if there are too many arguments provided to alternation and tuple patterns.
This file also contains the obtain
and rintro
tactics, which use the same syntax of rcases
patterns but with a slightly different use case:
rintro
(orrintros
) is used likerintro x ⟨y, z⟩
and is the same asintros
followed byrcases
on the newly introduced arguments.obtain
is the same asrcases
but with a syntax styled afterhave
rather thancases
.obtain ⟨hx, hy⟩ | hz := foo
is equivalent torcases foo with ⟨hx, hy⟩ | hz
. Unlikercases
,obtain
also allows one to omit:= foo
, although a type must be provided in this case, as inobtain ⟨hx, hy⟩ | hz : a ∧ b ∨ c
, in which case it produces a subgoal for provinga ∧ b ∨ c
in addition to the subgoalshx : a, hy : b |- goal
andhz : c |- goal
.
Tags #
rcases, rintro, obtain, destructuring, cases, pattern matching, match
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A low precedence rcases
pattern is a rcasesPatMed
optionally followed by : ty
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x
is a pattern which binds x
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- Lean.Parser.Tactic.rcasesPat.one = Lean.ParserDescr.node `Lean.Parser.Tactic.rcasesPat.one 1022 (Lean.ParserDescr.const `ident)
Instances For
_
is a pattern which ignores the value and gives it an inaccessible name
Equations
- Lean.Parser.Tactic.rcasesPat.ignore = Lean.ParserDescr.node `Lean.Parser.Tactic.rcasesPat.ignore 1024 (Lean.ParserDescr.symbol "_")
Instances For
-
is a pattern which removes the value from the context
Equations
- Lean.Parser.Tactic.rcasesPat.clear = Lean.ParserDescr.node `Lean.Parser.Tactic.rcasesPat.clear 1024 (Lean.ParserDescr.symbol "-")
Instances For
A @
before a tuple pattern as in @⟨p1, p2, p3⟩
will bind all arguments in the constructor,
while leaving the @
off will only use the patterns on the explicit arguments.
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⟨pat, ...⟩
is a pattern which matches on a tuple-like constructor
or multi-argument inductive constructor
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(pat)
is a pattern which resets the precedence to low
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An rcases
pattern is an rintro
pattern
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- Lean.Parser.Tactic.rintroPat.one = Lean.ParserDescr.node `Lean.Parser.Tactic.rintroPat.one 1022 (Lean.ParserDescr.cat `rcasesPat 0)
Instances For
A multi argument binder (pat1 pat2 : ty)
binds a list of patterns and gives them all type ty
.
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Instances For
rcases
is a tactic that will perform cases
recursively, according to a pattern. It is used to
destructure hypotheses or expressions composed of inductive types like h1 : a ∧ b ∧ c ∨ d
or
h2 : ∃ x y, trans_rel R x y
. Usual usage might be rcases h1 with ⟨ha, hb, hc⟩ | hd
or
rcases h2 with ⟨x, y, _ | ⟨z, hxz, hzy⟩⟩
for these examples.
Each element of an rcases
pattern is matched against a particular local hypothesis (most of which
are generated during the execution of rcases
and represent individual elements destructured from
the input expression). An rcases
pattern has the following grammar:
- A name like
x
, which names the active hypothesis asx
. - A blank
_
, which does nothing (letting the automatic naming system used bycases
name the hypothesis). - A hyphen
-
, which clears the active hypothesis and any dependents. - The keyword
rfl
, which expects the hypothesis to beh : a = b
, and callssubst
on the hypothesis (which has the effect of replacingb
witha
everywhere or vice versa). - A type ascription
p : ty
, which sets the type of the hypothesis toty
and then matches it againstp
. (Of course,ty
must unify with the actual type ofh
for this to work.) - A tuple pattern
⟨p1, p2, p3⟩
, which matches a constructor with many arguments, or a series of nested conjunctions or existentials. For example if the active hypothesis isa ∧ b ∧ c
, then the conjunction will be destructured, andp1
will be matched againsta
,p2
againstb
and so on. - A
@
before a tuple pattern as in@⟨p1, p2, p3⟩
will bind all arguments in the constructor, while leaving the@
off will only use the patterns on the explicit arguments. - An alternation pattern
p1 | p2 | p3
, which matches an inductive type with multiple constructors, or a nested disjunction likea ∨ b ∨ c
.
A pattern like ⟨a, b, c⟩ | ⟨d, e⟩
will do a split over the inductive datatype,
naming the first three parameters of the first constructor as a,b,c
and the
first two of the second constructor d,e
. If the list is not as long as the
number of arguments to the constructor or the number of constructors, the
remaining variables will be automatically named. If there are nested brackets
such as ⟨⟨a⟩, b | c⟩ | d
then these will cause more case splits as necessary.
If there are too many arguments, such as ⟨a, b, c⟩
for splitting on
∃ x, ∃ y, p x
, then it will be treated as ⟨a, ⟨b, c⟩⟩
, splitting the last
parameter as necessary.
rcases
also has special support for quotient types: quotient induction into Prop works like
matching on the constructor quot.mk
.
rcases h : e with PAT
will do the same as rcases e with PAT
with the exception that an
assumption h : e = PAT
will be added to the context.
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The obtain
tactic is a combination of have
and rcases
. See rcases
for
a description of supported patterns.
obtain ⟨patt⟩ : type := proof
is equivalent to
have h : type := proof
rcases h with ⟨patt⟩
If ⟨patt⟩
is omitted, rcases
will try to infer the pattern.
If type
is omitted, := proof
is required.
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The rintro
tactic is a combination of the intros
tactic with rcases
to
allow for destructuring patterns while introducing variables. See rcases
for
a description of supported patterns. For example, rintro (a | ⟨b, c⟩) ⟨d, e⟩
will introduce two variables, and then do case splits on both of them producing
two subgoals, one with variables a d e
and the other with b c d e
.
rintro
, unlike rcases
, also supports the form (x y : ty)
for introducing
and type-ascripting multiple variables at once, similar to binders.
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