Utilities¶
The distribution provides utilities to simplify some tedious works beside proof development, tactics writing or documentation.
Using Coq as a library¶
In previous versions, coqmktop
was used to build custom
toplevels - for example for better debugging or custom static
linking. Nowadays, the preferred method is to use ocamlfind
.
The most basic custom toplevel is built using:
% ocamlfind ocamlopt -thread -rectypes -linkall -linkpkg \
-package coq.toplevel \
topbin/coqtop_bin.ml -o my_toplevel.native
For example, to statically link L
tac, you can just do:
% ocamlfind ocamlopt -thread -rectypes -linkall -linkpkg \
-package coq.toplevel,coq.plugins.ltac \
topbin/coqtop_bin.ml -o my_toplevel.native
and similarly for other plugins.
Building a Coq project¶
As of today it is possible to build Coq projects using two tools:
- coq_makefile, which is distributed by Coq and is based on generating a makefile,
- Dune, the standard OCaml build tool, which, since version 1.9, supports building Coq libraries.
Building a Coq project with coq_makefile¶
The majority of Coq projects are very similar: a collection of .v
files and eventually some .ml
ones (a Coq plugin). The main piece of
metadata needed in order to build the project are the command line
options to coqc
(e.g. -R
, Q
, -I
, see command
line options). Collecting the list of files
and options is the job of the _CoqProject
file.
A simple example of a _CoqProject
file follows:
-R theories/ MyCode
-arg -w
-arg all
theories/foo.v
theories/bar.v
-I src/
src/baz.mlg
src/bazaux.ml
src/qux_plugin.mlpack
where options -R
, -Q
and -I
are natively recognized, as well as
file names. The lines of the form -arg foo
are used in order to tell
to literally pass an argument foo
to coqc
: in the
example, this allows to pass the two-word option -w all
(see
command line options).
Currently, both CoqIDE and Proof-General (version ≥ 4.3pre
)
understand _CoqProject
files and invoke Coq with the desired options.
The coq_makefile
utility can be used to set up a build infrastructure
for the Coq project based on makefiles. The recommended way of
invoking coq_makefile
is the following one:
coq_makefile -f _CoqProject -o CoqMakefile
Such command generates the following files:
- CoqMakefile
- is a generic makefile for
GNU Make
that provides targets to build the project (both.v
and.ml*
files), to install it system-wide in thecoq-contrib
directory (i.e. where Coq is installed) as well as to invoke coqdoc to generate HTML documentation. - CoqMakefile.conf
- contains make variables assignments that reflect
the contents of the
_CoqProject
file as well as the path relevant to Coq.
An optional file CoqMakefile.local
can be provided by the user in order to
extend CoqMakefile
. In particular one can declare custom actions to be
performed before or after the build process. Similarly one can customize the
install target or even provide new targets. Extension points are documented in
paragraph CoqMakefile.local.
The extensions of the files listed in _CoqProject
is used in order to
decide how to build them. In particular:
- Coq files must use the
.v
extension - OCaml files must use the
.ml
or.mli
extension - OCaml files that require pre processing for syntax
extensions (like
VERNAC EXTEND
) must use the.mlg
extension - In order to generate a plugin one has to list all OCaml
modules (i.e.
Baz
forbaz.ml
) in a.mlpack
file (or.mllib
file).
The use of .mlpack
files has to be preferred over .mllib
files,
since it results in a “packed” plugin: All auxiliary modules (as
Baz
and Bazaux
) are hidden inside the plugin’s "namespace"
(Qux_plugin
). This reduces the chances of begin unable to load two
distinct plugins because of a clash in their auxiliary module names.
CoqMakefile.local¶
The optional file CoqMakefile.local
is included by the generated
file CoqMakefile
. It can contain two kinds of directives.
Variable assignment
The variable must belong to the variables listed in the Parameters
section of the generated makefile.
Here we describe only few of them.
