:
pso
or :
pso!
Major Section: OTHER
Examples: (set-saved-output t t) ; save proof output for later, but inhibit it now (set-saved-output :all t) ; same as the line above :set-saved-output t t ; same as the two lines above (set-saved-output t nil) ; save proof output for later, but print it now too (set-saved-output nil t) ; do not save proof output, and print it now (set-saved-output nil nil); do not save or inhibit output (set-saved-output nil :normal) ; default: do not save output, and only ; inhibit proof-tree outputParameterGeneral Form: (set-saved-output save-flg inhibit-flg)
save-flg
is t
or :all
to cause output to be saved for
later display using pso
or pso!
; see pso and see pso!, and see the
documentation for proof-checker commands of the same names. Set
save-flg
to nil
to turn off this feature; except, it always stays on
in proof-checker sessions entered with verify
. The other argument,
inhibit-flg
, controls whether output should be inhibited when it is
created (normally, during a proof attempt). So a common combination is to
set both arguments to t
, to indicate that output should be suppressed for
now but saved for printing with pso
or pso!
. The examples above
give a good summary of the functionality, including the meaning of values
:all
and :normal
for the first and second arguments (respectively).
Saved output is cleared at the start of every event, and also at the start of
every proof-checker commands that invoke the prover. Note that
interactive proof-checker commands, that is, from a proof-checker
session entered with verify
, are always run with output saved.
Also see set-print-clause-ids, which causes subgoal numbers to be printed
during proof attempts when output is inhibited.