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Tricks in Coq

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Some tips, tricks, and features in Coq that are hard to discover.

If you have a trick you've found useful feel free to submit an issue or pull request!

Meta

  • Author(s):
    • Tej Chajed (initial)
  • Coq-community maintainer(s):
  • License: The code in the repository is licensed under the terms of the MIT license. The documentation (including this README) is licensed under the CC0 license.
  • Compatible Coq versions: Coq master

To build all the examples in src/, run make.

Ltac

  • The pattern tactic generalizes an expression over a variable. For example, pattern y transforms a goal of P x y z into (fun y => P x y z) y. An especially useful way to use this is to pattern match on eval pattern y in constr:(P x y z) to extract just the function.
  • lazymatch is like match but without backtracking on failures inside the match action. If you're not using failures for backtracking (this is often the case), then lazymatch gets better error messages because an error inside the action becomes the overall error message rather than the uninformative "no match" error message. (The semantics of match mean Coq can't do obviously do better - it can't distinguish between a bug in the action and intentionally using the failure to prevent pattern matching.)
  • deex (see Deex.v) is a useful tactic for extracting the witness from an exists hypothesis while preserving the name of the witness and hypothesis.
  • Ltac t ::= foo. re-defines the tactic t to foo. This changes the binding, so tactics that refer to t will use the new definition. You can use this for a form of extensibility: write Ltac hook := fail and then use
    repeat match goal with
           | (* initial cases *)
           | _ => hook
           | (* other cases *)
           end
    in your tactic. Now the user can insert an extra case in your tactic's core loop by overriding hook.
  • learn approach - see Learn.v for a self-contained example or Clément's thesis for more details
  • unshelve tactical, especially useful with an eapply - good example use case is constructing an object by refinement where the obligations end up being your proofs with the values as evars, when you wanted to construct the values by proof
  • unfold "+" works
  • destruct matches tactic; see coq-tactical's SimplMatch.v
  • using instantiate to modify evar environment (thanks to Jonathan Leivent on coq-club)
  • eexists ?[x] lets one name an existential variable to be able to refer to it later
  • strong induction is in the standard library: Require Import Arith. and use induction n as [n IHn] using lt_wf_ind.
  • induction on the length of a list: Require Import Coq.Arith.Wf_nat. and induction xs as [xs IHxs] using (induction_ltof1 _ (@length _)); unfold ltof in IHxs.
  • debug auto, debug eauto, and debug trivial give traces, including failed invocations. info_auto, info_eauto, and info_trivial are less verbose ways to debug which only report what the resulting proof includes
  • constructor and econstructor backtrack over the constructors over an inductive, which lets you do fun things exploring the constructors of an inductive type. See Constructors.v for some demonstrations.
  • There's a way to destruct and maintain an equality: destruct_with_eqn x. You can also do destruct x eqn:H to explicitly name the equality hypothesis. This is similar to case_eq x; intros; I'm not sure what the practical differences are.
  • rew H in t notation to use eq_rect for a (safe) "type cast". Need to import EqNotations - see RewNotation.v for a working example.
  • intro-patterns can be combined in a non-trivial way: intros [=->%lemma] -- see IntroPatterns.v.
  • change tactic supports patterns (?var): e.g. repeat change (fun x => ?f x) with f would eta-reduce all the functions (of arbitrary arity) in the goal.
  • One way to implement a tactic that sleeps for n seconds is in Sleep.v.
  • Some tactics take an "occurrence clause" to select where they apply. The common ones are in * and in H to apply everywhere and in a specific hypotheses, but there are actually a bunch of forms, for example:
    • in H1, H2 (just H1 and H2)
    • in H1, H2 |- * (H1, H2, and the goal)
    • in * |- (just hypotheses)
    • in |- (nowhere)
    • in |- * (just the goal, same as leaving the whole thing off)
    • in * |- * (everywhere, same as in *) These forms would be especially useful if occurrence clauses were first-class objects; that is, if tactics could take and pass occurrence clauses. Currently user-defined tactics support occurrence clauses via a set of tactic notations.
  • Defining tactics (Tactic Notations) that accept multiple optional parameters directly is cumbersome, but it can be done more flexibly using Ltac2. An example can be found in TacticNotationOptionalParams.v.
