The fin_cases tactic. #
Given a hypothesis of the form h : x ∈ (A : List α), x ∈ (A : Finset α),
or x ∈ (A : Multiset α),
or a hypothesis of the form h : A, where [Fintype A] is available,
fin_cases h will repeatedly call cases to split the goal into
separate cases for each possible value.
If e is of the form x ∈ (A : List α), x ∈ (A : Finset α), or x ∈ (A : Multiset α),
return some α, otherwise none.
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- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.
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Recursively runs the cases tactic on a hypothesis h.
As long as two goals are produced, cases is called recursively on the second goal,
and we return a list of the first goals which appeared.
This is useful for hypotheses of the form h : a ∈ [l₁, l₂, ...],
which will be transformed into a sequence of goals with hypotheses h : a = l₁, h : a = l₂,
and so on.
Cases are named according to the order in which they are generated as tracked by counter
and prefixed with userNamePre.
fin_cases h performs case analysis on a hypothesis of the form
h : A, where [Fintype A] is available, or
h : a ∈ A, where A : Finset X, A : Multiset X or A : List X.
As an example, in
example (f : ℕ → Prop) (p : Fin 3) (h0 : f 0) (h1 : f 1) (h2 : f 2) : f p.val := by
fin_cases p; simp
all_goals assumption
after fin_cases p; simp, there are three goals, f 0, f 1, and f 2.
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fin_cases used to also have two modifiers, fin_cases ... with ... and fin_cases ... using ....
With neither actually used in mathlib, they haven't been re-implemented here.
In case someone finds a need for them, and wants to re-implement, the relevant sections of the doc-string are preserved here:
fin_cases h with l takes a list of descriptions for the cases of h.
These should be definitionally equal to and in the same order as the
default enumeration of the cases.
For example,
example (x y : ℕ) (h : x ∈ [1, 2]) : x = y := by
fin_cases h with 1, 1+1
produces two cases: 1 = y and 1 + 1 = y.
When using fin_cases a on data a defined with let,
the tactic will not be able to clear the variable a,
and will instead produce hypotheses this : a = ....
These hypotheses can be given a name using fin_cases a using ha.
For example,
example (f : ℕ → Fin 3) : True := by
let a := f 3
fin_cases a using ha
produces three goals with hypotheses
ha : a = 0, ha : a = 1, and ha : a = 2.