-- Hoogle documentation, generated by Haddock
-- See Hoogle, http://www.haskell.org/hoogle/


-- | SMT Based Verification: Symbolic Haskell theorem prover using SMT solving.
--   
--   Express properties about Haskell programs and automatically prove them
--   using SMT (Satisfiability Modulo Theories) solvers.
--   
--   For details, please see: <a>http://leventerkok.github.com/sbv/</a>
@package sbv
@version 7.13


-- | Test generation from symbolic programs
module Data.SBV.Tools.GenTest

-- | Generate a set of concrete test values from a symbolic program. The
--   output can be rendered as test vectors in different languages as
--   necessary. Use the function <a>output</a> call to indicate what fields
--   should be in the test result. (Also see <a>constrain</a> for filtering
--   acceptable test values.)
genTest :: Outputtable a => Int -> Symbolic a -> IO TestVectors

-- | Type of test vectors (abstract)
data TestVectors

-- | Retrieve the test vectors for further processing. This function is
--   useful in cases where <a>renderTest</a> is not sufficient and custom
--   output (or further preprocessing) is needed.
getTestValues :: TestVectors -> [([CW], [CW])]

-- | Render the test as a Haskell value with the given name <tt>n</tt>.
renderTest :: TestStyle -> TestVectors -> String

-- | Test output style
data TestStyle

-- | As a Haskell value with given name
Haskell :: String -> TestStyle

-- | As a C array of structs with given name
C :: String -> TestStyle

-- | As a Forte/Verilog value with given name. If the boolean is True then
--   vectors are blasted big-endian, otherwise little-endian The indices
--   are the split points on bit-vectors for input and output values
Forte :: String -> Bool -> ([Int], [Int]) -> TestStyle


-- | Control sublanguage for interacting with SMT solvers.
module Data.SBV.Control

-- | A query is a user-guided mechanism to directly communicate and extract
--   results from the solver.
data Query a

-- | Run a custom query
query :: Query a -> Symbolic a

-- | Similar to <a>freshVar</a>, except creates unnamed variable.
freshVar_ :: forall a. SymWord a => Query (SBV a)

-- | Create a fresh variable in query mode. You should prefer creating
--   input variables using <a>sBool</a>, <a>sInt32</a>, etc., which act as
--   primary inputs to the model and can be existential or universal. Use
--   <a>freshVar</a> only in query mode for anonymous temporary variables.
--   Such variables are always existential. Note that <a>freshVar</a>
--   should hardly be needed: Your input variables and symbolic expressions
--   should suffice for most major use cases.
freshVar :: forall a. SymWord a => String -> Query (SBV a)

-- | Similar to <a>freshArray</a>, except creates unnamed array.
freshArray_ :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => Maybe (SBV b) -> Query (array a b)

-- | Create a fresh array in query mode. Again, you should prefer creating
--   arrays before the queries start using <a>newArray</a>, but this method
--   can come in handy in occasional cases where you need a new array after
--   you start the query based interaction.
freshArray :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => String -> Maybe (SBV b) -> Query (array a b)

-- | Result of a <a>checkSat</a> or <a>checkSatAssuming</a> call.
data CheckSatResult

-- | Satisfiable: A model is available, which can be queried with
--   <a>getValue</a>.
Sat :: CheckSatResult

-- | Unsatisfiable: No model is available. Unsat cores might be obtained
--   via <a>getUnsatCore</a>.
Unsat :: CheckSatResult

-- | Unknown: Use <a>getUnknownReason</a> to obtain an explanation why this
--   might be the case.
Unk :: CheckSatResult

-- | Check for satisfiability.
checkSat :: Query CheckSatResult

-- | Check for satisfiability with a custom check-sat-using command.
checkSatUsing :: String -> Query CheckSatResult

-- | Check for satisfiability, under the given conditions. Similar to
--   <a>checkSat</a> except it allows making further assumptions as
--   captured by the first argument of booleans. (Also see
--   <a>checkSatAssumingWithUnsatisfiableSet</a> for a variant that returns
--   the subset of the given assumptions that led to the <a>Unsat</a>
--   conclusion.)
checkSatAssuming :: [SBool] -> Query CheckSatResult

-- | Check for satisfiability, under the given conditions. Returns the
--   unsatisfiable set of assumptions. Similar to <a>checkSat</a> except it
--   allows making further assumptions as captured by the first argument of
--   booleans. If the result is <a>Unsat</a>, the user will also receive a
--   subset of the given assumptions that led to the <a>Unsat</a>
--   conclusion. Note that while this set will be a subset of the inputs,
--   it is not necessarily guaranteed to be minimal.
--   
--   You must have arranged for the production of unsat assumptions first
--   via
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>ProduceUnsatAssumptions</a> <a>True</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   for this call to not error out!
--   
--   Usage note: <a>getUnsatCore</a> is usually easier to use than
--   <a>checkSatAssumingWithUnsatisfiableSet</a>, as it allows the use of
--   named assertions, as obtained by <a>namedConstraint</a>. If
--   <a>getUnsatCore</a> fills your needs, you should definitely prefer it
--   over <a>checkSatAssumingWithUnsatisfiableSet</a>.
checkSatAssumingWithUnsatisfiableSet :: [SBool] -> Query (CheckSatResult, Maybe [SBool])

-- | A class which allows for sexpr-conversion to values
class SMTValue a
sexprToVal :: SMTValue a => SExpr -> Maybe a
sexprToVal :: (SMTValue a, Read a) => SExpr -> Maybe a

-- | Get the value of a term.
getValue :: SMTValue a => SBV a -> Query a

-- | Get the value of an uninterpreted sort, as a String
getUninterpretedValue :: HasKind a => SBV a -> Query String

-- | Collect model values. It is implicitly assumed that we are in a
--   check-sat context. See <a>getSMTResult</a> for a variant that issues a
--   check-sat first and returns an <a>SMTResult</a>.
getModel :: Query SMTModel

-- | Retrieve the assignment. This is a lightweight version of
--   <a>getValue</a>, where the solver returns the truth value for all
--   named subterms of type <a>Bool</a>.
--   
--   You must have first arranged for assignments to be produced via
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>ProduceAssignments</a> <a>True</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   for this call to not error out!
getAssignment :: Query [(String, Bool)]

-- | Issue check-sat and get an SMT Result out.
getSMTResult :: Query SMTResult

-- | Get the reason unknown. Only internally used.
getUnknownReason :: Query SMTReasonUnknown

-- | Retrieve the unsat-core. Note you must have arranged for unsat cores
--   to be produced first via
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>ProduceUnsatCores</a> <a>True</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   for this call to not error out!
--   
--   NB. There is no notion of a minimal unsat-core, in case
--   unsatisfiability can be derived in multiple ways. Furthermore, Z3 does
--   not guarantee that the generated unsat core does not have any
--   redundant assertions either, as doing so can incur a performance
--   penalty. (There might be assertions in the set that is not needed.) To
--   ensure all the assertions in the core are relevant, use:
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>OptionKeyword</a> ":smt.core.minimize" ["true"]
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that this only works with Z3.
getUnsatCore :: Query [String]

-- | Retrieve the proof. Note you must have arranged for proofs to be
--   produced first via
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>ProduceProofs</a> <a>True</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   for this call to not error out!
--   
--   A proof is simply a <a>String</a>, as returned by the solver. In the
--   future, SBV might provide a better datatype, depending on the use
--   cases. Please get in touch if you use this function and can suggest a
--   better API.
getProof :: Query String

-- | Retrieve an interpolant after an <a>Unsat</a> result is obtained. Note
--   you must have arranged for interpolants to be produced first via
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>ProduceInterpolants</a> <a>True</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   for this call to not error out!
--   
--   To get an interpolant for a pair of formulas <tt>A</tt> and
--   <tt>B</tt>, use a <a>constrainWithAttribute</a> call to attach
--   interplation groups to <tt>A</tt> and <tt>B</tt>. Then call
--   <a>getInterpolant</a> <tt>["A"]</tt>, assuming those are the names you
--   gave to the formulas in the <tt>A</tt> group.
--   
--   An interpolant for <tt>A</tt> and <tt>B</tt> is a formula <tt>I</tt>
--   such that:
--   
--   <pre>
--       A ==&gt; I
--   and B ==&gt; not I
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is, it's evidence that <tt>A</tt> and <tt>B</tt> cannot be true
--   together since <tt>A</tt> implies <tt>I</tt> but <tt>B</tt> implies
--   <tt>not I</tt>; establishing that <tt>A</tt> and <tt>B</tt> cannot be
--   satisfied at the same time. Furthermore, <tt>I</tt> will have only the
--   symbols that are common to <tt>A</tt> and <tt>B</tt>.
--   
--   N.B. As of Z3 version 4.8.0; Z3 no longer supports interpolants. Use
--   the MathSAT backend for extracting interpolants. See
--   <a>Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Interpolants</a> for an example.
getInterpolant :: [String] -> Query String

-- | Retrieve assertions. Note you must have arranged for assertions to be
--   available first via
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>setOption</a> $ <a>ProduceAssertions</a> <a>True</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   for this call to not error out!
--   
--   Note that the set of assertions returned is merely a list of strings,
--   just like the case for <a>getProof</a>. In the future, SBV might
--   provide a better datatype, depending on the use cases. Please get in
--   touch if you use this function and can suggest a better API.
getAssertions :: Query [String]

-- | Collectable information from the solver.
data SMTInfoFlag
AllStatistics :: SMTInfoFlag
AssertionStackLevels :: SMTInfoFlag
Authors :: SMTInfoFlag
ErrorBehavior :: SMTInfoFlag
Name :: SMTInfoFlag
ReasonUnknown :: SMTInfoFlag
Version :: SMTInfoFlag
InfoKeyword :: String -> SMTInfoFlag

-- | Behavior of the solver for errors.
data SMTErrorBehavior
ErrorImmediateExit :: SMTErrorBehavior
ErrorContinuedExecution :: SMTErrorBehavior

-- | Collectable information from the solver.
data SMTInfoResponse
Resp_Unsupported :: SMTInfoResponse
Resp_AllStatistics :: [(String, String)] -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_AssertionStackLevels :: Integer -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_Authors :: [String] -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_Error :: SMTErrorBehavior -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_Name :: String -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_ReasonUnknown :: SMTReasonUnknown -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_Version :: String -> SMTInfoResponse
Resp_InfoKeyword :: String -> [String] -> SMTInfoResponse

-- | Ask solver for info.
getInfo :: SMTInfoFlag -> Query SMTInfoResponse

-- | Retrieve the value of an 'SMTOption.' The curious function argument is
--   on purpose here, simply pass the constructor name. Example: the call
--   <tt><a>getOption</a> <a>ProduceUnsatCores</a></tt> will return either
--   <tt>Nothing</tt> or <tt>Just (ProduceUnsatCores True)</tt> or <tt>Just
--   (ProduceUnsatCores False)</tt>.
--   
--   Result will be <a>Nothing</a> if the solver does not support this
--   option.
getOption :: (a -> SMTOption) -> Query (Maybe SMTOption)

-- | The current assertion stack depth, i.e., pops after start. Always
--   non-negative.
getAssertionStackDepth :: Query Int

-- | Push the context, entering a new one. Pushes multiple levels if
--   <i>n</i> &gt; 1.
push :: Int -> Query ()

-- | Pop the context, exiting a new one. Pops multiple levels if <i>n</i>
--   &gt; 1. It's an error to pop levels that don't exist.
pop :: Int -> Query ()

-- | Run the query in a new assertion stack. That is, we push the context,
--   run the query commands, and pop it back.
inNewAssertionStack :: Query a -> Query a

-- | Search for a result via a sequence of case-splits, guided by the user.
--   If one of the conditions lead to a satisfiable result, returns
--   <tt>Just</tt> that result. If none of them do, returns
--   <tt>Nothing</tt>. Note that we automatically generate a coverage case
--   and search for it automatically as well. In that latter case, the
--   string returned will be <a>Coverage</a>. The first argument controls
--   printing progress messages See
--   <a>Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.CaseSplit</a> for an example use
--   case.
caseSplit :: Bool -> [(String, SBool)] -> Query (Maybe (String, SMTResult))

-- | Reset the solver, by forgetting all the assertions. However, bindings
--   are kept as is, as opposed to a full reset of the solver. Use this
--   variant to clean-up the solver state while leaving the bindings
--   intact. Pops all assertion levels. Declarations and definitions
--   resulting from the <a>setLogic</a> command are unaffected. Note that
--   SBV implicitly uses global-declarations, so bindings will remain
--   intact.
resetAssertions :: Query ()

-- | Make an assignment. The type <a>Assignment</a> is abstract, the result
--   is typically passed to <a>mkSMTResult</a>:
--   
--   <pre>
--   mkSMTResult [ a |-&gt; 332
--               , b |-&gt; 2.3
--               , c |-&gt; True
--               ]
--   </pre>
--   
--   End users should use <a>getModel</a> for automatically constructing
--   models from the current solver state. However, an explicit
--   <a>Assignment</a> might be handy in complex scenarios where a model
--   needs to be created manually.
(|->) :: SymWord a => SBV a -> a -> Assignment
infix 1 |->

-- | Produce the query result from an assignment.
mkSMTResult :: [Assignment] -> Query SMTResult

-- | Exit the solver. This action will cause the solver to terminate.
--   Needless to say, trying to communicate with the solver after issuing
--   "exit" will simply fail.
exit :: Query ()

-- | If true, we shall ignore the exit code upon exit. Otherwise we require
--   ExitSuccess.
ignoreExitCode :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Timeout a query action, typically a command call to the underlying SMT
--   solver. The duration is in microseconds (<tt>1/10^6</tt> seconds). If
--   the duration is negative, then no timeout is imposed. When specifying
--   long timeouts, be careful not to exceed <tt>maxBound :: Int</tt>. (On
--   a 64 bit machine, this bound is practically infinite. But on a 32 bit
--   machine, it corresponds to about 36 minutes!)
--   
--   Semantics: The call <tt>timeout n q</tt> causes the timeout value to
--   be applied to all interactive calls that take place as we execute the
--   query <tt>q</tt>. That is, each call that happens during the execution
--   of <tt>q</tt> gets a separate time-out value, as opposed to one
--   timeout value that limits the whole query. This is typically the
--   intended behavior. It is advisible to apply this combinator to calls
--   that involve a single call to the solver for finer control, as opposed
--   to an entire set of interactions. However, different use cases might
--   call for different scenarios.
--   
--   If the solver responds within the time-out specified, then we continue
--   as usual. However, if the backend solver times-out using this
--   mechanism, there is no telling what the state of the solver will be.
--   Thus, we raise an error in this case.
timeout :: Int -> Query a -> Query a

-- | If <a>verbose</a> is <a>True</a>, print the message, useful for
--   debugging messages in custom queries. Note that <a>redirectVerbose</a>
--   will be respected: If a file redirection is given, the output will go
--   to the file.
queryDebug :: [String] -> Query ()

-- | Echo a string. Note that the echoing is done by the solver, not by
--   SBV.
echo :: String -> Query ()

-- | Perform an arbitrary IO action.
io :: IO a -> Query a

-- | Option values that can be set in the solver, following the SMTLib
--   specification <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/language.shtml</a>.
--   
--   Note that not all solvers may support all of these!
--   
--   Furthermore, SBV doesn't support the following options allowed by
--   SMTLib.
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li><tt>:interactive-mode</tt> (Deprecated in SMTLib, use
--   <a>ProduceAssertions</a> instead.)</li>
--   <li><tt>:print-success</tt> (SBV critically needs this to be True in
--   query mode.)</li>
--   <li><tt>:produce-models</tt> (SBV always sets this option so it can
--   extract models.)</li>
--   <li><tt>:regular-output-channel</tt> (SBV always requires regular
--   output to come on stdout for query purposes.)</li>
--   <li><tt>:global-declarations</tt> (SBV always uses global declarations
--   since definitions are accumulative.)</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   Note that <a>SetLogic</a> and <a>SetInfo</a> are, strictly speaking,
--   not SMTLib options. However, we treat it as such here uniformly, as it
--   fits better with how options work.
data SMTOption
DiagnosticOutputChannel :: FilePath -> SMTOption
ProduceAssertions :: Bool -> SMTOption
ProduceAssignments :: Bool -> SMTOption
ProduceProofs :: Bool -> SMTOption
ProduceInterpolants :: Bool -> SMTOption
ProduceUnsatAssumptions :: Bool -> SMTOption
ProduceUnsatCores :: Bool -> SMTOption
RandomSeed :: Integer -> SMTOption
ReproducibleResourceLimit :: Integer -> SMTOption
SMTVerbosity :: Integer -> SMTOption
OptionKeyword :: String -> [String] -> SMTOption
SetLogic :: Logic -> SMTOption
SetInfo :: String -> [String] -> SMTOption


-- | Implementation of full-binary symbolic trees, providing logarithmic
--   time access to elements. Both reads and writes are supported.
module Data.SBV.Tools.STree

-- | A symbolic tree containing values of type e, indexed by elements of
--   type i. Note that these are full-trees, and their their shapes remain
--   constant. There is no API provided that can change the shape of the
--   tree. These structures are useful when dealing with data-structures
--   that are indexed with symbolic values where access time is important.
--   <a>STree</a> structures provide logarithmic time reads and writes.
type STree i e = STreeInternal (SBV i) (SBV e)

-- | Reading a value. We bit-blast the index and descend down the full tree
--   according to bit-values.
readSTree :: (SFiniteBits i, SymWord e) => STree i e -> SBV i -> SBV e

-- | Writing a value, similar to how reads are done. The important thing is
--   that the tree representation keeps updates to a minimum.
writeSTree :: (SFiniteBits i, SymWord e) => STree i e -> SBV i -> SBV e -> STree i e

-- | Construct the fully balanced initial tree using the given values.
mkSTree :: forall i e. HasKind i => [SBV e] -> STree i e
instance GHC.Show.Show e => GHC.Show.Show (Data.SBV.Tools.STree.STreeInternal i e)
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e => Data.SBV.Core.Model.Mergeable (Data.SBV.Tools.STree.STree i e)


-- | Implementation of polynomial arithmetic
module Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial

-- | Implements polynomial addition, multiplication, division, and modulus
--   operations over GF(2^n). NB. Similar to <a>sQuotRem</a>, division by
--   <tt>0</tt> is interpreted as follows:
--   
--   <pre>
--   x <a>pDivMod</a> 0 = (0, x)
--   </pre>
--   
--   for all <tt>x</tt> (including <tt>0</tt>)
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: <a>pMult</a>, <a>pDivMod</a>,
--   <a>showPolynomial</a>
class (Num a, Bits a) => Polynomial a

-- | Given bit-positions to be set, create a polynomial For instance
--   
--   <pre>
--   polynomial [0, 1, 3] :: SWord8
--   </pre>
--   
--   will evaluate to <tt>11</tt>, since it sets the bits <tt>0</tt>,
--   <tt>1</tt>, and <tt>3</tt>. Mathematicans would write this polynomial
--   as <tt>x^3 + x + 1</tt>. And in fact, <a>showPoly</a> will show it
--   like that.
polynomial :: Polynomial a => [Int] -> a

-- | Add two polynomials in GF(2^n).
pAdd :: Polynomial a => a -> a -> a

-- | Multiply two polynomials in GF(2^n), and reduce it by the irreducible
--   specified by the polynomial as specified by coefficients of the third
--   argument. Note that the third argument is specifically left in this
--   form as it is usally in GF(2^(n+1)), which is not available in our
--   formalism. (That is, we would need SWord9 for SWord8 multiplication,
--   etc.) Also note that we do not support symbolic irreducibles, which is
--   a minor shortcoming. (Most GF's will come with fixed irreducibles, so
--   this should not be a problem in practice.)
--   
--   Passing [] for the third argument will multiply the polynomials and
--   then ignore the higher bits that won't fit into the resulting size.
pMult :: Polynomial a => (a, a, [Int]) -> a

-- | Divide two polynomials in GF(2^n), see above note for division by 0.
pDiv :: Polynomial a => a -> a -> a

-- | Compute modulus of two polynomials in GF(2^n), see above note for
--   modulus by 0.
pMod :: Polynomial a => a -> a -> a

-- | Division and modulus packed together.
pDivMod :: Polynomial a => a -> a -> (a, a)

-- | Display a polynomial like a mathematician would (over the monomial
--   <tt>x</tt>), with a type.
showPoly :: Polynomial a => a -> String

-- | Display a polynomial like a mathematician would (over the monomial
--   <tt>x</tt>), the first argument controls if the final type is shown as
--   well.
showPolynomial :: Polynomial a => Bool -> a -> String

-- | Compute CRC's over polynomials, i.e., symbolic words. The first
--   <a>Int</a> argument plays the same role as the one in the <a>crcBV</a>
--   function.
crc :: (SFiniteBits a, SFiniteBits b) => Int -> SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV b

-- | Compute CRCs over bit-vectors. The call <tt>crcBV n m p</tt> computes
--   the CRC of the message <tt>m</tt> with respect to polynomial
--   <tt>p</tt>. The inputs are assumed to be blasted big-endian. The
--   number <tt>n</tt> specifies how many bits of CRC is needed. Note that
--   <tt>n</tt> is actually the degree of the polynomial <tt>p</tt>, and
--   thus it seems redundant to pass it in. However, in a typical proof
--   context, the polynomial can be symbolic, so we cannot compute the
--   degree easily. While this can be worked-around by generating code that
--   accounts for all possible degrees, the resulting code would be
--   unnecessarily big and complicated, and much harder to reason with.
--   (Also note that a CRC is just the remainder from the polynomial
--   division, but this routine is much faster in practice.)
--   
--   NB. The <tt>n</tt>th bit of the polynomial <tt>p</tt> <i>must</i> be
--   set for the CRC to be computed correctly. Note that the polynomial
--   argument <tt>p</tt> will not even have this bit present most of the
--   time, as it will typically contain bits <tt>0</tt> through
--   <tt>n-1</tt> as usual in the CRC literature. The higher order
--   <tt>n</tt>th bit is simply assumed to be set, as it does not make
--   sense to use a polynomial of a lesser degree. This is usually not a
--   problem since CRC polynomials are designed and expressed this way.
--   
--   NB. The literature on CRC's has many variants on how CRC's are
--   computed. We follow the following simple procedure:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Extend the message <tt>m</tt> by adding <tt>n</tt> 0 bits on the
--   right</li>
--   <li>Divide the polynomial thus obtained by the <tt>p</tt></li>
--   <li>The remainder is the CRC value.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   There are many variants on final XOR's, reversed polynomials etc., so
--   it is essential to double check you use the correct <i>algorithm</i>.
crcBV :: Int -> [SBool] -> [SBool] -> [SBool]

-- | Run down a boolean condition over two lists. Note that this is
--   different than zipWith as shorter list is assumed to be filled with
--   false at the end (i.e., zero-bits); which nicely pads it when
--   considered as an unsigned number in little-endian form.
ites :: SBool -> [SBool] -> [SBool] -> [SBool]

-- | Compute modulus/remainder of polynomials on bit-vectors.
mdp :: [SBool] -> [SBool] -> ([SBool], [SBool])

-- | Add two polynomials
addPoly :: [SBool] -> [SBool] -> [SBool]
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial GHC.Word.Word8
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial GHC.Word.Word16
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial GHC.Word.Word32
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial GHC.Word.Word64
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord8
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord16
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord32
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Polynomial.Polynomial Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord64


-- | Implementation of overflow detection functions. Based on:
--   <a>http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/z3prefix.pdf</a>
module Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow

-- | Detecting underflow/overflow conditions. For each function, the first
--   result is the condition under which the computation underflows, and
--   the second is the condition under which it overflows.
class ArithOverflow a

-- | Bit-vector addition. Unsigned addition can only overflow. Signed
--   addition can underflow and overflow.
--   
--   A tell tale sign of unsigned addition overflow is when the sum is less
--   than minumum of the arguments.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x y -&gt; snd (bvAddO x (y::SWord16)) &lt;=&gt; x + y .&lt; x `smin` y
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
bvAddO :: ArithOverflow a => a -> a -> (SBool, SBool)

-- | Bit-vector subtraction. Unsigned subtraction can only underflow.
--   Signed subtraction can underflow and overflow.
bvSubO :: ArithOverflow a => a -> a -> (SBool, SBool)

-- | Bit-vector multiplication. Unsigned multiplication can only overflow.
--   Signed multiplication can underflow and overflow.
bvMulO :: ArithOverflow a => a -> a -> (SBool, SBool)

-- | Same as <a>bvMulO</a>, except instead of doing the computation
--   internally, it simply sends it off to z3 as a primitive. Obviously,
--   only use if you have the z3 backend! Note that z3 provides this
--   operation only when no logic is set, so make sure to call <tt>setLogic
--   Logic_NONE</tt> in your program!
bvMulOFast :: ArithOverflow a => a -> a -> (SBool, SBool)

-- | Bit-vector division. Unsigned division neither underflows nor
--   overflows. Signed division can only overflow. In fact, for each signed
--   bitvector type, there's precisely one pair that overflows, when
--   <tt>x</tt> is <tt>minBound</tt> and <tt>y</tt> is <tt>-1</tt>:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; allSat $ \x y -&gt; snd (x `bvDivO` (y::SInt8))
--   Solution #1:
--     s0 = -128 :: Int8
--     s1 =   -1 :: Int8
--   This is the only solution.
--   </pre>
bvDivO :: ArithOverflow a => a -> a -> (SBool, SBool)

-- | Bit-vector negation. Unsigned negation neither underflows nor
--   overflows. Signed negation can only overflow, when the argument is
--   <tt>minBound</tt>:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; x .== minBound &lt;=&gt; snd (bvNegO (x::SInt16))
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
bvNegO :: ArithOverflow a => a -> (SBool, SBool)

-- | A class of checked-arithmetic operations. These follow the usual
--   arithmetic, except make calls to <a>sAssert</a> to ensure no
--   overflow/underflow can occur. Use them in conjunction with <a>safe</a>
--   to ensure no overflow can happen.
class (ArithOverflow (SBV a), Num a, SymWord a) => CheckedArithmetic a
(+!) :: (CheckedArithmetic a, ?loc :: CallStack) => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a
(-!) :: (CheckedArithmetic a, ?loc :: CallStack) => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a
(*!) :: (CheckedArithmetic a, ?loc :: CallStack) => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a
(/!) :: (CheckedArithmetic a, ?loc :: CallStack) => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a
negateChecked :: (CheckedArithmetic a, ?loc :: CallStack) => SBV a -> SBV a
infixl 6 +!
infixl 6 -!
infixl 7 *!
infixl 7 /!

-- | Detecting underflow/overflow conditions for casting between
--   bit-vectors. The first output is the result, the second component
--   itself is a pair with the first boolean indicating underflow and the
--   second indicating overflow.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sFromIntegralO (256 :: SInt16) :: (SWord8, (SBool, SBool))
--   (0 :: SWord8,(False,True))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sFromIntegralO (-2 :: SInt16) :: (SWord8, (SBool, SBool))
--   (254 :: SWord8,(True,False))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sFromIntegralO (2 :: SInt16) :: (SWord8, (SBool, SBool))
--   (2 :: SWord8,(False,False))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; sFromIntegralO (x::SInt32) .== (sFromIntegral x :: SInteger, (false, false))
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   As the last example shows, converting to <a>sInteger</a> never
--   underflows or overflows for any value.
sFromIntegralO :: forall a b. (Integral a, HasKind a, Num a, SymWord a, HasKind b, Num b, SymWord b) => SBV a -> (SBV b, (SBool, SBool))

-- | Version of <a>sFromIntegral</a> that has calls to <a>sAssert</a> for
--   checking no overflow/underflow can happen. Use it with a <a>safe</a>
--   call.
sFromIntegralChecked :: forall a b. (?loc :: CallStack, Integral a, HasKind a, HasKind b, Num a, SymWord a, HasKind b, Num b, SymWord b) => SBV a -> SBV b
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Word.Word8
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Word.Word16
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Word.Word32
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Word.Word64
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Int.Int8
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Int.Int16
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Int.Int32
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.CheckedArithmetic GHC.Int.Int64
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord8
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord16
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord32
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SWord64
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SInt8
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SInt16
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SInt32
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Data.SInt64
instance Data.SBV.Tools.Overflow.ArithOverflow Data.SBV.Core.Symbolic.SVal


-- | A collection of string/character utilities, useful when working with
--   symbolic strings. To the extent possible, the functions in this module
--   follow those of <a>Data.List</a> so importing qualified is the
--   recommended workflow. Also, it is recommended you use the
--   <tt>OverloadedStrings</tt> extension to allow literal strings to be
--   used as symbolic-strings.
module Data.SBV.String

-- | Length of a string.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \s -&gt; length s .== 2
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = "\NUL\NUL" :: String
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \s -&gt; length s .&lt; 0
--   Unsatisfiable
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; length s1 + length s2 .== length (s1 .++ s2)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
length :: SString -> SInteger

-- | <tt><a>null</a> s</tt> is True iff the string is empty
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; null s &lt;=&gt; length s .== 0
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; null s &lt;=&gt; s .== ""
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
null :: SString -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>head</a></tt> returns the head of a string. Unspecified if the
--   string is empty.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; head (singleton c) .== c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
head :: SString -> SChar

-- | <tt><a>tail</a></tt> returns the tail of a string. Unspecified if the
--   string is empty.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \h s -&gt; tail (singleton h .++ s) .== s
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; length s .&gt; 0 ==&gt; length (tail s) .== length s - 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; bnot (null s) ==&gt; singleton (head s) .++ tail s .== s
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
tail :: SString -> SString

-- | <tt><a>init</a></tt> returns all but the last element of the list.
--   Unspecified if the string is empty.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c t -&gt; init (t .++ singleton c) .== t
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
init :: SString -> SString

-- | <tt><a>singleton</a> c</tt> is the string of length 1 that contains
--   the only character whose value is the 8-bit value <tt>c</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c .== literal 'A' ==&gt; singleton c .== "A"
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; length (singleton c) .== 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
singleton :: SChar -> SString

-- | <tt><a>strToStrAt</a> s offset</tt>. Substring of length 1 at
--   <tt>offset</tt> in <tt>s</tt>. Unspecified if offset is out of bounds.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; strToStrAt (s1 .++ s2) (length s1) .== strToStrAt s2 0
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \s -&gt; length s .&gt;= 2 &amp;&amp;&amp; strToStrAt s 0 ./= strToStrAt s (length s - 1)
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = "\NUL\NUL\128" :: String
--   </pre>
strToStrAt :: SString -> SInteger -> SString

-- | <tt><a>strToCharAt</a> s i</tt> is the 8-bit value stored at location
--   <tt>i</tt>. Unspecified if index is out of bounds.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt;= 4 ==&gt; "AAAAA" `strToCharAt` i .== literal 'A'
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i c -&gt; s `strToCharAt` i .== c ==&gt; indexOf s (singleton c) .&lt;= i
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
strToCharAt :: SString -> SInteger -> SChar

-- | Short cut for <a>strToCharAt</a>
(.!!) :: SString -> SInteger -> SChar

-- | <tt><a>implode</a> cs</tt> is the string of length <tt>|cs|</tt>
--   containing precisely those characters. Note that there is no
--   corresponding function <tt>explode</tt>, since we wouldn't know the
--   length of a symbolic string.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c1 c2 c3 -&gt; length (implode [c1, c2, c3]) .== 3
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c1 c2 c3 -&gt; map (strToCharAt (implode [c1, c2, c3])) (map literal [0 .. 2]) .== [c1, c2, c3]
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
implode :: [SChar] -> SString

-- | Concatenate two strings. See also <a>.++</a>.
concat :: SString -> SString -> SString

-- | Prepend an element, the traditional <tt>cons</tt>.
(.:) :: SChar -> SString -> SString
infixr 5 .:

-- | Short cut for <a>concat</a>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \x y z -&gt; length x .== 5 &amp;&amp;&amp; length y .== 1 &amp;&amp;&amp; x .++ y .++ z .== "Hello world!"
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 =  "Hello" :: String
--     s1 =      " " :: String
--     s2 = "world!" :: String
--   </pre>
(.++) :: SString -> SString -> SString
infixr 5 .++