  • You can use notations to shorten repetitive Ltac patterns (much like Haskell's PatternSynonyms). Define a notation with holes (underscores) and use it in an Ltac match, eg Notation anyplus := (_ + _). and then
    match goal with
    | |- context[anyplus] => idtac
    end
    I would recommend using Local Notation so the notation isn't available outside the current file.
  • You can make all constructors of an inductive hints with Hint Constructors; you can also do this locally in a proof with eauto using t where t is the name of the inductive.
  • The intuition tactic has some unexpected behaviors. It takes a tactic to run on each goal, which is auto with * by default, using hints from all hint databases. intuition idtac or intuition eauto are both much safer. When using these, note that intuition eauto; simpl is parsed as intuition (eauto; simpl), which is unlikely to be what you want; you'll need to instead write (intuition eauto); simpl.
  • The Coq.Program.Tactics library has a number of useful tactics and tactic helpers. Some gems that I like: add_hypothesis is like pose proof but fails if the fact is already in the context (a lightweight version of the learn approach); destruct_one_ex implements the tricky code to eliminate an exists while retaining names (it's a better version of our deex); on_application matches any application of f by simply handling a large number of arities.
  • You can structure your proofs using bullets. You should use them in the order -, +, * so that Proof General indents them correctly. If you need more bullets you can keep going with --, ++, ** (although you should rarely need more then three levels of bullets in one proof).
  • You can use the set tactic to create shorthand names for expressions. These are special let-bound variables and show up in the hypotheses as v := def. To "unfold" these definitions you can do subst v (note the explicit name is required, subst will not do this by default). This is a good way to make large goals readable, perhaps while figuring out what lemma to extract. It can also be useful if you need to refer these expressions.
  • When you write a function in proof mode (useful when dependent types are involved), you probably want to end the proof with Defined instead of Qed. The difference is that Qed makes the proof term opaque and prevents reduction, while Defined will simplify correctly. If you mix computational parts and proof parts (eg, functions which produce sigma types) then you may want to separate the proof into a lemma so that it doesn't get unfolded into a large proof term.
  • To make an evar an explicit goal, you can use this trick: unshelve (instantiate (1:=_)). The way this work is to instantiate the evar with a fresh evar (created due to the _) and then unshelve that evar, making it an explicit goal. See UnshelveInstantiate.v for a working example.
  • The enough tactic behaves like assert but puts the goal for the stated fact after the current goal rather than before.
  • You can use context E [x] to bind a context variable, and then let e := eval context E [y] in ... to substitute back into the context. See Context.v for an example.
  • If you have a second-order match (using @?z x, which bind z to a function) and you want to apply the function, there's a trick involving a seemingly useless match. See LtacGallinaApplication.v for an example.
  • auto with foo nocore with the pseudo-database nocore disables the default core hint databases and only uses hints from foo (and the context).
  • If you need to apply a theorem to a hypothesis and then immediately destruct the result, there's a concise way to do it without repetition: apply thm in H as [x H], for example, might be used then thm produces an existential for a variable named x.
  • If you have a hypothesis H: a = b and need f a = f b, you can use apply (f_equal f) in H. (Strictly speaking this is just using the f_equal theorem in the standard library, but it's also very much like the inverse direction for the f_equal tactic.)
  • If you want to both run Ltac and return a constr, you can do so by wrapping the side effect in let _ := match goal with _ => side_effect_tactic end in .... See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45949064/check-for-evars-in-a-tactic-that-returns-a-value/46178884#46178884 for Jason Gross's much more thorough explanation.
  • If you want lia to help with non-linear arithmetic involving division or modulo (or the similar quot and rem), you can do that for simple cases with Ltac Zify.zify_post_hook ::= Z.div_mod_to_equations. See DivMod.v for an example and the micromega documentation the full details.
  • Coq's admit will force you to use Admitted. If you want to use Qed, you can instead use Axiom falso : False. Ltac admit := destruct falso. This can be useful for debugging Qed errors (say, due to universes) or slow Qeds.