CAMLPKGS: | can be used to specify third party findlib packages, and is
passed to the OCaml compiler on building or linking of modules. Eg:
-package yojson . |
---|---|
CAMLFLAGS: | can be used to specify additional flags to the OCaml
compiler, like -bin-annot or -w .... |
OCAMLWARN: | it contains a default of -warn-error +a-3 , useful to modify
this setting; beware this is not recommended for projects in
Coq's CI. |
COQC, COQDEP, COQDOC: | |
can be set in order to use alternative binaries (e.g. wrappers) | |
COQ_SRC_SUBDIRS: | |
can be extended by including other paths in which *.cm* files
are searched. For example COQ_SRC_SUBDIRS+=user-contrib/Unicoq
lets you build a plugin containing OCaml code that depends on the
OCaml code of Unicoq |
|
COQFLAGS: | override the flags passed to coqc . By default -q . |
COQEXTRAFLAGS: | extend the flags passed to coqc |
COQCHKFLAGS: | override the flags passed to coqchk . By default -silent -o . |
COQCHKEXTRAFLAGS: | |
extend the flags passed to coqchk |
|
COQDOCFLAGS: | override the flags passed to coqdoc . By default -interpolate -utf8 . |
COQDOCEXTRAFLAGS: | |
extend the flags passed to coqdoc |
Rule extension
The following makefile rules can be extended.
Example
pre-all::
echo "This line is print before making the all target"
install-extra::
cp ThisExtraFile /there/it/goes
pre-all::
- run before the
all
target. One can use this to configure the project, or initialize sub modules or check dependencies are met. post-all::
- run after the
all
target. One can use this to run a test suite, or compile extracted code. install-extra::
- run after
install
. One can use this to install extra files. install-doc::
- One can use this to install extra doc.
uninstall::
uninstall-doc::
clean::
cleanall::
archclean::
merlin-hook::
- One can append lines to the generated
.merlin
file extending this target.
Timing targets and performance testing¶
The generated Makefile
supports the generation of two kinds of timing
data: per-file build-times, and per-line times for an individual file.
The following targets and Makefile variables allow collection of per- file timing data:
TIMED=1
passing this variable will cause
make
to emit a line describing the user-space build-time and peak memory usage for each file built.Note
On
Mac OS
, this works best if you’ve installedgnu-time
.Example
For example, the output of
make TIMED=1
may look like this:COQDEP Fast.v COQDEP Slow.v COQC Slow.v Slow (user: 0.34 mem: 395448 ko) COQC Fast.v Fast (user: 0.01 mem: 45184 ko)
pretty-timed
this target stores the output of
make TIMED=1
intotime-of-build.log
, and displays a table of the times, sorted from slowest to fastest, which is also stored intime-of-build-pretty.log
. If you want to construct thelog
for targets other than the default one, you can pass them via the variableTGTS
, e.g.,make pretty-timed TGTS="a.vo b.vo"
.Note
This target will append to the timing log; if you want a fresh start, you must remove the
filetime-of-build.log
orrun make cleanall
.Example
For example, the output of
make pretty-timed
may look like this:COQDEP Fast.v COQDEP Slow.v COQC Slow.v Slow (user: 0.36 mem: 393912 ko) COQC Fast.v Fast (user: 0.05 mem: 45992 ko) Time | File Name -------------------- 0m00.41s | Total -------------------- 0m00.36s | Slow 0m00.05s | Fast
print-pretty-timed-diff
this target builds a table of timing changes between two compilations; run
make make-pretty-timed-before
to build the log of the “before” times, and runmake make-pretty-timed-after
to build the log of the “after” times. The table is printed on the command line, and stored intime-of-build-both.log
. This target is most useful for profiling the difference between two commits in a repository.Note
This target requires
python
to build the table.Note
The
make-pretty-timed-before
andmake-pretty-timed-after
targets will append to the timing log; if you want a fresh start, you must remove the filestime-of-build-before.log
andtime-of-build-after.log
or runmake cleanall
before building either the “before” or “after” targets.Note
The table will be sorted first by absolute time differences rounded towards zero to a whole-number of seconds, then by times in the “after” column, and finally lexicographically by file name. This will put the biggest changes in either direction first, and will prefer sorting by build-time over subsecond changes in build time (which are frequently noise); lexicographic sorting forces an order on files which take effectively no time to compile.
