The variable?
command #
This defines a command like variable
that automatically adds all missing typeclass
arguments. For example, variable? [Module R M]
is the same as
variable [Semiring R] [AddCommMonoid M] [Module R M]
, though if any of these three instance
arguments can be inferred from previous variables then they will be omitted.
An inherent limitation with this command is that variables are recorded in the scope as
syntax. This means that variable?
needs to pretty print the expressions we get
from typeclass synthesis errors, and these might fail to round trip.
Get the type out of a bracketed binder.
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The variable?
command has the same syntax as variable
, but it will auto-insert
missing instance arguments wherever they are needed.
It does not add variables that can already be deduced from others in the current context.
By default the command checks that variables aren't implied by earlier ones, but it does not
check that earlier variables aren't implied by later ones.
Unlike variable
, the variable?
command does not support changing variable binder types.
The variable?
command will give a suggestion to replace itself with a command of the form
variable? ...binders... => ...binders...
. The binders after the =>
are the completed
list of binders. When this =>
clause is present, the command verifies that the expanded
binders match the post-=>
binders. The purpose of this is to help keep code that uses
variable?
resilient against changes to the typeclass hierarchy, at least in the sense
that this additional information can be used to debug issues that might arise.
One can also replace variable? ...binders... =>
with variable
.
The core algorithm is to try elaborating binders one at a time, and whenever there is a typeclass instance inference failure, it synthesizes binder syntax for it and adds it to the list of binders and tries again, recursively. There are no guarantees that this process gives the "correct" list of binders.
Structures tagged with the variable_alias
attribute can serve as aliases for a collection
of typeclasses. For example, given
@[variable_alias]
structure VectorSpace (k V : Type*) [Field k] [AddCommGroup V] [Module k V]
then variable? [VectorSpace k V]
is
equivalent to variable {k V : Type*} [Field k] [AddCommGroup V] [Module k V]
, assuming
that there are no pre-existing instances on k
and V
.
Note that this is not a simple replacement: it only adds instances not inferrable
from others in the current scope.
A word of warning: the core algorithm depends on pretty printing, so if terms that appear
in binders do not round trip, this algorithm can fail. That said, it has some support
for quantified binders such as [∀ i, F i]
.
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Attribute to record aliases for the variable?
command. Aliases are structures that have no
fields, and additional typeclasses are recorded as arguments to the structure.
Example:
@[variable_alias]
structure VectorSpace (k V : Type*)
[Field k] [AddCommGroup V] [Module k V]
Then variable? [VectorSpace k V]
ensures that these three typeclasses are present in
the current scope. Notice that it's looking at the arguments to the VectorSpace
type
constructor. You should not have any fields in variable_alias
structures.
Notice that VectorSpace
is not a class; the variable?
command allows non-classes with the
variable_alias
attribute to use instance binders.
Find a synthetic typeclass metavariable with no expr metavariables in its type.
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Try elaborating ty
. Returns none
if it doesn't need any additional typeclasses,
or it returns a new binder that needs to come first. Does not add info unless it throws
an exception.
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Tries elaborating binders, inserting new binders whenever typeclass inference fails.
i
is the index of the next binder that needs to be checked.
The toOmit
array keeps track of which binders should be removed at the end,
in particular the variable_alias
binders and any redundant binders.
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Strip off whitespace and comments.
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The variable?
command has the same syntax as variable
, but it will auto-insert
missing instance arguments wherever they are needed.
It does not add variables that can already be deduced from others in the current context.
By default the command checks that variables aren't implied by earlier ones, but it does not
check that earlier variables aren't implied by later ones.
Unlike variable
, the variable?
command does not support changing variable binder types.
The variable?
command will give a suggestion to replace itself with a command of the form
variable? ...binders... => ...binders...
. The binders after the =>
are the completed
list of binders. When this =>
clause is present, the command verifies that the expanded
binders match the post-=>
binders. The purpose of this is to help keep code that uses
variable?
resilient against changes to the typeclass hierarchy, at least in the sense
that this additional information can be used to debug issues that might arise.
One can also replace variable? ...binders... =>
with variable
.
The core algorithm is to try elaborating binders one at a time, and whenever there is a typeclass instance inference failure, it synthesizes binder syntax for it and adds it to the list of binders and tries again, recursively. There are no guarantees that this process gives the "correct" list of binders.
Structures tagged with the variable_alias
attribute can serve as aliases for a collection
of typeclasses. For example, given
@[variable_alias]
structure VectorSpace (k V : Type*) [Field k] [AddCommGroup V] [Module k V]
then variable? [VectorSpace k V]
is
equivalent to variable {k V : Type*} [Field k] [AddCommGroup V] [Module k V]
, assuming
that there are no pre-existing instances on k
and V
.
Note that this is not a simple replacement: it only adds instances not inferrable
from others in the current scope.
A word of warning: the core algorithm depends on pretty printing, so if terms that appear
in binders do not round trip, this algorithm can fail. That said, it has some support
for quantified binders such as [∀ i, F i]
.
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Hint for the unused variables linter. Copies the one for variable
.
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