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prooftree - proof-tree display for Proof General

prooftree [Options...]

Prooftree visualizes proof trees during proof development with Proof General. Currently it only works for Coq, though adding support for other proof assistants should be relatively easy.

To start a proof-tree display, hit the Prooftree icon in the Proof General tool-bar or select the menu entry Proof-General -> Start/Stop Prooftree or type C-c C-d (which runs proof-tree-external-display-toggle). Inside a proof, this will immediately start a proof-tree display for the current proof. Outside a proof, Proof General remembers to start the proof-tree display for the next proof.

Under normal circumstances Prooftree is started by Proof General as an Emacs subprocess. The user interacts with Prooftree only through the graphical user interface. A substantial part of the proof-tree visualization task is done by Proof General. Therefore not only the Prooftree command line arguments but also other aspects can only be configured inside Proof General, see Proof General Customization below.

Print synopsis and exit.
Open the configuration dialog on startup (if you want to change the configuration without starting Proof General).
Sets the X geometry of the main window. spec is a standard X geometry string in the form xposxypos[+xoff[+yoff]].
Write all input to file (usually for debugging purposes).
Provide more details on errors.
Open the help dialog on startup. Mainly useful for proofreading the help text.

Prooftree opens one window for each proof that it is requested to display. This window contains the proof-tree graph and a small display for sequents and proof commands.

The branches in the proof-tree graph are colored according to their state. Prooftree distinguishes between the following states.

The current branch is the branch from the root of the proof tree to the current goal.
A branch is unproven if it contains open proof goals.
An incompletely proved branch has its proof finished, but some of the existential variables that have been introduced in this branch are not (yet) instantiated.
In a partially proved branch all existential variables of the branch itself are instantiated, but some of those instantiations contain existential variables that are not (yet) instantiated.
A branch is proved complete if all its existential variables are instantiated with terms that themselves do not contain any existential variables.
A cheated branch contains a cheating proof command, such as admit

The colors as well as many other Prooftree parameters can be changed in the Prooftree Configuration Dialog (see below).

When the proof tree grows large one can navigate by a variety of means. In addition to scroll bars and the usual keys one can move the proof tree by dragging with mouse button 1 pressed. By default, dragging moves the viewport (i.e., the proof tree underneath moves in the opposite direction). After setting a negative value for Drag acceleration in the Prooftree Configuration Dialog, dragging will move the proof tree instead (i.e, the proof tree moves in the same direction as the mouse).

The sequent display below the proof tree normally shows the ancestor sequent of the current goal. With a single left mouse click one can display any goal or proof command in the sequent display. A single click outside the proof tree will switch back to default behavior. The initial size of the sequent display can be set in the Prooftree Configuration Dialog. A value of 0 hides the sequent display.

Abbreviated proof commands and sequents are shown in full as tool tips when the mouse pointer rests over them. Both, the tool tips for abbreviated proof commands and for sequents can be independently switched off in the Prooftree Configuration Dialog. The length at which proof commands are abbreviated can be configured as well.

A double click or a shift-click displays any goal or proof command in an additional window. These additional windows are automatically updated, for instance, if an existential variable is instantiated. For additional sequent displays one can browse the instantiation history of the sequent using the forward and backward buttons. These additional windows can be detached from the proof tree. A detached display is neither automatically updated nor automatically deleted.

Prooftree keeps track of existential variables, whether they have been instantiated and whether they depend on some other, not (yet) instantiated existential. It uses different colors for proved branches that contain non-instantiated existential variables and branches that only depend on some not instantiated existential. The list of currently not (yet) instantiated existential variables is appended to proof commands and sequents in tool-tips and the other displays.

The Existential Variable Dialog displays a table with all existential variables of the current proof and their dependencies. Each line of the table contains a button that marks the proof command that introduced this variable (with yellow background, by default) and, if present, the proof command that instantiated this variable (with orange background, by default).

The Menu button displays the main menu. The Clone item clones the current proof tree in an additional window. This additional window continues to display a snapshot of the cloned proof tree, no matter what happens with the original proof.

The Show current and Show selected items move the viewport of the proof tree such that the current proof goal, or, respectively, the selected node will be visible (if they exist).

The Exit item terminates Prooftree and closes all proof-tree displays.

The remaining three items display, respectively, the Prooftree Configuration Dialog, and the Help and About windows.

A right click displays the Context Menu, which contains additional items.

The item Undo to point is active over sequent nodes in the proof tree. There, it sends an retract or undo request to Proof General that retracts the scripting buffer up to that sequent.

The items Insert command and Insert subproof are active over proof commands. They sent, respectively, the selected proof command or all proof commands in the selected subtree, to Proof General, which inserts them at point.

The Save button stores the current configuration (as marshaled OCaml record) in ~/.prooftree, which will overwrite the built-in default configuration for the following Prooftree runs. The Revert button loads and applies the saved configuration. The Cancel and OK buttons close the dialog, but Cancel additionally resets the configuration to the state before the start of the dialog. To avoid opening partial file names, the Log Proof General input check box is deactivated when typing the log file name.

The location of the Prooftree executable and the command line arguments are in the customization group proof-tree. Prover specific points, such as the regular expressions for navigation and cheating commands are in the customization group proof-tree-internals. To visit a customization group, type M-x customize-group followed by the name of the customization group inside Proof General.

For Coq >= 8.5, existential variables in Prooftree are severely broken because Coq does not provide the necessary information, see Coq bug 4504.

In Coq, proofs must be started with command Proof, which is the recommended practice anyway (see Coq problem report 2776).

In additional sequent displays, the information about existential variables is only shown for the latest version of the sequent and not for older versions in the instantiation history. The current communication protocol between Proof General and Prooftree does not permit more.

This version of Prooftree requires Coq 8.4beta or better and Proof General 4.3pre130327 or better.

~/.prooftree
Saved Prooftree configuration. Is loaded at application start-up for overwriting the built-in default configuration. Must contain a marshaled OCaml configuration record.

contains information about adapting Prooftree for a new proof assistant (see http://proofgeneral.inf.ed.ac.uk/adaptingman-latest.html).

Prooftree has been inspired by the proof tree display of PVS.

Hendrik Tews <prooftree at askra.de>

August 2011 PROOFTREE