-- | <tt><a>isInfixOf</a> sub s</tt>. Does <tt>s</tt> contain the substring
--   <tt>sub</tt>?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 s3 -&gt; s2 `isInfixOf` (s1 .++ s2 .++ s3)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; s1 `isInfixOf` s2 &amp;&amp;&amp; s2 `isInfixOf` s1 &lt;=&gt; s1 .== s2
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isInfixOf :: SString -> SString -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>isSuffixOf</a> suf s</tt>. Is <tt>suf</tt> a suffix of
--   <tt>s</tt>?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; s2 `isSuffixOf` (s1 .++ s2)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; s1 `isSuffixOf` s2 ==&gt; subStr s2 (length s2 - length s1) (length s1) .== s1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isSuffixOf :: SString -> SString -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>isPrefixOf</a> pre s</tt>. Is <tt>pre</tt> a prefix of
--   <tt>s</tt>?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; s1 `isPrefixOf` (s1 .++ s2)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; s1 `isPrefixOf` s2 ==&gt; subStr s2 0 (length s1) .== s1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isPrefixOf :: SString -> SString -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>take</a> len s</tt>. Corresponds to Haskell's <a>take</a> on
--   symbolic-strings.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 ==&gt; length (take i s) .&lt;= i
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
take :: SInteger -> SString -> SString

-- | <tt><a>drop</a> len s</tt>. Corresponds to Haskell's <a>drop</a> on
--   symbolic-strings.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i -&gt; length (drop i s) .&lt;= length s
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i -&gt; take i s .++ drop i s .== s
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
drop :: SInteger -> SString -> SString

-- | <tt><a>subStr</a> s offset len</tt> is the substring of <tt>s</tt> at
--   offset <tt>offset</tt> with length <tt>len</tt>. This function is
--   under-specified when the offset is outside the range of positions in
--   <tt>s</tt> or <tt>len</tt> is negative or <tt>offset+len</tt> exceeds
--   the length of <tt>s</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt; length s ==&gt; subStr s 0 i .++ subStr s i (length s - i) .== s
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat  $ \i j -&gt; subStr "hello" i j .== "ell"
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = 1 :: Integer
--     s1 = 3 :: Integer
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat  $ \i j -&gt; subStr "hell" i j .== "no"
--   Unsatisfiable
--   </pre>
subStr :: SString -> SInteger -> SInteger -> SString

-- | <tt><a>replace</a> s src dst</tt>. Replace the first occurrence of
--   <tt>src</tt> by <tt>dst</tt> in <tt>s</tt>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; replace "hello" s "world" .== "world" ==&gt; s .== "hello"
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 s3 -&gt; length s2 .&gt; length s1 ==&gt; replace s1 s2 s3 .== s1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
replace :: SString -> SString -> SString -> SString

-- | <tt><a>indexOf</a> s sub</tt>. Retrieves first position of
--   <tt>sub</tt> in <tt>s</tt>, <tt>-1</tt> if there are no occurrences.
--   Equivalent to <tt><a>offsetIndexOf</a> s sub 0</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i -&gt; i .&gt; 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt; length s ==&gt; indexOf s (subStr s i 1) .&lt;= i
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s i -&gt; i .&gt; 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt; length s ==&gt; indexOf s (subStr s i 1) .== i
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     s0 = " \NUL\NUL\NUL\NUL\NUL" :: String
--     s1 =                       3 :: Integer
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s1 s2 -&gt; length s2 .&gt; length s1 ==&gt; indexOf s1 s2 .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
indexOf :: SString -> SString -> SInteger

-- | <tt><a>offsetIndexOf</a> s sub offset</tt>. Retrieves first position
--   of <tt>sub</tt> at or after <tt>offset</tt> in <tt>s</tt>, <tt>-1</tt>
--   if there are no occurrences.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s sub -&gt; offsetIndexOf s sub 0 .== indexOf s sub
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s sub i -&gt; i .&gt;= length s &amp;&amp;&amp; length sub .&gt; 0 ==&gt; offsetIndexOf s sub i .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s sub i -&gt; i .&gt; length s ==&gt; offsetIndexOf s sub i .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
offsetIndexOf :: SString -> SString -> SInteger -> SInteger

-- | <tt><a>strToNat</a> s</tt>. Retrieve integer encoded by string
--   <tt>s</tt> (ground rewriting only). Note that by definition this
--   function only works when <tt>s</tt> only contains digits, that is, if
--   it encodes a natural number. Otherwise, it returns '-1'. See
--   <a>http://cvc4.cs.stanford.edu/wiki/Strings</a> for details.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; let n = strToNat s in n .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; n .&lt; 10 ==&gt; length s .== 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
strToNat :: SString -> SInteger

-- | <tt><a>natToStr</a> i</tt>. Retrieve string encoded by integer
--   <tt>i</tt> (ground rewriting only). Again, only naturals are
--   supported, any input that is not a natural number produces empty
--   string, even though we take an integer as an argument. See
--   <a>http://cvc4.cs.stanford.edu/wiki/Strings</a> for details.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \i -&gt; length (natToStr i) .== 3 ==&gt; i .&lt;= 999
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
natToStr :: SInteger -> SString


-- | A collection of list utilities, useful when working with symbolic
--   lists. To the extent possible, the functions in this module follow
--   those of <a>Data.List</a> so importing qualified is the recommended
--   workflow. Also, it is recommended you use the <tt>OverloadedLists</tt>
--   extension to allow literal lists to be used as symbolic-lists.
module Data.SBV.List

-- | Length of a list.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \(l :: SList Word16) -&gt; length l .== 2
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = [0,0] :: [SWord16]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \(l :: SList Word16) -&gt; length l .&lt; 0
--   Unsatisfiable
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Word16) (l2 :: SList Word16) -&gt; length l1 + length l2 .== length (l1 .++ l2)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
length :: SymWord a => SList a -> SInteger

-- | <tt><a>null</a> s</tt> is True iff the list is empty
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Word16) -&gt; null l &lt;=&gt; length l .== 0
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Word16) -&gt; null l &lt;=&gt; l .== []
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
null :: SymWord a => SList a -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>head</a></tt> returns the first element of a list. Unspecified
--   if the list is empty.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; head (singleton c) .== (c :: SInteger)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
head :: SymWord a => SList a -> SBV a

-- | <tt><a>tail</a></tt> returns the tail of a list. Unspecified if the
--   list is empty.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(h :: SInteger) t -&gt; tail (singleton h .++ t) .== t
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Integer) -&gt; length l .&gt; 0 ==&gt; length (tail l) .== length l - 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Integer) -&gt; bnot (null l) ==&gt; singleton (head l) .++ tail l .== l
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
tail :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a

-- | @<a>uncons</a> returns the pair of the head and tail. Unspecified if
--   the list is empty.
uncons :: SymWord a => SList a -> (SBV a, SList a)

-- | <tt><a>init</a></tt> returns all but the last element of the list.
--   Unspecified if the list is empty.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(h :: SInteger) t -&gt; init (t .++ singleton h) .== t
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
init :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>singleton</a> x</tt> is the list of length 1 that contains the
--   only value <tt>x</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(x :: SInteger) -&gt; head (singleton x) .== x
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(x :: SInteger) -&gt; length (singleton x) .== 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
singleton :: SymWord a => SBV a -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>listToListAt</a> l offset</tt>. List of length 1 at
--   <tt>offset</tt> in <tt>l</tt>. Unspecified if index is out of bounds.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Integer) l2 -&gt; listToListAt (l1 .++ l2) (length l1) .== listToListAt l2 0
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \(l :: SList Word16) -&gt; length l .&gt;= 2 &amp;&amp;&amp; listToListAt l 0 ./= listToListAt l (length l - 1)
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = [0,0,32] :: [SWord16]
--   </pre>
listToListAt :: SymWord a => SList a -> SInteger -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>elemAt</a> l i</tt> is the value stored at location <tt>i</tt>.
--   Unspecified if index is out of bounds.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt;= 4 ==&gt; [1,1,1,1,1] `elemAt` i .== (1::SInteger)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Integer) i e -&gt; l `elemAt` i .== e ==&gt; indexOf l (singleton e) .&lt;= i
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
elemAt :: forall a. SymWord a => SList a -> SInteger -> SBV a

-- | Short cut for <a>elemAt</a>
(.!!) :: SymWord a => SList a -> SInteger -> SBV a

-- | <tt><a>implode</a> es</tt> is the list of length <tt>|es|</tt>
--   containing precisely those elements. Note that there is no
--   corresponding function <tt>explode</tt>, since we wouldn't know the
--   length of a symbolic list.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(e1 :: SInteger) e2 e3 -&gt; length (implode [e1, e2, e3]) .== 3
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(e1 :: SInteger) e2 e3 -&gt; map (elemAt (implode [e1, e2, e3])) (map literal [0 .. 2]) .== [e1, e2, e3]
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
implode :: SymWord a => [SBV a] -> SList a

-- | Concatenate two lists. See also <a>.++</a>.
concat :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SList a

-- | Prepend an element, the traditional <tt>cons</tt>.
(.:) :: SymWord a => SBV a -> SList a -> SList a
infixr 5 .:

-- | Short cut for <a>concat</a>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \x y z -&gt; length x .== 5 &amp;&amp;&amp; length y .== 1 &amp;&amp;&amp; x .++ y .++ z .== [1 .. 12]
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 =      [1,2,3,4,5] :: [SInteger]
--     s1 =              [6] :: [SInteger]
--     s2 = [7,8,9,10,11,12] :: [SInteger]
--   </pre>
(.++) :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SList a
infixr 5 .++

-- | <tt><a>isInfixOf</a> sub l</tt>. Does <tt>l</tt> contain the
--   subsequence <tt>sub</tt>?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Integer) l2 l3 -&gt; l2 `isInfixOf` (l1 .++ l2 .++ l3)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Integer) l2 -&gt; l1 `isInfixOf` l2 &amp;&amp;&amp; l2 `isInfixOf` l1 &lt;=&gt; l1 .== l2
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isInfixOf :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>isSuffixOf</a> suf l</tt>. Is <tt>suf</tt> a suffix of
--   <tt>l</tt>?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Word16) l2 -&gt; l2 `isSuffixOf` (l1 .++ l2)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Word16) l2 -&gt; l1 `isSuffixOf` l2 ==&gt; subList l2 (length l2 - length l1) (length l1) .== l1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isSuffixOf :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>isPrefixOf</a> pre l</tt>. Is <tt>pre</tt> a prefix of
--   <tt>l</tt>?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Integer) l2 -&gt; l1 `isPrefixOf` (l1 .++ l2)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Integer) l2 -&gt; l1 `isPrefixOf` l2 ==&gt; subList l2 0 (length l1) .== l1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isPrefixOf :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SBool

-- | <tt><a>take</a> len l</tt>. Corresponds to Haskell's <a>take</a> on
--   symbolic lists.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Integer) i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 ==&gt; length (take i l) .&lt;= i
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
take :: SymWord a => SInteger -> SList a -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>drop</a> len s</tt>. Corresponds to Haskell's <a>drop</a> on
--   symbolic-lists.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Word16) i -&gt; length (drop i l) .&lt;= length l
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Word16) i -&gt; take i l .++ drop i l .== l
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
drop :: SymWord a => SInteger -> SList a -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>subList</a> s offset len</tt> is the sublist of <tt>s</tt> at
--   offset <tt>offset</tt> with length <tt>len</tt>. This function is
--   under-specified when the offset is outside the range of positions in
--   <tt>s</tt> or <tt>len</tt> is negative or <tt>offset+len</tt> exceeds
--   the length of <tt>s</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Integer) i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt; length l ==&gt; subList l 0 i .++ subList l i (length l - i) .== l
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat  $ \i j -&gt; subList [1..5] i j .== ([2..4] :: SList Integer)
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = 1 :: Integer
--     s1 = 3 :: Integer
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat  $ \i j -&gt; subList [1..5] i j .== ([6..7] :: SList Integer)
--   Unsatisfiable
--   </pre>
subList :: SymWord a => SList a -> SInteger -> SInteger -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>replace</a> l src dst</tt>. Replace the first occurrence of
--   <tt>src</tt> by <tt>dst</tt> in <tt>s</tt>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \l -&gt; replace [1..5] l [6..10] .== [6..10] ==&gt; l .== ([1..5] :: SList Word8)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Integer) l2 l3 -&gt; length l2 .&gt; length l1 ==&gt; replace l1 l2 l3 .== l1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
replace :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SList a -> SList a

-- | <tt><a>indexOf</a> l sub</tt>. Retrieves first position of
--   <tt>sub</tt> in <tt>l</tt>, <tt>-1</tt> if there are no occurrences.
--   Equivalent to <tt><a>offsetIndexOf</a> l sub 0</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Int8) i -&gt; i .&gt; 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt; length l ==&gt; indexOf l (subList l i 1) .&lt;= i
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Word16) i -&gt; i .&gt; 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt; length l ==&gt; indexOf l (subList l i 1) .== i
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     s0 = [32,0,0] :: [SWord16]
--     s1 =        2 :: Integer
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l1 :: SList Word16) l2 -&gt; length l2 .&gt; length l1 ==&gt; indexOf l1 l2 .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
indexOf :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SInteger

-- | <tt><a>offsetIndexOf</a> l sub offset</tt>. Retrieves first position
--   of <tt>sub</tt> at or after <tt>offset</tt> in <tt>l</tt>, <tt>-1</tt>
--   if there are no occurrences.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Int8) sub -&gt; offsetIndexOf l sub 0 .== indexOf l sub
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Int8) sub i -&gt; i .&gt;= length l &amp;&amp;&amp; length sub .&gt; 0 ==&gt; offsetIndexOf l sub i .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(l :: SList Int8) sub i -&gt; i .&gt; length l ==&gt; offsetIndexOf l sub i .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
offsetIndexOf :: SymWord a => SList a -> SList a -> SInteger -> SInteger


-- | A collection of character utilities, follows the namings in
--   <a>Data.Char</a> and is intended to be imported qualified. Also, it is
--   recommended you use the <tt>OverloadedStrings</tt> extension to allow
--   literal strings to be used as symbolic-strings when working with
--   symbolic characters and strings.
--   
--   Note that currently <a>SChar</a> type only covers Latin1 (i.e., the
--   first 256 characters), as opposed to Haskell's Unicode character
--   support. However, there is a pending SMTLib proposal to extend this
--   set to Unicode, at which point we will update these functions to match
--   the implementations. For details, see:
--   <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/theories-UnicodeStrings.shtml</a>
module Data.SBV.Char

-- | Is the character in the string?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; :set -XOverloadedStrings
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `elem` singleton c
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; bnot (c `elem` "")
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
elem :: SChar -> SString -> SBool

-- | Is the character not in the string?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c s -&gt; c `elem` s &lt;=&gt; bnot (c `notElem` s)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
notElem :: SChar -> SString -> SBool

-- | The <a>ord</a> of a character.
ord :: SChar -> SInteger

-- | Conversion from an integer to a character.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; 0 .&lt;= x &amp;&amp;&amp; x .&lt; 256 ==&gt; ord (chr x) .== x
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; chr (ord x) .== x
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
chr :: SInteger -> SChar

-- | Convert to lower-case.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; toLower (toLower c) .== toLower c
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isLower c ==&gt; toLower (toUpper c) .== c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
toLower :: SChar -> SChar

-- | Convert to upper-case. N.B. There are three special cases!
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>The character 223 is special. It corresponds to the German Eszett,
--   it is considered lower-case, and furthermore it's upper-case maps back
--   to itself within our character-set. So, we leave it untouched.</li>
--   <li>The character 181 maps to upper-case 924, which is beyond our
--   character set. We leave it untouched. (This is the A with an acute
--   accent.)</li>
--   <li>The character 255 maps to upper-case 376, which is beyond our
--   character set. We leave it untouched. (This is the non-breaking space
--   character.)</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; toUpper (toUpper c) .== toUpper c
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isUpper c ==&gt; toUpper (toLower c) .== c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
toUpper :: SChar -> SChar

-- | Convert a digit to an integer. Works for hexadecimal digits too. If
--   the input isn't a digit, then return -1.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isDigit c ||| isHexDigit c ==&gt; digitToInt c .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; digitToInt c .&lt;= 15
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; bnot (isDigit c ||| isHexDigit c) ==&gt; digitToInt c .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
digitToInt :: SChar -> SInteger

-- | Convert an an integer to a digit, inverse of <a>digitToInt</a>. If the
--   integer is out of bounds, we return the arbitrarily chosen space
--   character. Note that for hexadecimal letters, we return the
--   corresponding lowercase letter.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \i -&gt; i .&gt;= 0 &amp;&amp;&amp; i .&lt;= 15 ==&gt; digitToInt (intToDigit i) .== i
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \i -&gt; i .&lt;  0 ||| i .&gt;  15 ==&gt; digitToInt (intToDigit i) .== -1
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; digitToInt c .== -1 &lt;=&gt; intToDigit (digitToInt c) .== literal ' '
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
intToDigit :: SInteger -> SChar

-- | Is this a control character? Control characters are essentially the
--   non-printing characters.
isControl :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this white-space? That is, one of "tnvfr 160".
isSpace :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a lower-case character?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isUpper c ==&gt; isLower (toLower c)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isLower :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an upper-case character?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; bnot (isLower c &amp;&amp;&amp; isUpper c)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isUpper :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an alphabet character? That is lower-case, upper-case and
--   title-case letters, plus letters of caseless scripts and modifiers
--   letters.
isAlpha :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an <a>isAlpha</a> or <a>isNumber</a>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isAlphaNum c &lt;=&gt; isAlpha c ||| isNumber c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isAlphaNum :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a printable character? Essentially the complement of
--   <a>isControl</a>, with one exception. The Latin-1 character 173 is
--   neither control nor printable. Go figure.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c .== literal '\173' ||| isControl c &lt;=&gt; bnot (isPrint c)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isPrint :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an ASCII digit, i.e., one of <tt>0</tt>..<tt>9</tt>. Note that
--   this is a subset of <a>isNumber</a>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isDigit c ==&gt; isNumber c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isDigit :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an Octal digit, i.e., one of <tt>0</tt>..<tt>7</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isOctDigit c ==&gt; isDigit c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isOctDigit :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a Hex digit, i.e, one of <tt>0</tt>..<tt>9</tt>,
--   <tt>a</tt>..<tt>f</tt>, <tt>A</tt>..<tt>F</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isHexDigit c ==&gt; isAlphaNum c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isHexDigit :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an alphabet character. Note that this function is equivalent
--   to <a>isAlpha</a>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isLetter c &lt;=&gt; isAlpha c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isLetter :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a mark? Note that the Latin-1 subset doesn't have any marks;
--   so this function is simply constant false for the time being.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ bnot . isMark
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isMark :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a number character? Note that this set contains not only the
--   digits, but also the codes for a few numeric looking characters like
--   1/2 etc. Use <a>isDigit</a> for the digits <tt>0</tt> through
--   <tt>9</tt>.
isNumber :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a punctuation mark?
isPunctuation :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a symbol?
isSymbol :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a separator?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isSeparator c ==&gt; isSpace c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isSeparator :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an ASCII character, i.e., the first 128 characters.
isAscii :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this a Latin1 character? Note that this function is always true
--   since <a>SChar</a> corresponds precisely to Latin1 for the time being.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove isLatin1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isLatin1 :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an ASCII letter?
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isAsciiLetter c &lt;=&gt; isAsciiUpper c ||| isAsciiLower c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isAsciiLetter :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an ASCII Upper-case letter? i.e., <tt>A</tt> thru <tt>Z</tt>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isAsciiUpper c &lt;=&gt; ord c .&gt;= ord (literal 'A') &amp;&amp;&amp; ord c .&lt;= ord (literal 'Z')
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isAsciiUpper c &lt;=&gt; isAscii c &amp;&amp;&amp; isUpper c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isAsciiUpper :: SChar -> SBool

-- | Is this an ASCII Lower-case letter? i.e., <tt>a</tt> thru <tt>z</tt>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isAsciiLower c &lt;=&gt; ord c .&gt;= ord (literal 'a') &amp;&amp;&amp; ord c .&lt;= ord (literal 'z')
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; isAsciiLower c &lt;=&gt; isAscii c &amp;&amp;&amp; isLower c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
isAsciiLower :: SChar -> SBool


-- | A collection of regular-expression related utilities. The recommended
--   workflow is to import this module qualified as the names of the
--   functions are specificly chosen to be common identifiers. Also, it is
--   recommended you use the <tt>OverloadedStrings</tt> extension to allow
--   literal strings to be used as symbolic-strings and regular-expressions
--   when working with this module.
module Data.SBV.RegExp

-- | Regular expressions. Note that regular expressions themselves are
--   concrete, but the <a>match</a> function from the
--   <a>RegExpMatchable</a> class can check membership against a symbolic
--   string/character. Also, we are preferring a datatype approach here, as
--   opposed to coming up with some string-representation; there are way
--   too many alternatives already so inventing one isn't a priority.
--   Please get in touch if you would like a parser for this type as it
--   might be easier to use.
data RegExp

-- | Precisely match the given string
Literal :: String -> RegExp

-- | Accept every string
All :: RegExp

-- | Accept no strings
None :: RegExp

-- | Accept range of characters
Range :: Char -> Char -> RegExp

-- | Concatenation
Conc :: [RegExp] -> RegExp

-- | Kleene Star: Zero or more
KStar :: RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Kleene Plus: One or more
KPlus :: RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Zero or one
Opt :: RegExp -> RegExp

-- | From <tt>n</tt> repetitions to <tt>m</tt> repetitions
Loop :: Int -> Int -> RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Union of regular expressions
Union :: [RegExp] -> RegExp

-- | Intersection of regular expressions
Inter :: RegExp -> RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Matchable class. Things we can match against a <a>RegExp</a>. (TODO:
--   Currently SBV does *not* optimize this call if the input is a concrete
--   string or a character, but rather directly calls down to the solver.
--   We might want to perform the operation on the Haskell side for
--   performance reasons, should this become important.)
--   
--   For instance, you can generate valid-looking phone numbers like this:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; :set -XOverloadedStrings
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let dig09 = Range '0' '9'
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let dig19 = Range '1' '9'
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let pre   = dig19 * Loop 2 2 dig09
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let post  = dig19 * Loop 3 3 dig09
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let phone = pre * "-" * post
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \s -&gt; (s :: SString) `match` phone
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = "224-4222" :: String
--   </pre>
class RegExpMatchable a

-- | <tt><a>match</a> s r</tt> checks whether <tt>s</tt> is in the language
--   generated by <tt>r</tt>.
match :: RegExpMatchable a => a -> RegExp -> SBool

-- | A literal regular-expression, matching the given string exactly. Note
--   that with <tt>OverloadedStrings</tt> extension, you can simply use a
--   Haskell string to mean the same thing, so this function is rarely
--   needed.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(s :: SString) -&gt; s `match` exactly "LITERAL" &lt;=&gt; s .== "LITERAL"
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
exactly :: String -> RegExp

-- | Helper to define a character class.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(c :: SChar) -&gt; c `match` oneOf "ABCD" &lt;=&gt; bAny (c .==) (map literal "ABCD")
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
oneOf :: String -> RegExp

-- | Recognize a newline. Also includes carriage-return and form-feed.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; newline
--   (re.union (str.to.re "\n") (str.to.re "\r") (str.to.re "\f"))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` newline ==&gt; isSpace c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
newline :: RegExp

-- | Recognize white-space, but without a new line.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; whiteSpaceNoNewLine
--   (re.union (str.to.re "\x09") (re.union (str.to.re "\v") (str.to.re "\xa0") (str.to.re " ")))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` whiteSpaceNoNewLine ==&gt; c `match` whiteSpace &amp;&amp;&amp; c ./= literal '\n'
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
whiteSpaceNoNewLine :: RegExp

-- | Recognize white space.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` whiteSpace ==&gt; isSpace c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
whiteSpace :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a tab.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; tab
--   (str.to.re "\x09")
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` tab ==&gt; c .== literal '\t'
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
tab :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a punctuation character. Anything that satisfies the
--   predicate <a>isPunctuation</a> will be accepted. (TODO: Will need
--   modification when we move to unicode.)
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` punctuation ==&gt; isPunctuation c
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
punctuation :: RegExp

-- | Recognize an alphabet letter, i.e., <tt>A</tt>..<tt>Z</tt>,
--   <tt>a</tt>..<tt>z</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; asciiLetter
--   (re.union (re.range "a" "z") (re.range "A" "Z"))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` asciiLetter &lt;=&gt; toUpper c `match` asciiLetter
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` asciiLetter &lt;=&gt; toLower c `match` asciiLetter
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
asciiLetter :: RegExp

-- | Recognize an ASCII lower case letter
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; asciiLower
--   (re.range "a" "z")
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; (c :: SChar) `match` asciiLower  ==&gt; c `match` asciiLetter
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` asciiLower  ==&gt; toUpper c `match` asciiUpper
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` asciiLetter ==&gt; toLower c `match` asciiLower
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
asciiLower :: RegExp

-- | Recognize an upper case letter
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; asciiUpper
--   (re.range "A" "Z")
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; (c :: SChar) `match` asciiUpper  ==&gt; c `match` asciiLetter
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` asciiUpper  ==&gt; toLower c `match` asciiLower
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` asciiLetter ==&gt; toUpper c `match` asciiUpper
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
asciiUpper :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a digit. One of <tt>0</tt>..<tt>9</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; digit
--   (re.range "0" "9")
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` digit &lt;=&gt; let v = digitToInt c in 0 .&lt;= v &amp;&amp;&amp; v .&lt; 10
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
digit :: RegExp

-- | Recognize an octal digit. One of <tt>0</tt>..<tt>7</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; octDigit
--   (re.range "0" "7")
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` octDigit &lt;=&gt; let v = digitToInt c in 0 .&lt;= v &amp;&amp;&amp; v .&lt; 8
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(c :: SChar) -&gt; c `match` octDigit ==&gt; c `match` digit
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
octDigit :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a hexadecimal digit. One of <tt>0</tt>..<tt>9</tt>,
--   <tt>a</tt>..<tt>f</tt>, <tt>A</tt>..<tt>F</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; hexDigit
--   (re.union (re.range "0" "9") (re.range "a" "f") (re.range "A" "F"))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \c -&gt; c `match` hexDigit &lt;=&gt; let v = digitToInt c in 0 .&lt;= v &amp;&amp;&amp; v .&lt; 16
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \(c :: SChar) -&gt; c `match` digit ==&gt; c `match` hexDigit
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
hexDigit :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a decimal number.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; decimal
--   (re.+ (re.range "0" "9"))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; (s::SString) `match` decimal ==&gt; bnot (s `match` KStar asciiLetter)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
decimal :: RegExp

-- | Recognize an octal number. Must have a prefix of the form
--   <tt>0o</tt>/<tt>0O</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; octal
--   (re.++ (re.union (str.to.re "0o") (str.to.re "0O")) (re.+ (re.range "0" "7")))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; s `match` octal ==&gt; bAny (.== take 2 s) ["0o", "0O"]
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
octal :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a hexadecimal number. Must have a prefix of the form
--   <tt>0x</tt>/<tt>0X</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; hexadecimal
--   (re.++ (re.union (str.to.re "0x") (str.to.re "0X")) (re.+ (re.union (re.range "0" "9") (re.range "a" "f") (re.range "A" "F"))))
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; s `match` hexadecimal ==&gt; bAny (.== take 2 s) ["0x", "0X"]
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
hexadecimal :: RegExp

-- | Recognize a floating point number. The exponent part is optional if a
--   fraction is present. The exponent may or may not have a sign.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; s `match` floating ==&gt; length s .&gt;= 3
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
floating :: RegExp

-- | For the purposes of this regular expression, an identifier consists of
--   a letter followed by zero or more letters, digits, underscores, and
--   single quotes. The first letter must be lowercase.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; s `match` identifier ==&gt; isAsciiLower (head s)
--   Q.E.D.
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \s -&gt; s `match` identifier ==&gt; length s .&gt;= 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
identifier :: RegExp
instance Data.SBV.RegExp.RegExpMatchable Data.SBV.Core.Data.SChar
instance Data.SBV.RegExp.RegExpMatchable Data.SBV.Core.Data.SString


-- | Code-generation from SBV programs.
module Data.SBV.Tools.CodeGen

-- | The code-generation monad. Allows for precise layout of input values
--   reference parameters (for returning composite values in languages such
--   as C), and return values.
data SBVCodeGen a

-- | Reach into symbolic monad from code-generation
cgSym :: Symbolic a -> SBVCodeGen a

-- | Sets RTC (run-time-checks) for index-out-of-bounds, shift-with-large
--   value etc. on/off. Default: <a>False</a>.
cgPerformRTCs :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets driver program run time values, useful for generating programs
--   with fixed drivers for testing. Default: None, i.e., use random
--   values.
cgSetDriverValues :: [Integer] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Should we generate a driver program? Default: <a>True</a>. When a
--   library is generated, it will have a driver if any of the contituent
--   functions has a driver. (See <a>compileToCLib</a>.)
cgGenerateDriver :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Should we generate a Makefile? Default: <a>True</a>.
cgGenerateMakefile :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | If passed <a>True</a>, then we will not ask the user if we're
--   overwriting files as we generate the C code. Otherwise, we'll prompt.
cgOverwriteFiles :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an atomic input in the generated code.
cgInput :: SymWord a => String -> SBVCodeGen (SBV a)

-- | Creates an array input in the generated code.
cgInputArr :: SymWord a => Int -> String -> SBVCodeGen [SBV a]

-- | Creates an atomic output in the generated code.
cgOutput :: String -> SBV a -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an array output in the generated code.
cgOutputArr :: SymWord a => String -> [SBV a] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) value in the generated code.
cgReturn :: SBV a -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) array value in the generated code.
cgReturnArr :: SymWord a => [SBV a] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given lines to the header file generated, useful for
--   generating programs with uninterpreted functions.
cgAddPrototype :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given lines to the program file generated, useful for
--   generating programs with uninterpreted functions.
cgAddDecl :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given words to the compiler options in the generated
--   Makefile, useful for linking extra stuff in.
cgAddLDFlags :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Ignore assertions (those generated by <a>sAssert</a> calls) in the
--   generated C code
cgIgnoreSAssert :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets number of bits to be used for representing the <a>SInteger</a>
--   type in the generated C code. The argument must be one of <tt>8</tt>,
--   <tt>16</tt>, <tt>32</tt>, or <tt>64</tt>. Note that this is
--   essentially unsafe as the semantics of unbounded Haskell integers
--   becomes reduced to the corresponding bit size, as typical in most C
--   implementations.
cgIntegerSize :: Int -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets the C type to be used for representing the <a>SReal</a> type in
--   the generated C code. The setting can be one of C's <tt>"float"</tt>,
--   <tt>"double"</tt>, or <tt>"long double"</tt>, types, depending on the
--   precision needed. Note that this is essentially unsafe as the
--   semantics of infinite precision SReal values becomes reduced to the
--   corresponding floating point type in C, and hence it is subject to
--   rounding errors.
cgSRealType :: CgSRealType -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Possible mappings for the <a>SReal</a> type when translated to C. Used
--   in conjunction with the function <a>cgSRealType</a>. Note that the
--   particular characteristics of the mapped types depend on the platform
--   and the compiler used for compiling the generated C program. See
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_data_types</a> for details.
data CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   float
--   </pre>
CgFloat :: CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   double
--   </pre>
CgDouble :: CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   long double
--   </pre>
CgLongDouble :: CgSRealType

-- | Given a symbolic computation, render it as an equivalent collection of
--   files that make up a C program:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>The first argument is the directory name under which the files
--   will be saved. To save files in the current directory pass
--   <tt><a>Just</a> "."</tt>. Use <a>Nothing</a> for printing to
--   stdout.</li>
--   <li>The second argument is the name of the C function to
--   generate.</li>
--   <li>The final argument is the function to be compiled.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   Compilation will also generate a <tt>Makefile</tt>, a header file, and
--   a driver (test) program, etc.
compileToC :: Maybe FilePath -> String -> SBVCodeGen () -> IO ()

-- | Create code to generate a library archive (.a) from given symbolic
--   functions. Useful when generating code from multiple functions that
--   work together as a library.
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>The first argument is the directory name under which the files
--   will be saved. To save files in the current directory pass
--   <tt><a>Just</a> "."</tt>. Use <a>Nothing</a> for printing to
--   stdout.</li>
--   <li>The second argument is the name of the archive to generate.</li>
--   <li>The third argument is the list of functions to include, in the
--   form of function-name/code pairs, similar to the second and third
--   arguments of <a>compileToC</a>, except in a list.</li>
--   </ul>
compileToCLib :: Maybe FilePath -> String -> [(String, SBVCodeGen ())] -> IO ()


-- | Low level functions to access the SBV infrastructure, for developers
--   who want to build further tools on top of SBV. End-users of the
--   library should not need to use this module.
module Data.SBV.Internals

