Major Section: MISCELLANEOUS
See rule-classes for a discussion of the syntax of the
:loop-stopper
field of :
rewrite
rule-classes. Here we describe how
that field is used, and also how that field is created when the user
does not explicitly supply it.
For example, the built-in :
rewrite
rule commutativity-of-+
,
(implies (and (acl2-numberp x) (acl2-numberp y)) (equal (+ x y) (+ y x))),creates a rewrite rule with a loop-stopper of
((x y binary-+))
.
This means, very roughly, that the term corresponding to y
must be
``smaller'' than the term corresponding to x
in order for this rule
to apply. However, the presence of binary-+
in the list means that
certain functions that are ``invisible'' with respect to binary-+
(by default, unary--
is the only such function) are more or less
ignored when making this ``smaller'' test. We are much more precise
below.
Our explanation of loop-stopping is in four parts. First we discuss
ACL2's notion of ``term order.'' Next, we bring in the notion of
``invisibility'', and use it together with term order to define
orderings on terms that are used in the loop-stopping algorithm.
Third, we describe that algorithm. These topics all assume that we
have in hand the :loop-stopper
field of a given rewrite rule; the
fourth and final topic describes how that field is calculated when
it is not supplied by the user.
ACL2 must sometimes decide which of two terms is syntactically
simpler. It uses a total ordering on terms, called the ``term
order.'' Under this ordering constants such as '(a b c)
are simpler
than terms containing variables such as x
and (+ 1 x)
. Terms
containing variables are ordered according to how many occurrences
of variables there are. Thus x
and (+ 1 x)
are both simpler than
(cons x x)
and (+ x y)
. If variable counts do not decide the order,
then the number of function applications are tried. Thus (cons x x)
is simpler than (+ x (+ 1 y))
because the latter has one more
function application. Finally, if the number of function
applications do not decide the order, a lexicographic ordering on
Lisp objects is used. See term-order for details.
When the loop-stopping algorithm is controlling the use of
permutative :
rewrite
rules it allows term1
to be moved leftward over
term2
only if term1
is smaller, in a suitable sense. Note: The
sense used in loop-stopping is not the above explained term order
but a more complicated ordering described below. The use of a total
ordering stops rules like commutativity from looping indefinitely
because it allows (+ b a)
to be permuted to (+ a b)
but not vice
versa, assuming a
is smaller than b
in the ordering. Given a set of
permutative rules that allows arbitrary permutations of the tips of
a tree of function calls, this will normalize the tree so that the
smallest argument is leftmost and the arguments ascend in the order
toward the right. Thus, for example, if the same argument appears
twice in the tree, as x
does in the binary-+
tree denoted by the
term (+ a x b x)
, then when the allowed permutations are done, all
occurrences of the duplicated argument in the tree will be adjacent,
e.g., the tree above will be normalized to (+ a b x x)
.
Suppose the loop-stopping algorithm used term order, as noted above,
and consider the binary-+
tree denoted by (+ x y (- x))
. The
arguments here are in ascending term order already. Thus, no
permutative rules are applied. But because we are inside a
+-expression
it is very convenient if x
and (- x)
could be given
virtually the same position in the ordering so that y
is not
allowed to separate them. This would allow such rules as
(+ i (- i) j) = j
to be applied. In support of this, the
ordering used in the control of permutative rules allows certain
unary functions, e.g., the unary minus function above, to be
``invisible'' with respect to certain ``surrounding'' functions,
e.g., +
function above.
Briefly, a unary function symbol fn1
is invisible with respect to a
function symbol fn2
if fn2
belongs to the value of fn1
in
invisible-fns-table
; also see set-invisible-fns-table, which
explains its format and how it can be set by the user. Roughly
speaking, ``invisible'' function symbols are ignored for the
purposes of the term-order test.
Consider the example above, (+ x y (- x))
. The translated version
of this term is (binary-+ x (binary-+ y (unary-- x)))
. The initial
invisible-fns-table
makes unary--
invisible with repect to binary-+
.
The commutativity rule for binary-+
will attempt to swap y
and
(unary-- x)
and the loop-stopping algorithm is called to approve or
disapprove. If term order is used, the swap will be disapproved.
But term order is not used. While the loop-stopping algorithm is
permuting arguments inside a binary-+
expression, unary--
is
invisible. Thus, insted of comparing y
with (unary-- x)
, the
loop-stopping algorithm compares y
with x
, approving the swap
because x
comes before y
.
Here is a more precise specification of the total order used for
loop-stopping with respect to a list, fns
, of functions that are to
be considered invisible. Let x
and y
be distinct terms; we specify
when ``x
is smaller than y
with respect to fns
.'' If x
is the
application of a unary function symbol that belongs to fns
, replace
x
by its argument. Repeat this process until the result is not the
application of such a function; let us call the result x-guts
.
Similarly obtain y-guts
from y
. Now if x-guts
is the same term as
y-guts
, then x
is smaller than y
in this order iff x
is smaller than
y
in the standard term order. On the other hand, if x-guts
is
different than y-guts
, then x
is smaller than y
in this order iff
x-guts
is smaller than y-guts
in the standard term order.
Now we may describe the loop-stopping algorithm. Consider a rewrite
rule with conclusion (equiv lhs rhs)
that applies to a term x
in a
given context; see rewrite. Suppose that this rewrite rule has
a loop-stopper field (technically, the :heuristic-info
field) of
((x1 y1 . fns-1) ... (xn yn . fns-n))
. (Note that this field can be
observed by using the command :
pr
with the name of the rule;
see pr.) We describe when rewriting is permitted. The
simplest case is when the loop-stopper list is nil
(i.e., n
is 0
);
in that case, rewriting is permitted. Otherwise, for each i
from 1
to n
let xi'
be the actual term corresponding to the variable xi
when lhs
is matched against the term to be rewritten, and similarly
correspond yi'
with y
. If xi'
and yi'
are the same term for all i
,
then rewriting is not permitted. Otherwise, let k
be the least i
such that xi'
and yi'
are distinct. Let fns
be the list of all
functions that are invisible with respect to every function in
fns-k
, if fns-k
is non-empty; otherwise, let fns
be nil
. Then
rewriting is permitted if and only if yi'
is smaller than xi'
with
respect to fns
, in the sense defined in the preceding paragraph.
It remains only to describe how the loop-stopper field is calculated
for a rewrite rule when this field is not supplied by the user. (On
the other hand, to see how the user may specify the :loop-stopper
,
see rule-classes.) Suppose the conclusion of the rule is of
the form (equiv lhs rhs)
. First of all, if rhs
is not an instance
of the left hand side by a substitution whose range is a list of
distinct variables, then the loop-stopper field is nil
. Otherwise,
consider all pairs (u . v)
from this substitution with the property
that the first occurrence of v
appears in front of the first
occurrence of u
in the print representation of rhs
. For each such u
and v
, form a list fns
of all functions fn
in lhs
with the property
that u
or v
(or both) appears as a top-level argument of a subterm
of lhs
with function symbol fn
. Then the loop-stopper for this
rewrite rule is a list of all lists (u v . fns)
.