5 KiB
Lean declarations
Definitions
The command definition
declares a new constant/function. The identity function is defined as
definition id {A : Type} (a : A) : A := a
We say definitions are "transparent", because the type checker can
unfold them. The following declaration only type checks because +
is
a transparent definition. Otherwise, the type checker would reject
the expression v = w
since it would not be able to establish that
2+3
and 5
are "identical". In type theory, we say they are
definitionally equal.
import data.vector data.nat
open nat
check λ (v : vector nat (2+3)) (w : vector nat 5), v = w
Similarly, the following definition only type checks because id
is transparent, and the type checker can establish that
nat
and id nat
are definitionally equal, that is, they are the "same".
import data.nat
definition id {A : Type} (a : A) : A := a
check λ (x : nat) (y : id nat), x = y
Theorems
In Lean, a theorem is just an opaque
definition. We usually use
theorem
for declaring propositions. The idea is that users don't
really care about the actual proof, only about its existence. As
described in previous sections, Prop
(the type of all propositions)
is proof irrelevant. If we had defined id
using a theorem the
previous example would produce a typing error because the type checker
would be unable to unfold id
and establish that nat
and id nat
are definitionally equal.
Opaque definitions
Opaque definitions are similar to regular definitions, but they are
only transparent in the module/file where they were defined. The
idea is to allow us to prove theorems about the opaque definition C
in the module where it was defined. In other modules, we can only rely
on these theorems. That is, the actual definition is
hidden/encapsulated, and the module designer is free to change it
without affecting its "customers".
Actually, the opaque definition is only treated as transparent inside of other opaque definitions/theorems in the same module.
Here is an example
import data.nat
opaque definition id {A : Type} (a : A) : A := a
-- The following command is type correct since it is being executed in the
-- same file where id was defined
check λ (x : nat) (y : id nat), x = y
-- The following theorem is also type correct since id is being treated as
-- transparent only in the proof by reflexivity.
theorem id_eq {A : Type} (a : A) : id a = a :=
eq.refl a
-- The following transparent definition is also type correct. It uses
-- id but it can be type checked without unfolding id.
definition id2 {A : Type} (a : A) : A :=
id a
-- The following definition is type incorrect. It only type checks if
-- we unfold id, but it is not allowed because the definition is opaque.
/-
definition buggy_def {A : Type} (a : A) : Prop :=
∀ (b : id A), a = b
-/
Theorems are always opaque, but we should be able to type check their type
in any module. The following theorem is type incorrect because we need to
unfold the opaque definition id
to type check it.
import data.unit
opaque definition id {A : Type} (a : A) : A := a
/-
theorem buggy_thm (a : unit) (b : id unit) : a = b :=
unit.equal a b
-/
In contrast, the following theorem is type correct because id
is
transparent in this example.
import data.unit
definition id {A : Type} (a : A) : A := a
theorem simple (a : unit) (b : id unit) : a = b :=
unit.equal a b
Private definitions and theorems
Sometimes it is useful to hide auxiliary definitions and theorems from
the module interface. The keyword private
allows us to declare local
hidden definitions and theorems. A private definition is always
opaque. The name of a private
definition is only visible in the
module/file where it was declared.
import data.nat
open nat
private definition inc (x : nat) := x + 1
private theorem inc_eq_succ (x : nat) : succ x = inc x :=
rfl
-- The definition inc and theorem inc_eq_succ are not visible/accessible
-- in modules that import this one.
Protected definitions and theorems
Declarations can be be organized into namespaces. In the previous
examples, we have been using the namespace nat
. It contains
definitions such as nat.succ
and nat.add
. The command open
creates the aliases succ
and add
to these definitions. An alias
will not be created for a protected definition unless the user
explicitly request it.
import data.nat
open nat
namespace foo
definition two : nat := 2
protected definition three : nat := 3
end foo
open foo
check two
-- The following command produces a 'unknown identifier' error
/-
check three
-/
-- We have to use its fully qualified name to access three
check foo.three
-- If the user explicitly request three, then an alias is created
open foo (three)
check three