-- | Result of running a symbolic computation
data Result
Result :: Set Kind -> [(String, CW)] -> [(String, SW)] -> [(String, [String])] -> ([(Quantifier, NamedSymVar)], [NamedSymVar]) -> [(SW, CW)] -> [((Int, Kind, Kind), [SW])] -> [(Int, ArrayInfo)] -> [(String, SBVType)] -> [(String, [String])] -> SBVPgm -> [(Bool, [(String, String)], SW)] -> [(String, Maybe CallStack, SW)] -> [SW] -> Result

-- | kinds used in the program
[reskinds] :: Result -> Set Kind

-- | quick-check counter-example information (if any)
[resTraces] :: Result -> [(String, CW)]

-- | observable expressions (part of the model)
[resObservables] :: Result -> [(String, SW)]

-- | uninterpeted code segments
[resUISegs] :: Result -> [(String, [String])]

-- | inputs (possibly existential) + tracker vars
[resInputs] :: Result -> ([(Quantifier, NamedSymVar)], [NamedSymVar])

-- | constants
[resConsts] :: Result -> [(SW, CW)]

-- | tables (automatically constructed) (tableno, index-type, result-type)
--   elts
[resTables] :: Result -> [((Int, Kind, Kind), [SW])]

-- | arrays (user specified)
[resArrays] :: Result -> [(Int, ArrayInfo)]

-- | uninterpreted constants
[resUIConsts] :: Result -> [(String, SBVType)]

-- | axioms
[resAxioms] :: Result -> [(String, [String])]

-- | assignments
[resAsgns] :: Result -> SBVPgm

-- | additional constraints (boolean)
[resConstraints] :: Result -> [(Bool, [(String, String)], SW)]

-- | assertions
[resAssertions] :: Result -> [(String, Maybe CallStack, SW)]

-- | outputs
[resOutputs] :: Result -> [SW]

-- | Different means of running a symbolic piece of code
data SBVRunMode

-- | In regular mode, with a stage. Bool is True if this is SAT.
SMTMode :: IStage -> Bool -> SMTConfig -> SBVRunMode

-- | Code generation mode.
CodeGen :: SBVRunMode

-- | Concrete simulation mode.
Concrete :: SBVRunMode

-- | Stage of an interactive run
data IStage
ISetup :: IStage
ISafe :: IStage
IRun :: IStage

-- | Translation tricks needed for specific capabilities afforded by each
--   solver
data SolverCapabilities
SolverCapabilities :: Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Maybe [String] -> SolverCapabilities

-- | Support for SMT-Lib2 style quantifiers?
[supportsQuantifiers] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for SMT-Lib2 style uninterpreted-sorts
[supportsUninterpretedSorts] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for unbounded integers?
[supportsUnboundedInts] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for reals?
[supportsReals] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Supports printing of approximations of reals?
[supportsApproxReals] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for floating point numbers?
[supportsIEEE754] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for optimization routines?
[supportsOptimization] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for pseudo-boolean operations?
[supportsPseudoBooleans] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for interactive queries per SMT-Lib?
[supportsCustomQueries] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for global decls, needed for push-pop.
[supportsGlobalDecls] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Supports flattened sequence output, with given config lines
[supportsFlattenedSequences] :: SolverCapabilities -> Maybe [String]

-- | A symbolic boolean/bit
type SBool = SBV Bool

-- | 8-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord8 = SBV Word8

-- | 16-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord16 = SBV Word16

-- | 32-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord32 = SBV Word32

-- | 64-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord64 = SBV Word64

-- | 8-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt8 = SBV Int8

-- | 16-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt16 = SBV Int16

-- | 32-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt32 = SBV Int32

-- | 64-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt64 = SBV Int64

-- | Infinite precision signed symbolic value
type SInteger = SBV Integer

-- | Infinite precision symbolic algebraic real value
type SReal = SBV AlgReal

-- | IEEE-754 single-precision floating point numbers
type SFloat = SBV Float

-- | IEEE-754 double-precision floating point numbers
type SDouble = SBV Double

-- | A symbolic character. Note that, as far as SBV's symbolic strings are
--   concerned, a character is currently an 8-bit unsigned value,
--   corresponding to the ISO-8859-1 (Latin-1) character set:
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859-1</a>. A Haskell
--   <a>Char</a>, on the other hand, is based on unicode. Therefore, there
--   isn't a 1-1 correspondence between a Haskell character and an SBV
--   character for the time being. This limitation is due to the
--   SMT-solvers only supporting this particular subset. However, there is
--   a pending proposal to add support for unicode, and SBV will track
--   these changes to have full unicode support as solvers become
--   available. For details, see:
--   <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/theories-UnicodeStrings.shtml</a>
type SChar = SBV Char

-- | A symbolic string. Note that a symbolic string is <i>not</i> a list of
--   symbolic characters, that is, it is not the case that <tt>SString =
--   [SChar]</tt>, unlike what one might expect following Haskell strings.
--   An <a>SString</a> is a symbolic value of its own, of possibly
--   arbitrary but finite length, and internally processed as one unit as
--   opposed to a fixed-length list of characters.
type SString = SBV String

-- | A symbolic list of items. Note that a symbolic list is <i>not</i> a
--   list of symbolic items, that is, it is not the case that <tt>SList a =
--   [a]</tt>, unlike what one might expect following haskell
--   lists/sequences. An <a>SList</a> is a symbolic value of its own, of
--   possibly arbitrary but finite length, and internally processed as one
--   unit as opposed to a fixed-length list of items. Note that lists can
--   be nested, i.e., we do allow lists of lists of ... items.
type SList a = SBV [a]

-- | Not-A-Number for <a>Double</a> and <a>Float</a>. Surprisingly, Haskell
--   Prelude doesn't have this value defined, so we provide it here.
nan :: Floating a => a

-- | Infinity for <a>Double</a> and <a>Float</a>. Surprisingly, Haskell
--   Prelude doesn't have this value defined, so we provide it here.
infinity :: Floating a => a

-- | Symbolic variant of Not-A-Number. This value will inhabit both
--   <a>SDouble</a> and <a>SFloat</a>.
sNaN :: (Floating a, SymWord a) => SBV a

-- | Symbolic variant of infinity. This value will inhabit both
--   <a>SDouble</a> and <a>SFloat</a>.
sInfinity :: (Floating a, SymWord a) => SBV a

-- | Rounding mode to be used for the IEEE floating-point operations. Note
--   that Haskell's default is <a>RoundNearestTiesToEven</a>. If you use a
--   different rounding mode, then the counter-examples you get may not
--   match what you observe in Haskell.
data RoundingMode

-- | Round to nearest representable floating point value. If precisely at
--   half-way, pick the even number. (In this context, <i>even</i> means
--   the lowest-order bit is zero.)
RoundNearestTiesToEven :: RoundingMode

-- | Round to nearest representable floating point value. If precisely at
--   half-way, pick the number further away from 0. (That is, for positive
--   values, pick the greater; for negative values, pick the smaller.)
RoundNearestTiesToAway :: RoundingMode

-- | Round towards positive infinity. (Also known as rounding-up or
--   ceiling.)
RoundTowardPositive :: RoundingMode

-- | Round towards negative infinity. (Also known as rounding-down or
--   floor.)
RoundTowardNegative :: RoundingMode

-- | Round towards zero. (Also known as truncation.)
RoundTowardZero :: RoundingMode

-- | The symbolic variant of <a>RoundingMode</a>
type SRoundingMode = SBV RoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundNearestTiesToEven</a>
sRoundNearestTiesToEven :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundNearestTiesToAway</a>
sRoundNearestTiesToAway :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundTowardPositive</a>
sRoundTowardPositive :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundTowardNegative</a>
sRoundTowardNegative :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundTowardZero</a>
sRoundTowardZero :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundNearestTiesToEven</a>
sRNE :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundNearestTiesToAway</a>
sRNA :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundTowardPositive</a>
sRTP :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundTowardNegative</a>
sRTN :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundTowardZero</a>
sRTZ :: SRoundingMode

-- | A <a>SymWord</a> is a potential symbolic bitvector that can be created
--   instances of to be fed to a symbolic program. Note that these methods
--   are typically not needed in casual uses with <a>prove</a>, <a>sat</a>,
--   <a>allSat</a> etc, as default instances automatically provide the
--   necessary bits.
class (HasKind a, Ord a, Typeable a) => SymWord a

-- | Create a user named input (universal)
forall :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create an automatically named input
forall_ :: SymWord a => Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Get a bunch of new words
mkForallVars :: SymWord a => Int -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Create an existential variable
exists :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create an automatically named existential variable
exists_ :: SymWord a => Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create a bunch of existentials
mkExistVars :: SymWord a => Int -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Create a free variable, universal in a proof, existential in sat
free :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create an unnamed free variable, universal in proof, existential in
--   sat
free_ :: SymWord a => Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create a bunch of free vars
mkFreeVars :: SymWord a => Int -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Similar to free; Just a more convenient name
symbolic :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Similar to mkFreeVars; but automatically gives names based on the
--   strings
symbolics :: SymWord a => [String] -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Turn a literal constant to symbolic
literal :: SymWord a => a -> SBV a

-- | Extract a literal, if the value is concrete
unliteral :: SymWord a => SBV a -> Maybe a

-- | Extract a literal, from a CW representation
fromCW :: SymWord a => CW -> a

-- | Is the symbolic word concrete?
isConcrete :: SymWord a => SBV a -> Bool

-- | Is the symbolic word really symbolic?
isSymbolic :: SymWord a => SBV a -> Bool

-- | Does it concretely satisfy the given predicate?
isConcretely :: SymWord a => SBV a -> (a -> Bool) -> Bool

-- | One stop allocator
mkSymWord :: SymWord a => Maybe Quantifier -> Maybe String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Turn a literal constant to symbolic
literal :: (SymWord a, Show a) => a -> SBV a

-- | Extract a literal, from a CW representation
fromCW :: (SymWord a, Read a) => CW -> a

-- | One stop allocator
mkSymWord :: (SymWord a, Read a, Data a) => Maybe Quantifier -> Maybe String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | <a>CW</a> represents a concrete word of a fixed size: For signed
--   words, the most significant digit is considered to be the sign.
data CW
CW :: !Kind -> !CWVal -> CW
[_cwKind] :: CW -> !Kind
[cwVal] :: CW -> !CWVal

-- | A constant value
data CWVal

-- | algebraic real
CWAlgReal :: !AlgReal -> CWVal

-- | bit-vector/unbounded integer
CWInteger :: !Integer -> CWVal

-- | float
CWFloat :: !Float -> CWVal

-- | double
CWDouble :: !Double -> CWVal

-- | character
CWChar :: !Char -> CWVal

-- | string
CWString :: !String -> CWVal

-- | list
CWList :: ![CWVal] -> CWVal

-- | value of an uninterpreted/user kind. The Maybe Int shows index
--   position for enumerations
CWUserSort :: !(Maybe Int, String) -> CWVal

-- | Algebraic reals. Note that the representation is left abstract. We
--   represent rational results explicitly, while the roots-of-polynomials
--   are represented implicitly by their defining equation
data AlgReal

-- | bool says it's exact (i.e., SMT-solver did not return it with ? at the
--   end.)
AlgRational :: Bool -> Rational -> AlgReal

-- | which root of this polynomial and an approximate decimal
--   representation with given precision, if available
AlgPolyRoot :: (Integer, AlgRealPoly) -> Maybe String -> AlgReal

-- | A univariate polynomial, represented simply as a coefficient list. For
--   instance, "5x^3 + 2x - 5" is represented as [(5, 3), (2, 1), (-5, 0)]
data AlgRealPoly

-- | A simple expression type over extendent values, covering infinity,
--   epsilon and intervals.
data ExtCW
Infinite :: Kind -> ExtCW
Epsilon :: Kind -> ExtCW
Interval :: ExtCW -> ExtCW -> ExtCW
BoundedCW :: CW -> ExtCW
AddExtCW :: ExtCW -> ExtCW -> ExtCW
MulExtCW :: ExtCW -> ExtCW -> ExtCW

-- | A generalized CW allows for expressions involving infinite and epsilon
--   values/intervals Used in optimization problems.
data GeneralizedCW
ExtendedCW :: ExtCW -> GeneralizedCW
RegularCW :: CW -> GeneralizedCW

-- | Is this a regular CW?
isRegularCW :: GeneralizedCW -> Bool

-- | Are two CW's of the same type?
cwSameType :: CW -> CW -> Bool

-- | Convert a CW to a Haskell boolean (NB. Assumes input is well-kinded)
cwToBool :: CW -> Bool

-- | Create a constant word from an integral.
mkConstCW :: Integral a => Kind -> a -> CW

-- | Lift a binary function through a CW
liftCW2 :: (AlgReal -> AlgReal -> b) -> (Integer -> Integer -> b) -> (Float -> Float -> b) -> (Double -> Double -> b) -> (Char -> Char -> b) -> (String -> String -> b) -> ([CWVal] -> [CWVal] -> b) -> ((Maybe Int, String) -> (Maybe Int, String) -> b) -> CW -> CW -> b

-- | Map a unary function through a CW.
mapCW :: (AlgReal -> AlgReal) -> (Integer -> Integer) -> (Float -> Float) -> (Double -> Double) -> (Char -> Char) -> (String -> String) -> ((Maybe Int, String) -> (Maybe Int, String)) -> CW -> CW

-- | Map a binary function through a CW.
mapCW2 :: (AlgReal -> AlgReal -> AlgReal) -> (Integer -> Integer -> Integer) -> (Float -> Float -> Float) -> (Double -> Double -> Double) -> (Char -> Char -> Char) -> (String -> String -> String) -> ((Maybe Int, String) -> (Maybe Int, String) -> (Maybe Int, String)) -> CW -> CW -> CW

-- | A symbolic word, tracking it's signedness and size.
data SW
SW :: !Kind -> !NodeId -> SW

-- | Constant True as an SW. Note that this value always occupies slot -1.
trueSW :: SW

-- | Constant False as an SW. Note that this value always occupies slot -2.
falseSW :: SW

-- | Constant True as a CW. We represent it using the integer value 1.
trueCW :: CW

-- | Constant False as a CW. We represent it using the integer value 0.
falseCW :: CW

-- | Normalize a CW. Essentially performs modular arithmetic to make sure
--   the value can fit in the given bit-size. Note that this is rather
--   tricky for negative values, due to asymmetry. (i.e., an 8-bit negative
--   number represents values in the range -128 to 127; thus we have to be
--   careful on the negative side.)
normCW :: CW -> CW

-- | The <a>Symbolic</a> value. Either a constant (<tt>Left</tt>) or a
--   symbolic value (<tt>Right Cached</tt>). Note that caching is essential
--   for making sure sharing is preserved.
data SVal
SVal :: !Kind -> !Either CW (Cached SW) -> SVal

-- | The <a>Symbolic</a> value. The parameter <tt>a</tt> is phantom, but is
--   extremely important in keeping the user interface strongly typed.
newtype SBV a
SBV :: SVal -> SBV a
[unSBV] :: SBV a -> SVal

-- | A symbolic node id
newtype NodeId
NodeId :: Int -> NodeId

-- | Create a symbolic variable.
mkSymSBV :: forall a. Maybe Quantifier -> Kind -> Maybe String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | The context of a symbolic array as created
data ArrayContext

-- | A new array, the contents are initialized with the given value, if any
ArrayFree :: Maybe SW -> ArrayContext

-- | An array created by mutating another array at a given cell
ArrayMutate :: ArrayIndex -> SW -> SW -> ArrayContext

-- | An array created by symbolically merging two other arrays
ArrayMerge :: SW -> ArrayIndex -> ArrayIndex -> ArrayContext

-- | Representation for symbolic arrays
type ArrayInfo = (String, (Kind, Kind), ArrayContext)

-- | Flat arrays of symbolic values An <tt>array a b</tt> is an array
--   indexed by the type <tt><a>SBV</a> a</tt>, with elements of type
--   <tt><a>SBV</a> b</tt>.
--   
--   If a default value is supplied, then all the array elements will be
--   initialized to this value. Otherwise, they will be left unspecified,
--   i.e., a read from an unwritten location will produce an uninterpreted
--   constant.
--   
--   While it's certainly possible for user to create instances of
--   <a>SymArray</a>, the <a>SArray</a> and <a>SFunArray</a> instances
--   already provided should cover most use cases in practice. Note that
--   there are a few differences between these two models in terms of use
--   models:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li><a>SArray</a> produces SMTLib arrays, and requires a solver that
--   understands the array theory. <a>SFunArray</a> is internally handled,
--   and thus can be used with any solver. (Note that all solvers except
--   <a>abc</a> support arrays, so this isn't a big decision factor.)</li>
--   <li>For both arrays, if a default value is supplied, then reading from
--   uninitialized cell will return that value. If the default is not
--   given, then reading from uninitialized cells is still OK for both
--   arrays, and will produce an uninterpreted constant in both cases.</li>
--   <li>Only <a>SArray</a> supports checking equality of arrays. (That is,
--   checking if an entire array is equivalent to another.)
--   <a>SFunArray</a>s cannot be checked for equality. In general, checking
--   wholesale equality of arrays is a difficult decision problem and
--   should be avoided if possible.</li>
--   <li>Only <a>SFunArray</a> supports compilation to C. Programs using
--   <a>SArray</a> will not be accepted by the C-code generator.</li>
--   <li>You cannot use quickcheck on programs that contain these arrays.
--   (Neither <a>SArray</a> nor <a>SFunArray</a>.)</li>
--   <li>With <a>SArray</a>, SBV transfers all array-processing to the
--   SMT-solver. So, it can generate programs more quickly, but they might
--   end up being too hard for the solver to handle. With <a>SFunArray</a>,
--   SBV only generates code for individual elements and the array itself
--   never shows up in the resulting SMTLib program. This puts more onus on
--   the SBV side and might have some performance impacts, but it might
--   generate problems that are easier for the SMT solvers to handle.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   As a rule of thumb, try <a>SArray</a> first. These should generate
--   compact code. However, if the backend solver has hard time solving the
--   generated problems, switch to <a>SFunArray</a>. If you still have
--   issues, please report so we can see what the problem might be!
class SymArray array

-- | Create a new anonymous array, possibly with a default initial value.
newArray_ :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => Maybe (SBV b) -> Symbolic (array a b)

-- | Create a named new array, possibly with a default initial value.
newArray :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => String -> Maybe (SBV b) -> Symbolic (array a b)

-- | Read the array element at <tt>a</tt>
readArray :: SymArray array => array a b -> SBV a -> SBV b

-- | Update the element at <tt>a</tt> to be <tt>b</tt>
writeArray :: (SymArray array, SymWord b) => array a b -> SBV a -> SBV b -> array a b

-- | Merge two given arrays on the symbolic condition Intuitively:
--   <tt>mergeArrays cond a b = if cond then a else b</tt>. Merging pushes
--   the if-then-else choice down on to elements
mergeArrays :: (SymArray array, SymWord b) => SBV Bool -> array a b -> array a b -> array a b

-- | Internal function, not exported to the user
newArrayInState :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => Maybe String -> Maybe (SBV b) -> State -> IO (array a b)

-- | Arrays implemented internally, without translating to SMT-Lib
--   functions:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Internally handled by the library and not mapped to SMT-Lib, hence
--   can be used with solvers that don't support arrays. (Such as
--   abc.)</li>
--   <li>Reading from an unintialized value is OK. If the default value is
--   given in <a>newArray</a>, it will be the result. Otherwise, the read
--   yields an uninterpreted constant.</li>
--   <li>Cannot check for equality of arrays.</li>
--   <li>Can be used in code-generation (i.e., compilation to C).</li>
--   <li>Can not quick-check theorems using <tt>SFunArray</tt> values</li>
--   <li>Typically faster as it gets compiled away during translation.</li>
--   </ul>
newtype SFunArray a b
SFunArray :: SFunArr -> SFunArray a b
[unSFunArray] :: SFunArray a b -> SFunArr

-- | Arrays implemented in terms of SMT-arrays:
--   <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/theories-ArraysEx.shtml</a>
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Maps directly to SMT-lib arrays</li>
--   <li>Reading from an unintialized value is OK. If the default value is
--   given in <a>newArray</a>, it will be the result. Otherwise, the read
--   yields an uninterpreted constant.</li>
--   <li>Can check for equality of these arrays</li>
--   <li>Cannot be used in code-generation (i.e., compilation to C)</li>
--   <li>Cannot quick-check theorems using <tt>SArray</tt> values</li>
--   <li>Typically slower as it heavily relies on SMT-solving for the array
--   theory</li>
--   </ul>
newtype SArray a b
SArray :: SArr -> SArray a b
[unSArray] :: SArray a b -> SArr

-- | Convert a symbolic value to a symbolic-word
sbvToSW :: State -> SBV a -> IO SW

-- | Convert a symbolic value to an SW, inside the Symbolic monad
sbvToSymSW :: SBV a -> Symbolic SW

-- | Forcing an argument; this is a necessary evil to make sure all the
--   arguments to an uninterpreted function are evaluated before called;
--   the semantics of uinterpreted functions is necessarily strict;
--   deviating from Haskell's
forceSWArg :: SW -> IO ()

-- | A symbolic expression
data SBVExpr
SBVApp :: !Op -> ![SW] -> SBVExpr

-- | Create a new expression; hash-cons as necessary
newExpr :: State -> Kind -> SBVExpr -> IO SW

-- | Cache a state-based computation
cache :: (State -> IO a) -> Cached a

-- | We implement a peculiar caching mechanism, applicable to the use case
--   in implementation of SBV's. Whenever we do a state based computation,
--   we do not want to keep on evaluating it in the then-current state.
--   That will produce essentially a semantically equivalent value. Thus,
--   we want to run it only once, and reuse that result, capturing the
--   sharing at the Haskell level. This is similar to the "type-safe
--   observable sharing" work, but also takes into the account of how
--   symbolic simulation executes.
--   
--   See Andy Gill's type-safe obervable sharing trick for the inspiration
--   behind this technique:
--   <a>http://ku-fpg.github.io/files/Gill-09-TypeSafeReification.pdf</a>
--   
--   Note that this is *not* a general memo utility!
data Cached a

-- | Uncache a previously cached computation
uncache :: Cached SW -> State -> IO SW

-- | Uncache, retrieving SMT array indexes
uncacheAI :: Cached ArrayIndex -> State -> IO ArrayIndex

-- | A class for capturing values that have a sign and a size (finite or
--   infinite) minimal complete definition: kindOf, unless you can take
--   advantage of the default signature: This class can be automatically
--   derived for data-types that have a <a>Data</a> instance; this is
--   useful for creating uninterpreted sorts. So, in reality, end users
--   should almost never need to define any methods.
class HasKind a
kindOf :: HasKind a => a -> Kind
hasSign :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
intSizeOf :: HasKind a => a -> Int
isBoolean :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isBounded :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isReal :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isFloat :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isDouble :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isInteger :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isUninterpreted :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isChar :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isString :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isList :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
showType :: HasKind a => a -> String
kindOf :: (HasKind a, Read a, Data a) => a -> Kind

-- | Symbolic operations
data Op
Plus :: Op
Times :: Op
Minus :: Op
UNeg :: Op
Abs :: Op
Quot :: Op
Rem :: Op
Equal :: Op
NotEqual :: Op
LessThan :: Op
GreaterThan :: Op
LessEq :: Op
GreaterEq :: Op
Ite :: Op
And :: Op
Or :: Op
XOr :: Op
Not :: Op
Shl :: Op
Shr :: Op
Rol :: Int -> Op
Ror :: Int -> Op
Extract :: Int -> Int -> Op
Join :: Op
LkUp :: (Int, Kind, Kind, Int) -> !SW -> !SW -> Op
ArrEq :: ArrayIndex -> ArrayIndex -> Op
ArrRead :: ArrayIndex -> Op
KindCast :: Kind -> Kind -> Op
Uninterpreted :: String -> Op
Label :: String -> Op
IEEEFP :: FPOp -> Op
PseudoBoolean :: PBOp -> Op
OverflowOp :: OvOp -> Op
StrOp :: StrOp -> Op
SeqOp :: SeqOp -> Op

-- | Pseudo-boolean operations
data PBOp

-- | At most k
PB_AtMost :: Int -> PBOp

-- | At least k
PB_AtLeast :: Int -> PBOp

-- | Exactly k
PB_Exactly :: Int -> PBOp

-- | At most k, with coefficients given. Generalizes PB_AtMost
PB_Le :: [Int] -> Int -> PBOp

-- | At least k, with coefficients given. Generalizes PB_AtLeast
PB_Ge :: [Int] -> Int -> PBOp

-- | Exactly k, with coefficients given. Generalized PB_Exactly
PB_Eq :: [Int] -> Int -> PBOp

-- | Floating point operations
data FPOp
FP_Cast :: Kind -> Kind -> SW -> FPOp
FP_Reinterpret :: Kind -> Kind -> FPOp
FP_Abs :: FPOp
FP_Neg :: FPOp
FP_Add :: FPOp
FP_Sub :: FPOp
FP_Mul :: FPOp
FP_Div :: FPOp
FP_FMA :: FPOp
FP_Sqrt :: FPOp
FP_Rem :: FPOp
FP_RoundToIntegral :: FPOp
FP_Min :: FPOp
FP_Max :: FPOp
FP_ObjEqual :: FPOp
FP_IsNormal :: FPOp
FP_IsSubnormal :: FPOp
FP_IsZero :: FPOp
FP_IsInfinite :: FPOp
FP_IsNaN :: FPOp
FP_IsNegative :: FPOp
FP_IsPositive :: FPOp

-- | String operations. Note that we do not define <tt>StrAt</tt> as it
--   translates to <a>StrSubstr</a> trivially.
data StrOp

-- | Concatenation of one or more strings
StrConcat :: StrOp

-- | String length
StrLen :: StrOp

-- | Unit string
StrUnit :: StrOp

-- | Retrieves substring of <tt>s</tt> at <tt>offset</tt>
StrSubstr :: StrOp

-- | Retrieves first position of <tt>sub</tt> in <tt>s</tt>, <tt>-1</tt> if
--   there are no occurrences
StrIndexOf :: StrOp

-- | Does <tt>s</tt> contain the substring <tt>sub</tt>?
StrContains :: StrOp

-- | Is <tt>pre</tt> a prefix of <tt>s</tt>?
StrPrefixOf :: StrOp

-- | Is <tt>suf</tt> a suffix of <tt>s</tt>?
StrSuffixOf :: StrOp

-- | Replace the first occurrence of <tt>src</tt> by <tt>dst</tt> in
--   <tt>s</tt>
StrReplace :: StrOp

-- | Retrieve integer encoded by string <tt>s</tt> (ground rewriting only)
StrStrToNat :: StrOp

-- | Retrieve string encoded by integer <tt>i</tt> (ground rewriting only)
StrNatToStr :: StrOp

-- | Check if string is in the regular expression
StrInRe :: RegExp -> StrOp

-- | Sequence operations.
data SeqOp

-- | See StrConcat
SeqConcat :: SeqOp

-- | See StrLen
SeqLen :: SeqOp

-- | See StrUnit
SeqUnit :: SeqOp

-- | See StrSubseq
SeqSubseq :: SeqOp

-- | See StrIndexOf
SeqIndexOf :: SeqOp

-- | See StrContains
SeqContains :: SeqOp

-- | See StrPrefixOf
SeqPrefixOf :: SeqOp

-- | See StrSuffixOf
SeqSuffixOf :: SeqOp

-- | See StrReplace
SeqReplace :: SeqOp

-- | Regular expressions. Note that regular expressions themselves are
--   concrete, but the <a>match</a> function from the
--   <a>RegExpMatchable</a> class can check membership against a symbolic
--   string/character. Also, we are preferring a datatype approach here, as
--   opposed to coming up with some string-representation; there are way
--   too many alternatives already so inventing one isn't a priority.
--   Please get in touch if you would like a parser for this type as it
--   might be easier to use.
data RegExp

-- | Precisely match the given string
Literal :: String -> RegExp

-- | Accept every string
All :: RegExp

-- | Accept no strings
None :: RegExp

-- | Accept range of characters
Range :: Char -> Char -> RegExp

-- | Concatenation
Conc :: [RegExp] -> RegExp

-- | Kleene Star: Zero or more
KStar :: RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Kleene Plus: One or more
KPlus :: RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Zero or one
Opt :: RegExp -> RegExp

-- | From <tt>n</tt> repetitions to <tt>m</tt> repetitions
Loop :: Int -> Int -> RegExp -> RegExp

-- | Union of regular expressions
Union :: [RegExp] -> RegExp

-- | Intersection of regular expressions
Inter :: RegExp -> RegExp -> RegExp

-- | <a>NamedSymVar</a> pairs symbolic words and user given/automatically
--   generated names
type NamedSymVar = (SW, String)

-- | Create a new table; hash-cons as necessary
getTableIndex :: State -> Kind -> Kind -> [SW] -> IO Int

-- | A program is a sequence of assignments
newtype SBVPgm
SBVPgm :: Seq (SW, SBVExpr) -> SBVPgm
[pgmAssignments] :: SBVPgm -> Seq (SW, SBVExpr)

-- | A Symbolic computation. Represented by a reader monad carrying the
--   state of the computation, layered on top of IO for creating unique
--   references to hold onto intermediate results.
data Symbolic a

-- | Run a symbolic computation, and return a extra value paired up with
--   the <a>Result</a>
runSymbolic :: SBVRunMode -> Symbolic a -> IO (a, Result)

-- | The state of the symbolic interpreter
data State

-- | Get the current path condition
getPathCondition :: State -> SBool

-- | Extend the path condition with the given test value.
extendPathCondition :: State -> (SBool -> SBool) -> State

-- | Are we running in proof mode?
inSMTMode :: State -> IO Bool

-- | Different means of running a symbolic piece of code
data SBVRunMode

-- | In regular mode, with a stage. Bool is True if this is SAT.
SMTMode :: IStage -> Bool -> SMTConfig -> SBVRunMode

-- | Code generation mode.
CodeGen :: SBVRunMode

-- | Concrete simulation mode.
Concrete :: SBVRunMode

-- | Kind of symbolic value
data Kind
KBool :: Kind
KBounded :: !Bool -> !Int -> Kind
KUnbounded :: Kind
KReal :: Kind
KUserSort :: String -> Either String [String] -> Kind
KFloat :: Kind
KDouble :: Kind
KChar :: Kind
KString :: Kind
KList :: Kind -> Kind

-- | A class representing what can be returned from a symbolic computation.
class Outputtable a

-- | Mark an interim result as an output. Useful when constructing Symbolic
--   programs that return multiple values, or when the result is
--   programmatically computed.
output :: Outputtable a => a -> Symbolic a

-- | Result of running a symbolic computation
data Result
Result :: Set Kind -> [(String, CW)] -> [(String, SW)] -> [(String, [String])] -> ([(Quantifier, NamedSymVar)], [NamedSymVar]) -> [(SW, CW)] -> [((Int, Kind, Kind), [SW])] -> [(Int, ArrayInfo)] -> [(String, SBVType)] -> [(String, [String])] -> SBVPgm -> [(Bool, [(String, String)], SW)] -> [(String, Maybe CallStack, SW)] -> [SW] -> Result

-- | kinds used in the program
[reskinds] :: Result -> Set Kind

-- | quick-check counter-example information (if any)
[resTraces] :: Result -> [(String, CW)]

-- | observable expressions (part of the model)
[resObservables] :: Result -> [(String, SW)]

-- | uninterpeted code segments
[resUISegs] :: Result -> [(String, [String])]

-- | inputs (possibly existential) + tracker vars
[resInputs] :: Result -> ([(Quantifier, NamedSymVar)], [NamedSymVar])

-- | constants
[resConsts] :: Result -> [(SW, CW)]

-- | tables (automatically constructed) (tableno, index-type, result-type)
--   elts
[resTables] :: Result -> [((Int, Kind, Kind), [SW])]

-- | arrays (user specified)
[resArrays] :: Result -> [(Int, ArrayInfo)]

-- | uninterpreted constants
[resUIConsts] :: Result -> [(String, SBVType)]

-- | axioms
[resAxioms] :: Result -> [(String, [String])]

-- | assignments
[resAsgns] :: Result -> SBVPgm

-- | additional constraints (boolean)
[resConstraints] :: Result -> [(Bool, [(String, String)], SW)]

-- | assertions
[resAssertions] :: Result -> [(String, Maybe CallStack, SW)]

-- | outputs
[resOutputs] :: Result -> [SW]

-- | Actions we can do in a context: Either at problem description time or
--   while we are dynamically querying. <a>Symbolic</a> and <a>Query</a>
--   are two instances of this class. Note that we use this mechanism
--   internally and do not export it from SBV.
class SolverContext m

-- | Add a constraint, any satisfying instance must satisfy this condition
constrain :: SolverContext m => SBool -> m ()