Gallina

  • tactics in terms, eg ltac:(eauto) can provide a proof argument

  • maximally inserted implicit arguments are implicit even when for identifier alone (eg, nil is defined to include the implicit list element type)

  • maximally inserted arguments can be defined differently for different numbers of arguments - undocumented but eq_refl provides an example

  • r.(Field) syntax: same as Field r, but convenient when Field is a projection function for the (record) type of r. If you use these, you might also want Set Printing Projections so Coq re-prints calls to projections with the same syntax.

  • Function vernacular provides a more advanced way to define recursive functions, which removes the restriction of having a structurally decreasing argument; you just need to specify a well-founded relation or a decreasing measure maps to a nat, then prove all necessary obligations to show this function can terminate. See manual and examples in Function.v for more details.

    Three alternatives may be considered as drop-in replacements for Function.

    • Program Fixpoint may be useful when defining a nested recursive function. See manual and this StackOverflow post.
    • CPDT's way of defining general recursive functions with Fix combinator.
    • Equations is a plugin which extends Coq with new commands for defining recursive functions, and compiles everything down to eliminators for inductive types, equality and accessibility.
  • One can pattern-match on tuples under lambdas: Definition fst {A B} : (A * B) -> A := fun '(x,_) => x.

  • Records fields can be defined with :>, which make that field accessor a coercion. There are three ways to use this (since there are three types of coercion classes). See Coercions.v for some concrete examples.

    • If the field is an ordinary type, the record can be used as that type (the field will implicitly be accessed). One good use case for this is whenever a record includes another record; this coercion will make the field accessors of the sub-record work for the outer record as well. (This is vaguely similar to Go embedded structs)
    • If the field has a function type, the record can be called.
    • If the field is a sort (eg, Type), then the record can be used as a type.
  • When a Class field (as opposed to a record) is defined with :>, it becomes a hint for typeclass resolution. This is useful when a class includes a "super-class" requirement as a field. For example, Equivalence has fields for reflexivity, symmetry, and transitivity. The reflexivity field can be used to generically take an Equivalence instance and get a reflexivity instance for free.

  • The type classes in RelationClasses are useful but can be repetitive to prove. RelationInstances.v goes through a few ways of making these more convenient, and why you would want to do so (basically you can make reflexivity, transitivity, and symmetry more powerful).

  • The types of inductives can be definitions, as long as they expand to an "arity" (a function type ending in Prop, Set, or Type). See ArityDefinition.v.

  • "Views" are a programming pattern that can be used to perform a case analysis only on "relevant" parts of a datatype given the context of the case analysis. See Views.v.

  • Record fields that are functions can be written in definition-style syntax with the parameters bound after the record name, eg {| func x y := x + y; |} (see RecordFunction.v for a complete example).

  • If you have a coercion get_function : MyRecord >-> Funclass you can use Add Printing Coercion get_function and then add a notation for get_function so your coercion can be parsed as function application but printed using some other syntax (and maybe you want that syntax to be printing only).

  • You can pass implicit arguments explicitly in a keyword-argument-like style, eg nil (A:=nat). Use About to figure out argument names.

  • If you do nasty dependent pattern matches or use inversion on a goal and it produces equalities of existT's, you may benefit from small inversions, described in this blog post. While the small inversion tactic is still not available anywhere I can find, some support is built in to Coq's match return type inference; see SmallInversions.v for examples of how to use that.

  • You can use tactics-in-terms with notations to write function-like definitions that are written in Ltac. For example, you can use this facility to write macros that inspect and transform Gallina terms, producing theorem statements and optionally their proofs automatically. A simple example is given in DefEquality.v of writing a function that produces an equality for unfolding a definition.

  • Notations can be dangerous since they by default have global scope and are imported by Import, with no way to selectively import. A pattern I now use by default to make notations controllable is to define every notation in a module with a scope; see NotationModule.v.

    This pattern has several advantages:

    • notations are only loaded as needed, preventing conflicts when not using the notations
    • the notations can be brought into scope everywhere as needed with Import and Local Open Scope, restoring the convenience of a global notation
    • if notations conflict, some of them can always be scoped appropriately
  • Coq has a module system, modeled after ML (eg, the one used in OCaml). You can see some simple examples of using it in Modules.v. In user code, I've found module types and module functors to be more trouble than they're worth 90% of the time - the biggest issue is that once something is in a module type, the only way to extend it is with a new module that wraps an existing module, and the only way to use the extension is to instantiate it. At the same time, you can mostly simulate module types with records.

  • Coq type class resolution is extremely flexible. There's a hint database called typeclass_instances and typeclass resolution is essentially eauto with typeclass_instances. Normally you add to this database with commands like Instance, but you can add whatever you want to it, including Hint Externs. See coq-record-update for a practical example.

  • Classes are a bit special compared to any other type. First of all, in (_ : T x1 x2) Coq will only trigger type class resolution to fill the hole when T is a class. Second, classes get special implicit generalization behavior; specifically, you can write {T} and Coq will automatically generalize the arguments to T, which you don't even have to write down. See the manual on implicit generalization for more details. Note that you don't have to use Class at declaration time to make something a class; you can do it after the fact with Existing Class T.

  • Set Printing Projections is nice in theory if you use records, but it interacts poorly with classes. See Projections.v.

