7 research outputs found

    Décimales distantes de ππ: Preuves formelles de certains algorithmes pour les calculer et des garanties d'exactitude

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    International audienceWe describe how to compute very far decimals of ππ and how to provide formal guarantees that the decimals we compute are correct. In particular, we report on an experiment where 1 million decimals of ππ and the billionth hexadecimal (without the preceding ones) have been computed in a formally verified way. Three methods have been studied, the first one relying on a spigot formula to obtain at a reasonable cost only one distant digit (more precisely a hexadecimal digit, because the numeration basis is 16) and the other two relying on arithmetic-geometric means. All proofs and computations can be made inside the Coq system. We detail the new formalized material that was necessary for this achievement and the techniques employed to guarantee the accuracy of the computed digits, in spite of the necessity to work with fixed precision numerical computation

    Quantitative Continuity and Computable Analysis in Coq

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    We give a number of formal proofs of theorems from the field of computable analysis. Many of our results specify executable algorithms that work on infinite inputs by means of operating on finite approximations and are proven correct in the sense of computable analysis. The development is done in the proof assistant Coq and heavily relies on the Incone library for information theoretic continuity. This library is developed by one of the authors and the results of this paper extend the library. While full executability in a formal development of mathematical statements about real numbers and the like is not a feature that is unique to the Incone library, its original contribution is to adhere to the conventions of computable analysis to provide a general purpose interface for algorithmic reasoning on continuous structures. The paper includes a brief description of the most important concepts of Incone and its sub libraries mf and Metric. The results that provide complete computational content include that the algebraic operations and the efficient limit operator on the reals are computable, that the countably infinite product of a space with itself is isomorphic to a space of functions, compatibility of the enumeration representation of subsets of natural numbers with the abstract definition of the space of open subsets of the natural numbers, and that continuous realizability implies sequential continuity. We also describe many non-computational results that support the correctness of definitions from the library. These include that the information theoretic notion of continuity used in the library is equivalent to the metric notion of continuity on Baire space, a complete comparison of the different concepts of continuity that arise from metric and represented space structures and the discontinuity of the unrestricted limit operator on the real numbers and the task of selecting an element of a closed subset of the natural numbers

    Introduction to Milestones in Interactive Theorem Proving

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    On March 8, 2018, Tobias Nipkow celebrated his sixtieth birthday. In anticipation of the occasion, in January 2016, two of his former students, Gerwin Klein and Jasmin Blanchette, and one of his former postdocs, Andrei Popescu, approached the editorial board of the Journal of Automated Reasoning with a proposal to publish a surprise Festschrift issue in his honor. The e-mail was sent to twenty-six members of the board, leaving out one, for reasons that will become clear in a moment. It is a sign of the love and respect that Tobias commands from his colleagues that within two days every recipient of the e-mail had responded favorably and enthusiastically to the proposal

    Introduction to milestones in interactive theorem proving

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    International Congress of Mathematicians: 2022 July 6–14: Proceedings of the ICM 2022

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    Following the long and illustrious tradition of the International Congress of Mathematicians, these proceedings include contributions based on the invited talks that were presented at the Congress in 2022. Published with the support of the International Mathematical Union and edited by Dmitry Beliaev and Stanislav Smirnov, these seven volumes present the most important developments in all fields of mathematics and its applications in the past four years. In particular, they include laudations and presentations of the 2022 Fields Medal winners and of the other prestigious prizes awarded at the Congress. The proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians provide an authoritative documentation of contemporary research in all branches of mathematics, and are an indispensable part of every mathematical library
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