-- | Add a soft constraint. The solver will try to satisfy this condition
--   if possible, but won't if it cannot
softConstrain :: SolverContext m => SBool -> m ()

-- | Add a named constraint. The name is used in unsat-core extraction.
namedConstraint :: SolverContext m => String -> SBool -> m ()

-- | Add a constraint, with arbitrary attributes. Used in interpolant
--   generation.
constrainWithAttribute :: SolverContext m => [(String, String)] -> SBool -> m ()

-- | Set info. Example: <tt>setInfo ":status" ["unsat"]</tt>.
setInfo :: SolverContext m => String -> [String] -> m ()

-- | Set an option.
setOption :: SolverContext m => SMTOption -> m ()

-- | Set the logic.
setLogic :: SolverContext m => Logic -> m ()

-- | Set a solver time-out value, in milli-seconds. This function
--   essentially translates to the SMTLib call <tt>(set-info :timeout
--   val)</tt>, and your backend solver may or may not support it! The
--   amount given is in milliseconds. Also see the function <a>timeOut</a>
--   for finer level control of time-outs, directly from SBV.
setTimeOut :: SolverContext m => Integer -> m ()

-- | Create an internal variable, which acts as an input but isn't visible
--   to the user. Such variables are existentially quantified in a SAT
--   context, and universally quantified in a proof context.
internalVariable :: State -> Kind -> IO SW

-- | Require a boolean condition to be true in the state. Only used for
--   internal purposes.
internalConstraint :: State -> Bool -> [(String, String)] -> SVal -> IO ()

-- | Is this a CodeGen run? (i.e., generating code)
isCodeGenMode :: State -> IO Bool

-- | A simple type for SBV computations, used mainly for uninterpreted
--   constants. We keep track of the signedness/size of the arguments. A
--   non-function will have just one entry in the list.
newtype SBVType
SBVType :: [Kind] -> SBVType

-- | Create a new uninterpreted symbol, possibly with user given code
newUninterpreted :: State -> String -> SBVType -> Maybe [String] -> IO ()

-- | Add a user specified axiom to the generated SMT-Lib file. The first
--   argument is a mere string, use for commenting purposes. The second
--   argument is intended to hold the multiple-lines of the axiom text as
--   expressed in SMT-Lib notation. Note that we perform no checks on the
--   axiom itself, to see whether it's actually well-formed or is sensical
--   by any means. A separate formalization of SMT-Lib would be very useful
--   here.
addAxiom :: String -> [String] -> Symbolic ()

-- | Quantifiers: forall or exists. Note that we allow arbitrary nestings.
data Quantifier
ALL :: Quantifier
EX :: Quantifier

-- | Are there any existential quantifiers?
needsExistentials :: [Quantifier] -> Bool

-- | Representation of an SMT-Lib program. In between pre and post goes the
--   refuted models
data SMTLibPgm
SMTLibPgm :: SMTLibVersion -> [String] -> SMTLibPgm

-- | Representation of SMTLib Program versions. As of June 2015, we're
--   dropping support for SMTLib1, and supporting SMTLib2 only. We keep
--   this data-type around in case SMTLib3 comes along and we want to
--   support 2 and 3 simultaneously.
data SMTLibVersion
SMTLib2 :: SMTLibVersion

-- | The extension associated with the version
smtLibVersionExtension :: SMTLibVersion -> String

-- | Names reserved by SMTLib. This list is current as of Dec 6 2015; but
--   of course there's no guarantee it'll stay that way.
smtLibReservedNames :: [String]

-- | Translation tricks needed for specific capabilities afforded by each
--   solver
data SolverCapabilities
SolverCapabilities :: Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Maybe [String] -> SolverCapabilities

-- | Support for SMT-Lib2 style quantifiers?
[supportsQuantifiers] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for SMT-Lib2 style uninterpreted-sorts
[supportsUninterpretedSorts] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for unbounded integers?
[supportsUnboundedInts] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for reals?
[supportsReals] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Supports printing of approximations of reals?
[supportsApproxReals] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for floating point numbers?
[supportsIEEE754] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for optimization routines?
[supportsOptimization] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for pseudo-boolean operations?
[supportsPseudoBooleans] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for interactive queries per SMT-Lib?
[supportsCustomQueries] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Support for global decls, needed for push-pop.
[supportsGlobalDecls] :: SolverCapabilities -> Bool

-- | Supports flattened sequence output, with given config lines
[supportsFlattenedSequences] :: SolverCapabilities -> Maybe [String]

-- | Grab the program from a running symbolic simulation state.
extractSymbolicSimulationState :: State -> IO Result

-- | A script, to be passed to the solver.
data SMTScript
SMTScript :: String -> [String] -> SMTScript

-- | Initial feed
[scriptBody] :: SMTScript -> String

-- | Continuation script, to extract results
[scriptModel] :: SMTScript -> [String]

-- | Solvers that SBV is aware of
data Solver
Z3 :: Solver
Yices :: Solver
Boolector :: Solver
CVC4 :: Solver
MathSAT :: Solver
ABC :: Solver

-- | An SMT solver
data SMTSolver
SMTSolver :: Solver -> String -> (SMTConfig -> [String]) -> SMTEngine -> SolverCapabilities -> SMTSolver

-- | The solver in use
[name] :: SMTSolver -> Solver

-- | The path to its executable
[executable] :: SMTSolver -> String

-- | Options to provide to the solver
[options] :: SMTSolver -> SMTConfig -> [String]

-- | The solver engine, responsible for interpreting solver output
[engine] :: SMTSolver -> SMTEngine

-- | Various capabilities of the solver
[capabilities] :: SMTSolver -> SolverCapabilities

-- | The result of an SMT solver call. Each constructor is tagged with the
--   <a>SMTConfig</a> that created it so that further tools can inspect it
--   and build layers of results, if needed. For ordinary uses of the
--   library, this type should not be needed, instead use the accessor
--   functions on it. (Custom Show instances and model extractors.)
data SMTResult

-- | Unsatisfiable. If unsat-cores are enabled, they will be returned in
--   the second parameter.
Unsatisfiable :: SMTConfig -> Maybe [String] -> SMTResult

-- | Satisfiable with model
Satisfiable :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> SMTResult

-- | Prover returned a model, but in an extension field containing
--   Infinite/epsilon
SatExtField :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> SMTResult

-- | Prover returned unknown, with the given reason
Unknown :: SMTConfig -> SMTReasonUnknown -> SMTResult

-- | Prover errored out
ProofError :: SMTConfig -> [String] -> SMTResult

-- | A model, as returned by a solver
data SMTModel
SMTModel :: [(String, GeneralizedCW)] -> [(String, CW)] -> SMTModel

-- | Mapping of symbolic values to objective values.
[modelObjectives] :: SMTModel -> [(String, GeneralizedCW)]

-- | Mapping of symbolic values to constants.
[modelAssocs] :: SMTModel -> [(String, CW)]

-- | Solver configuration. See also <a>z3</a>, <a>yices</a>, <a>cvc4</a>,
--   <a>boolector</a>, <a>mathSAT</a>, etc. which are instantiations of
--   this type for those solvers, with reasonable defaults. In particular,
--   custom configuration can be created by varying those values. (Such as
--   <tt>z3{verbose=True}</tt>.)
--   
--   Most fields are self explanatory. The notion of precision for printing
--   algebraic reals stems from the fact that such values does not
--   necessarily have finite decimal representations, and hence we have to
--   stop printing at some depth. It is important to emphasize that such
--   values always have infinite precision internally. The issue is merely
--   with how we print such an infinite precision value on the screen. The
--   field <a>printRealPrec</a> controls the printing precision, by
--   specifying the number of digits after the decimal point. The default
--   value is 16, but it can be set to any positive integer.
--   
--   When printing, SBV will add the suffix <tt>...</tt> at the and of a
--   real-value, if the given bound is not sufficient to represent the
--   real-value exactly. Otherwise, the number will be written out in
--   standard decimal notation. Note that SBV will always print the whole
--   value if it is precise (i.e., if it fits in a finite number of
--   digits), regardless of the precision limit. The limit only applies if
--   the representation of the real value is not finite, i.e., if it is not
--   rational.
--   
--   The <a>printBase</a> field can be used to print numbers in base 2, 10,
--   or 16. If base 2 or 16 is used, then floating-point values will be
--   printed in their internal memory-layout format as well, which can come
--   in handy for bit-precise analysis.
data SMTConfig
SMTConfig :: Bool -> Timing -> Int -> Int -> String -> Maybe Int -> (String -> Bool) -> Maybe FilePath -> SMTLibVersion -> SMTSolver -> RoundingMode -> [SMTOption] -> Bool -> Maybe FilePath -> SMTConfig

-- | Debug mode
[verbose] :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Print timing information on how long different phases took
--   (construction, solving, etc.)
[timing] :: SMTConfig -> Timing

-- | Print integral literals in this base (2, 10, and 16 are supported.)
[printBase] :: SMTConfig -> Int

-- | Print algebraic real values with this precision. (SReal, default: 16)
[printRealPrec] :: SMTConfig -> Int

-- | Usually "(check-sat)". However, users might tweak it based on solver
--   characteristics.
[satCmd] :: SMTConfig -> String

-- | In an allSat call, return at most this many models. If nothing, return
--   all.
[allSatMaxModelCount] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe Int

-- | When constructing a model, ignore variables whose name satisfy this
--   predicate. (Default: (const False), i.e., don't ignore anything)
[isNonModelVar] :: SMTConfig -> String -> Bool

-- | If Just, the entire interaction will be recorded as a playable file
--   (for debugging purposes mostly)
[transcript] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe FilePath

-- | What version of SMT-lib we use for the tool
[smtLibVersion] :: SMTConfig -> SMTLibVersion

-- | The actual SMT solver.
[solver] :: SMTConfig -> SMTSolver

-- | Rounding mode to use for floating-point conversions
[roundingMode] :: SMTConfig -> RoundingMode

-- | Options to set as we start the solver
[solverSetOptions] :: SMTConfig -> [SMTOption]

-- | If true, we shall ignore the exit code upon exit. Otherwise we require
--   ExitSuccess.
[ignoreExitCode] :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Redirect the verbose output to this file if given. If Nothing, stdout
--   is implied.
[redirectVerbose] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe FilePath

-- | Style of optimization. Note that in the pareto case the user is
--   allowed to specify a max number of fronts to query the solver for,
--   since there might potentially be an infinite number of them and there
--   is no way to know exactly how many ahead of time. If <a>Nothing</a> is
--   given, SBV will possibly loop forever if the number is really
--   infinite.
data OptimizeStyle

-- | Objectives are optimized in the order given, earlier objectives have
--   higher priority.
Lexicographic :: OptimizeStyle

-- | Each objective is optimized independently.
Independent :: OptimizeStyle

-- | Objectives are optimized according to pareto front: That is, no
--   objective can be made better without making some other worse.
Pareto :: Maybe Int -> OptimizeStyle

-- | Penalty for a soft-assertion. The default penalty is <tt>1</tt>, with
--   all soft-assertions belonging to the same objective goal. A positive
--   weight and an optional group can be provided by using the
--   <a>Penalty</a> constructor.
data Penalty

-- | Default: Penalty of <tt>1</tt> and no group attached
DefaultPenalty :: Penalty

-- | Penalty with a weight and an optional group
Penalty :: Rational -> Maybe String -> Penalty

-- | Objective of optimization. We can minimize, maximize, or give a soft
--   assertion with a penalty for not satisfying it.
data Objective a

-- | Minimize this metric
Minimize :: String -> a -> Objective a

-- | Maximize this metric
Maximize :: String -> a -> Objective a

-- | A soft assertion, with an associated penalty
AssertWithPenalty :: String -> a -> Penalty -> Objective a

-- | The state we keep track of as we interact with the solver
data QueryState
QueryState :: (Maybe Int -> String -> IO String) -> (Maybe Int -> String -> IO ()) -> (Maybe Int -> IO String) -> SMTConfig -> IO () -> Maybe Int -> Int -> Maybe (Int, Int) -> QueryState
[queryAsk] :: QueryState -> Maybe Int -> String -> IO String
[querySend] :: QueryState -> Maybe Int -> String -> IO ()
[queryRetrieveResponse] :: QueryState -> Maybe Int -> IO String
[queryConfig] :: QueryState -> SMTConfig
[queryTerminate] :: QueryState -> IO ()
[queryTimeOutValue] :: QueryState -> Maybe Int
[queryAssertionStackDepth] :: QueryState -> Int
[queryTblArrPreserveIndex] :: QueryState -> Maybe (Int, Int)

-- | A query is a user-guided mechanism to directly communicate and extract
--   results from the solver.
newtype Query a
Query :: StateT State IO a -> Query a

-- | Internal representation of a symbolic simulation result
newtype SMTProblem

-- | SMTLib representation, given the config
SMTProblem :: (SMTConfig -> SMTLibPgm) -> SMTProblem
[smtLibPgm] :: SMTProblem -> SMTConfig -> SMTLibPgm

-- | Generate a finite constant bitvector
genLiteral :: Integral a => Kind -> a -> SBV b

-- | Convert a constant to an integral value
genFromCW :: Integral a => CW -> a

-- | <a>CW</a> represents a concrete word of a fixed size: For signed
--   words, the most significant digit is considered to be the sign.
data CW
CW :: !Kind -> !CWVal -> CW
[_cwKind] :: CW -> !Kind
[cwVal] :: CW -> !CWVal

-- | Generically make a symbolic var
genMkSymVar :: Kind -> Maybe Quantifier -> Maybe String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Parse a signed/sized value from a sequence of CWs
genParse :: Integral a => Kind -> [CW] -> Maybe (a, [CW])

-- | Show a model in human readable form. Ignore bindings to those
--   variables that start with "__internal_sbv_" and also those marked as
--   "nonModelVar" in the config; as these are only for internal purposes
showModel :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> String

-- | A model, as returned by a solver
data SMTModel
SMTModel :: [(String, GeneralizedCW)] -> [(String, CW)] -> SMTModel

-- | Mapping of symbolic values to objective values.
[modelObjectives] :: SMTModel -> [(String, GeneralizedCW)]

-- | Mapping of symbolic values to constants.
[modelAssocs] :: SMTModel -> [(String, CW)]

-- | Lift <a>quotRem</a> to symbolic words. Division by 0 is defined s.t.
--   <tt>x/0 = 0</tt>; which holds even when <tt>x</tt> is <tt>0</tt>
--   itself.
liftQRem :: SymWord a => SBV a -> SBV a -> (SBV a, SBV a)

-- | Lift <a>divMod</a> to symbolic words. Division by 0 is defined s.t.
--   <tt>x/0 = 0</tt>; which holds even when <tt>x</tt> is <tt>0</tt>
--   itself. Essentially, this is conversion from quotRem (truncate to 0)
--   to divMod (truncate towards negative infinity)
liftDMod :: (SymWord a, Num a, SDivisible (SBV a)) => SBV a -> SBV a -> (SBV a, SBV a)

-- | Register a new kind with the system, used for uninterpreted sorts. NB:
--   Is it safe to have new kinds in query mode? It could be that the new
--   kind might introduce a constraint that effects the logic. For
--   instance, if we're seeing <a>Double</a> for the first time and using a
--   BV logic, then things would fall apart. But this should be rare, and
--   hopefully the success-response checking mechanism will catch the rare
--   cases where this is an issue. In either case, the user can always
--   arrange for the right logic by calling <a>setLogic</a> appropriately,
--   so it seems safe to just allow for this.
registerKind :: State -> Kind -> IO ()

-- | Lower level version of <a>compileToC</a>, producing a
--   <a>CgPgmBundle</a>
compileToC' :: String -> SBVCodeGen () -> IO (CgConfig, CgPgmBundle)

-- | Lower level version of <a>compileToCLib</a>, producing a
--   <a>CgPgmBundle</a>
compileToCLib' :: String -> [(String, SBVCodeGen ())] -> IO (CgConfig, CgPgmBundle)

-- | The code-generation monad. Allows for precise layout of input values
--   reference parameters (for returning composite values in languages such
--   as C), and return values.
newtype SBVCodeGen a
SBVCodeGen :: StateT CgState Symbolic a -> SBVCodeGen a

-- | Reach into symbolic monad from code-generation
cgSym :: Symbolic a -> SBVCodeGen a

-- | Creates an atomic input in the generated code.
cgInput :: SymWord a => String -> SBVCodeGen (SBV a)

-- | Creates an array input in the generated code.
cgInputArr :: SymWord a => Int -> String -> SBVCodeGen [SBV a]

-- | Creates an atomic output in the generated code.
cgOutput :: String -> SBV a -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an array output in the generated code.
cgOutputArr :: SymWord a => String -> [SBV a] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) value in the generated code.
cgReturn :: SBV a -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) array value in the generated code.
cgReturnArr :: SymWord a => [SBV a] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an atomic input in the generated code.
svCgInput :: Kind -> String -> SBVCodeGen SVal

-- | Creates an array input in the generated code.
svCgInputArr :: Kind -> Int -> String -> SBVCodeGen [SVal]

-- | Creates an atomic output in the generated code.
svCgOutput :: String -> SVal -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an array output in the generated code.
svCgOutputArr :: String -> [SVal] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) value in the generated code.
svCgReturn :: SVal -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) array value in the generated code.
svCgReturnArr :: [SVal] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets RTC (run-time-checks) for index-out-of-bounds, shift-with-large
--   value etc. on/off. Default: <a>False</a>.
cgPerformRTCs :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets driver program run time values, useful for generating programs
--   with fixed drivers for testing. Default: None, i.e., use random
--   values.
cgSetDriverValues :: [Integer] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given lines to the header file generated, useful for
--   generating programs with uninterpreted functions.
cgAddPrototype :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given lines to the program file generated, useful for
--   generating programs with uninterpreted functions.
cgAddDecl :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given words to the compiler options in the generated
--   Makefile, useful for linking extra stuff in.
cgAddLDFlags :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Ignore assertions (those generated by <a>sAssert</a> calls) in the
--   generated C code
cgIgnoreSAssert :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | If passed <a>True</a>, then we will not ask the user if we're
--   overwriting files as we generate the C code. Otherwise, we'll prompt.
cgOverwriteFiles :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets number of bits to be used for representing the <a>SInteger</a>
--   type in the generated C code. The argument must be one of <tt>8</tt>,
--   <tt>16</tt>, <tt>32</tt>, or <tt>64</tt>. Note that this is
--   essentially unsafe as the semantics of unbounded Haskell integers
--   becomes reduced to the corresponding bit size, as typical in most C
--   implementations.
cgIntegerSize :: Int -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets the C type to be used for representing the <a>SReal</a> type in
--   the generated C code. The setting can be one of C's <tt>"float"</tt>,
--   <tt>"double"</tt>, or <tt>"long double"</tt>, types, depending on the
--   precision needed. Note that this is essentially unsafe as the
--   semantics of infinite precision SReal values becomes reduced to the
--   corresponding floating point type in C, and hence it is subject to
--   rounding errors.
cgSRealType :: CgSRealType -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Possible mappings for the <a>SReal</a> type when translated to C. Used
--   in conjunction with the function <a>cgSRealType</a>. Note that the
--   particular characteristics of the mapped types depend on the platform
--   and the compiler used for compiling the generated C program. See
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_data_types</a> for details.
data CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   float
--   </pre>
CgFloat :: CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   double
--   </pre>
CgDouble :: CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   long double
--   </pre>
CgLongDouble :: CgSRealType

-- | Abstract over code generation for different languages
class CgTarget a
targetName :: CgTarget a => a -> String
translate :: CgTarget a => a -> CgConfig -> String -> CgState -> Result -> CgPgmBundle

-- | Options for code-generation.
data CgConfig
CgConfig :: Bool -> Maybe Int -> Maybe CgSRealType -> [Integer] -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> Bool -> CgConfig

-- | If <a>True</a>, perform run-time-checks for index-out-of-bounds or
--   shifting-by-large values etc.
[cgRTC] :: CgConfig -> Bool

-- | Bit-size to use for representing SInteger (if any)
[cgInteger] :: CgConfig -> Maybe Int

-- | Type to use for representing SReal (if any)
[cgReal] :: CgConfig -> Maybe CgSRealType

-- | Values to use for the driver program generated, useful for generating
--   non-random drivers.
[cgDriverVals] :: CgConfig -> [Integer]

-- | If <a>True</a>, will generate a driver program
[cgGenDriver] :: CgConfig -> Bool

-- | If <a>True</a>, will generate a makefile
[cgGenMakefile] :: CgConfig -> Bool

-- | If <a>True</a>, will ignore <a>sAssert</a> calls
[cgIgnoreAsserts] :: CgConfig -> Bool

-- | If <a>True</a>, will overwrite the generated files without prompting.
[cgOverwriteGenerated] :: CgConfig -> Bool

-- | Code-generation state
data CgState
CgState :: [(String, CgVal)] -> [(String, CgVal)] -> [CgVal] -> [String] -> [String] -> [String] -> CgConfig -> CgState
[cgInputs] :: CgState -> [(String, CgVal)]
[cgOutputs] :: CgState -> [(String, CgVal)]
[cgReturns] :: CgState -> [CgVal]
[cgPrototypes] :: CgState -> [String]
[cgDecls] :: CgState -> [String]
[cgLDFlags] :: CgState -> [String]
[cgFinalConfig] :: CgState -> CgConfig

-- | Representation of a collection of generated programs.
data CgPgmBundle
CgPgmBundle :: (Maybe Int, Maybe CgSRealType) -> [(FilePath, (CgPgmKind, [Doc]))] -> CgPgmBundle

-- | Different kinds of "files" we can produce. Currently this is quite
--   <a>C</a> specific.
data CgPgmKind
CgMakefile :: [String] -> CgPgmKind
CgHeader :: [Doc] -> CgPgmKind
CgSource :: CgPgmKind
CgDriver :: CgPgmKind

-- | Abstraction of target language values
data CgVal
CgAtomic :: SW -> CgVal
CgArray :: [SW] -> CgVal

-- | Default options for code generation. The run-time checks are
--   turned-off, and the driver values are completely random.
defaultCgConfig :: CgConfig

-- | Initial configuration for code-generation
initCgState :: CgState

-- | Is this a driver program?
isCgDriver :: CgPgmKind -> Bool

-- | Is this a make file?
isCgMakefile :: CgPgmKind -> Bool

-- | Should we generate a driver program? Default: <a>True</a>. When a
--   library is generated, it will have a driver if any of the contituent
--   functions has a driver. (See <a>compileToCLib</a>.)
cgGenerateDriver :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Should we generate a Makefile? Default: <a>True</a>.
cgGenerateMakefile :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Generate code for a symbolic program, returning a Code-gen bundle,
--   i.e., collection of makefiles, source code, headers, etc.
codeGen :: CgTarget l => l -> CgConfig -> String -> SBVCodeGen () -> IO (CgConfig, CgPgmBundle)

-- | Render a code-gen bundle to a directory or to stdout
renderCgPgmBundle :: Maybe FilePath -> (CgConfig, CgPgmBundle) -> IO ()

-- | A variant of round; except defaulting to 0 when fed NaN or Infinity
fpRound0 :: (RealFloat a, Integral b) => a -> b

-- | A variant of toRational; except defaulting to 0 when fed NaN or
--   Infinity
fpRatio0 :: RealFloat a => a -> Rational

-- | The SMT-Lib (in particular Z3) implementation for min/max for floats
--   does not agree with Haskell's; and also it does not agree with what
--   the hardware does. Sigh.. See:
--   <a>http://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/10378</a>
--   <a>http://github.com/Z3Prover/z3/issues/68</a> So, we codify here what
--   the Z3 (SMTLib) is implementing for fpMax. The discrepancy with
--   Haskell is that the NaN propagation doesn't work in Haskell The
--   discrepancy with x86 is that given +0/-0, x86 returns the second
--   argument; SMTLib is non-deterministic
fpMaxH :: RealFloat a => a -> a -> a

-- | SMTLib compliant definition for <a>fpMin</a>. See the comments for
--   <a>fpMax</a>.
fpMinH :: RealFloat a => a -> a -> a

-- | Convert double to float and back. Essentially <tt>fromRational .
--   toRational</tt> except careful on NaN, Infinities, and -0.
fp2fp :: (RealFloat a, RealFloat b) => a -> b

-- | Compute the "floating-point" remainder function, the float/double
--   value that remains from the division of <tt>x</tt> and <tt>y</tt>.
--   There are strict rules around 0's, Infinities, and NaN's as coded
--   below, See <a>http://smt-lib.org/papers/BTRW14.pdf</a>, towards the
--   end of section 4.c.
fpRemH :: RealFloat a => a -> a -> a

-- | Convert a float to the nearest integral representable in that type
fpRoundToIntegralH :: RealFloat a => a -> a

-- | Check that two floats are the exact same values, i.e., +0/-0 does not
--   compare equal, and NaN's compare equal to themselves.
fpIsEqualObjectH :: RealFloat a => a -> a -> Bool

-- | Ordering for floats, avoiding the +0<i>-0</i>NaN issues. Note that
--   this is essentially used for indexing into a map, so we need to be
--   total. Thus, the order we pick is: NaN -oo -0 +0 +oo The placement of
--   NaN here is questionable, but immaterial.
fpCompareObjectH :: RealFloat a => a -> a -> Ordering

-- | Check if a number is "normal." Note that +0/-0 is not considered a
--   normal-number and also this is not simply the negation of
--   isDenormalized!
fpIsNormalizedH :: RealFloat a => a -> Bool

-- | PrettyNum class captures printing of numbers in hex and binary
--   formats; also supporting negative numbers.
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: <a>hexS</a> and <a>binS</a>
class PrettyNum a

-- | Show a number in hexadecimal (starting with <tt>0x</tt> and type.)
hexS :: PrettyNum a => a -> String

-- | Show a number in binary (starting with <tt>0b</tt> and type.)
binS :: PrettyNum a => a -> String

-- | Show a number in hex, without prefix, or types.
hex :: PrettyNum a => a -> String

-- | Show a number in bin, without prefix, or types.
bin :: PrettyNum a => a -> String

-- | A more convenient interface for reading binary numbers, also supports
--   negative numbers
readBin :: Num a => String -> a

-- | Show as a hexadecimal value. First bool controls whether type info is
--   printed while the second boolean controls wether 0x prefix is printed.
--   The tuple is the signedness and the bit-length of the input. The
--   length of the string will <i>not</i> depend on the value, but rather
--   the bit-length.
shex :: (Show a, Integral a) => Bool -> Bool -> (Bool, Int) -> a -> String

-- | Show as hexadecimal, but for C programs. We have to be careful about
--   printing min-bounds, since C does some funky casting, possibly losing
--   the sign bit. In those cases, we use the defined constants in
--   <a>stdint.h</a>. We also properly append the necessary suffixes as
--   needed.
chex :: (Show a, Integral a) => Bool -> Bool -> (Bool, Int) -> a -> String

-- | Show as a hexadecimal value, integer version. Almost the same as shex
--   above except we don't have a bit-length so the length of the string
--   will depend on the actual value.
shexI :: Bool -> Bool -> Integer -> String

-- | Similar to <a>shex</a>; except in binary.
sbin :: (Show a, Integral a) => Bool -> Bool -> (Bool, Int) -> a -> String

-- | Similar to <a>shexI</a>; except in binary.
sbinI :: Bool -> Bool -> Integer -> String

-- | A version of show for floats that generates correct C literals for
--   nan/infinite. NB. Requires "math.h" to be included.
showCFloat :: Float -> String

-- | A version of show for doubles that generates correct C literals for
--   nan/infinite. NB. Requires "math.h" to be included.
showCDouble :: Double -> String

-- | A version of show for floats that generates correct Haskell literals
--   for nan/infinite
showHFloat :: Float -> String

-- | A version of show for doubles that generates correct Haskell literals
--   for nan/infinite
showHDouble :: Double -> String

-- | A version of show for floats that generates correct SMTLib literals
--   using the rounding mode
showSMTFloat :: RoundingMode -> Float -> String

-- | A version of show for doubles that generates correct SMTLib literals
--   using the rounding mode
showSMTDouble :: RoundingMode -> Double -> String

-- | Convert a rounding mode to the format SMT-Lib2 understands.
smtRoundingMode :: RoundingMode -> String

-- | Convert a CW to an SMTLib2 compliant value
cwToSMTLib :: RoundingMode -> CW -> String

-- | Create a skolem 0 for the kind
mkSkolemZero :: RoundingMode -> Kind -> String

-- | Specify how to save timing information, if at all.
data Timing
NoTiming :: Timing
PrintTiming :: Timing
SaveTiming :: IORef NominalDiffTime -> Timing

-- | Show <a>NominalDiffTime</a> in human readable form.
--   <a>NominalDiffTime</a> is essentially picoseconds (10^-12 seconds). We
--   show it so that it's represented at the day:hour:minute:second.XXX
--   granularity.
showTDiff :: NominalDiffTime -> String

-- | Send an arbitrary string to the solver in a query. Note that this is
--   inherently dangerous as it can put the solver in an arbitrary state
--   and confuse SBV. If you use this feature, you are on your own!
sendStringToSolver :: String -> Query ()

-- | Send an arbitrary string to the solver in a query, and return a
--   response. Note that this is inherently dangerous as it can put the
--   solver in an arbitrary state and confuse SBV.
sendRequestToSolver :: String -> Query String

-- | Retrieve multiple responses from the solver, until it responds with a
--   user given tag that we shall arrange for internally. The optional
--   timeout is in milliseconds. If the time-out is exceeded, then we will
--   raise an error. Note that this is inherently dangerous as it can put
--   the solver in an arbitrary state and confuse SBV. If you use this
--   feature, you are on your own!
retrieveResponseFromSolver :: String -> Maybe Int -> Query [String]

-- | Add an optimization goal
addSValOptGoal :: Objective SVal -> Symbolic ()


-- | (The sbv library is hosted at
--   <a>http://github.com/LeventErkok/sbv</a>. Comments, bug reports, and
--   patches are always welcome.)
--   
--   SBV: SMT Based Verification
--   
--   Express properties about Haskell programs and automatically prove them
--   using SMT solvers.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; x `shiftL` 2 .== 4 * (x :: SWord8)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; x `shiftL` 2 .== 2 * (x :: SWord8)
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     s0 = 64 :: Word8
--   </pre>
--   
--   The function <a>prove</a> has the following type:
--   
--   <pre>
--   <a>prove</a> :: <a>Provable</a> a =&gt; a -&gt; <a>IO</a> <a>ThmResult</a>
--   </pre>
--   
--   The class <a>Provable</a> comes with instances for n-ary predicates,
--   for arbitrary n. The predicates are just regular Haskell functions
--   over symbolic types listed below. Functions for checking
--   satisfiability (<a>sat</a> and <a>allSat</a>) are also provided.
--   
--   The sbv library introduces the following symbolic types:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li><a>SBool</a>: Symbolic Booleans (bits).</li>
--   <li><a>SWord8</a>, <a>SWord16</a>, <a>SWord32</a>, <a>SWord64</a>:
--   Symbolic Words (unsigned).</li>
--   <li><a>SInt8</a>, <a>SInt16</a>, <a>SInt32</a>, <a>SInt64</a>:
--   Symbolic Ints (signed).</li>
--   <li><a>SInteger</a>: Unbounded signed integers.</li>
--   <li><a>SReal</a>: Algebraic-real numbers</li>
--   <li><a>SFloat</a>: IEEE-754 single-precision floating point
--   values</li>
--   <li><a>SDouble</a>: IEEE-754 double-precision floating point
--   values</li>
--   <li><a>SChar</a>, <a>SString</a>, <a>RegExp</a>: Characters, strings
--   and regular expressions</li>
--   <li><a>SList</a>: Symbolic lists (which can be nested)</li>
--   <li><a>SArray</a>, <a>SFunArray</a>: Flat arrays of symbolic
--   values.</li>
--   <li>Symbolic polynomials over GF(2^n), polynomial arithmetic, and
--   CRCs.</li>
--   <li>Uninterpreted constants and functions over symbolic values, with
--   user defined SMT-Lib axioms.</li>
--   <li>Uninterpreted sorts, and proofs over such sorts, potentially with
--   axioms.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   The user can construct ordinary Haskell programs using these types,
--   which behave very similar to their concrete counterparts. In
--   particular these types belong to the standard classes <a>Num</a>,
--   <a>Bits</a>, custom versions of <a>Eq</a> (<a>EqSymbolic</a>) and
--   <a>Ord</a> (<a>OrdSymbolic</a>), along with several other custom
--   classes for simplifying programming with symbolic values. The
--   framework takes full advantage of Haskell's type inference to avoid
--   many common mistakes.
--   
--   Furthermore, predicates (i.e., functions that return <a>SBool</a>)
--   built out of these types can also be:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>proven correct via an external SMT solver (the <a>prove</a>
--   function)</li>
--   <li>checked for satisfiability (the <a>sat</a>, <a>allSat</a>
--   functions)</li>
--   <li>used in synthesis (the <a>sat</a> function with existentials)</li>
--   <li>quick-checked</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   If a predicate is not valid, <a>prove</a> will return a
--   counterexample: An assignment to inputs such that the predicate fails.
--   The <a>sat</a> function will return a satisfying assignment, if there
--   is one. The <a>allSat</a> function returns all satisfying assignments.
--   
--   The sbv library uses third-party SMT solvers via the standard SMT-Lib
--   interface: <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/</a>
--   
--   The SBV library is designed to work with any SMT-Lib compliant
--   SMT-solver. Currently, we support the following SMT-Solvers out-of-the
--   box:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>ABC from University of Berkeley:
--   <a>http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~alanmi/abc/</a></li>
--   <li>CVC4 from Stanford: <a>http://cvc4.cs.stanford.edu/web/</a></li>
--   <li>Boolector from Johannes Kepler University:
--   <a>http://fmv.jku.at/boolector/</a></li>
--   <li>MathSAT from Fondazione Bruno Kessler and DISI-University of
--   Trento: <a>http://mathsat.fbk.eu/</a></li>
--   <li>Yices from SRI: <a>http://yices.csl.sri.com/</a></li>
--   <li>Z3 from Microsoft: <a>http://github.com/Z3Prover/z3/wiki</a></li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   SBV requires recent versions of these solvers; please see the file
--   <tt>SMTSolverVersions.md</tt> in the source distribution for
--   specifics.
--   
--   SBV also allows calling these solvers in parallel, either getting
--   results from multiple solvers or returning the fastest one. (See
--   <a>proveWithAll</a>, <a>proveWithAny</a>, etc.)
--   
--   Support for other compliant solvers can be added relatively easily,
--   please get in touch if there is a solver you'd like to see included.
module Data.SBV

