This is not the Kernel type checker, but an auxiliary method for checking
whether terms produced by tactics and isDefEq
are type correct.
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Given two expressions a
and b
, this method tries to annotate terms with pp.explicit := true
to
expose "implicit" differences. For example, suppose a
and b
are of the form
@HashMap Nat Nat eqInst hasInst1
@HashMap Nat Nat eqInst hasInst2
By default, the pretty printer formats both of them as HashMap Nat Nat
.
So, counterintuitive error messages such as
error: application type mismatch
HashMap.insert m
argument
m
has type
HashMap Nat Nat
but is expected to have type
HashMap Nat Nat
would be produced.
By adding pp.explicit := true
, we can generate the more informative error
error: application type mismatch
HashMap.insert m
argument
m
has type
@HashMap Nat Nat eqInst hasInst1
but is expected to have type
@HashMap Nat Nat eqInst hasInst2
Remark: this method implements a simple heuristic, we should extend it as we find other counterintuitive error messages.
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Return error message "has type{givenType}\nbut is expected to have type{expectedType}"
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Throw an exception if e
is not type correct.
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Return true if e
is type correct.
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- Lean.Meta.isTypeCorrect e = tryCatch (do Lean.Meta.check e pure true) fun x => pure false