Major Section: HISTORY
Example Forms: ACL2 !>:puff* :max ACL2 !>:puff* :x ACL2 !>:puff* 15 ACL2 !>:puff* "book"whereGeneral Form: :puff* cd
cd
is a command descriptor (see command-descriptor) for
a ``puffable'' command. See puff for the definition of
``puffable'' and for a description of the basic act of ``puffing'' a
command. Puff*
is just the recursive application of puff. Puff*
prints the region puffed, using pcs
.
To puff a command is to replace it by its immediate subevents, each
of which is executed as a command. To puff*
a command is to replace
the command by each of its immediate subevents and then to puff*
each of the puffable commands among the newly introduced ones.
For example, suppose "ab"
is a book containing the following
(in-package "ACL2") (include-book "a") (include-book "b")Suppose that book
"a"
only contained defun
s for the functions a1
and a2
and that "b"
only contained defun
s for b1
and b2
.
Now consider an ACL2 state in which only two commands have been
executed, the first being (include-book "ab")
and the second being
(include-book "c")
. Thus, the relevant part of the display
produced by :
pbt
1 would be:
1 (INCLUDE-BOOK "ab") 2 (INCLUDE-BOOK "c")Call this state the ``starting state'' in this example, because we will refer to it several times.
Suppose :puff 1
is executed in the starting state. Then the first
command is replaced by its immediate subevents and :pbt 1
would
show:
1 (INCLUDE-BOOK "a") 2 (INCLUDE-BOOK "b") 3 (INCLUDE-BOOK "c")Contrast this with the execution of
:puff* 1
in the starting
state. Puff*
would first puff (include-book "ab")
to get the
state shown above. But then it would recursively puff*
the puffable
commands introduced by the first puff. This continues recursively
as long as any puff introduced a puffable command. The end result
of :puff* 1
in the starting state is
1 (DEFUN A1 ...) 2 (DEFUN A2 ...) 3 (DEFUN B1 ...) 4 (DEFUN B2 ...) 5 (INCLUDE-BOOK "c")Observe that when
puff*
is done, the originally indicated command,
(include-book "ab")
, has been replaced by the corresponding
sequence of primitive events. Observe also that puffable commands
elsewhere in the history, for example, command 2 in the starting
state, are not affected (except that their command numbers grow as a
result of the splicing in of earlier commands).