Other Coq commands

  • Search vernacular variants; see Search.v for examples.

  • Search s -Learnt for a search of local hypotheses excluding Learnt

  • Locate can search for notation, including partial searches.

  • Optimize Heap (undocumented) runs GC (specifically Gc.compact)

  • Optimize Proof (undocumented) runs several simplifications on the current proof term (see Proofview.compact)

  • (in Coq 8.12 and earlier) Generalizable Variable A enables implicit generalization; Definition id `(x:A) := x will implicitly add a parameter A before x. Generalizable All Variables enables implicit generalization for any identifier. Note that this surprisingly allows generalization without a backtick in Instances. Issue #6030 generously requests this behavior be documented, but it should probably require enabling some option. This has been fixed in Coq 8.13; the old behavior requires Set Instance Generalized Output. In Coq 8.14 the option has been removed.

  • Check supports partial terms, printing a type along with a context of evars. A cool example is Check (id _ _), where the first underscore must be a function (along with other constraints on the types involved).

  • The above also works with named existentials. For example, Check ?[x] + ?[y] works.

  • Unset Intuition Negation Unfolding will cause intuition to stop unfolding not.

  • Definitions can be normalized (simplified/computed) easily with Definition bar := Eval compute in foo.

  • Set Uniform Inductive Parameters (in Coq v8.9+beta onwards) allows you to omit the uniform parameters to an inductive in the constructors.

  • Lemma and Theorem are synonymous, except that coqdoc will not show lemmas. Also synonymous: Corollary, Remark, and Fact. Definition is nearly synonymous, except that Theorem x := def is not supported (you need to use Definition).

  • Sections are a powerful way to write a collection of definitions and lemmas that all take the same generic arguments. Here are some tricks for working with sections, which are illustrated in Sections.v:

    • Use Context, which is strictly more powerful than Variable - you can declare multiple dependent parameters and get type inference, and can write {A} to make sure a parameter is implicit and maximally inserted.
    • Tactics and hints are cleared at the end of a section. This is often annoying but you can take advantage of it by writing one-off tactics like t that are specific to the automation of a file, and callers don't see it. Similarly with adding hints to core with abandon.
    • Use notations and implicit types. Say you have a section that defines lists, and you want another file with a bunch of list theorems. You can start with Context (A:Type). Notation list := (List.list A). Implicit Types (l:list). and then in the whole section you basically never need to write type annotations. The notation and implicit type disappears at the end of the section so no worries about leaking it. Furthermore, don't write Theorem foo : forall l, but instead write Theorem foo l :; you can often also avoid using intros with this trick (though be careful about doing induction and ending up with a weak induction hypothesis).
    • If you write a general-purpose tactic t that solves most goals in a section, it gets annoying to write Proof. t. Qed. every time. Instead, define Notation magic := ltac:(t) (only parsing). and write Definition foo l : l = l ++ [] := magic.. You do unfortunately have to write Definition; Lemma and Theorem do not support := definitions. You don't have to call it magic but of course it's more fun that way. Note that this isn't the best plan because you end up with transparent proofs, which isn't great; ideally Coq would just support Theorem foo := syntax for opaque proofs.
  • Haskell has an operator f $ x, which is the same as f x except that its parsed differently: f $ 1 + 1 means f (1 + 1), avoiding parentheses. You can simulate this in Coq with a notation: Notation "f $ x" := (f x) (at level 60, right associativity, only parsing). (from jwiegley/coq-haskell).

  • A useful convention for notations is to have them start with a word and an exclamation mark. This is borrowed from @andres-erbsen, who borrowed it from the Rust macro syntax. An example of using this convention is in Macros.v. There are three big advantages to this approach: first, using it consistently alerts readers that a macro is being used, and second, using names makes it much easier to create many macros compared to inventing ASCII syntax, and third, starting every macro with a keyword makes them much easier to get parsing correctly.

  • To declare an axiomatic instance of a typeclass, use Declare Instance foo : TypeClass. This better than the pattern of Axiom + Existing Instance.

  • To make Ltac scripts more readable, you can use Set Default Goal Selector "!"., which will enforce that every Ltac command (sentence) be applied to exactly one focused goal. You achieve that by using a combination of bullets and braces. As a result, when reading a script you can always see the flow of where multiple goals are generated and solved.

  • Arguments foo _ & _ (in Coq 8.11) adds a bidirectionality hint saying that an application of foo should infer a type from its arguments after typing the first argument. See Bidirectional.v for an example and the latest Coq documentation.