-- | A symbolic boolean/bit
type SBool = SBV Bool

-- | Returns 1 if the boolean is true, otherwise 0.
oneIf :: (Num a, SymWord a) => SBool -> SBV a

-- | The <a>Boolean</a> class: a generalization of Haskell's <a>Bool</a>
--   type Haskell <a>Bool</a> and SBV's <a>SBool</a> are instances of this
--   class, unifying the treatment of boolean values.
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: <a>true</a>, <a>bnot</a>,
--   <a>&amp;&amp;&amp;</a> However, it's advisable to define <a>false</a>,
--   and <a>|||</a> as well (typically), for clarity.
class Boolean b

-- | logical true
true :: Boolean b => b

-- | logical false
false :: Boolean b => b

-- | complement
bnot :: Boolean b => b -> b

-- | and
(&&&) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | or
(|||) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | nand
(~&) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | nor
(~|) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | xor
(<+>) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | implies
(==>) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | equivalence
(<=>) :: Boolean b => b -> b -> b

-- | cast from Bool
fromBool :: Boolean b => Bool -> b
infixr 1 ==>
infixr 2 |||
infixl 6 <+>
infixr 3 &&&
infixr 3 ~&
infixr 2 ~|
infixr 1 <=>

-- | Generalization of <a>and</a>
bAnd :: Boolean b => [b] -> b

-- | Generalization of <a>or</a>
bOr :: Boolean b => [b] -> b

-- | Generalization of <a>any</a>
bAny :: Boolean b => (a -> b) -> [a] -> b

-- | Generalization of <a>all</a>
bAll :: Boolean b => (a -> b) -> [a] -> b

-- | 8-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord8 = SBV Word8

-- | 16-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord16 = SBV Word16

-- | 32-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord32 = SBV Word32

-- | 64-bit unsigned symbolic value
type SWord64 = SBV Word64

-- | 8-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt8 = SBV Int8

-- | 16-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt16 = SBV Int16

-- | 32-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt32 = SBV Int32

-- | 64-bit signed symbolic value, 2's complement representation
type SInt64 = SBV Int64

-- | Infinite precision signed symbolic value
type SInteger = SBV Integer

-- | IEEE-754 single-precision floating point numbers
type SFloat = SBV Float

-- | IEEE-754 double-precision floating point numbers
type SDouble = SBV Double

-- | Infinite precision symbolic algebraic real value
type SReal = SBV AlgReal

-- | Algebraic reals. Note that the representation is left abstract. We
--   represent rational results explicitly, while the roots-of-polynomials
--   are represented implicitly by their defining equation
data AlgReal

-- | Convert an SReal to an SInteger. That is, it computes the largest
--   integer <tt>n</tt> that satisfies <tt>sIntegerToSReal n &lt;= r</tt>
--   essentially giving us the <tt>floor</tt>.
--   
--   For instance, <tt>1.3</tt> will be <tt>1</tt>, but <tt>-1.3</tt> will
--   be <tt>-2</tt>.
sRealToSInteger :: SReal -> SInteger

-- | A symbolic character. Note that, as far as SBV's symbolic strings are
--   concerned, a character is currently an 8-bit unsigned value,
--   corresponding to the ISO-8859-1 (Latin-1) character set:
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859-1</a>. A Haskell
--   <a>Char</a>, on the other hand, is based on unicode. Therefore, there
--   isn't a 1-1 correspondence between a Haskell character and an SBV
--   character for the time being. This limitation is due to the
--   SMT-solvers only supporting this particular subset. However, there is
--   a pending proposal to add support for unicode, and SBV will track
--   these changes to have full unicode support as solvers become
--   available. For details, see:
--   <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/theories-UnicodeStrings.shtml</a>
type SChar = SBV Char

-- | A symbolic string. Note that a symbolic string is <i>not</i> a list of
--   symbolic characters, that is, it is not the case that <tt>SString =
--   [SChar]</tt>, unlike what one might expect following Haskell strings.
--   An <a>SString</a> is a symbolic value of its own, of possibly
--   arbitrary but finite length, and internally processed as one unit as
--   opposed to a fixed-length list of characters.
type SString = SBV String

-- | A symbolic list of items. Note that a symbolic list is <i>not</i> a
--   list of symbolic items, that is, it is not the case that <tt>SList a =
--   [a]</tt>, unlike what one might expect following haskell
--   lists/sequences. An <a>SList</a> is a symbolic value of its own, of
--   possibly arbitrary but finite length, and internally processed as one
--   unit as opposed to a fixed-length list of items. Note that lists can
--   be nested, i.e., we do allow lists of lists of ... items.
type SList a = SBV [a]

-- | Flat arrays of symbolic values An <tt>array a b</tt> is an array
--   indexed by the type <tt><a>SBV</a> a</tt>, with elements of type
--   <tt><a>SBV</a> b</tt>.
--   
--   If a default value is supplied, then all the array elements will be
--   initialized to this value. Otherwise, they will be left unspecified,
--   i.e., a read from an unwritten location will produce an uninterpreted
--   constant.
--   
--   While it's certainly possible for user to create instances of
--   <a>SymArray</a>, the <a>SArray</a> and <a>SFunArray</a> instances
--   already provided should cover most use cases in practice. Note that
--   there are a few differences between these two models in terms of use
--   models:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li><a>SArray</a> produces SMTLib arrays, and requires a solver that
--   understands the array theory. <a>SFunArray</a> is internally handled,
--   and thus can be used with any solver. (Note that all solvers except
--   <a>abc</a> support arrays, so this isn't a big decision factor.)</li>
--   <li>For both arrays, if a default value is supplied, then reading from
--   uninitialized cell will return that value. If the default is not
--   given, then reading from uninitialized cells is still OK for both
--   arrays, and will produce an uninterpreted constant in both cases.</li>
--   <li>Only <a>SArray</a> supports checking equality of arrays. (That is,
--   checking if an entire array is equivalent to another.)
--   <a>SFunArray</a>s cannot be checked for equality. In general, checking
--   wholesale equality of arrays is a difficult decision problem and
--   should be avoided if possible.</li>
--   <li>Only <a>SFunArray</a> supports compilation to C. Programs using
--   <a>SArray</a> will not be accepted by the C-code generator.</li>
--   <li>You cannot use quickcheck on programs that contain these arrays.
--   (Neither <a>SArray</a> nor <a>SFunArray</a>.)</li>
--   <li>With <a>SArray</a>, SBV transfers all array-processing to the
--   SMT-solver. So, it can generate programs more quickly, but they might
--   end up being too hard for the solver to handle. With <a>SFunArray</a>,
--   SBV only generates code for individual elements and the array itself
--   never shows up in the resulting SMTLib program. This puts more onus on
--   the SBV side and might have some performance impacts, but it might
--   generate problems that are easier for the SMT solvers to handle.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   As a rule of thumb, try <a>SArray</a> first. These should generate
--   compact code. However, if the backend solver has hard time solving the
--   generated problems, switch to <a>SFunArray</a>. If you still have
--   issues, please report so we can see what the problem might be!
class SymArray array

-- | Create a new anonymous array, possibly with a default initial value.
newArray_ :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => Maybe (SBV b) -> Symbolic (array a b)

-- | Create a named new array, possibly with a default initial value.
newArray :: (SymArray array, HasKind a, HasKind b) => String -> Maybe (SBV b) -> Symbolic (array a b)

-- | Read the array element at <tt>a</tt>
readArray :: SymArray array => array a b -> SBV a -> SBV b

-- | Update the element at <tt>a</tt> to be <tt>b</tt>
writeArray :: (SymArray array, SymWord b) => array a b -> SBV a -> SBV b -> array a b

-- | Arrays implemented in terms of SMT-arrays:
--   <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/theories-ArraysEx.shtml</a>
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Maps directly to SMT-lib arrays</li>
--   <li>Reading from an unintialized value is OK. If the default value is
--   given in <a>newArray</a>, it will be the result. Otherwise, the read
--   yields an uninterpreted constant.</li>
--   <li>Can check for equality of these arrays</li>
--   <li>Cannot be used in code-generation (i.e., compilation to C)</li>
--   <li>Cannot quick-check theorems using <tt>SArray</tt> values</li>
--   <li>Typically slower as it heavily relies on SMT-solving for the array
--   theory</li>
--   </ul>
data SArray a b

-- | Arrays implemented internally, without translating to SMT-Lib
--   functions:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Internally handled by the library and not mapped to SMT-Lib, hence
--   can be used with solvers that don't support arrays. (Such as
--   abc.)</li>
--   <li>Reading from an unintialized value is OK. If the default value is
--   given in <a>newArray</a>, it will be the result. Otherwise, the read
--   yields an uninterpreted constant.</li>
--   <li>Cannot check for equality of arrays.</li>
--   <li>Can be used in code-generation (i.e., compilation to C).</li>
--   <li>Can not quick-check theorems using <tt>SFunArray</tt> values</li>
--   <li>Typically faster as it gets compiled away during translation.</li>
--   </ul>
data SFunArray a b

-- | Declare an <a>SBool</a>
sBool :: String -> Symbolic SBool

-- | Declare an <a>SWord8</a>
sWord8 :: String -> Symbolic SWord8

-- | Declare an <a>SWord16</a>
sWord16 :: String -> Symbolic SWord16

-- | Declare an <a>SWord32</a>
sWord32 :: String -> Symbolic SWord32

-- | Declare an <a>SWord64</a>
sWord64 :: String -> Symbolic SWord64

-- | Declare an <a>SInt8</a>
sInt8 :: String -> Symbolic SInt8

-- | Declare an <a>SInt16</a>
sInt16 :: String -> Symbolic SInt16

-- | Declare an <a>SInt32</a>
sInt32 :: String -> Symbolic SInt32

-- | Declare an <a>SInt64</a>
sInt64 :: String -> Symbolic SInt64

-- | Declare an <a>SInteger</a>
sInteger :: String -> Symbolic SInteger

-- | Declare an <a>SReal</a>
sReal :: String -> Symbolic SReal

-- | Declare an <a>SFloat</a>
sFloat :: String -> Symbolic SFloat

-- | Declare an <a>SDouble</a>
sDouble :: String -> Symbolic SDouble

-- | Declare an <a>SChar</a>
sChar :: String -> Symbolic SChar

-- | Declare an <a>SString</a>
sString :: String -> Symbolic SString

-- | Declare an <a>SList</a>
sList :: forall a. SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SList a)

-- | Declare a list of <a>SBool</a>s
sBools :: [String] -> Symbolic [SBool]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SWord8</a>s
sWord8s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SWord8]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SWord16</a>s
sWord16s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SWord16]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SWord32</a>s
sWord32s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SWord32]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SWord64</a>s
sWord64s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SWord64]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SInt8</a>s
sInt8s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SInt8]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SInt16</a>s
sInt16s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SInt16]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SInt32</a>s
sInt32s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SInt32]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SInt64</a>s
sInt64s :: [String] -> Symbolic [SInt64]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SInteger</a>s
sIntegers :: [String] -> Symbolic [SInteger]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SReal</a>s
sReals :: [String] -> Symbolic [SReal]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SFloat</a>s
sFloats :: [String] -> Symbolic [SFloat]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SDouble</a>s
sDoubles :: [String] -> Symbolic [SDouble]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SChar</a>s
sChars :: [String] -> Symbolic [SChar]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SString</a>s
sStrings :: [String] -> Symbolic [SString]

-- | Declare a list of <a>SList</a>s
sLists :: forall a. SymWord a => [String] -> Symbolic [SList a]

-- | Symbolic Equality. Note that we can't use Haskell's <a>Eq</a> class
--   since Haskell insists on returning Bool Comparing symbolic values will
--   necessarily return a symbolic value.
class EqSymbolic a

-- | Symbolic equality.
(.==) :: EqSymbolic a => a -> a -> SBool

-- | Symbolic inequality.
(./=) :: EqSymbolic a => a -> a -> SBool

-- | Returns (symbolic) true if all the elements of the given list are
--   different.
distinct :: EqSymbolic a => [a] -> SBool

-- | Returns (symbolic) true if all the elements of the given list are the
--   same.
allEqual :: EqSymbolic a => [a] -> SBool

-- | Symbolic membership test.
sElem :: EqSymbolic a => a -> [a] -> SBool
infix 4 .==
infix 4 ./=

-- | Symbolic Comparisons. Similar to <a>Eq</a>, we cannot implement
--   Haskell's <a>Ord</a> class since there is no way to return an
--   <a>Ordering</a> value from a symbolic comparison. Furthermore,
--   <a>OrdSymbolic</a> requires <a>Mergeable</a> to implement
--   if-then-else, for the benefit of implementing symbolic versions of
--   <a>max</a> and <a>min</a> functions.
class (Mergeable a, EqSymbolic a) => OrdSymbolic a

-- | Symbolic less than.
(.<) :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> a -> SBool

-- | Symbolic less than or equal to.
(.<=) :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> a -> SBool

-- | Symbolic greater than.
(.>) :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> a -> SBool

-- | Symbolic greater than or equal to.
(.>=) :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> a -> SBool

-- | Symbolic minimum.
smin :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> a -> a

-- | Symbolic maximum.
smax :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> a -> a

-- | Is the value withing the allowed <i>inclusive</i> range?
inRange :: OrdSymbolic a => a -> (a, a) -> SBool
infix 4 .<
infix 4 .<=
infix 4 .>
infix 4 .>=

-- | Equality as a proof method. Allows for very concise construction of
--   equivalence proofs, which is very typical in bit-precise proofs.
class Equality a
(===) :: Equality a => a -> a -> IO ThmResult
infix 4 ===

-- | Symbolic conditionals are modeled by the <a>Mergeable</a> class,
--   describing how to merge the results of an if-then-else call with a
--   symbolic test. SBV provides all basic types as instances of this
--   class, so users only need to declare instances for custom data-types
--   of their programs as needed.
--   
--   A <a>Mergeable</a> instance may be automatically derived for a custom
--   data-type with a single constructor where the type of each field is an
--   instance of <a>Mergeable</a>, such as a record of symbolic values.
--   Users only need to add <a>Generic</a> and <a>Mergeable</a> to the
--   <tt>deriving</tt> clause for the data-type. See <a>Status</a> for an
--   example and an illustration of what the instance would look like if
--   written by hand.
--   
--   The function <a>select</a> is a total-indexing function out of a list
--   of choices with a default value, simulating array/list indexing. It's
--   an n-way generalization of the <a>ite</a> function.
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: None, if the type is instance of
--   <tt>Generic</tt>. Otherwise <a>symbolicMerge</a>. Note that most types
--   subject to merging are likely to be trivial instances of
--   <tt>Generic</tt>.
class Mergeable a

-- | Merge two values based on the condition. The first argument states
--   whether we force the then-and-else branches before the merging, at the
--   word level. This is an efficiency concern; one that we'd rather not
--   make but unfortunately necessary for getting symbolic simulation
--   working efficiently.
symbolicMerge :: Mergeable a => Bool -> SBool -> a -> a -> a

-- | Total indexing operation. <tt>select xs default index</tt> is
--   intuitively the same as <tt>xs !! index</tt>, except it evaluates to
--   <tt>default</tt> if <tt>index</tt> underflows/overflows.
select :: (Mergeable a, SymWord b, Num b) => [a] -> a -> SBV b -> a

-- | Merge two values based on the condition. The first argument states
--   whether we force the then-and-else branches before the merging, at the
--   word level. This is an efficiency concern; one that we'd rather not
--   make but unfortunately necessary for getting symbolic simulation
--   working efficiently.
symbolicMerge :: (Mergeable a, Generic a, GMergeable (Rep a)) => Bool -> SBool -> a -> a -> a

-- | If-then-else. This is by definition <a>symbolicMerge</a> with both
--   branches forced. This is typically the desired behavior, but also see
--   <a>iteLazy</a> should you need more laziness.
ite :: Mergeable a => SBool -> a -> a -> a

-- | A Lazy version of ite, which does not force its arguments. This might
--   cause issues for symbolic simulation with large thunks around, so use
--   with care.
iteLazy :: Mergeable a => SBool -> a -> a -> a

-- | Symbolic Numbers. This is a simple class that simply incorporates all
--   number like base types together, simplifying writing polymorphic
--   type-signatures that work for all symbolic numbers, such as
--   <a>SWord8</a>, <a>SInt8</a> etc. For instance, we can write a generic
--   list-minimum function as follows:
--   
--   <pre>
--   mm :: SIntegral a =&gt; [SBV a] -&gt; SBV a
--   mm = foldr1 (a b -&gt; ite (a .&lt;= b) a b)
--   </pre>
--   
--   It is similar to the standard <a>Integral</a> class, except ranging
--   over symbolic instances.
class (SymWord a, Num a, Bits a, Integral a) => SIntegral a

-- | The <a>SDivisible</a> class captures the essence of division.
--   Unfortunately we cannot use Haskell's <a>Integral</a> class since the
--   <a>Real</a> and <a>Enum</a> superclasses are not implementable for
--   symbolic bit-vectors. However, <a>quotRem</a> and <a>divMod</a> both
--   make perfect sense, and the <a>SDivisible</a> class captures this
--   operation. One issue is how division by 0 behaves. The verification
--   technology requires total functions, and there are several design
--   choices here. We follow Isabelle/HOL approach of assigning the value 0
--   for division by 0. Therefore, we impose the following pair of laws:
--   
--   <pre>
--   x <a>sQuotRem</a> 0 = (0, x)
--   x <a>sDivMod</a>  0 = (0, x)
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that our instances implement this law even when <tt>x</tt> is
--   <tt>0</tt> itself.
--   
--   NB. <a>quot</a> truncates toward zero, while <a>div</a> truncates
--   toward negative infinity.
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: <a>sQuotRem</a>, <a>sDivMod</a>
class SDivisible a
sQuotRem :: SDivisible a => a -> a -> (a, a)
sDivMod :: SDivisible a => a -> a -> (a, a)
sQuot :: SDivisible a => a -> a -> a
sRem :: SDivisible a => a -> a -> a
sDiv :: SDivisible a => a -> a -> a
sMod :: SDivisible a => a -> a -> a

-- | Conversion between integral-symbolic values, akin to Haskell's
--   <a>fromIntegral</a>
sFromIntegral :: forall a b. (Integral a, HasKind a, Num a, SymWord a, HasKind b, Num b, SymWord b) => SBV a -> SBV b

-- | Generalization of <a>shiftL</a>, when the shift-amount is symbolic.
--   Since Haskell's <a>shiftL</a> only takes an <a>Int</a> as the shift
--   amount, it cannot be used when we have a symbolic amount to shift
--   with.
sShiftLeft :: (SIntegral a, SIntegral b) => SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV a

-- | Generalization of <a>shiftR</a>, when the shift-amount is symbolic.
--   Since Haskell's <a>shiftR</a> only takes an <a>Int</a> as the shift
--   amount, it cannot be used when we have a symbolic amount to shift
--   with.
--   
--   NB. If the shiftee is signed, then this is an arithmetic shift;
--   otherwise it's logical, following the usual Haskell convention. See
--   <a>sSignedShiftArithRight</a> for a variant that explicitly uses the
--   msb as the sign bit, even for unsigned underlying types.
sShiftRight :: (SIntegral a, SIntegral b) => SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV a

-- | Generalization of <a>rotateL</a>, when the shift-amount is symbolic.
--   Since Haskell's <a>rotateL</a> only takes an <a>Int</a> as the shift
--   amount, it cannot be used when we have a symbolic amount to shift
--   with. The first argument should be a bounded quantity.
sRotateLeft :: (SIntegral a, SIntegral b, SDivisible (SBV b)) => SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV a

-- | Generalization of <a>rotateR</a>, when the shift-amount is symbolic.
--   Since Haskell's <a>rotateR</a> only takes an <a>Int</a> as the shift
--   amount, it cannot be used when we have a symbolic amount to shift
--   with. The first argument should be a bounded quantity.
sRotateRight :: (SIntegral a, SIntegral b, SDivisible (SBV b)) => SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV a

-- | Arithmetic shift-right with a symbolic unsigned shift amount. This is
--   equivalent to <a>sShiftRight</a> when the argument is signed. However,
--   if the argument is unsigned, then it explicitly treats its msb as a
--   sign-bit, and uses it as the bit that gets shifted in. Useful when
--   using the underlying unsigned bit representation to implement custom
--   signed operations. Note that there is no direct Haskell analogue of
--   this function.
sSignedShiftArithRight :: (SFiniteBits a, SIntegral b) => SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV a

-- | Finite bit-length symbolic values. Essentially the same as
--   <a>SIntegral</a>, but further leaves out <a>Integer</a>. Loosely based
--   on Haskell's <tt>FiniteBits</tt> class, but with more methods defined
--   and structured differently to fit into the symbolic world view.
--   Minimal complete definition: <a>sFiniteBitSize</a>.
class (SymWord a, Num a, Bits a) => SFiniteBits a

-- | Bit size.
sFiniteBitSize :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> Int

-- | Least significant bit of a word, always stored at index 0.
lsb :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Most significant bit of a word, always stored at the last position.
msb :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Big-endian blasting of a word into its bits.
blastBE :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> [SBool]

-- | Little-endian blasting of a word into its bits.
blastLE :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> [SBool]

-- | Reconstruct from given bits, given in little-endian.
fromBitsBE :: SFiniteBits a => [SBool] -> SBV a

-- | Reconstruct from given bits, given in little-endian.
fromBitsLE :: SFiniteBits a => [SBool] -> SBV a

-- | Replacement for <a>testBit</a>, returning <a>SBool</a> instead of
--   <a>Bool</a>.
sTestBit :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> Int -> SBool

-- | Variant of <a>sTestBit</a>, where we want to extract multiple bit
--   positions.
sExtractBits :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> [Int] -> [SBool]

-- | Variant of <a>popCount</a>, returning a symbolic value.
sPopCount :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SWord8

-- | A combo of <a>setBit</a> and <a>clearBit</a>, when the bit to be set
--   is symbolic.
setBitTo :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> Int -> SBool -> SBV a

-- | Full adder, returns carry-out from the addition. Only for unsigned
--   quantities.
fullAdder :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SBV a -> (SBool, SBV a)

-- | Full multipler, returns both high and low-order bits. Only for
--   unsigned quantities.
fullMultiplier :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SBV a -> (SBV a, SBV a)

-- | Count leading zeros in a word, big-endian interpretation.
sCountLeadingZeros :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SWord8

-- | Count trailing zeros in a word, big-endian interpretation.
sCountTrailingZeros :: SFiniteBits a => SBV a -> SWord8

-- | Splitting an <tt>a</tt> into two <tt>b</tt>'s and joining back.
--   Intuitively, <tt>a</tt> is a larger bit-size word than <tt>b</tt>,
--   typically double. The <a>extend</a> operation captures embedding of a
--   <tt>b</tt> value into an <tt>a</tt> without changing its semantic
--   value.
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: All, no defaults.
class Splittable a b | b -> a
split :: Splittable a b => a -> (b, b)
(#) :: Splittable a b => b -> b -> a
extend :: Splittable a b => b -> a
infixr 5 #

-- | Symbolic exponentiation using bit blasting and repeated squaring.
--   
--   N.B. The exponent must be unsigned/bounded if symbolic. Signed
--   exponents will be rejected.
(.^) :: (Mergeable b, Num b, SIntegral e) => b -> SBV e -> b

-- | A class of floating-point (IEEE754) operations, some of which behave
--   differently based on rounding modes. Note that unless the rounding
--   mode is concretely RoundNearestTiesToEven, we will not concretely
--   evaluate these, but rather pass down to the SMT solver.
class (SymWord a, RealFloat a) => IEEEFloating a

-- | Compute the floating point absolute value.
fpAbs :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Compute the unary negation. Note that <tt>0 - x</tt> is not equivalent
--   to <tt>-x</tt> for floating-point, since <tt>-0</tt> and <tt>0</tt>
--   are different.
fpNeg :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Add two floating point values, using the given rounding mode
fpAdd :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Subtract two floating point values, using the given rounding mode
fpSub :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Multiply two floating point values, using the given rounding mode
fpMul :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Divide two floating point values, using the given rounding mode
fpDiv :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Fused-multiply-add three floating point values, using the given
--   rounding mode. <tt>fpFMA x y z = x*y+z</tt> but with only one rounding
--   done for the whole operation; not two. Note that we will never
--   concretely evaluate this function since Haskell lacks an FMA
--   implementation.
fpFMA :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Compute the square-root of a float, using the given rounding mode
fpSqrt :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Compute the remainder: <tt>x - y * n</tt>, where <tt>n</tt> is the
--   truncated integer nearest to x/y. The rounding mode is implicitly
--   assumed to be <tt>RoundNearestTiesToEven</tt>.
fpRem :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Round to the nearest integral value, using the given rounding mode.
fpRoundToIntegral :: IEEEFloating a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Compute the minimum of two floats, respects <tt>infinity</tt> and
--   <tt>NaN</tt> values
fpMin :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Compute the maximum of two floats, respects <tt>infinity</tt> and
--   <tt>NaN</tt> values
fpMax :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Are the two given floats exactly the same. That is, <tt>NaN</tt> will
--   compare equal to itself, <tt>+0</tt> will <i>not</i> compare equal to
--   <tt>-0</tt> etc. This is the object level equality, as opposed to the
--   semantic equality. (For the latter, just use <a>.==</a>.)
fpIsEqualObject :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number a normal value. (i.e., not denormalized.)
fpIsNormal :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number a subnormal value. (Also known as
--   denormal.)
fpIsSubnormal :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number 0? (Note that both +0 and -0 will satisfy
--   this predicate.)
fpIsZero :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number infinity? (Note that both +oo and -oo
--   will satisfy this predicate.)
fpIsInfinite :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number a NaN value?
fpIsNaN :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number negative? Note that -0 satisfies this
--   predicate but +0 does not.
fpIsNegative :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number positive? Note that +0 satisfies this
--   predicate but -0 does not.
fpIsPositive :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating point number -0?
fpIsNegativeZero :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating point number +0?
fpIsPositiveZero :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Is the floating-point number a regular floating point, i.e., not NaN,
--   nor +oo, nor -oo. Normals or denormals are allowed.
fpIsPoint :: IEEEFloating a => SBV a -> SBool

-- | Rounding mode to be used for the IEEE floating-point operations. Note
--   that Haskell's default is <a>RoundNearestTiesToEven</a>. If you use a
--   different rounding mode, then the counter-examples you get may not
--   match what you observe in Haskell.
data RoundingMode

-- | Round to nearest representable floating point value. If precisely at
--   half-way, pick the even number. (In this context, <i>even</i> means
--   the lowest-order bit is zero.)
RoundNearestTiesToEven :: RoundingMode

-- | Round to nearest representable floating point value. If precisely at
--   half-way, pick the number further away from 0. (That is, for positive
--   values, pick the greater; for negative values, pick the smaller.)
RoundNearestTiesToAway :: RoundingMode

-- | Round towards positive infinity. (Also known as rounding-up or
--   ceiling.)
RoundTowardPositive :: RoundingMode

-- | Round towards negative infinity. (Also known as rounding-down or
--   floor.)
RoundTowardNegative :: RoundingMode

-- | Round towards zero. (Also known as truncation.)
RoundTowardZero :: RoundingMode

-- | The symbolic variant of <a>RoundingMode</a>
type SRoundingMode = SBV RoundingMode

-- | Not-A-Number for <a>Double</a> and <a>Float</a>. Surprisingly, Haskell
--   Prelude doesn't have this value defined, so we provide it here.
nan :: Floating a => a

-- | Infinity for <a>Double</a> and <a>Float</a>. Surprisingly, Haskell
--   Prelude doesn't have this value defined, so we provide it here.
infinity :: Floating a => a

-- | Symbolic variant of Not-A-Number. This value will inhabit both
--   <a>SDouble</a> and <a>SFloat</a>.
sNaN :: (Floating a, SymWord a) => SBV a

-- | Symbolic variant of infinity. This value will inhabit both
--   <a>SDouble</a> and <a>SFloat</a>.
sInfinity :: (Floating a, SymWord a) => SBV a

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundNearestTiesToEven</a>
sRoundNearestTiesToEven :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundNearestTiesToAway</a>
sRoundNearestTiesToAway :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundTowardPositive</a>
sRoundTowardPositive :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundTowardNegative</a>
sRoundTowardNegative :: SRoundingMode

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>RoundTowardZero</a>
sRoundTowardZero :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundNearestTiesToEven</a>
sRNE :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundNearestTiesToAway</a>
sRNA :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundTowardPositive</a>
sRTP :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundTowardNegative</a>
sRTN :: SRoundingMode

-- | Alias for <a>sRoundTowardZero</a>
sRTZ :: SRoundingMode

-- | Capture convertability from/to FloatingPoint representations NB.
--   <a>fromSFloat</a> and <a>fromSDouble</a> are underspecified when given
--   when given a <tt>NaN</tt>, <tt>+oo</tt>, or <tt>-oo</tt> value that
--   cannot be represented in the target domain. For these inputs, we
--   define the result to be +0, arbitrarily.
class IEEEFloatConvertable a
fromSFloat :: IEEEFloatConvertable a => SRoundingMode -> SFloat -> SBV a
toSFloat :: IEEEFloatConvertable a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SFloat
fromSDouble :: IEEEFloatConvertable a => SRoundingMode -> SDouble -> SBV a
toSDouble :: IEEEFloatConvertable a => SRoundingMode -> SBV a -> SDouble

-- | Convert an <a>SFloat</a> to an <a>SWord32</a>, preserving the
--   bit-correspondence. Note that since the representation for
--   <tt>NaN</tt>s are not unique, this function will return a symbolic
--   value when given a concrete <tt>NaN</tt>.
--   
--   Implementation note: Since there's no corresponding function in SMTLib
--   for conversion to bit-representation due to partiality, we use a
--   translation trick by allocating a new word variable, converting it to
--   float, and requiring it to be equivalent to the input. In
--   code-generation mode, we simply map it to a simple conversion.
sFloatAsSWord32 :: SFloat -> SWord32

-- | Reinterpret the bits in a 32-bit word as a single-precision floating
--   point number
sWord32AsSFloat :: SWord32 -> SFloat

-- | Convert an <a>SDouble</a> to an <a>SWord64</a>, preserving the
--   bit-correspondence. Note that since the representation for
--   <tt>NaN</tt>s are not unique, this function will return a symbolic
--   value when given a concrete <tt>NaN</tt>.
--   
--   See the implementation note for <a>sFloatAsSWord32</a>, as it applies
--   here as well.
sDoubleAsSWord64 :: SDouble -> SWord64

-- | Reinterpret the bits in a 32-bit word as a single-precision floating
--   point number
sWord64AsSDouble :: SWord64 -> SDouble