Example
For example, the output table from
make print-pretty-timed-diff
may look like this:After | File Name | Before || Change | % Change -------------------------------------------------------- 0m00.39s | Total | 0m00.35s || +0m00.03s | +11.42% -------------------------------------------------------- 0m00.37s | Slow | 0m00.01s || +0m00.36s | +3600.00% 0m00.02s | Fast | 0m00.34s || -0m00.32s | -94.11%
The following targets and Makefile
variables allow collection of per-
line timing data:
TIMING=1
passing this variable will cause
make
to usecoqc -time
to write to a.v.timing
file for each.v
file compiled, which contains line-by-line timing information.Example
For example, running
make all TIMING=1
may result in a file like this:Chars 0 - 26 [Require~Coq.ZArith.BinInt.] 0.157 secs (0.128u,0.028s) Chars 27 - 68 [Declare~Reduction~comp~:=~vm_c...] 0. secs (0.u,0.s) Chars 69 - 162 [Definition~foo0~:=~Eval~comp~i...] 0.153 secs (0.136u,0.019s) Chars 163 - 208 [Definition~foo1~:=~Eval~comp~i...] 0.239 secs (0.236u,0.s)
print-pretty-single-time-diff
print-pretty-single-time-diff BEFORE=path/to/file.v.before-timing AFTER=path/to/file.v.after-timing
this target will make a sorted table of the per-line timing differences between the timing logs in the
BEFORE
andAFTER
files, display it, and save it to the file specified by theTIME_OF_PRETTY_BUILD_FILE
variable, which defaults totime-of-build-pretty.log
. To generate the.v.before-timing
or.v.after-timing
files, you should passTIMING=before
orTIMING=after
rather thanTIMING=1
.Note
The sorting used here is the same as in the
print-pretty-timed-diff
target.Note
This target requires python to build the table.
Example
For example, running
print-pretty-single-time-diff
might give a table like this:After | Code | Before || Change | % Change --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0m00.50s | Total | 0m04.17s || -0m03.66s | -87.96% --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0m00.145s | Chars 069 - 162 [Definition~foo0~:=~Eval~comp~i...] | 0m00.192s || -0m00.04s | -24.47% 0m00.126s | Chars 000 - 026 [Require~Coq.ZArith.BinInt.] | 0m00.143s || -0m00.01s | -11.88% N/A | Chars 027 - 068 [Declare~Reduction~comp~:=~nati...] | 0m00.s || +0m00.00s | N/A 0m00.s | Chars 027 - 068 [Declare~Reduction~comp~:=~vm_c...] | N/A || +0m00.00s | N/A 0m00.231s | Chars 163 - 208 [Definition~foo1~:=~Eval~comp~i...] | 0m03.836s || -0m03.60s | -93.97%
all.timing.diff
,path/to/file.v.timing.diff
The
path/to/file.v.timing.diff
target will make a.v.timing.diff
file for the corresponding.v
file, with a table as would be generated by theprint-pretty-single-time-diff
target; it depends on having already made the corresponding.v.before-timing
and.v.after-timing
files, which can be made by passingTIMING=before
andTIMING=after
. Theall.timing.diff
target will make such timing difference files for all of the.v
files that theMakefile
knows about. It will fail if some.v.before-timing
or.v.after-timing
files don’t exist.Note
This target requires python to build the table.
Reusing/extending the generated Makefile¶
Including the generated makefile with an include directive is
discouraged. The contents of this file, including variable names and
status of rules shall change in the future. Users are advised to
include Makefile.conf
or call a target of the generated Makefile as in
make -f Makefile target
from another Makefile.
One way to get access to all targets of the generated CoqMakefile
is to
have a generic target for invoking unknown targets.