  • Coq 8.11 introduced compiled interfaces, aka vos files (as far as I can tell they are a more principled replacement for vio files). Suppose you make a change deep down to Lib.v and want to start working on Proof.v which imports Lib.v through many dependencies. With vos files, you can recompile all the signatures that Proof.v depends on, skippinng proofs, and keep working. The basic way to use them is to compile Proof.required_vos, a special dependency coqdep generates that will build everything needed to work on Proof.v. Coq natively looks for vos files in interactive mode, and uses empty vos files to indicate that the file is fully compiled in a vo file.

    Note that Coq also has vok files; it's possible to check the missing proofs in a vos file, but this does not produce a vo and so all Coq can do is record that the proofs have been checked. They can also be compiled in parallel within a single file, although I don't know how to do that. Compiling voks lets you fairly confidently check proofs, but to really check everything (particularly universe constraints) you need to build vo files from scratch.

    Signature files have one big caveat: if Coq cannot determine the type of a theorem or the proof ends with Defined (and thus might be relevant to later type-checking), it has to run the proof. It does so silently, potentially eliminating any performance benefit. The main reason this happens is due to proofs in a section that don't annotate which section variables are used with Proof using. Generally this can be fixed with Set Default Proof Using "Type", though only on Coq 8.12+.

  • Coq 8.12 has a new feature Set Printing Parentheses that prints parentheses as if no notations had an associativity. For example, this will print (1,2,3) as ((1,2),3). This is much more readable than entirely disabling notations.

  • You can use Export Set or #[export] Set to set options in a way that affects any file directly importing the file (but not transitively importing, the way Global Set works). This allows a project to locally set up defaults with an options.v file with all of its options, which every file imports. You can use this for basic sanity settings, like Set Default Proof Using "Type". and Set Default Goal Selector "!" without forcing them on all projects that import your project.

  • You can use all: fail "goals remaining". to assert that a proof is complete. This is useful when you'll use Admitted. but want to document (and check in CI) that the proof is complete other than the admit. tactics used.

  • You can also use Fail idtac. to assert that a proof is complete, which is shorter than the above but more arcane.

  • You can use Fail Fail Qed. to really assert that a proof is complete, including doing universe checks, but then still be able to Restart it. I think this is only useful for illustrating small examples but it's amusing that it works. (The new Succeed vernacular in Coq 8.15 is a better replacement, because it preserves error messages on failure.)

  • Hints can now be set to global, export, or local. Global (the current default) means the hint applies to any module that transitivity imports this one; export makes the hint visible only if the caller imports this module directly. The behavior will eventually change for hints at the top-level so that they become export instead of global (see coq/coq#13384), so this might be worth understanding now. HintLocality.v walks through what the three levels do.

  • The uniform inheritance condition for coercions is gone as of March 2022. This condition required that all the implicit arguments of the target of a coercion could be inferred from the source, so if the source had extra implicit arguments the definition could not be a coercion. This is no longer the case - elaboration will infer the missing arguments. There's still a warning but you can disable it with #[warning="-uniform-inheritance"] on the coercion.

Warnings and options

  • You can use Set Warnings "-deprecated-syntactic-definition" to achieve the same effect as -w -deprecated-syntactic-definition from the command line, but from within a Coq file. As of Coq 8.18 you can also use #[warning="-deprecated-syntactic-definition"] to disable the warning for one command.

Using Coq

  • You can pass -noinit to coqc or coqtop to avoid loading the standard library.
  • Ltac is provided as a plugin loaded by the standard library; if you have -noinit to load it you need Declare ML Module "ltac_plugin". (see NoInit.v).
  • Numeral notations are only provided by the prelude, even if you issue Require Import Coq.Init.Datatypes.
  • If you use Coq master, the latest Coq reference manual is built and deployed to https://coq.github.io/doc/master/refman/index.html automatically.
  • At Qed, Coq re-checks the proof term, which can take a while. At the same time, Qed rarely fails - some reasons why it might include that there's a universe inconsistency, the coinductive guarded check fails, there's a bug in an OCaml tactic, or there's an incorrect use of exact_no_check. It's not so easy to disable Qed - in Perennial we do so using this disable-qed.sh script, which replaces Qed with Unshelve. Fail idtac. Admitted.. This still ensures there are no goals, but skips the Qed checking. We only skip Qed during CI, but run it regularly locally to have a fully consistent build; another good tradeoff would be to run with Qed checking on a weekly basis but not on every commit.

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