-- | Extract the sign/exponent/mantissa of a single-precision float. The
--   output will have 8 bits in the second argument for exponent, and 23 in
--   the third for the mantissa.
blastSFloat :: SFloat -> (SBool, [SBool], [SBool])

-- | Extract the sign/exponent/mantissa of a single-precision float. The
--   output will have 11 bits in the second argument for exponent, and 52
--   in the third for the mantissa.
blastSDouble :: SDouble -> (SBool, [SBool], [SBool])

-- | Make an enumeration a symbolic type.
mkSymbolicEnumeration :: Name -> Q [Dec]

-- | Uninterpreted constants and functions. An uninterpreted constant is a
--   value that is indexed by its name. The only property the prover
--   assumes about these values are that they are equivalent to themselves;
--   i.e., (for functions) they return the same results when applied to
--   same arguments. We support uninterpreted-functions as a general means
--   of black-box'ing operations that are <i>irrelevant</i> for the
--   purposes of the proof; i.e., when the proofs can be performed without
--   any knowledge about the function itself.
--   
--   Minimal complete definition: <a>sbvUninterpret</a>. However, most
--   instances in practice are already provided by SBV, so end-users should
--   not need to define their own instances.
class Uninterpreted a

-- | Uninterpret a value, receiving an object that can be used instead. Use
--   this version when you do not need to add an axiom about this value.
uninterpret :: Uninterpreted a => String -> a

-- | Uninterpret a value, only for the purposes of code-generation. For
--   execution and verification the value is used as is. For
--   code-generation, the alternate definition is used. This is useful when
--   we want to take advantage of native libraries on the target languages.
cgUninterpret :: Uninterpreted a => String -> [String] -> a -> a

-- | Most generalized form of uninterpretation, this function should not be
--   needed by end-user-code, but is rather useful for the library
--   development.
sbvUninterpret :: Uninterpreted a => Maybe ([String], a) -> String -> a

-- | Add a user specified axiom to the generated SMT-Lib file. The first
--   argument is a mere string, use for commenting purposes. The second
--   argument is intended to hold the multiple-lines of the axiom text as
--   expressed in SMT-Lib notation. Note that we perform no checks on the
--   axiom itself, to see whether it's actually well-formed or is sensical
--   by any means. A separate formalization of SMT-Lib would be very useful
--   here.
addAxiom :: String -> [String] -> Symbolic ()

-- | A predicate is a symbolic program that returns a (symbolic) boolean
--   value. For all intents and purposes, it can be treated as an n-ary
--   function from symbolic-values to a boolean. The <a>Symbolic</a> monad
--   captures the underlying representation, and can/should be ignored by
--   the users of the library, unless you are building further utilities on
--   top of SBV itself. Instead, simply use the <a>Predicate</a> type when
--   necessary.
type Predicate = Symbolic SBool

-- | A goal is a symbolic program that returns no values. The idea is that
--   the constraints/min-max goals will serve as appropriate directives for
--   sat/prove calls.
type Goal = Symbolic ()

-- | A type <tt>a</tt> is provable if we can turn it into a predicate. Note
--   that a predicate can be made from a curried function of arbitrary
--   arity, where each element is either a symbolic type or up-to a 7-tuple
--   of symbolic-types. So predicates can be constructed from almost
--   arbitrary Haskell functions that have arbitrary shapes. (See the
--   instance declarations below.)
class Provable a

-- | Turns a value into a universally quantified predicate, internally
--   naming the inputs. In this case the sbv library will use names of the
--   form <tt>s1, s2</tt>, etc. to name these variables Example:
--   
--   <pre>
--   forAll_ $ \(x::SWord8) y -&gt; x `shiftL` 2 .== y
--   </pre>
--   
--   is a predicate with two arguments, captured using an ordinary Haskell
--   function. Internally, <tt>x</tt> will be named <tt>s0</tt> and
--   <tt>y</tt> will be named <tt>s1</tt>.
forAll_ :: Provable a => a -> Predicate

-- | Turns a value into a predicate, allowing users to provide names for
--   the inputs. If the user does not provide enough number of names for
--   the variables, the remaining ones will be internally generated. Note
--   that the names are only used for printing models and has no other
--   significance; in particular, we do not check that they are unique.
--   Example:
--   
--   <pre>
--   forAll ["x", "y"] $ \(x::SWord8) y -&gt; x `shiftL` 2 .== y
--   </pre>
--   
--   This is the same as above, except the variables will be named
--   <tt>x</tt> and <tt>y</tt> respectively, simplifying the
--   counter-examples when they are printed.
forAll :: Provable a => [String] -> a -> Predicate

-- | Turns a value into an existentially quantified predicate. (Indeed,
--   <a>exists</a> would have been a better choice here for the name, but
--   alas it's already taken.)
forSome_ :: Provable a => a -> Predicate

-- | Version of <a>forSome</a> that allows user defined names.
forSome :: Provable a => [String] -> a -> Predicate

-- | Prove a predicate, using the default solver.
prove :: Provable a => a -> IO ThmResult

-- | Prove the predicate using the given SMT-solver.
proveWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO ThmResult

-- | Find a satisfying assignment for a predicate, using the default
--   solver.
sat :: Provable a => a -> IO SatResult

-- | Find a satisfying assignment using the given SMT-solver.
satWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO SatResult

-- | Find all satisfying assignments, using the default solver. See
--   <a>allSatWith</a> for details.
allSat :: Provable a => a -> IO AllSatResult

-- | Return all satisfying assignments for a predicate, equivalent to
--   <tt><a>allSatWith</a> <a>defaultSMTCfg</a></tt>. Note that this call
--   will block until all satisfying assignments are found. If you have a
--   problem with infinitely many satisfying models (consider
--   <a>SInteger</a>) or a very large number of them, you might have to
--   wait for a long time. To avoid such cases, use the
--   <a>allSatMaxModelCount</a> parameter in the configuration.
--   
--   NB. Uninterpreted constant/function values and counter-examples for
--   array values are ignored for the purposes of <a>allSat</a>. That is,
--   only the satisfying assignments modulo uninterpreted functions and
--   array inputs will be returned. This is due to the limitation of not
--   having a robust means of getting a function counter-example back from
--   the SMT solver. Find all satisfying assignments using the given
--   SMT-solver
allSatWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO AllSatResult

-- | Optimize a given collection of <a>Objective</a>s
optimize :: Provable a => OptimizeStyle -> a -> IO OptimizeResult

-- | Optimizes the objectives using the given SMT-solver.
optimizeWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> OptimizeStyle -> a -> IO OptimizeResult

-- | Check if the constraints given are consistent, using the default
--   solver.
isVacuous :: Provable a => a -> IO Bool

-- | Determine if the constraints are vacuous using the given SMT-solver.
isVacuousWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO Bool

-- | Checks theoremhood using the default solver.
isTheorem :: Provable a => a -> IO Bool

-- | Check whether a given property is a theorem.
isTheoremWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO Bool

-- | Checks satisfiability using the default solver.
isSatisfiable :: Provable a => a -> IO Bool

-- | Check whether a given property is satisfiable.
isSatisfiableWith :: Provable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO Bool

-- | Prove a property with multiple solvers, running them in separate
--   threads. The results will be returned in the order produced.
proveWithAll :: Provable a => [SMTConfig] -> a -> IO [(Solver, NominalDiffTime, ThmResult)]

-- | Prove a property with multiple solvers, running them in separate
--   threads. Only the result of the first one to finish will be returned,
--   remaining threads will be killed. Note that we send a
--   <tt>ThreadKilled</tt> to the losing processes, but we do *not*
--   actually wait for them to finish. In rare cases this can lead to
--   zombie processes. In previous experiments, we found that some
--   processes take their time to terminate. So, this solution favors quick
--   turnaround.
proveWithAny :: Provable a => [SMTConfig] -> a -> IO (Solver, NominalDiffTime, ThmResult)

-- | Find a satisfying assignment to a property with multiple solvers,
--   running them in separate threads. The results will be returned in the
--   order produced.
satWithAll :: Provable a => [SMTConfig] -> a -> IO [(Solver, NominalDiffTime, SatResult)]

-- | Find a satisfying assignment to a property with multiple solvers,
--   running them in separate threads. Only the result of the first one to
--   finish will be returned, remaining threads will be killed. Note that
--   we send a <tt>ThreadKilled</tt> to the losing processes, but we do
--   *not* actually wait for them to finish. In rare cases this can lead to
--   zombie processes. In previous experiments, we found that some
--   processes take their time to terminate. So, this solution favors quick
--   turnaround.
satWithAny :: Provable a => [SMTConfig] -> a -> IO (Solver, NominalDiffTime, SatResult)

-- | Create an SMT-Lib2 benchmark. The <a>Bool</a> argument controls
--   whether this is a SAT instance, i.e., translate the query directly, or
--   a PROVE instance, i.e., translate the negated query.
generateSMTBenchmark :: Provable a => Bool -> a -> IO String

-- | Form the symbolic conjunction of a given list of boolean conditions.
--   Useful in expressing problems with constraints, like the following:
--   
--   <pre>
--   sat $ do [x, y, z] &lt;- sIntegers ["x", "y", "z"]
--            solve [x .&gt; 5, y + z .&lt; x]
--   </pre>
solve :: [SBool] -> Symbolic SBool

-- | Add a constraint, any satisfying instance must satisfy this condition
constrain :: SolverContext m => SBool -> m ()

-- | Add a soft constraint. The solver will try to satisfy this condition
--   if possible, but won't if it cannot
softConstrain :: SolverContext m => SBool -> m ()

-- | Add a named constraint. The name is used in unsat-core extraction.
namedConstraint :: SolverContext m => String -> SBool -> m ()

-- | Add a constraint, with arbitrary attributes. Used in interpolant
--   generation.
constrainWithAttribute :: SolverContext m => [(String, String)] -> SBool -> m ()

-- | <a>true</a> if at most <tt>k</tt> of the input arguments are
--   <a>true</a>
pbAtMost :: [SBool] -> Int -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if at least <tt>k</tt> of the input arguments are
--   <a>true</a>
pbAtLeast :: [SBool] -> Int -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if exactly <tt>k</tt> of the input arguments are
--   <a>true</a>
pbExactly :: [SBool] -> Int -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if the sum of coefficients for <a>true</a> elements is at
--   most <tt>k</tt>. Generalizes <a>pbAtMost</a>.
pbLe :: [(Int, SBool)] -> Int -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if the sum of coefficients for <a>true</a> elements is at
--   least <tt>k</tt>. Generalizes <a>pbAtLeast</a>.
pbGe :: [(Int, SBool)] -> Int -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if the sum of coefficients for <a>true</a> elements is
--   exactly least <tt>k</tt>. Useful for coding <i>exactly K-of-N</i>
--   constraints, and in particular mutex constraints.
pbEq :: [(Int, SBool)] -> Int -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if there is at most one set bit
pbMutexed :: [SBool] -> SBool

-- | <a>true</a> if there is exactly one set bit
pbStronglyMutexed :: [SBool] -> SBool

-- | Symbolic assert. Check that the given boolean condition is always true
--   in the given path. The optional first argument can be used to provide
--   call-stack info via GHC's location facilities.
sAssert :: Maybe CallStack -> String -> SBool -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Check if a safe-call was safe or not, turning a <a>SafeResult</a> to a
--   Bool.
isSafe :: SafeResult -> Bool

-- | Symbolically executable program fragments. This class is mainly used
--   for <a>safe</a> calls, and is sufficently populated internally to
--   cover most use cases. Users can extend it as they wish to allow
--   <a>safe</a> checks for SBV programs that return/take types that are
--   user-defined.
class SExecutable a
sName_ :: SExecutable a => a -> Symbolic ()
sName :: SExecutable a => [String] -> a -> Symbolic ()

-- | Check safety using the default solver.
safe :: SExecutable a => a -> IO [SafeResult]

-- | Check if any of the <a>sAssert</a> calls can be violated.
safeWith :: SExecutable a => SMTConfig -> a -> IO [SafeResult]

-- | Quick check an SBV property. Note that a regular <tt>quickCheck</tt>
--   call will work just as well. Use this variant if you want to receive
--   the boolean result.
sbvQuickCheck :: Symbolic SBool -> IO Bool

-- | Style of optimization. Note that in the pareto case the user is
--   allowed to specify a max number of fronts to query the solver for,
--   since there might potentially be an infinite number of them and there
--   is no way to know exactly how many ahead of time. If <a>Nothing</a> is
--   given, SBV will possibly loop forever if the number is really
--   infinite.
data OptimizeStyle

-- | Objectives are optimized in the order given, earlier objectives have
--   higher priority.
Lexicographic :: OptimizeStyle

-- | Each objective is optimized independently.
Independent :: OptimizeStyle

-- | Objectives are optimized according to pareto front: That is, no
--   objective can be made better without making some other worse.
Pareto :: Maybe Int -> OptimizeStyle

-- | Objective of optimization. We can minimize, maximize, or give a soft
--   assertion with a penalty for not satisfying it.
data Objective a

-- | Minimize this metric
Minimize :: String -> a -> Objective a

-- | Maximize this metric
Maximize :: String -> a -> Objective a

-- | A soft assertion, with an associated penalty
AssertWithPenalty :: String -> a -> Penalty -> Objective a

-- | Class of metrics we can optimize for. Currently, bounded
--   signed/unsigned bit-vectors, unbounded integers, and algebraic reals
--   can be optimized. (But not, say, SFloat, SDouble, or SBool.) Minimal
--   complete definition: minimize/maximize.
--   
--   A good reference on these features is given in the following paper:
--   <a>http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/nbjorner-scss2014.pdf</a>.
class Metric a

-- | Minimize a named metric
minimize :: Metric a => String -> a -> Symbolic ()

-- | Maximize a named metric
maximize :: Metric a => String -> a -> Symbolic ()

-- | Introduce a soft assertion, with an optional penalty
assertWithPenalty :: String -> SBool -> Penalty -> Symbolic ()

-- | Penalty for a soft-assertion. The default penalty is <tt>1</tt>, with
--   all soft-assertions belonging to the same objective goal. A positive
--   weight and an optional group can be provided by using the
--   <a>Penalty</a> constructor.
data Penalty

-- | Default: Penalty of <tt>1</tt> and no group attached
DefaultPenalty :: Penalty

-- | Penalty with a weight and an optional group
Penalty :: Rational -> Maybe String -> Penalty

-- | A simple expression type over extendent values, covering infinity,
--   epsilon and intervals.
data ExtCW
Infinite :: Kind -> ExtCW
Epsilon :: Kind -> ExtCW
Interval :: ExtCW -> ExtCW -> ExtCW
BoundedCW :: CW -> ExtCW
AddExtCW :: ExtCW -> ExtCW -> ExtCW
MulExtCW :: ExtCW -> ExtCW -> ExtCW

-- | A generalized CW allows for expressions involving infinite and epsilon
--   values/intervals Used in optimization problems.
data GeneralizedCW
ExtendedCW :: ExtCW -> GeneralizedCW
RegularCW :: CW -> GeneralizedCW

-- | A <a>prove</a> call results in a <a>ThmResult</a>
newtype ThmResult
ThmResult :: SMTResult -> ThmResult

-- | A <a>sat</a> call results in a <a>SatResult</a> The reason for having
--   a separate <a>SatResult</a> is to have a more meaningful <a>Show</a>
--   instance.
newtype SatResult
SatResult :: SMTResult -> SatResult

-- | An <a>allSat</a> call results in a <a>AllSatResult</a>. The first
--   boolean says whether we hit the max-model limit as we searched. The
--   second boolean says whether there were prefix-existentials.
newtype AllSatResult
AllSatResult :: (Bool, Bool, [SMTResult]) -> AllSatResult

-- | A <a>safe</a> call results in a <a>SafeResult</a>
newtype SafeResult
SafeResult :: (Maybe String, String, SMTResult) -> SafeResult

-- | An <a>optimize</a> call results in a <a>OptimizeResult</a>. In the
--   <a>ParetoResult</a> case, the boolean is <a>True</a> if we reached
--   pareto-query limit and so there might be more unqueried results
--   remaining. If <a>False</a>, it means that we have all the pareto
--   fronts returned. See the <a>Pareto</a> <a>OptimizeStyle</a> for
--   details.
data OptimizeResult
LexicographicResult :: SMTResult -> OptimizeResult
ParetoResult :: (Bool, [SMTResult]) -> OptimizeResult
IndependentResult :: [(String, SMTResult)] -> OptimizeResult

-- | The result of an SMT solver call. Each constructor is tagged with the
--   <a>SMTConfig</a> that created it so that further tools can inspect it
--   and build layers of results, if needed. For ordinary uses of the
--   library, this type should not be needed, instead use the accessor
--   functions on it. (Custom Show instances and model extractors.)
data SMTResult

-- | Unsatisfiable. If unsat-cores are enabled, they will be returned in
--   the second parameter.
Unsatisfiable :: SMTConfig -> Maybe [String] -> SMTResult

-- | Satisfiable with model
Satisfiable :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> SMTResult

-- | Prover returned a model, but in an extension field containing
--   Infinite/epsilon
SatExtField :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> SMTResult

-- | Prover returned unknown, with the given reason
Unknown :: SMTConfig -> SMTReasonUnknown -> SMTResult

-- | Prover errored out
ProofError :: SMTConfig -> [String] -> SMTResult

-- | Reason for reporting unknown.
data SMTReasonUnknown
UnknownMemOut :: SMTReasonUnknown
UnknownIncomplete :: SMTReasonUnknown
UnknownTimeOut :: SMTReasonUnknown
UnknownOther :: String -> SMTReasonUnknown

-- | Observe the value of an expression. Such values are useful in model
--   construction, as they are printed part of a satisfying model, or a
--   counter-example. The same works for quick-check as well. Useful when
--   we want to see intermediate values, or expected/obtained pairs in a
--   particular run. Note that an observed expression is always symbolic,
--   i.e., it won't be constant folded. Compare this to <a>label</a> which
--   is used for putting a label in the generated SMTLib-C code.
observe :: SymWord a => String -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Instances of <a>SatModel</a> can be automatically extracted from
--   models returned by the solvers. The idea is that the sbv
--   infrastructure provides a stream of CW's (constant-words) coming from
--   the solver, and the type <tt>a</tt> is interpreted based on these
--   constants. Many typical instances are already provided, so new
--   instances can be declared with relative ease.
--   
--   Minimum complete definition: <a>parseCWs</a>
class SatModel a

-- | Given a sequence of constant-words, extract one instance of the type
--   <tt>a</tt>, returning the remaining elements untouched. If the next
--   element is not what's expected for this type you should return
--   <a>Nothing</a>
parseCWs :: SatModel a => [CW] -> Maybe (a, [CW])

-- | Given a parsed model instance, transform it using <tt>f</tt>, and
--   return the result. The default definition for this method should be
--   sufficient in most use cases.
cvtModel :: SatModel a => (a -> Maybe b) -> Maybe (a, [CW]) -> Maybe (b, [CW])

-- | Given a sequence of constant-words, extract one instance of the type
--   <tt>a</tt>, returning the remaining elements untouched. If the next
--   element is not what's expected for this type you should return
--   <a>Nothing</a>
parseCWs :: (SatModel a, Read a) => [CW] -> Maybe (a, [CW])

-- | Various SMT results that we can extract models out of.
class Modelable a

-- | Is there a model?
modelExists :: Modelable a => a -> Bool

-- | Extract assignments of a model, the result is a tuple where the first
--   argument (if True) indicates whether the model was "probable". (i.e.,
--   if the solver returned unknown.)
getModelAssignment :: (Modelable a, SatModel b) => a -> Either String (Bool, b)

-- | Extract a model dictionary. Extract a dictionary mapping the variables
--   to their respective values as returned by the SMT solver. Also see
--   <a>getModelDictionaries</a>.
getModelDictionary :: Modelable a => a -> Map String CW

-- | Extract a model value for a given element. Also see
--   <a>getModelValues</a>.
getModelValue :: (Modelable a, SymWord b) => String -> a -> Maybe b

-- | Extract a representative name for the model value of an uninterpreted
--   kind. This is supposed to correspond to the value as computed
--   internally by the SMT solver; and is unportable from solver to solver.
--   Also see <a>getModelUninterpretedValues</a>.
getModelUninterpretedValue :: Modelable a => String -> a -> Maybe String

-- | A simpler variant of <a>getModelAssignment</a> to get a model out
--   without the fuss.
extractModel :: (Modelable a, SatModel b) => a -> Maybe b

-- | Extract model objective values, for all optimization goals.
getModelObjectives :: Modelable a => a -> Map String GeneralizedCW

-- | Extract the value of an objective
getModelObjectiveValue :: Modelable a => String -> a -> Maybe GeneralizedCW

-- | Given an <a>allSat</a> call, we typically want to iterate over it and
--   print the results in sequence. The <a>displayModels</a> function
--   automates this task by calling <tt>disp</tt> on each result,
--   consecutively. The first <a>Int</a> argument to <tt>disp</tt> 'is the
--   current model number. The second argument is a tuple, where the first
--   element indicates whether the model is alleged (i.e., if the solver is
--   not sure, returing Unknown)
displayModels :: SatModel a => (Int -> (Bool, a) -> IO ()) -> AllSatResult -> IO Int

-- | Return all the models from an <a>allSat</a> call, similar to
--   <a>extractModel</a> but is suitable for the case of multiple results.
extractModels :: SatModel a => AllSatResult -> [a]

-- | Get dictionaries from an all-sat call. Similar to
--   <a>getModelDictionary</a>.
getModelDictionaries :: AllSatResult -> [Map String CW]

-- | Extract value of a variable from an all-sat call. Similar to
--   <a>getModelValue</a>.
getModelValues :: SymWord b => String -> AllSatResult -> [Maybe b]

-- | Extract value of an uninterpreted variable from an all-sat call.
--   Similar to <a>getModelUninterpretedValue</a>.
getModelUninterpretedValues :: String -> AllSatResult -> [Maybe String]

-- | Solver configuration. See also <a>z3</a>, <a>yices</a>, <a>cvc4</a>,
--   <a>boolector</a>, <a>mathSAT</a>, etc. which are instantiations of
--   this type for those solvers, with reasonable defaults. In particular,
--   custom configuration can be created by varying those values. (Such as
--   <tt>z3{verbose=True}</tt>.)
--   
--   Most fields are self explanatory. The notion of precision for printing
--   algebraic reals stems from the fact that such values does not
--   necessarily have finite decimal representations, and hence we have to
--   stop printing at some depth. It is important to emphasize that such
--   values always have infinite precision internally. The issue is merely
--   with how we print such an infinite precision value on the screen. The
--   field <a>printRealPrec</a> controls the printing precision, by
--   specifying the number of digits after the decimal point. The default
--   value is 16, but it can be set to any positive integer.
--   
--   When printing, SBV will add the suffix <tt>...</tt> at the and of a
--   real-value, if the given bound is not sufficient to represent the
--   real-value exactly. Otherwise, the number will be written out in
--   standard decimal notation. Note that SBV will always print the whole
--   value if it is precise (i.e., if it fits in a finite number of
--   digits), regardless of the precision limit. The limit only applies if
--   the representation of the real value is not finite, i.e., if it is not
--   rational.
--   
--   The <a>printBase</a> field can be used to print numbers in base 2, 10,
--   or 16. If base 2 or 16 is used, then floating-point values will be
--   printed in their internal memory-layout format as well, which can come
--   in handy for bit-precise analysis.
data SMTConfig
SMTConfig :: Bool -> Timing -> Int -> Int -> String -> Maybe Int -> (String -> Bool) -> Maybe FilePath -> SMTLibVersion -> SMTSolver -> RoundingMode -> [SMTOption] -> Bool -> Maybe FilePath -> SMTConfig

-- | Debug mode
[verbose] :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Print timing information on how long different phases took
--   (construction, solving, etc.)
[timing] :: SMTConfig -> Timing

-- | Print integral literals in this base (2, 10, and 16 are supported.)
[printBase] :: SMTConfig -> Int

-- | Print algebraic real values with this precision. (SReal, default: 16)
[printRealPrec] :: SMTConfig -> Int

-- | Usually "(check-sat)". However, users might tweak it based on solver
--   characteristics.
[satCmd] :: SMTConfig -> String

-- | In an allSat call, return at most this many models. If nothing, return
--   all.
[allSatMaxModelCount] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe Int

-- | When constructing a model, ignore variables whose name satisfy this
--   predicate. (Default: (const False), i.e., don't ignore anything)
[isNonModelVar] :: SMTConfig -> String -> Bool

-- | If Just, the entire interaction will be recorded as a playable file
--   (for debugging purposes mostly)
[transcript] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe FilePath

-- | What version of SMT-lib we use for the tool
[smtLibVersion] :: SMTConfig -> SMTLibVersion

-- | The actual SMT solver.
[solver] :: SMTConfig -> SMTSolver

-- | Rounding mode to use for floating-point conversions
[roundingMode] :: SMTConfig -> RoundingMode

-- | Options to set as we start the solver
[solverSetOptions] :: SMTConfig -> [SMTOption]

-- | If true, we shall ignore the exit code upon exit. Otherwise we require
--   ExitSuccess.
[ignoreExitCode] :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Redirect the verbose output to this file if given. If Nothing, stdout
--   is implied.
[redirectVerbose] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe FilePath

-- | Specify how to save timing information, if at all.
data Timing
NoTiming :: Timing
PrintTiming :: Timing
SaveTiming :: IORef NominalDiffTime -> Timing

-- | Representation of SMTLib Program versions. As of June 2015, we're
--   dropping support for SMTLib1, and supporting SMTLib2 only. We keep
--   this data-type around in case SMTLib3 comes along and we want to
--   support 2 and 3 simultaneously.
data SMTLibVersion
SMTLib2 :: SMTLibVersion

-- | Solvers that SBV is aware of
data Solver
Z3 :: Solver
Yices :: Solver
Boolector :: Solver
CVC4 :: Solver
MathSAT :: Solver
ABC :: Solver

-- | An SMT solver
data SMTSolver
SMTSolver :: Solver -> String -> (SMTConfig -> [String]) -> SMTEngine -> SolverCapabilities -> SMTSolver

-- | The solver in use
[name] :: SMTSolver -> Solver

-- | The path to its executable
[executable] :: SMTSolver -> String

-- | Options to provide to the solver
[options] :: SMTSolver -> SMTConfig -> [String]

-- | The solver engine, responsible for interpreting solver output
[engine] :: SMTSolver -> SMTEngine

-- | Various capabilities of the solver
[capabilities] :: SMTSolver -> SolverCapabilities

-- | Default configuration for the Boolector SMT solver
boolector :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the CVC4 SMT Solver.
cvc4 :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the Yices SMT Solver.
yices :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the Z3 SMT solver
z3 :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the MathSAT SMT solver
mathSAT :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the ABC synthesis and verification tool.
abc :: SMTConfig

-- | The default configs corresponding to supported SMT solvers
defaultSolverConfig :: Solver -> SMTConfig

-- | The default solver used by SBV. This is currently set to z3.
defaultSMTCfg :: SMTConfig

-- | Check whether the given solver is installed and is ready to go. This
--   call does a simple call to the solver to ensure all is well.
sbvCheckSolverInstallation :: SMTConfig -> IO Bool

-- | Return the known available solver configs, installed on your machine.
sbvAvailableSolvers :: IO [SMTConfig]

-- | Set the logic.
setLogic :: SolverContext m => Logic -> m ()

-- | SMT-Lib logics. If left unspecified SBV will pick the logic based on
--   what it determines is needed. However, the user can override this
--   choice using a call to <a>setLogic</a> This is especially handy if one
--   is experimenting with custom logics that might be supported on new
--   solvers. See <a>http://smtlib.cs.uiowa.edu/logics.shtml</a> for the
--   official list.
data Logic

-- | Formulas over the theory of linear integer arithmetic and arrays
--   extended with free sort and function symbols but restricted to arrays
--   with integer indices and values.
AUFLIA :: Logic

-- | Linear formulas with free sort and function symbols over one- and
--   two-dimentional arrays of integer index and real value.
AUFLIRA :: Logic

-- | Formulas with free function and predicate symbols over a theory of
--   arrays of arrays of integer index and real value.
AUFNIRA :: Logic

-- | Linear formulas in linear real arithmetic.
LRA :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of bitvectors and bitvector
--   arrays.
QF_ABV :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of bitvectors and bitvector
--   arrays extended with free sort and function symbols.
QF_AUFBV :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free linear formulas over the theory of integer arrays
--   extended with free sort and function symbols.
QF_AUFLIA :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of arrays with
--   extensionality.
QF_AX :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of fixed-size bitvectors.
QF_BV :: Logic

-- | Difference Logic over the integers. Boolean combinations of
--   inequations of the form x - y &lt; b where x and y are integer
--   variables and b is an integer constant.
QF_IDL :: Logic

-- | Unquantified linear integer arithmetic. In essence, Boolean
--   combinations of inequations between linear polynomials over integer
--   variables.
QF_LIA :: Logic

-- | Unquantified linear real arithmetic. In essence, Boolean combinations
--   of inequations between linear polynomials over real variables.
QF_LRA :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free integer arithmetic.
QF_NIA :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free real arithmetic.
QF_NRA :: Logic

-- | Difference Logic over the reals. In essence, Boolean combinations of
--   inequations of the form x - y &lt; b where x and y are real variables
--   and b is a rational constant.
QF_RDL :: Logic

-- | Unquantified formulas built over a signature of uninterpreted (i.e.,
--   free) sort and function symbols.
QF_UF :: Logic

-- | Unquantified formulas over bitvectors with uninterpreted sort function
--   and symbols.
QF_UFBV :: Logic

-- | Difference Logic over the integers (in essence) but with uninterpreted
--   sort and function symbols.
QF_UFIDL :: Logic

-- | Unquantified linear integer arithmetic with uninterpreted sort and
--   function symbols.
QF_UFLIA :: Logic

-- | Unquantified linear real arithmetic with uninterpreted sort and
--   function symbols.
QF_UFLRA :: Logic

-- | Unquantified non-linear real arithmetic with uninterpreted sort and
--   function symbols.
QF_UFNRA :: Logic

-- | Unquantified non-linear real integer arithmetic with uninterpreted
--   sort and function symbols.
QF_UFNIRA :: Logic

-- | Linear real arithmetic with uninterpreted sort and function symbols.
UFLRA :: Logic

-- | Non-linear integer arithmetic with uninterpreted sort and function
--   symbols.
UFNIA :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of floating point numbers,
--   arrays, and bit-vectors.
QF_FPBV :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of floating point numbers.
QF_FP :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free finite domains.
QF_FD :: Logic

-- | Quantifier-free formulas over the theory of strings.
QF_S :: Logic

-- | The catch-all value.
Logic_ALL :: Logic

-- | Use this value when you want SBV to simply not set the logic.
Logic_NONE :: Logic

-- | In case you need a really custom string!
CustomLogic :: String -> Logic

-- | Set an option.
setOption :: SolverContext m => SMTOption -> m ()

-- | Set info. Example: <tt>setInfo ":status" ["unsat"]</tt>.
setInfo :: SolverContext m => String -> [String] -> m ()

-- | Set a solver time-out value, in milli-seconds. This function
--   essentially translates to the SMTLib call <tt>(set-info :timeout
--   val)</tt>, and your backend solver may or may not support it! The
--   amount given is in milliseconds. Also see the function <a>timeOut</a>
--   for finer level control of time-outs, directly from SBV.
setTimeOut :: SolverContext m => Integer -> m ()

-- | An exception thrown from SBV. If the solver ever responds with a
--   non-success value for a command, SBV will throw an
--   <a>SBVException</a>, it so the user can process it as required. The
--   provided <a>Show</a> instance will render the failure nicely. Note
--   that if you ever catch this exception, the solver is no longer alive:
--   You should either -- throw the exception up, or do other proper
--   clean-up before continuing.
data SBVException
SBVException :: String -> Maybe String -> Maybe String -> Maybe String -> Maybe String -> Maybe String -> Maybe ExitCode -> SMTConfig -> Maybe [String] -> Maybe [String] -> SBVException
[sbvExceptionDescription] :: SBVException -> String
[sbvExceptionSent] :: SBVException -> Maybe String
[sbvExceptionExpected] :: SBVException -> Maybe String
[sbvExceptionReceived] :: SBVException -> Maybe String
[sbvExceptionStdOut] :: SBVException -> Maybe String
[sbvExceptionStdErr] :: SBVException -> Maybe String
[sbvExceptionExitCode] :: SBVException -> Maybe ExitCode
[sbvExceptionConfig] :: SBVException -> SMTConfig
[sbvExceptionReason] :: SBVException -> Maybe [String]
[sbvExceptionHint] :: SBVException -> Maybe [String]

