1,517 research outputs found
Coq Modulo Theory - Short Paper
International audienceCoq Modulo Theory (CoqMT) is an extension of the Coq proof assistant incorporating, in its computational mechanism, validity entailment for user-defined first-order equational theories. Such a mechanism strictly enriches the system (more terms are typable), eases the use of dependent types and provides more automation during the development of proofs. CoqMT improves over the Calculus of Congruent Inductive Constructions by getting rid of various restrictions and simplifying the type-checking algorithm and the integration of first-order decision procedures
A Proof Theoretic View of Constraint Programming
We provide here a proof theoretic account of constraint programming that
attempts to capture the essential ingredients of this programming style. We
exemplify it by presenting proof rules for linear constraints over interval
domains, and illustrate their use by analyzing the constraint propagation
process for the {\tt SEND + MORE = MONEY} puzzle. We also show how this
approach allows one to build new constraint solvers.Comment: 25 page
Building Decision Procedures in the Calculus of Inductive Constructions
It is commonly agreed that the success of future proof assistants will rely
on their ability to incorporate computations within deduction in order to mimic
the mathematician when replacing the proof of a proposition P by the proof of
an equivalent proposition P' obtained from P thanks to possibly complex
calculations. In this paper, we investigate a new version of the calculus of
inductive constructions which incorporates arbitrary decision procedures into
deduction via the conversion rule of the calculus. The novelty of the problem
in the context of the calculus of inductive constructions lies in the fact that
the computation mechanism varies along proof-checking: goals are sent to the
decision procedure together with the set of user hypotheses available from the
current context. Our main result shows that this extension of the calculus of
constructions does not compromise its main properties: confluence, subject
reduction, strong normalization and consistency are all preserved
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