Rewriting¶
Rewrite rules allow you to extend Agda’s evaluation relation with new computation rules.
Note
This page is about the --rewriting option and the
associated REWRITE builtin. You might be
looking for the documentation on the rewrite construct instead.
Rewrite rules by example¶
To enable rewrite rules, you should run Agda with the flag --rewriting and import the modules Agda.Builtin.Equality and Agda.Builtin.Equality.Rewrite:
{-# OPTIONS --rewriting #-}
module language.rewriting where
open import Agda.Builtin.Equality
open import Agda.Builtin.Equality.Rewrite
Overlapping pattern matching¶
To start, let’s look at an example where rewrite rules can solve a
problem that is encountered by almost every newcomer to Agda. This
problem usually pops up as the question why 0 + m computes to
m, but m + 0 does not (and similarly, (suc m) + n computes
to suc (m + n) but m + (suc n) does not). This problem
manifests itself for example when trying to prove commutativity of _+_:
+comm : m + n ≡ n + m
+comm {m = zero} = refl
+comm {m = suc m} = cong suc (+comm {m = m})
Here, Agda complains that n != n + zero of type Nat. The usual way
to solve this problem is by proving the equations m + 0 ≡ m and
m + (suc n) ≡ suc (m + n) and using an explicit rewrite
statement in the main proof (N.B.: Agda’s rewrite keyword should not
be confused with rewrite rules, which are added by a REWRITE
pragma.)
By using rewrite rules, we can simulate the solution from our paper. First, we need to prove that the equations we want hold as propositional equalities:
+zero : m + zero ≡ m
+zero {m = zero} = refl
+zero {m = suc m} = cong suc +zero
+suc : m + (suc n) ≡ suc (m + n)
+suc {m = zero} = refl
+suc {m = suc m} = cong suc +suc
Next we mark the equalities as rewrite rules with a REWRITE pragma:
{-# REWRITE +zero +suc #-}
Now the proof of commutativity works exactly as we wrote it before:
+comm : m + n ≡ n + m
+comm {m = zero} = refl
+comm {m = suc m} = cong suc (+comm {m = m})
Note that there is no way to make this proof go through without
rewrite rules: it is essential that _+_ computes both on its first
and its second argument, but there’s no way to define _+_ in such a
way using Agda’s regular pattern matching.
More examples¶
Additional examples of how to use rewrite rules can be found in a blog post by Jesper Cockx.
General shape of rewrite rules¶
In general, an equality proof eq may be registered as a rewrite
rule using the pragma {-# REWRITE eq #-}, provided the following
requirements are met:
- The type of
eqis of the formeq : (x₁ : A₁) ... (xₖ : Aₖ) → f p₁ ... pₙ ≡ v fis a postulate, a defined function symbol, or a constructor applied to fully general parameters (i.e. the parameters must be distinct variables)- Each variable
x₁, …,xₖoccurs at least once in a pattern position inp₁ ... pₙ(see below for the definition of pattern positions) - The left-hand side
f p₁ ... pₙshould be neutral, i.e. it should not reduce.
The following patterns are supported:
x y₁ ... yₙ, wherexis a pattern variable andy₁, …,yₙare distinct variables that are bound locally in the patternf p₁ ... pₙ, wherefis a postulate, a defined function, a constructor, or a data/record type, andp₁, …,pₙare again patternsλ x → p, wherepis again a pattern(x : P) → Q, wherePandQare again patternsy p₁ ... pₙ, whereyis a variable bound locally in the pattern andp₁, …,pₙare again patternsSet porProp p, wherepis again a pattern- Any other term
v(here the variables invare not considered to be in a pattern position)
Once a rewrite rule has been added, Agda automatically rewrites all
instances of the left-hand side to the corresponding instance of the
right-hand side during reduction. More precisely, a term
(definitionally equal to) f p₁σ ... pₙσ is rewritten to vσ,
where σ is any substitution on the pattern variables x₁,
… xₖ.
Since rewriting happens after normal reduction, rewrite rules are only applied to terms that would otherwise be neutral.
Confluence checking¶
Agda can optionally check (local) confluence of rewrite rules by
enabling the --confluence-check flag.
Advanced usage¶
Instead of importing Agda.Builtin.Equality.Rewrite, a different
type may be chosen as the rewrite relation by registering it as the
REWRITE builtin. For example, using the pragma {-# BUILTIN
REWRITE _~_ #-} registers the type _~_ as the rewrite
relation. To qualify as the rewrite relation, the type must take at
least two arguments, and the final two arguments should be visible.