-- | The <a>Symbolic</a> value. The parameter <tt>a</tt> is phantom, but is
--   extremely important in keeping the user interface strongly typed.
data SBV a

-- | A class for capturing values that have a sign and a size (finite or
--   infinite) minimal complete definition: kindOf, unless you can take
--   advantage of the default signature: This class can be automatically
--   derived for data-types that have a <a>Data</a> instance; this is
--   useful for creating uninterpreted sorts. So, in reality, end users
--   should almost never need to define any methods.
class HasKind a
kindOf :: HasKind a => a -> Kind
hasSign :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
intSizeOf :: HasKind a => a -> Int
isBoolean :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isBounded :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isReal :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isFloat :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isDouble :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isInteger :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isUninterpreted :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isChar :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isString :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isList :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
showType :: HasKind a => a -> String
kindOf :: (HasKind a, Read a, Data a) => a -> Kind

-- | Kind of symbolic value
data Kind
KBool :: Kind
KBounded :: !Bool -> !Int -> Kind
KUnbounded :: Kind
KReal :: Kind
KUserSort :: String -> Either String [String] -> Kind
KFloat :: Kind
KDouble :: Kind
KChar :: Kind
KString :: Kind
KList :: Kind -> Kind

-- | A <a>SymWord</a> is a potential symbolic bitvector that can be created
--   instances of to be fed to a symbolic program. Note that these methods
--   are typically not needed in casual uses with <a>prove</a>, <a>sat</a>,
--   <a>allSat</a> etc, as default instances automatically provide the
--   necessary bits.
class (HasKind a, Ord a, Typeable a) => SymWord a

-- | Create a user named input (universal)
forall :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create an automatically named input
forall_ :: SymWord a => Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Get a bunch of new words
mkForallVars :: SymWord a => Int -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Create an existential variable
exists :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create an automatically named existential variable
exists_ :: SymWord a => Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create a bunch of existentials
mkExistVars :: SymWord a => Int -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Create a free variable, universal in a proof, existential in sat
free :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create an unnamed free variable, universal in proof, existential in
--   sat
free_ :: SymWord a => Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Create a bunch of free vars
mkFreeVars :: SymWord a => Int -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Similar to free; Just a more convenient name
symbolic :: SymWord a => String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Similar to mkFreeVars; but automatically gives names based on the
--   strings
symbolics :: SymWord a => [String] -> Symbolic [SBV a]

-- | Turn a literal constant to symbolic
literal :: SymWord a => a -> SBV a

-- | Extract a literal, if the value is concrete
unliteral :: SymWord a => SBV a -> Maybe a

-- | Extract a literal, from a CW representation
fromCW :: SymWord a => CW -> a

-- | Is the symbolic word concrete?
isConcrete :: SymWord a => SBV a -> Bool

-- | Is the symbolic word really symbolic?
isSymbolic :: SymWord a => SBV a -> Bool

-- | Does it concretely satisfy the given predicate?
isConcretely :: SymWord a => SBV a -> (a -> Bool) -> Bool

-- | One stop allocator
mkSymWord :: SymWord a => Maybe Quantifier -> Maybe String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | Turn a literal constant to symbolic
literal :: (SymWord a, Show a) => a -> SBV a

-- | Extract a literal, from a CW representation
fromCW :: (SymWord a, Read a) => CW -> a

-- | One stop allocator
mkSymWord :: (SymWord a, Read a, Data a) => Maybe Quantifier -> Maybe String -> Symbolic (SBV a)

-- | A Symbolic computation. Represented by a reader monad carrying the
--   state of the computation, layered on top of IO for creating unique
--   references to hold onto intermediate results.
data Symbolic a

-- | label: Label the result of an expression. This is essentially a no-op,
--   but useful as it generates a comment in the generated C/SMT-Lib code.
--   Note that if the argument is a constant, then the label is dropped
--   completely, per the usual constant folding strategy. Compare this to
--   <a>observe</a> which is good for printing counter-examples.
label :: SymWord a => String -> SBV a -> SBV a

-- | Mark an interim result as an output. Useful when constructing Symbolic
--   programs that return multiple values, or when the result is
--   programmatically computed.
output :: Outputtable a => a -> Symbolic a

-- | Run an arbitrary symbolic computation, equivalent to
--   <tt><a>runSMTWith</a> <a>defaultSMTCfg</a></tt>
runSMT :: Symbolic a -> IO a

-- | Runs an arbitrary symbolic computation, exposed to the user in SAT
--   mode
runSMTWith :: SMTConfig -> Symbolic a -> IO a
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality ((Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b) -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality ((Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c) -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality ((Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d) -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV e -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality ((Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV e) -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord f, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV e -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV f -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord f, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality ((Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV e, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV f) -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord f, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord g, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV e -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV f -> Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV g -> z)
instance (Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord e, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord f, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord g, Data.SBV.Core.Model.EqSymbolic z) => Data.SBV.Equality ((Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV a, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV b, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV c, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV d, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV e, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV f, Data.SBV.Core.Data.SBV g) -> z)
instance Data.SBV.Provers.Prover.Provable Data.SBV.Provers.Prover.Goal


-- | Single variable valid range detection.
module Data.SBV.Tools.Range

-- | A boundary value
data Boundary a

-- | Unbounded
Unbounded :: Boundary a

-- | Exclusive of the point
Open :: a -> Boundary a

-- | Inclusive of the point
Closed :: a -> Boundary a

-- | A range is a pair of boundaries: Lower and upper bounds
data Range a
Range :: Boundary a -> Boundary a -> Range a

-- | Given a single predicate over a single variable, find the contiguous
--   ranges over which the predicate is satisfied. SBV will make one call
--   to the optimizer, and then as many calls to the solver as there are
--   disjoint ranges that the predicate is satisfied over. (Linear in the
--   number of ranges.) Note that the number of ranges is large, this can
--   take a long time! Some examples:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(_ :: SInteger) -&gt; false)
--   []
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(_ :: SInteger) -&gt; true)
--   [(-oo,oo)]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SInteger) -&gt; bAnd [x .&lt;= 120, x .&gt;= -12, x ./= 3])
--   [[-12,3),(3,120]]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SInteger) -&gt; bAnd [x .&lt;= 75, x .&gt;= 5, x ./= 6, x ./= 67])
--   [[5,6),(6,67),(67,75]]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SInteger) -&gt; bAnd [x .&lt;= 75, x ./= 3, x ./= 67])
--   [(-oo,3),(3,67),(67,75]]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SReal) -&gt; bAnd [x .&gt; 3.2, x .&lt;  12.7])
--   [(3.2,12.7)]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SReal) -&gt; bAnd [x .&gt; 3.2, x .&lt;= 12.7])
--   [(3.2,12.7]]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SReal) -&gt; bAnd [x .&lt;= 12.7, x ./= 8])
--   [(-oo,8.0),(8.0,12.7]]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SReal) -&gt; bAnd [x .&gt;= 12.7, x ./= 15])
--   [[12.7,15.0),(15.0,oo)]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges (\(x :: SInt8) -&gt; bAnd [x .&lt;= 7, x ./= 6])
--   [[-128,6),(6,7]]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges $ \x -&gt; x .&gt; (0::SReal)
--   [(0.0,oo)]
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ranges $ \x -&gt; x .&lt; (0::SReal)
--   [(-oo,0.0)]
--   </pre>
ranges :: forall a. (Num a, SymWord a, SMTValue a, SatModel a, Metric (SBV a)) => (SBV a -> SBool) -> IO [Range a]

-- | Compute ranges, using the given solver configuration.
rangesWith :: forall a. (Num a, SymWord a, SMTValue a, SatModel a, Metric (SBV a)) => SMTConfig -> (SBV a -> SBool) -> IO [Range a]
instance GHC.Show.Show a => GHC.Show.Show (Data.SBV.Tools.Range.Range a)


-- | Bounded fixed-point unrolling.
module Data.SBV.Tools.BoundedFix

-- | Bounded fixed-point operation. The call <tt>bfix bnd nm f</tt> unrolls
--   the recursion in <tt>f</tt> at most <tt>bnd</tt> times, and
--   uninterprets the function (with the name <tt>nm</tt>) after the bound
--   is reached.
--   
--   This combinator is handy for dealing with recursive definitions that
--   are not symbolically terminating and when the property we are
--   interested in does not require an infinite unrolling, or when we are
--   happy with a bounded proof. In particular, this operator can be used
--   as a basis of software-bounded model checking algorithms built on top
--   of SBV. The bound can be successively refined in a CEGAR like loop as
--   necessary, by analyzing the counter-examples and rejecting them if
--   they are false-negatives.
--   
--   For instance, we can define the factorial function using the bounded
--   fixed-point operator like this:
--   
--   <pre>
--   bfac :: SInteger -&gt; SInteger
--   bfac = bfix 10 "fac" fact
--     where fact f n = ite (n .== 0) 1 (n * f (n-1))
--   </pre>
--   
--   This definition unrolls the recursion in factorial at most 10 times
--   before uninterpreting the result. We can now prove:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \n -&gt; n .&gt;= 1 &amp;&amp;&amp; n .&lt;= 9 ==&gt; bfac n .== n * bfac (n-1)
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   And we would get a bogus counter-example if the proof of our property
--   needs a larger bound:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \n -&gt; n .== 10 ==&gt; bfac n .== 3628800
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     s0 = 10 :: Integer
--   </pre>
--   
--   By design, if a function defined via <a>bfix</a> is given a concrete
--   argument, it will unroll the recursion as much as necessary to
--   complete the call (which can of course diverge). The bound only
--   applies if the given argument is symbolic. This fact can be used to
--   observe concrete values to see where the bounded-model-checking
--   approach fails:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \n -&gt; n .== 10 ==&gt; observe "bfac_n" (bfac n) .== observe "bfac_10" (bfac 10)
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     s0      =      10 :: Integer
--     bfac_n  = 7257600 :: Integer
--     bfac_10 = 3628800 :: Integer
--   </pre>
--   
--   Here, we see that the SMT solver must have decided to assign the value
--   <tt>2</tt> in the final call just as it was reaching the base case,
--   and thus got the final result incorrect. (Note that <tt>7257600 = 2 *
--   3628800</tt>.) A wrapper algorithm can then assert the actual value of
--   <tt>bfac 10</tt> here as an extra constraint and can search for
--   "deeper bugs."
bfix :: (SymWord a, Uninterpreted (SBV a -> r)) => Int -> String -> ((SBV a -> r) -> SBV a -> r) -> SBV a -> r


-- | A collection of bounded list utilities, useful when working with
--   symbolic lists. These functions all take a concrete bound, and operate
--   on the prefix of a symbolic list that is at most that long. Due to
--   limitations on writing recursive functions over lists (the classic
--   symbolic termination problem), we cannot write arbitrary recursive
--   programs on symbolic lists. But most of the time all we need is a
--   bounded prefix of this list, at which point these functions come in
--   handy.
module Data.SBV.List.Bounded

-- | Bounded fold from the right.
bfoldr :: (SymWord a, SymWord b) => Int -> (SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV b) -> SBV b -> SList a -> SBV b

-- | Bounded monadic fold from the right.
bfoldrM :: forall a b m. (SymWord a, SymWord b, Monad m, Mergeable (m (SBV b))) => Int -> (SBV a -> SBV b -> m (SBV b)) -> SBV b -> SList a -> m (SBV b)

-- | Bounded fold from the left.
bfoldl :: (SymWord a, SymWord b) => Int -> (SBV b -> SBV a -> SBV b) -> SBV b -> SList a -> SBV b

-- | Bounded monadic fold from the left.
bfoldlM :: forall a b m. (SymWord a, SymWord b, Monad m, Mergeable (m (SBV b))) => Int -> (SBV b -> SBV a -> m (SBV b)) -> SBV b -> SList a -> m (SBV b)

-- | Bounded map.
bmap :: (SymWord a, SymWord b) => Int -> (SBV a -> SBV b) -> SList a -> SList b

-- | Bounded monadic map.
bmapM :: (SymWord a, SymWord b, Monad m, Mergeable (m (SBV [b]))) => Int -> (SBV a -> m (SBV b)) -> SList a -> m (SList b)

-- | Bounded filter.
bfilter :: SymWord a => Int -> (SBV a -> SBool) -> SList a -> SList a

-- | Bounded zipWith
bzipWith :: (SymWord a, SymWord b, SymWord c) => Int -> (SBV a -> SBV b -> SBV c) -> SList a -> SList b -> SList c

-- | Bounded element check
belem :: SymWord a => Int -> SBV a -> SList a -> SBool

-- | Bounded sum.
bsum :: (SymWord a, Num a) => Int -> SList a -> SBV a

-- | Bounded product.
bprod :: (SymWord a, Num a) => Int -> SList a -> SBV a

-- | Bounded logical and
band :: Int -> SList Bool -> SBool

-- | Bounded logical or
bor :: Int -> SList Bool -> SBool

-- | Bounded any
bany :: SymWord a => Int -> (SBV a -> SBool) -> SList a -> SBool

-- | Bounded all
ball :: SymWord a => Int -> (SBV a -> SBool) -> SList a -> SBool

-- | Bounded maximum. Undefined if list is empty.
bmaximum :: SymWord a => Int -> SList a -> SBV a

-- | Bounded minimum. Undefined if list is empty.
bminimum :: SymWord a => Int -> SList a -> SBV a

-- | Bounded reverse
breverse :: SymWord a => Int -> SList a -> SList a

-- | Bounded insertion sort
bsort :: SymWord a => Int -> SList a -> SList a


-- | Dynamically typed low-level API to the SBV library, for users who want
--   to generate symbolic values at run-time. Note that with this API it is
--   possible to create terms that are not type correct; use at your own
--   risk!
module Data.SBV.Dynamic

-- | The <a>Symbolic</a> value. Either a constant (<tt>Left</tt>) or a
--   symbolic value (<tt>Right Cached</tt>). Note that caching is essential
--   for making sure sharing is preserved.
data SVal

-- | A class for capturing values that have a sign and a size (finite or
--   infinite) minimal complete definition: kindOf, unless you can take
--   advantage of the default signature: This class can be automatically
--   derived for data-types that have a <a>Data</a> instance; this is
--   useful for creating uninterpreted sorts. So, in reality, end users
--   should almost never need to define any methods.
class HasKind a
kindOf :: HasKind a => a -> Kind
hasSign :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
intSizeOf :: HasKind a => a -> Int
isBoolean :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isBounded :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isReal :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isFloat :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isDouble :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isInteger :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isUninterpreted :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isChar :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isString :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
isList :: HasKind a => a -> Bool
showType :: HasKind a => a -> String
kindOf :: (HasKind a, Read a, Data a) => a -> Kind

-- | Kind of symbolic value
data Kind
KBool :: Kind
KBounded :: !Bool -> !Int -> Kind
KUnbounded :: Kind
KReal :: Kind
KUserSort :: String -> Either String [String] -> Kind
KFloat :: Kind
KDouble :: Kind
KChar :: Kind
KString :: Kind
KList :: Kind -> Kind

-- | <a>CW</a> represents a concrete word of a fixed size: For signed
--   words, the most significant digit is considered to be the sign.
data CW
CW :: !Kind -> !CWVal -> CW
[_cwKind] :: CW -> !Kind
[cwVal] :: CW -> !CWVal

-- | A constant value
data CWVal

-- | algebraic real
CWAlgReal :: !AlgReal -> CWVal

-- | bit-vector/unbounded integer
CWInteger :: !Integer -> CWVal

-- | float
CWFloat :: !Float -> CWVal

-- | double
CWDouble :: !Double -> CWVal

-- | character
CWChar :: !Char -> CWVal

-- | string
CWString :: !String -> CWVal

-- | list
CWList :: ![CWVal] -> CWVal

-- | value of an uninterpreted/user kind. The Maybe Int shows index
--   position for enumerations
CWUserSort :: !(Maybe Int, String) -> CWVal

-- | Convert a CW to a Haskell boolean (NB. Assumes input is well-kinded)
cwToBool :: CW -> Bool

-- | Arrays in terms of SMT-Lib arrays
data SArr

-- | Read the array element at <tt>a</tt>
readSArr :: SArr -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Update the element at <tt>a</tt> to be <tt>b</tt>
writeSArr :: SArr -> SVal -> SVal -> SArr

-- | Merge two given arrays on the symbolic condition Intuitively:
--   <tt>mergeArrays cond a b = if cond then a else b</tt>. Merging pushes
--   the if-then-else choice down on to elements
mergeSArr :: SVal -> SArr -> SArr -> SArr

-- | Create a named new array
newSArr :: State -> (Kind, Kind) -> (Int -> String) -> Maybe SVal -> IO SArr

-- | Compare two arrays for equality
eqSArr :: SArr -> SArr -> SVal

-- | Arrays managed internally
data SFunArr

-- | Read the array element at <tt>a</tt>. For efficiency purposes, we
--   create a memo-table as we go along, as otherwise we suffer significant
--   performance penalties. See:
--   <a>http://github.com/LeventErkok/sbv/issues/402</a> and
--   <a>http://github.com/LeventErkok/sbv/issues/396</a>.
readSFunArr :: SFunArr -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Update the element at <tt>address</tt> to be <tt>b</tt>
writeSFunArr :: SFunArr -> SVal -> SVal -> SFunArr

-- | Merge two given arrays on the symbolic condition Intuitively:
--   <tt>mergeArrays cond a b = if cond then a else b</tt>. Merging pushes
--   the if-then-else choice down on to elements
mergeSFunArr :: SVal -> SFunArr -> SFunArr -> SFunArr

-- | Create a named new array
newSFunArr :: State -> (Kind, Kind) -> (Int -> String) -> Maybe SVal -> IO SFunArr

-- | A Symbolic computation. Represented by a reader monad carrying the
--   state of the computation, layered on top of IO for creating unique
--   references to hold onto intermediate results.
data Symbolic a

-- | Quantifiers: forall or exists. Note that we allow arbitrary nestings.
data Quantifier
ALL :: Quantifier
EX :: Quantifier

-- | Create a symbolic value, based on the quantifier we have. If an
--   explicit quantifier is given, we just use that. If not, then we pick
--   the quantifier appropriately based on the run-mode. <tt>randomCW</tt>
--   is used for generating random values for this variable when used for
--   <tt>quickCheck</tt> or <a>genTest</a> purposes.
svMkSymVar :: Maybe Quantifier -> Kind -> Maybe String -> State -> IO SVal

-- | Create an N-bit symbolic unsigned named variable
sWordN :: Int -> String -> Symbolic SVal

-- | Create an N-bit symbolic unsigned unnamed variable
sWordN_ :: Int -> Symbolic SVal

-- | Create an N-bit symbolic signed named variable
sIntN :: Int -> String -> Symbolic SVal

-- | Create an N-bit symbolic signed unnamed variable
sIntN_ :: Int -> Symbolic SVal

-- | Boolean True.
svTrue :: SVal

-- | Boolean False.
svFalse :: SVal

-- | Convert from a Boolean.
svBool :: Bool -> SVal

-- | Extract a bool, by properly interpreting the integer stored.
svAsBool :: SVal -> Maybe Bool

-- | Convert from an Integer.
svInteger :: Kind -> Integer -> SVal

-- | Extract an integer from a concrete value.
svAsInteger :: SVal -> Maybe Integer

-- | Convert from a Float
svFloat :: Float -> SVal

-- | Convert from a Float
svDouble :: Double -> SVal

-- | Convert from a Rational
svReal :: Rational -> SVal

-- | Grab the numerator of an SReal, if available
svNumerator :: SVal -> Maybe Integer

-- | Grab the denominator of an SReal, if available
svDenominator :: SVal -> Maybe Integer

-- | Equality.
svEqual :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Inequality.
svNotEqual :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Constructing [x, y, .. z] and [x .. y]. Only works when all arguments
--   are concrete and integral and the result is guaranteed finite Note
--   that the it isn't "obviously" clear why the following works; after all
--   we're doing the construction over Integer's and mapping it back to
--   other types such as SIntN/SWordN. The reason is that the values we
--   receive are guaranteed to be in their domains; and thus the lifting to
--   Integers preserves the bounds; and then going back is just fine. So,
--   things like <tt>[1, 5 .. 200] :: [SInt8]</tt> work just fine (end
--   evaluate to empty list), since we see <tt>[1, 5 .. -56]</tt> in the
--   <tt>Integer</tt> domain. Also note the explicit check for <tt>s /=
--   f</tt> below to make sure we don't stutter and produce an infinite
--   list.
svEnumFromThenTo :: SVal -> Maybe SVal -> SVal -> Maybe [SVal]

-- | Less than.
svLessThan :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Greater than.
svGreaterThan :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Less than or equal to.
svLessEq :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Greater than or equal to.
svGreaterEq :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Addition.
svPlus :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Multiplication.
svTimes :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Subtraction.
svMinus :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Unary minus.
svUNeg :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Absolute value.
svAbs :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Division.
svDivide :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Quotient: Overloaded operation whose meaning depends on the kind at
--   which it is used: For unbounded integers, it corresponds to the
--   SMT-Lib "div" operator (<a>Euclidean</a> division, which always has a
--   non-negative remainder). For unsigned bitvectors, it is "bvudiv"; and
--   for signed bitvectors it is "bvsdiv", which rounds toward zero.
--   Division by 0 is defined s.t. <tt>x/0 = 0</tt>, which holds even when
--   <tt>x</tt> itself is <tt>0</tt>.
svQuot :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Remainder: Overloaded operation whose meaning depends on the kind at
--   which it is used: For unbounded integers, it corresponds to the
--   SMT-Lib "mod" operator (always non-negative). For unsigned bitvectors,
--   it is "bvurem"; and for signed bitvectors it is "bvsrem", which rounds
--   toward zero (sign of remainder matches that of <tt>x</tt>). Division
--   by 0 is defined s.t. <tt>x/0 = 0</tt>, which holds even when
--   <tt>x</tt> itself is <tt>0</tt>.
svRem :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Combination of quot and rem
svQuotRem :: SVal -> SVal -> (SVal, SVal)

-- | Exponentiation.
svExp :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Add a constant value:
svAddConstant :: Integral a => SVal -> a -> SVal

-- | Increment:
svIncrement :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Decrement:
svDecrement :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Bitwise and.
svAnd :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Bitwise or.
svOr :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Bitwise xor.
svXOr :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Bitwise complement.
svNot :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Shift left by a constant amount. Translates to the "bvshl" operation
--   in SMT-Lib.
svShl :: SVal -> Int -> SVal

-- | Shift right by a constant amount. Translates to either "bvlshr"
--   (logical shift right) or "bvashr" (arithmetic shift right) in SMT-Lib,
--   depending on whether <tt>x</tt> is a signed bitvector.
svShr :: SVal -> Int -> SVal

-- | Rotate-left, by a constant
svRol :: SVal -> Int -> SVal

-- | Rotate-right, by a constant
svRor :: SVal -> Int -> SVal

-- | Extract bit-sequences.
svExtract :: Int -> Int -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Join two words, by concataneting
svJoin :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Convert a symbolic bitvector from unsigned to signed.
svSign :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Convert a symbolic bitvector from signed to unsigned.
svUnsign :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Convert a symbolic bitvector from one integral kind to another.
svFromIntegral :: Kind -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Total indexing operation. <tt>svSelect xs default index</tt> is
--   intuitively the same as <tt>xs !! index</tt>, except it evaluates to
--   <tt>default</tt> if <tt>index</tt> overflows. Translates to SMT-Lib
--   tables.
svSelect :: [SVal] -> SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Convert an SVal from kind Bool to an unsigned bitvector of size 1.
svToWord1 :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Convert an SVal from a bitvector of size 1 (signed or unsigned) to
--   kind Bool.
svFromWord1 :: SVal -> SVal

-- | Test the value of a bit. Note that we do an extract here as opposed to
--   masking and checking against zero, as we found extraction to be much
--   faster with large bit-vectors.
svTestBit :: SVal -> Int -> SVal

-- | Set a given bit at index
svSetBit :: SVal -> Int -> SVal

-- | Generalization of <a>svShl</a>, where the shift-amount is symbolic.
svShiftLeft :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Generalization of <a>svShr</a>, where the shift-amount is symbolic.
--   
--   NB. If the shiftee is signed, then this is an arithmetic shift;
--   otherwise it's logical.
svShiftRight :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Generalization of <a>svRol</a>, where the rotation amount is symbolic.
--   If the first argument is not bounded, then the this is the same as
--   shift.
svRotateLeft :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Generalization of <a>svRor</a>, where the rotation amount is symbolic.
--   If the first argument is not bounded, then the this is the same as
--   shift.
svRotateRight :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Un-bit-blast from little-endian representation to a word of the right
--   size. The input is assumed to be unsigned.
svWordFromBE :: [SVal] -> SVal

-- | Un-bit-blast from big-endian representation to a word of the right
--   size. The input is assumed to be unsigned.
svWordFromLE :: [SVal] -> SVal

-- | Bit-blast: Little-endian. Assumes the input is a bit-vector.
svBlastLE :: SVal -> [SVal]

-- | Bit-blast: Big-endian. Assumes the input is a bit-vector.
svBlastBE :: SVal -> [SVal]

-- | If-then-else. This one will force branches.
svIte :: SVal -> SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Lazy If-then-else. This one will delay forcing the branches unless
--   it's really necessary.
svLazyIte :: Kind -> SVal -> SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Merge two symbolic values, at kind <tt>k</tt>, possibly
--   <tt>force</tt>'ing the branches to make sure they do not evaluate to
--   the same result.
svSymbolicMerge :: Kind -> Bool -> SVal -> SVal -> SVal -> SVal

-- | Uninterpreted constants and functions. An uninterpreted constant is a
--   value that is indexed by its name. The only property the prover
--   assumes about these values are that they are equivalent to themselves;
--   i.e., (for functions) they return the same results when applied to
--   same arguments. We support uninterpreted-functions as a general means
--   of black-box'ing operations that are <i>irrelevant</i> for the
--   purposes of the proof; i.e., when the proofs can be performed without
--   any knowledge about the function itself.
svUninterpreted :: Kind -> String -> Maybe [String] -> [SVal] -> SVal

-- | Proves the predicate using the given SMT-solver
proveWith :: SMTConfig -> Symbolic SVal -> IO ThmResult

-- | Find a satisfying assignment using the given SMT-solver
satWith :: SMTConfig -> Symbolic SVal -> IO SatResult

-- | Find all satisfying assignments using the given SMT-solver
allSatWith :: SMTConfig -> Symbolic SVal -> IO AllSatResult

-- | Check safety using the given SMT-solver
safeWith :: SMTConfig -> Symbolic SVal -> IO [SafeResult]

-- | Prove a property with multiple solvers, running them in separate
--   threads. The results will be returned in the order produced.
proveWithAll :: [SMTConfig] -> Symbolic SVal -> IO [(Solver, NominalDiffTime, ThmResult)]

-- | Prove a property with multiple solvers, running them in separate
--   threads. Only the result of the first one to finish will be returned,
--   remaining threads will be killed.
proveWithAny :: [SMTConfig] -> Symbolic SVal -> IO (Solver, NominalDiffTime, ThmResult)

-- | Find a satisfying assignment to a property with multiple solvers,
--   running them in separate threads. The results will be returned in the
--   order produced.
satWithAll :: [SMTConfig] -> Symbolic SVal -> IO [(Solver, NominalDiffTime, SatResult)]

-- | Find a satisfying assignment to a property with multiple solvers,
--   running them in separate threads. Only the result of the first one to
--   finish will be returned, remaining threads will be killed.
satWithAny :: [SMTConfig] -> Symbolic SVal -> IO (Solver, NominalDiffTime, SatResult)

-- | Dynamic variant of quick-check
svQuickCheck :: Symbolic SVal -> IO Bool

-- | A <a>prove</a> call results in a <a>ThmResult</a>
newtype ThmResult
ThmResult :: SMTResult -> ThmResult

-- | A <a>sat</a> call results in a <a>SatResult</a> The reason for having
--   a separate <a>SatResult</a> is to have a more meaningful <a>Show</a>
--   instance.
newtype SatResult
SatResult :: SMTResult -> SatResult

-- | An <a>allSat</a> call results in a <a>AllSatResult</a>. The first
--   boolean says whether we hit the max-model limit as we searched. The
--   second boolean says whether there were prefix-existentials.
newtype AllSatResult
AllSatResult :: (Bool, Bool, [SMTResult]) -> AllSatResult

-- | A <a>safe</a> call results in a <a>SafeResult</a>
newtype SafeResult
SafeResult :: (Maybe String, String, SMTResult) -> SafeResult

-- | An <a>optimize</a> call results in a <a>OptimizeResult</a>. In the
--   <a>ParetoResult</a> case, the boolean is <a>True</a> if we reached
--   pareto-query limit and so there might be more unqueried results
--   remaining. If <a>False</a>, it means that we have all the pareto
--   fronts returned. See the <a>Pareto</a> <a>OptimizeStyle</a> for
--   details.
data OptimizeResult
LexicographicResult :: SMTResult -> OptimizeResult
ParetoResult :: (Bool, [SMTResult]) -> OptimizeResult
IndependentResult :: [(String, SMTResult)] -> OptimizeResult

-- | The result of an SMT solver call. Each constructor is tagged with the
--   <a>SMTConfig</a> that created it so that further tools can inspect it
--   and build layers of results, if needed. For ordinary uses of the
--   library, this type should not be needed, instead use the accessor
--   functions on it. (Custom Show instances and model extractors.)
data SMTResult

-- | Unsatisfiable. If unsat-cores are enabled, they will be returned in
--   the second parameter.
Unsatisfiable :: SMTConfig -> Maybe [String] -> SMTResult

-- | Satisfiable with model
Satisfiable :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> SMTResult

-- | Prover returned a model, but in an extension field containing
--   Infinite/epsilon
SatExtField :: SMTConfig -> SMTModel -> SMTResult

-- | Prover returned unknown, with the given reason
Unknown :: SMTConfig -> SMTReasonUnknown -> SMTResult

-- | Prover errored out
ProofError :: SMTConfig -> [String] -> SMTResult

-- | Parse a signed/sized value from a sequence of CWs
genParse :: Integral a => Kind -> [CW] -> Maybe (a, [CW])

-- | Extract a model, the result is a tuple where the first argument (if
--   True) indicates whether the model was "probable". (i.e., if the solver
--   returned unknown.)
getModelAssignment :: SMTResult -> Either String (Bool, [CW])

-- | Extract a model dictionary. Extract a dictionary mapping the variables
--   to their respective values as returned by the SMT solver. Also see
--   <a>getModelDictionaries</a>.
getModelDictionary :: SMTResult -> Map String CW

-- | Solver configuration. See also <a>z3</a>, <a>yices</a>, <a>cvc4</a>,
--   <a>boolector</a>, <a>mathSAT</a>, etc. which are instantiations of
--   this type for those solvers, with reasonable defaults. In particular,
--   custom configuration can be created by varying those values. (Such as
--   <tt>z3{verbose=True}</tt>.)
--   
--   Most fields are self explanatory. The notion of precision for printing
--   algebraic reals stems from the fact that such values does not
--   necessarily have finite decimal representations, and hence we have to
--   stop printing at some depth. It is important to emphasize that such
--   values always have infinite precision internally. The issue is merely
--   with how we print such an infinite precision value on the screen. The
--   field <a>printRealPrec</a> controls the printing precision, by
--   specifying the number of digits after the decimal point. The default
--   value is 16, but it can be set to any positive integer.
--   
--   When printing, SBV will add the suffix <tt>...</tt> at the and of a
--   real-value, if the given bound is not sufficient to represent the
--   real-value exactly. Otherwise, the number will be written out in
--   standard decimal notation. Note that SBV will always print the whole
--   value if it is precise (i.e., if it fits in a finite number of
--   digits), regardless of the precision limit. The limit only applies if
--   the representation of the real value is not finite, i.e., if it is not
--   rational.
--   
--   The <a>printBase</a> field can be used to print numbers in base 2, 10,
--   or 16. If base 2 or 16 is used, then floating-point values will be
--   printed in their internal memory-layout format as well, which can come
--   in handy for bit-precise analysis.
data SMTConfig
SMTConfig :: Bool -> Timing -> Int -> Int -> String -> Maybe Int -> (String -> Bool) -> Maybe FilePath -> SMTLibVersion -> SMTSolver -> RoundingMode -> [SMTOption] -> Bool -> Maybe FilePath -> SMTConfig

-- | Debug mode
[verbose] :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Print timing information on how long different phases took
--   (construction, solving, etc.)
[timing] :: SMTConfig -> Timing

-- | Print integral literals in this base (2, 10, and 16 are supported.)
[printBase] :: SMTConfig -> Int