Example
# KNOWNTARGETS will not be passed along to CoqMakefile
KNOWNTARGETS := CoqMakefile extra-stuff extra-stuff2
# KNOWNFILES will not get implicit targets from the final rule, and so
# depending on them won't invoke the submake
# Warning: These files get declared as PHONY, so any targets depending
# on them always get rebuilt
KNOWNFILES := Makefile _CoqProject
.DEFAULT_GOAL := invoke-coqmakefile
CoqMakefile: Makefile _CoqProject
$(COQBIN)coq_makefile -f _CoqProject -o CoqMakefile
invoke-coqmakefile: CoqMakefile
$(MAKE) --no-print-directory -f CoqMakefile $(filter-out $(KNOWNTARGETS),$(MAKECMDGOALS))
.PHONY: invoke-coqmakefile $(KNOWNFILES)
####################################################################
## Your targets here ##
####################################################################
# This should be the last rule, to handle any targets not declared above
%: invoke-coqmakefile
@true
Building a subset of the targets with -j
¶
To build, say, two targets foo.vo and bar.vo in parallel one can use
make only TGTS="foo.vo bar.vo" -j
.
Note
make foo.vo bar.vo -j
has a different meaning for the make
utility, in particular it may build a shared prerequisite twice.
Note
For users of coq_makefile with version < 8.7
- Support for "subdirectory" is deprecated. To perform actions before
or after the build (like invoking
make
on a subdirectory) one can hook in pre-all and post-all extension points. -extra-phony
and-extra
are deprecated. To provide additional target (.PHONY
or not) please useCoqMakefile.local
.
Building a Coq project with Dune¶
Note
Dune's Coq support is still experimental; we strongly recommend using Dune 2.3 or later.
Note
The canonical documentation for the Coq Dune extension is maintained upstream; please refer to the Dune manual for up-to-date information. This documentation is up to date for Dune 2.3.
Building a Coq project with Dune requires setting up a Dune project
for your files. This involves adding a dune-project
and
pkg.opam
file to the root (pkg.opam
can be empty or generated
by Dune itself), and then providing dune
files in the directories
your .v
files are placed. For the experimental version "0.1" of
the Coq Dune language, Coq library stanzas look like:
(coq.theory
(name <module_prefix>)
(package <opam_package>)
(synopsis <text>)
(modules <ordered_set_lang>)
(libraries <ocaml_libraries>)
(flags <coq_flags>))
This stanza will build all .v
files in the given directory, wrapping
the library under <module_prefix>
. If you declare an
<opam_package>
, an .install
file for the library will be
generated; the optional (modules <ordered_set_lang>)
field allows
you to filter the list of modules, and (libraries
<ocaml_libraries>)
allows the Coq theory depend on ML plugins. For
the moment, Dune relies on Coq's standard mechanisms (such as
COQPATH
) to locate installed Coq libraries.
By default Dune will skip .v
files present in subdirectories. In
order to enable the usual recursive organization of Coq projects add
(include_subdirs qualified)
to you dune
file.
Once your project is set up, dune build
will generate the
pkg.install
files and all the files necessary for the installation
of your project.
Example
A typical stanza for a Coq plugin is split into two parts. An OCaml build directive, which is standard Dune:
(library
(name equations_plugin)
(public_name equations.plugin)
(flags :standard -warn-error -3-9-27-32-33-50)
(libraries coq.plugins.cc coq.plugins.extraction))
(coq.pp (modules g_equations))
And a Coq-specific part that depends on it via the libraries
field:
(coq.theory
(name Equations) ; -R flag
(package equations)
(synopsis "Equations Plugin")
(libraries coq.plugins.extraction equations.plugin)
(modules :standard \ IdDec NoCycle)) ; exclude some modules that don't build
(include_subdirs qualified)
Computing Module dependencies¶
In order to compute module dependencies (to be used by make
or
dune
), Coq provides the coqdep
tool.
coqdep
computes inter-module dependencies for Coq and OCaml
programs, and prints the dependencies on the standard output in a
format readable by make. When a directory is given as argument, it is
recursively looked at.
Dependencies of Coq modules are computed by looking at Require
commands (Require
, Require Export
, Require Import
), but also at the
command Declare ML Module
.
Dependencies of OCaml modules are computed by looking at
open
commands and the dot notation module.value. However, this is
done approximately and you are advised to use ocamldep
instead for the
OCaml module dependencies.
See the man page of coqdep
for more details and options.
Both Dune and coq_makefile
use coqdep
to compute the
dependencies among the files part of a Coq project.
Documenting Coq files with coqdoc¶
coqdoc is a documentation tool for the proof assistant Coq, similar to
javadoc
or ocamldoc
. The task of coqdoc is
- to produce a nice LaTeX and/or HTML document from Coq source files, readable for a human and not only for the proof assistant;
- to help the user navigate his own (or third-party) sources.
