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CSL
2007
Springer

Incorporating Tables into Proofs

13 years 10 months ago
Incorporating Tables into Proofs
We consider the problem of automating and checking the use of previously proved lemmas in the proof of some main theorem. In particular, we call the collection of such previously proved results a table and use a partial order on the table’s entries to denote the (provability) dependency relationship between tabled items. Tables can be used in automated deduction to store previously proved subgoals and in interactive theorem proving to store a sequence of lemmas introduced by a user to direct the proof system towards some final theorem. Tables of literals can be incorporated into sequent calculus proofs using two ideas. First, cuts are used to incorporate tabled items into a proof: one premise of the cut requires a proof of the lemma and the other branch of the cut inserts the lemma into the set of assumptions. Second, to ensure that lemma is not reproved, we exploit the fact that in focused proofs, atoms can have different polarity. Using these ideas, simple logic engines that do f...
Dale Miller, Vivek Nigam
Added 07 Jun 2010
Updated 07 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where CSL
Authors Dale Miller, Vivek Nigam
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