Principles¶
Documentation is inserted into Coq files as special comments. Thus
your files will compile as usual, whether you use coqdoc or not. coqdoc
presupposes that the given Coq files are well-formed (at least
lexically). Documentation starts with (**
, followed by a space, and
ends with *)
. The documentation format is inspired by Todd
A. Coram’s Almost Free Text (AFT) tool: it is mainly ASCII
text with
some syntax-light controls, described below. coqdoc is robust: it
shouldn’t fail, whatever the input is. But remember: “garbage in,
garbage out”.
Coq material inside documentation.¶
Coq material is quoted between the delimiters [
and ]
. Square brackets
may be nested, the inner ones being understood as being part of the
quoted code (thus you can quote a term like fun x => u
by writing [fun
x => u]
). Inside quotations, the code is pretty-printed in the same
way as it is in code parts.
Preformatted vernacular is enclosed by [[
and ]]
. The former must be
followed by a newline and the latter must follow a newline.
Pretty-printing.¶
coqdoc uses different faces for identifiers and keywords. The pretty- printing of Coq tokens (identifiers or symbols) can be controlled using one of the following commands:
(** printing *token* %...LATEX...% #...html...# *)
or
(** printing *token* $...LATEX math...$ #...html...# *)
It gives the LaTeX and HTML texts to be produced for the given Coq token. Either the LaTeX or the HTML rule may be omitted, causing the default pretty-printing to be used for this token.
The printing for one token can be removed with
(** remove printing *token* *)
Initially, the pretty-printing table contains the following mapping:
-> |
→ | <- |
← | * |
× | ||
<= |
≤ | >= |
≥ | => |
⇒ | ||
<> |
≠ | <-> |
↔ | |- |
⊢ | ||
\/ |
∨ | /\ |
∧ | ~ |
¬ |
Any of these can be overwritten or suppressed using the printing commands.
Note
The recognition of tokens is done by a (ocaml
) lex
automaton and thus applies the longest-match rule. For instance, ->~
is recognized as a single token, where Coq sees two tokens. It is the
responsibility of the user to insert space between tokens or to give
pretty-printing rules for the possible combinations, e.g.
(** printing ->~ %\ensuremath{\rightarrow\lnot}% *)
Sections¶
Sections are introduced by 1 to 4 asterisks at the beginning of a line followed by a space and the title of the section. One asterisk is a section, two a subsection, etc.
Example
(** * Well-founded relations
In this section, we introduce... *)
Lists.¶
List items are introduced by a leading dash. coqdoc uses whitespace to determine the depth of a new list item and which text belongs in which list items. A list ends when a line of text starts at or before the level of indenting of the list’s dash. A list item’s dash must always be the first non-space character on its line (so, in particular, a list can not begin on the first line of a comment - start it on the second line instead).
Example
We go by induction on [n]:
- If [n] is 0...
- If [n] is [S n'] we require...
two paragraphs of reasoning, and two subcases:
- In the first case...
- In the second case...
So the theorem holds.
Rules.¶
More than 4 leading dashes produce a horizontal rule.
Emphasis.¶
Text can be italicized by enclosing it in underscores. A non-identifier character must precede the leading underscore and follow the trailing underscore, so that uses of underscores in names aren’t mistaken for emphasis. Usually, these are spaces or punctuation.
This sentence contains some _emphasized text_.
Escaping to LaTeX and HTML.¶
Pure LaTeX or HTML material can be inserted using the following escape sequences:
$...LATEX stuff...$
inserts some LaTeX material in math mode. Simply discarded in HTML output.%...LATEX stuff...%
inserts some LaTeX material. Simply discarded in HTML output.#...HTML stuff...#
inserts some HTML material. Simply discarded in LaTeX output.
Note
to simply output the characters $
, %
and #
and escaping
their escaping role, these characters must be doubled.
Verbatim¶
Verbatim material is introduced by a leading <<
and closed by >>
at the beginning of a line.
Example
Here is the corresponding caml code:
<<
let rec fact n =
if n <= 1 then 1 else n * fact (n-1)
>>
Hyperlinks¶
Hyperlinks can be inserted into the HTML output, so that any identifier is linked to the place of its definition.
coqc file.v
automatically dumps localization information in
file.glob
or appends it to a file specified using the option --dump-glob
file
. Take care of erasing this global file, if any, when starting
the whole compilation process.
Then invoke coqdoc or coqdoc --glob-from file
to tell coqdoc to look
for name resolutions in the file file
(it will look in file.glob
by default).
Identifiers from the Coq standard library are linked to the Coq website
http://coq.inria.fr/library/. This behavior can be changed
using command line options --no-externals
and --coqlib
; see below.
Hiding / Showing parts of the source.¶
Some parts of the source can be hidden using command line options -g
and -l
(see below), or using such comments:
(* begin hide *)
*some Coq material*
(* end hide *)
Conversely, some parts of the source which would be hidden can be shown using such comments:
(* begin show *)
*some Coq material*
(* end show *)
The latter cannot be used around some inner parts of a proof, but can be used around a whole proof.
Usage¶
coqdoc is invoked on a shell command line as follows:
coqdoc <options and files>
.
Any command line argument which is not an option is considered to be a
file (even if it starts with a -
). Coq files are identified by the
suffixes .v
and .g
and LaTeX files by the suffix .tex
.
HTML output: | This is the default output format. One HTML file is created for
each Coq file given on the command line, together with a file
index.html (unless option-no-index is passed ). The HTML pages use a
style sheet named style.css . Such a file is distributed with coqdoc. |
---|---|
LaTeX output: | A single LaTeX file is created, on standard
output. It can be redirected to a file using the option -o . The order of
files on the command line is kept in the final document. LaTeX
files given on the command line are copied ‘as is’ in the final
document . DVI and PostScript can be produced directly with the
options -dvi and -ps respectively. |
TEXmacs output: | To translate the input files to TEXmacs format, to be used by the TEXmacs Coq interface. |
Command line options¶
Overall options
--HTML: Select a HTML output. --LaTeX: Select a LaTeX output. --dvi: Select a DVI output. --ps: Select a PostScript output. --texmacs: Select a TEXmacs output. --stdout: Write output to stdout. -o file, --output file: Redirect the output into the file ‘file’ (meaningless with -html
).-d dir, --directory dir: Output files into directory ‘dir’ instead of the current directory (option -d
does not change the filename specified with the option-o
, if any).--body-only: Suppress the header and trailer of the final document. Thus, you can insert the resulting document into a larger one. -p string, --preamble string: Insert some material in the LaTeX preamble, right before \begin{document}
(meaningless with-html
).--vernac-file file,--tex-file file: Considers the file ‘file’ respectively as a .v
(or.g
) file or a.tex
file.--files-from file: Read filenames to be processed from the file ‘file’ as if they were given on the command line. Useful for program sources split up into several directories. -q, --quiet: Be quiet. Do not print anything except errors. -h, --help: Give a short summary of the options and exit. -v, --version: Print the version and exit.
Index options
The default behavior is to build an index, for the HTML output only, into
index.html
.
--no-index: Do not output the index. --multi-index: Generate one page for each category and each letter in the index, together with a top page index.html
.--index string: Make the filename of the index string instead of “index”. Useful since “index.html” is special.
Table of contents option
-toc, --table-of-contents: Insert a table of contents. For a LaTeX output, it inserts a \tableofcontents
at the beginning of the document. For a HTML output, it builds a table of contents intotoc.html
.--toc-depth int: Only include headers up to depth int
in the table of contents.
Hyperlink options
--glob-from file: Make references using Coq globalizations from file file. (Such globalizations are obtained with Coq option
-dump-glob
).--no-externals: Do not insert links to the Coq standard library.
--external url coqdir: Use given URL for linking references whose name starts with prefix
coqdir
.--coqlib url: Set base URL for the Coq standard library (default is http://coq.inria.fr/library/). This is equivalent to
--external url Coq
.-R dir coqdir: Recursively map physical directory dir to Coq logical directory
coqdir
(similarly to Coq option-R
).-Q dir coqdir: Map physical directory dir to Coq logical directory
coqdir
(similarly to Coq option-Q
).Note
options
-R
and-Q
only have effect on the files following them on the command line, so you will probably need to put this option first.
Title options
-s , --short: Do not insert titles for the files. The default behavior is to insert a title like “Library Foo” for each file.
--lib-name string: Print “string Foo” instead of “Library Foo” in titles. For example “Chapter” and “Module” are reasonable choices.
--no-lib-name: Print just “Foo” instead of “Library Foo” in titles.
--lib-subtitles: Look for library subtitles. When enabled, the beginning of each file is checked for a comment of the form:
(** * ModuleName : text *)where
ModuleName
must be the name of the file. If it is present, the text is used as a subtitle for the module in appropriate places.-t string, --title string: Set the document title.
Contents options
-g, --gallina: Do not print proofs.
-l, --light: Light mode. Suppress proofs (as with
-g
) and the following commands:
- [Recursive] Tactic Definition
- Hint / Hints
- Require
- Transparent / Opaque
- Implicit Argument / Implicits
- Section / Variable / Hypothesis / End
The behavior of options
-g
and-l
can be locally overridden using the(* begin show *) … (* end show *)
environment (see above).There are a few options that control the parsing of comments:
--parse-comments: Parse regular comments delimited by
(*
and*)
as well. They are typeset inline.--plain-comments: Do not interpret comments, simply copy them as plain-text.
--interpolate: Use the globalization information to typeset identifiers appearing in Coq escapings inside comments.
Language options
The default behavior is to assume ASCII 7 bit input files.
-latin1, --latin1: Select ISO-8859-1 input files. It is equivalent to --inputenc latin1 --charset iso-8859-1. -utf8, --utf8: Set --inputenc utf8x for LaTeX output and--charset utf-8 for HTML output. Also use Unicode replacements for a couple of standard plain ASCII notations such as → for ->
and ∀ forforall
. LaTeX UTF-8 support can be found at http://www.ctan.org/pkg/unicode. For the interpretation of Unicode characters by LaTeX, extra packages which coqdoc does not provide by default might be required, such as textgreek for some Greek letters orstmaryrd
for some mathematical symbols. If a Unicode character is missing an interpretation in the utf8x input encoding, add\DeclareUnicodeCharacter{code}{LATEX-interpretation}
. Packages and declarations can be added with option-p
.--inputenc string: Give a LaTeX input encoding, as an option to LaTeX package inputenc
.--charset string: Specify the HTML character set, to be inserted in the HTML header.
The coqdoc LaTeX style file¶
In case you choose to produce a document without the default LaTeX
preamble (by using option --no-preamble
), then you must insert into
your own preamble the command
\usepackage{coqdoc}
The package optionally takes the argument [color]
to typeset
identifiers with colors (this requires the xcolor
package).
Then you may alter the rendering of the document by redefining some macros:
coqdockw, coqdocid, …: | |
---|---|
The one-argument macros for typesetting keywords and identifiers. Defaults are sans-serif for keywords and italic for identifiers.For example, if you would like a slanted font for keywords, you may insert \renewcommand{\coqdockw}[1]{\textsl{#1}}
anywhere between |
|
coqdocmodule: | One-argument macro for typesetting the title of a \newcommand{\coqdocmodule}[1]{\section*{Module #1}}
and you may redefine it using |
Embedded Coq phrases inside LaTeX documents¶
When writing documentation about a proof development, one may want
to insert Coq phrases inside a LaTeX document, possibly together
with the corresponding answers of the system. We provide a mechanical
way to process such Coq phrases embedded in LaTeX files: the coq-tex
filter. This filter extracts Coq phrases embedded in LaTeX files,
evaluates them, and insert the outcome of the evaluation after each
phrase.
Starting with a file file.tex
containing Coq phrases, the coq-tex
filter produces a file named file.v.tex
with the Coq outcome.
There are options to produce the Coq parts in smaller font, italic,
between horizontal rules, etc. See the man page of coq-tex
for more
details.
Man pages¶
There are man pages for the commands coqdep
and coq-tex
. Man
pages are installed at installation time (see installation
instructions in file INSTALL
, step 6).