-- | Print algebraic real values with this precision. (SReal, default: 16)
[printRealPrec] :: SMTConfig -> Int

-- | Usually "(check-sat)". However, users might tweak it based on solver
--   characteristics.
[satCmd] :: SMTConfig -> String

-- | In an allSat call, return at most this many models. If nothing, return
--   all.
[allSatMaxModelCount] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe Int

-- | When constructing a model, ignore variables whose name satisfy this
--   predicate. (Default: (const False), i.e., don't ignore anything)
[isNonModelVar] :: SMTConfig -> String -> Bool

-- | If Just, the entire interaction will be recorded as a playable file
--   (for debugging purposes mostly)
[transcript] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe FilePath

-- | What version of SMT-lib we use for the tool
[smtLibVersion] :: SMTConfig -> SMTLibVersion

-- | The actual SMT solver.
[solver] :: SMTConfig -> SMTSolver

-- | Rounding mode to use for floating-point conversions
[roundingMode] :: SMTConfig -> RoundingMode

-- | Options to set as we start the solver
[solverSetOptions] :: SMTConfig -> [SMTOption]

-- | If true, we shall ignore the exit code upon exit. Otherwise we require
--   ExitSuccess.
[ignoreExitCode] :: SMTConfig -> Bool

-- | Redirect the verbose output to this file if given. If Nothing, stdout
--   is implied.
[redirectVerbose] :: SMTConfig -> Maybe FilePath

-- | Representation of SMTLib Program versions. As of June 2015, we're
--   dropping support for SMTLib1, and supporting SMTLib2 only. We keep
--   this data-type around in case SMTLib3 comes along and we want to
--   support 2 and 3 simultaneously.
data SMTLibVersion
SMTLib2 :: SMTLibVersion

-- | Solvers that SBV is aware of
data Solver
Z3 :: Solver
Yices :: Solver
Boolector :: Solver
CVC4 :: Solver
MathSAT :: Solver
ABC :: Solver

-- | An SMT solver
data SMTSolver
SMTSolver :: Solver -> String -> (SMTConfig -> [String]) -> SMTEngine -> SolverCapabilities -> SMTSolver

-- | The solver in use
[name] :: SMTSolver -> Solver

-- | The path to its executable
[executable] :: SMTSolver -> String

-- | Options to provide to the solver
[options] :: SMTSolver -> SMTConfig -> [String]

-- | The solver engine, responsible for interpreting solver output
[engine] :: SMTSolver -> SMTEngine

-- | Various capabilities of the solver
[capabilities] :: SMTSolver -> SolverCapabilities

-- | Default configuration for the Boolector SMT solver
boolector :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the CVC4 SMT Solver.
cvc4 :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the Yices SMT Solver.
yices :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the Z3 SMT solver
z3 :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the MathSAT SMT solver
mathSAT :: SMTConfig

-- | Default configuration for the ABC synthesis and verification tool.
abc :: SMTConfig

-- | The default configs corresponding to supported SMT solvers
defaultSolverConfig :: Solver -> SMTConfig

-- | The default solver used by SBV. This is currently set to z3.
defaultSMTCfg :: SMTConfig

-- | Check whether the given solver is installed and is ready to go. This
--   call does a simple call to the solver to ensure all is well.
sbvCheckSolverInstallation :: SMTConfig -> IO Bool

-- | Return the known available solver configs, installed on your machine.
sbvAvailableSolvers :: IO [SMTConfig]

-- | Mark an interim result as an output. Useful when constructing Symbolic
--   programs that return multiple values, or when the result is
--   programmatically computed.
outputSVal :: SVal -> Symbolic ()

-- | The code-generation monad. Allows for precise layout of input values
--   reference parameters (for returning composite values in languages such
--   as C), and return values.
data SBVCodeGen a

-- | Sets RTC (run-time-checks) for index-out-of-bounds, shift-with-large
--   value etc. on/off. Default: <a>False</a>.
cgPerformRTCs :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets driver program run time values, useful for generating programs
--   with fixed drivers for testing. Default: None, i.e., use random
--   values.
cgSetDriverValues :: [Integer] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Should we generate a driver program? Default: <a>True</a>. When a
--   library is generated, it will have a driver if any of the contituent
--   functions has a driver. (See <a>compileToCLib</a>.)
cgGenerateDriver :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Should we generate a Makefile? Default: <a>True</a>.
cgGenerateMakefile :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an atomic input in the generated code.
svCgInput :: Kind -> String -> SBVCodeGen SVal

-- | Creates an array input in the generated code.
svCgInputArr :: Kind -> Int -> String -> SBVCodeGen [SVal]

-- | Creates an atomic output in the generated code.
svCgOutput :: String -> SVal -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates an array output in the generated code.
svCgOutputArr :: String -> [SVal] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) value in the generated code.
svCgReturn :: SVal -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Creates a returned (unnamed) array value in the generated code.
svCgReturnArr :: [SVal] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given lines to the header file generated, useful for
--   generating programs with uninterpreted functions.
cgAddPrototype :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given lines to the program file generated, useful for
--   generating programs with uninterpreted functions.
cgAddDecl :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Adds the given words to the compiler options in the generated
--   Makefile, useful for linking extra stuff in.
cgAddLDFlags :: [String] -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Ignore assertions (those generated by <a>sAssert</a> calls) in the
--   generated C code
cgIgnoreSAssert :: Bool -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets number of bits to be used for representing the <a>SInteger</a>
--   type in the generated C code. The argument must be one of <tt>8</tt>,
--   <tt>16</tt>, <tt>32</tt>, or <tt>64</tt>. Note that this is
--   essentially unsafe as the semantics of unbounded Haskell integers
--   becomes reduced to the corresponding bit size, as typical in most C
--   implementations.
cgIntegerSize :: Int -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Sets the C type to be used for representing the <a>SReal</a> type in
--   the generated C code. The setting can be one of C's <tt>"float"</tt>,
--   <tt>"double"</tt>, or <tt>"long double"</tt>, types, depending on the
--   precision needed. Note that this is essentially unsafe as the
--   semantics of infinite precision SReal values becomes reduced to the
--   corresponding floating point type in C, and hence it is subject to
--   rounding errors.
cgSRealType :: CgSRealType -> SBVCodeGen ()

-- | Possible mappings for the <a>SReal</a> type when translated to C. Used
--   in conjunction with the function <a>cgSRealType</a>. Note that the
--   particular characteristics of the mapped types depend on the platform
--   and the compiler used for compiling the generated C program. See
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_data_types</a> for details.
data CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   float
--   </pre>
CgFloat :: CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   double
--   </pre>
CgDouble :: CgSRealType

-- | <pre>
--   long double
--   </pre>
CgLongDouble :: CgSRealType

-- | Given a symbolic computation, render it as an equivalent collection of
--   files that make up a C program:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>The first argument is the directory name under which the files
--   will be saved. To save files in the current directory pass
--   <tt><a>Just</a> "."</tt>. Use <a>Nothing</a> for printing to
--   stdout.</li>
--   <li>The second argument is the name of the C function to
--   generate.</li>
--   <li>The final argument is the function to be compiled.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   Compilation will also generate a <tt>Makefile</tt>, a header file, and
--   a driver (test) program, etc.
compileToC :: Maybe FilePath -> String -> SBVCodeGen () -> IO ()

-- | Create code to generate a library archive (.a) from given symbolic
--   functions. Useful when generating code from multiple functions that
--   work together as a library.
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>The first argument is the directory name under which the files
--   will be saved. To save files in the current directory pass
--   <tt><a>Just</a> "."</tt>. Use <a>Nothing</a> for printing to
--   stdout.</li>
--   <li>The second argument is the name of the archive to generate.</li>
--   <li>The third argument is the list of functions to include, in the
--   form of function-name/code pairs, similar to the second and third
--   arguments of <a>compileToC</a>, except in a list.</li>
--   </ul>
compileToCLib :: Maybe FilePath -> String -> [(String, SBVCodeGen ())] -> IO ()

-- | Create SMT-Lib benchmarks. The first argument is the basename of the
--   file, we will automatically add ".smt2" per SMT-Lib2 convention. The
--   <a>Bool</a> argument controls whether this is a SAT instance, i.e.,
--   translate the query directly, or a PROVE instance, i.e., translate the
--   negated query.
generateSMTBenchmark :: Bool -> Symbolic SVal -> IO String


-- | Checks the correctness of a few tricks from the large collection found
--   in: <a>http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.BitTricks

-- | Formalizes
--   <a>http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#IntegerMinOrMax</a>
fastMinCorrect :: SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SBool

-- | Formalizes
--   <a>http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#IntegerMinOrMax</a>
fastMaxCorrect :: SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SBool

-- | Formalizes
--   <a>http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#DetectOppositeSigns</a>
oppositeSignsCorrect :: SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SBool

-- | Formalizes
--   <a>http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#ConditionalSetOrClearBitsWithoutBranching</a>
conditionalSetClearCorrect :: SBool -> SWord32 -> SWord32 -> SBool

-- | Formalizes
--   <a>http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#DetermineIfPowerOf2</a>
powerOfTwoCorrect :: SWord32 -> SBool

-- | Collection of queries
queries :: IO ()


-- | The classic "binary-searches are broken" example:
--   <a>http://ai.googleblog.com/2006/06/extra-extra-read-all-about-it-nearly.html</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.BrokenSearch

-- | Model the mid-point computation of the binary search, which is broken
--   due to arithmetic overflow. Note how we use the overflow checking
--   variants of the arithmetic operators. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkArithOverflow midPointBroken
--   Documentation/SBV/Examples/BitPrecise/BrokenSearch.hs:33:28:+!: SInt32 addition overflows: Violated. Model:
--     low  = 2147483647 :: Int32
--     high = 2147483647 :: Int32
--   </pre>
--   
--   Indeed:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; (2147483647 + 2147483647) `div` (2::Int32)
--   -1
--   </pre>
--   
--   giving us a negative mid-point value!
midPointBroken :: SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SInt32

-- | The correct version of how to compute the mid-point. As expected, this
--   version doesn't have any underflow or overflow issues:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkArithOverflow midPointFixed
--   No violations detected.
--   </pre>
--   
--   As expected, the value is computed correctly too:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkCorrectMidValue midPointFixed
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
midPointFixed :: SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SInt32

-- | Show that the variant suggested by the blog post is good as well:
--   
--   <pre>
--   mid = ((unsigned int)low + (unsigned int)high) &gt;&gt; 1;
--   </pre>
--   
--   In this case the overflow is eliminated by doing the computation at a
--   wider range:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkArithOverflow midPointAlternative
--   No violations detected.
--   </pre>
--   
--   And the value computed is indeed correct:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkCorrectMidValue midPointAlternative
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
midPointAlternative :: SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SInt32

-- | A helper predicate to check safety under the conditions that
--   <tt>low</tt> is at least 0 and <tt>high</tt> is at least <tt>low</tt>.
checkArithOverflow :: (SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SInt32) -> IO ()

-- | Another helper to show that the result is actually the correct value,
--   if it was done over 64-bit integers, which is sufficiently large
--   enough.
checkCorrectMidValue :: (SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SInt32) -> IO ThmResult


-- | An encoding and correctness proof of Legato's multiplier in Haskell.
--   Bill Legato came up with an interesting way to multiply two 8-bit
--   numbers on Mostek, as described here:
--   <a>http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~moore/acl2/workshop-2004/contrib/legato/Weakest-Preconditions-Report.pdf</a>
--   
--   Here's Legato's algorithm, as coded in Mostek assembly:
--   
--   <pre>
--   step1 :       LDX #8         ; load X immediate with the integer 8 
--   step2 :       LDA #0         ; load A immediate with the integer 0 
--   step3 : LOOP  ROR F1         ; rotate F1 right circular through C 
--   step4 :       BCC ZCOEF      ; branch to ZCOEF if C = 0 
--   step5 :       CLC            ; set C to 0 
--   step6 :       ADC F2         ; set A to A+F2+C and C to the carry 
--   step7 : ZCOEF ROR A          ; rotate A right circular through C 
--   step8 :       ROR LOW        ; rotate LOW right circular through C 
--   step9 :       DEX            ; set X to X-1 
--   step10:       BNE LOOP       ; branch to LOOP if Z = 0 
--   </pre>
--   
--   This program came to be known as the Legato's challenge in the
--   community, where the challenge was to prove that it indeed does
--   perform multiplication. This file formalizes the Mostek architecture
--   in Haskell and proves that Legato's algorithm is indeed correct.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato

-- | We model only two registers of Mostek that is used in the above
--   algorithm, can add more.
data Register
RegX :: Register
RegA :: Register

-- | The carry flag (<a>FlagC</a>) and the zero flag (<a>FlagZ</a>)
data Flag
FlagC :: Flag
FlagZ :: Flag

-- | Mostek was an 8-bit machine.
type Value = SWord8

-- | Convenient synonym for symbolic machine bits.
type Bit = SBool

-- | Register bank
type Registers = Array Register Value

-- | Flag bank
type Flags = Array Flag Bit

-- | We have three memory locations, sufficient to model our problem
data Location

-- | multiplicand
F1 :: Location

-- | multiplier
F2 :: Location

-- | low byte of the result gets stored here
LO :: Location

-- | Memory is simply an array from locations to values
type Memory = Array Location Value

-- | Abstraction of the machine: The CPU consists of memory, registers, and
--   flags. Unlike traditional hardware, we assume the program is stored in
--   some other memory area that we need not model. (No self modifying
--   programs!)
--   
--   <a>Mostek</a> is equipped with an automatically derived
--   <a>Mergeable</a> instance because each field is <a>Mergeable</a>.
data Mostek
Mostek :: Memory -> Registers -> Flags -> Mostek
[memory] :: Mostek -> Memory
[registers] :: Mostek -> Registers
[flags] :: Mostek -> Flags

-- | Given a machine state, compute a value out of it
type Extract a = Mostek -> a

-- | Programs are essentially state transformers (on the machine state)
type Program = Mostek -> Mostek

-- | Get the value of a given register
getReg :: Register -> Extract Value

-- | Set the value of a given register
setReg :: Register -> Value -> Program

-- | Get the value of a flag
getFlag :: Flag -> Extract Bit

-- | Set the value of a flag
setFlag :: Flag -> Bit -> Program

-- | Read memory
peek :: Location -> Extract Value

-- | Write to memory
poke :: Location -> Value -> Program

-- | Checking overflow. In Legato's multipler the <tt>ADC</tt> instruction
--   needs to see if the expression x + y + c overflowed, as checked by
--   this function. Note that we verify the correctness of this check
--   separately below in <a>checkOverflowCorrect</a>.
checkOverflow :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SBool -> SBool

-- | Correctness theorem for our <a>checkOverflow</a> implementation.
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkOverflowCorrect
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
checkOverflowCorrect :: IO ThmResult

-- | An instruction is modeled as a <a>Program</a> transformer. We model
--   mostek programs in direct continuation passing style.
type Instruction = Program -> Program

-- | LDX: Set register <tt>X</tt> to value <tt>v</tt>
ldx :: Value -> Instruction

-- | LDA: Set register <tt>A</tt> to value <tt>v</tt>
lda :: Value -> Instruction

-- | CLC: Clear the carry flag
clc :: Instruction

-- | ROR, memory version: Rotate the value at memory location <tt>a</tt> to
--   the right by 1 bit, using the carry flag as a transfer position. That
--   is, the final bit of the memory location becomes the new carry and the
--   carry moves over to the first bit. This very instruction is one of the
--   reasons why Legato's multiplier is quite hard to understand and is
--   typically presented as a verification challenge.
rorM :: Location -> Instruction

-- | ROR, register version: Same as <a>rorM</a>, except through register
--   <tt>r</tt>.
rorR :: Register -> Instruction

-- | BCC: branch to label <tt>l</tt> if the carry flag is false
bcc :: Program -> Instruction

-- | ADC: Increment the value of register <tt>A</tt> by the value of memory
--   contents at location <tt>a</tt>, using the carry-bit as the carry-in
--   for the addition.
adc :: Location -> Instruction

-- | DEX: Decrement the value of register <tt>X</tt>
dex :: Instruction

-- | BNE: Branch if the zero-flag is false
bne :: Program -> Instruction

-- | The <a>end</a> combinator "stops" our program, providing the final
--   continuation that does nothing.
end :: Program

-- | Multiplies the contents of <tt>F1</tt> and <tt>F2</tt>, storing the
--   low byte of the result in <tt>LO</tt> and the high byte of it in
--   register <tt>A</tt>. The implementation is a direct transliteration of
--   Legato's algorithm given at the top, using our notation.
legato :: Program

-- | Given values for F1 and F2, <tt>runLegato</tt> takes an arbitrary
--   machine state <tt>m</tt> and returns the high and low bytes of the
--   multiplication.
runLegato :: Mostek -> (Value, Value)

-- | Helper synonym for capturing relevant bits of Mostek
type InitVals = (Value, Value, Value, Value, Value, Bit, Bit)

-- | Create an instance of the Mostek machine, initialized by the memory
--   and the relevant values of the registers and the flags
initMachine :: InitVals -> Mostek

-- | The correctness theorem. For all possible memory configurations, the
--   factors (<tt>x</tt> and <tt>y</tt> below), the location of the
--   low-byte result and the initial-values of registers and the flags,
--   this function will return True only if running Legato's algorithm does
--   indeed compute the product of <tt>x</tt> and <tt>y</tt> correctly.
legatoIsCorrect :: InitVals -> SBool

-- | The correctness theorem.
correctnessTheorem :: IO ThmResult

-- | Generate a C program that implements Legato's algorithm automatically.
legatoInC :: IO ()
instance Data.SBV.Core.Model.Mergeable Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Mostek
instance GHC.Generics.Generic Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Mostek
instance GHC.Enum.Bounded Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Location
instance GHC.Arr.Ix Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Location
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Location
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Location
instance GHC.Enum.Bounded Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Flag
instance GHC.Arr.Ix Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Flag
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Flag
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Flag
instance GHC.Enum.Bounded Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Register
instance GHC.Arr.Ix Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Register
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Register
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.Legato.Register


-- | Symbolic implementation of merge-sort and its correctness.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.MergeSort

-- | Element type of lists we'd like to sort. For simplicity, we'll just
--   use <a>SWord8</a> here, but we can pick any symbolic type.
type E = SWord8

-- | Merging two given sorted lists, preserving the order.
merge :: [E] -> [E] -> [E]

-- | Simple merge-sort implementation. We simply divide the input list in
--   two two halves so long as it has at least two elements, sort each half
--   on its own, and then merge.
mergeSort :: [E] -> [E]

-- | Check whether a given sequence is non-decreasing.
nonDecreasing :: [E] -> SBool

-- | Check whether two given sequences are permutations. We simply check
--   that each sequence is a subset of the other, when considered as a set.
--   The check is slightly complicated for the need to account for possibly
--   duplicated elements.
isPermutationOf :: [E] -> [E] -> SBool

-- | Asserting correctness of merge-sort for a list of the given size. Note
--   that we can only check correctness for fixed-size lists. Also, the
--   proof will get more and more complicated for the backend SMT solver as
--   the list size increases. A value around 5 or 6 should be fairly easy
--   to prove. For instance, we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; correctness 5
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
correctness :: Int -> IO ThmResult

-- | Generate C code for merge-sorting an array of size <tt>n</tt>. Again,
--   we're restricted to fixed size inputs. While the output is not how one
--   would code merge sort in C by hand, it's a faithful rendering of all
--   the operations merge-sort would do as described by its Haskell
--   counterpart.
codeGen :: Int -> IO ()


-- | An SBV solution to the bit-precise puzzle of shuffling the bits in a
--   64-bit word in a custom order. The idea is to take a 64-bit value:
--   
--   <pre>
--   1.......2.......3.......4.......5.......6.......7.......8.......
--   </pre>
--   
--   And turn it into another 64-bit value, that looks like this:
--   
--   <pre>
--   12345678........................................................
--   </pre>
--   
--   We do not care what happens to the bits that are represented by dots.
--   The problem is to do this with one mask and one multiplication.
--   
--   Apparently this operation has several applications, including in
--   programs that play chess of all things. We use SBV to find the
--   appropriate mask and the multiplier.
--   
--   Note that this is an instance of the program synthesis problem, where
--   we "fill in the blanks" given a certain skeleton that satisfy a
--   certain property, using quantified formulas.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.MultMask

-- | Find the multiplier and the mask as described. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; maskAndMult
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     mask = 0x8080808080808080 :: Word64
--     mult = 0x0002040810204081 :: Word64
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is, any 64 bit value masked by the first and multipled by the
--   second value above will have its bits at positions
--   <tt>[7,15,23,31,39,47,55,63]</tt> moved to positions
--   <tt>[56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63]</tt> respectively.
maskAndMult :: IO ()


-- | The PrefixSum algorithm over power-lists and proof of the
--   Ladner-Fischer implementation. See
--   <a>http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=197356</a> and
--   <a>http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~plaxton/c/337/05f/slides/ParallelRecursion-4.pdf</a>.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.PrefixSum

-- | A poor man's representation of powerlists and basic operations on
--   them: <a>http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=197356</a> We merely
--   represent power-lists by ordinary lists.
type PowerList a = [a]

-- | The tie operator, concatenation.
tiePL :: PowerList a -> PowerList a -> PowerList a

-- | The zip operator, zips the power-lists of the same size, returns a
--   powerlist of double the size.
zipPL :: PowerList a -> PowerList a -> PowerList a

-- | Inverse of zipping.
unzipPL :: PowerList a -> (PowerList a, PowerList a)

-- | Reference prefix sum (<tt>ps</tt>) is simply Haskell's <tt>scanl1</tt>
--   function.
ps :: (a, a -> a -> a) -> PowerList a -> PowerList a

-- | The Ladner-Fischer (<tt>lf</tt>) implementation of prefix-sum. See
--   <a>http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~plaxton/c/337/05f/slides/ParallelRecursion-4.pdf</a>
--   or pg. 16 of <a>http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=197356</a>
lf :: (a, a -> a -> a) -> PowerList a -> PowerList a

-- | Correctness theorem, for a powerlist of given size, an associative
--   operator, and its left-unit element.
flIsCorrect :: Int -> (forall a. (OrdSymbolic a, Num a, Bits a) => (a, a -> a -> a)) -> Symbolic SBool

-- | Proves Ladner-Fischer is equivalent to reference specification for
--   addition. <tt>0</tt> is the left-unit element, and we use a power-list
--   of size <tt>8</tt>. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; thm1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
thm1 :: IO ThmResult

-- | Proves Ladner-Fischer is equivalent to reference specification for the
--   function <tt>max</tt>. <tt>0</tt> is the left-unit element, and we use
--   a power-list of size <tt>16</tt>. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; thm2
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
thm2 :: IO ThmResult


-- | Simple code generation example.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.CodeGeneration.AddSub

-- | Simple function that returns add/sum of args
addSub :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> (SWord8, SWord8)

-- | Generate C code for addSub. Here's the output showing the generated C
--   code:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; genAddSub
--   == BEGIN: "Makefile" ================
--   # Makefile for addSub. Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit!
--   
--   # include any user-defined .mk file in the current directory.
--   -include *.mk
--   
--   CC?=gcc
--   CCFLAGS?=-Wall -O3 -DNDEBUG -fomit-frame-pointer
--   
--   all: addSub_driver
--   
--   addSub.o: addSub.c addSub.h
--   	${CC} ${CCFLAGS} -c $&lt; -o $@
--   
--   addSub_driver.o: addSub_driver.c
--   	${CC} ${CCFLAGS} -c $&lt; -o $@
--   
--   addSub_driver: addSub.o addSub_driver.o
--   	${CC} ${CCFLAGS} $^ -o $@
--   
--   clean:
--   	rm -f *.o
--   
--   veryclean: clean
--   	rm -f addSub_driver
--   == END: "Makefile" ==================
--   == BEGIN: "addSub.h" ================
--   /* Header file for addSub. Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit! */
--   
--   #ifndef __addSub__HEADER_INCLUDED__
--   #define __addSub__HEADER_INCLUDED__
--   
--   #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdlib.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;inttypes.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdint.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdbool.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;string.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;math.h&gt;
--   
--   /* The boolean type */
--   typedef bool SBool;
--   
--   /* The float type */
--   typedef float SFloat;
--   
--   /* The double type */
--   typedef double SDouble;
--   
--   /* Unsigned bit-vectors */
--   typedef uint8_t  SWord8;
--   typedef uint16_t SWord16;
--   typedef uint32_t SWord32;
--   typedef uint64_t SWord64;
--   
--   /* Signed bit-vectors */
--   typedef int8_t  SInt8;
--   typedef int16_t SInt16;
--   typedef int32_t SInt32;
--   typedef int64_t SInt64;
--   
--   /* Entry point prototype: */
--   void addSub(const SWord8 x, const SWord8 y, SWord8 *sum,
--               SWord8 *dif);
--   
--   #endif /* __addSub__HEADER_INCLUDED__ */
--   == END: "addSub.h" ==================
--   == BEGIN: "addSub_driver.c" ================
--   /* Example driver program for addSub. */
--   /* Automatically generated by SBV. Edit as you see fit! */
--   
--   #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
--   #include "addSub.h"
--   
--   int main(void)
--   {
--     SWord8 sum;
--     SWord8 dif;
--   
--     addSub(132, 241, &amp;sum, &amp;dif);
--   
--     printf("addSub(132, 241, &amp;sum, &amp;dif) -&gt;\n");
--     printf("  sum = %"PRIu8"\n", sum);
--     printf("  dif = %"PRIu8"\n", dif);
--   
--     return 0;
--   }
--   == END: "addSub_driver.c" ==================
--   == BEGIN: "addSub.c" ================
--   /* File: "addSub.c". Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit! */
--   
--   #include "addSub.h"
--   
--   void addSub(const SWord8 x, const SWord8 y, SWord8 *sum,
--               SWord8 *dif)
--   {
--     const SWord8 s0 = x;
--     const SWord8 s1 = y;
--     const SWord8 s2 = s0 + s1;
--     const SWord8 s3 = s0 - s1;
--   
--     *sum = s2;
--     *dif = s3;
--   }
--   == END: "addSub.c" ==================
--   </pre>
genAddSub :: IO ()


-- | Computing the CRC symbolically, using the USB polynomial. We also
--   generating C code for it as well. This example demonstrates the use of
--   the <a>crcBV</a> function, along with how CRC's can be computed
--   mathematically using polynomial division. While the results are the
--   same (i.e., proven equivalent, see <a>crcGood</a> below), the internal
--   CRC implementation generates much better code, compare <a>cg1</a> vs
--   <a>cg2</a> below.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.CodeGeneration.CRC_USB5

-- | The USB CRC polynomial: <tt>x^5 + x^2 + 1</tt>. Although this
--   polynomial needs just 6 bits to represent (5 if higher order bit is
--   implicitly assumed to be set), we'll simply use a 16 bit number for
--   its representation to keep things simple for code generation purposes.
usb5 :: SWord16

-- | Given an 11 bit message, compute the CRC of it using the USB
--   polynomial, which is 5 bits, and then append it to the msg to get a
--   16-bit word. Again, the incoming 11-bits is represented as a 16-bit
--   word, with 5 highest bits essentially ignored for input purposes.
crcUSB :: SWord16 -> SWord16

-- | Alternate method for computing the CRC, <i>mathematically</i>. We
--   shift the number to the left by 5, and then compute the remainder from
--   the polynomial division by the USB polynomial. The result is then
--   appended to the end of the message.
crcUSB' :: SWord16 -> SWord16

-- | Prove that the custom <a>crcBV</a> function is equivalent to the
--   mathematical definition of CRC's for 11 bit messages. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; crcGood
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
crcGood :: IO ThmResult

-- | Generate a C function to compute the USB CRC, using the internal CRC
--   function.
cg1 :: IO ()

-- | Generate a C function to compute the USB CRC, using the mathematical
--   definition of the CRCs. While this version generates functionally
--   eqivalent C code, it's less efficient; it has about 30% more code. So,
--   the above version is preferable for code generation purposes.
cg2 :: IO ()


-- | Computing Fibonacci numbers and generating C code. Inspired by Lee
--   Pike's original implementation, modified for inclusion in the package.
--   It illustrates symbolic termination issues one can have when working
--   with recursive algorithms and how to deal with such, eventually
--   generating good C code.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.CodeGeneration.Fibonacci

-- | This is a naive implementation of fibonacci, and will work fine
--   (albeit slow) for concrete inputs:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map fib0 [0..6]
--   [0 :: SWord64,1 :: SWord64,1 :: SWord64,2 :: SWord64,3 :: SWord64,5 :: SWord64,8 :: SWord64]
--   </pre>
--   
--   However, it is not suitable for doing proofs or generating code, as it
--   is not symbolically terminating when it is called with a symbolic
--   value <tt>n</tt>. When we recursively call <tt>fib0</tt> on
--   <tt>n-1</tt> (or <tt>n-2</tt>), the test against <tt>0</tt> will
--   always explore both branches since the result will be symbolic, hence
--   will not terminate. (An integrated theorem prover can establish
--   termination after a certain number of unrollings, but this would be
--   quite expensive to implement, and would be impractical.)
fib0 :: SWord64 -> SWord64

-- | The recursion-depth limited version of fibonacci. Limiting the maximum
--   number to be 20, we can say:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map (fib1 20) [0..6]
--   [0 :: SWord64,1 :: SWord64,1 :: SWord64,2 :: SWord64,3 :: SWord64,5 :: SWord64,8 :: SWord64]
--   </pre>
--   
--   The function will work correctly, so long as the index we query is at
--   most <tt>top</tt>, and otherwise will return the value at
--   <tt>top</tt>. Note that we also use accumulating parameters here for
--   efficiency, although this is orthogonal to the termination concern.
--   
--   A note on modular arithmetic: The 64-bit word we use to represent the
--   values will of course eventually overflow, beware! Fibonacci is a fast
--   growing function..
fib1 :: SWord64 -> SWord64 -> SWord64

-- | We can generate code for <a>fib1</a> using the <a>genFib1</a> action.
--   Note that the generated code will grow larger as we pick larger values
--   of <tt>top</tt>, but only linearly, thanks to the accumulating
--   parameter trick used by <a>fib1</a>. The following is an excerpt from
--   the code generated for the call <tt>genFib1 10</tt>, where the code
--   will work correctly for indexes up to 10:
--   
--   <pre>
--   SWord64 fib1(const SWord64 x)
--   {
--     const SWord64 s0 = x;
--     const SBool   s2 = s0 == 0x0000000000000000ULL;
--     const SBool   s4 = s0 == 0x0000000000000001ULL;
--     const SBool   s6 = s0 == 0x0000000000000002ULL;
--     const SBool   s8 = s0 == 0x0000000000000003ULL;
--     const SBool   s10 = s0 == 0x0000000000000004ULL;
--     const SBool   s12 = s0 == 0x0000000000000005ULL;
--     const SBool   s14 = s0 == 0x0000000000000006ULL;
--     const SBool   s17 = s0 == 0x0000000000000007ULL;
--     const SBool   s19 = s0 == 0x0000000000000008ULL;
--     const SBool   s22 = s0 == 0x0000000000000009ULL;
--     const SWord64 s25 = s22 ? 0x0000000000000022ULL : 0x0000000000000037ULL;
--     const SWord64 s26 = s19 ? 0x0000000000000015ULL : s25;
--     const SWord64 s27 = s17 ? 0x000000000000000dULL : s26;
--     const SWord64 s28 = s14 ? 0x0000000000000008ULL : s27;
--     const SWord64 s29 = s12 ? 0x0000000000000005ULL : s28;
--     const SWord64 s30 = s10 ? 0x0000000000000003ULL : s29;
--     const SWord64 s31 = s8 ? 0x0000000000000002ULL : s30;
--     const SWord64 s32 = s6 ? 0x0000000000000001ULL : s31;
--     const SWord64 s33 = s4 ? 0x0000000000000001ULL : s32;
--     const SWord64 s34 = s2 ? 0x0000000000000000ULL : s33;
--     
--     return s34;
--   }
--   </pre>
genFib1 :: SWord64 -> IO ()

-- | Compute the fibonacci numbers statically at <i>code-generation</i>
--   time and put them in a table, accessed by the <a>select</a> call.
fib2 :: SWord64 -> SWord64 -> SWord64

-- | Once we have <a>fib2</a>, we can generate the C code
--   straightforwardly. Below is an excerpt from the code that SBV
--   generates for the call <tt>genFib2 64</tt>. Note that this code is a
--   constant-time look-up table implementation of fibonacci, with no
--   run-time overhead. The index can be made arbitrarily large, naturally.
--   (Note that this function returns <tt>0</tt> if the index is larger
--   than 64, as specified by the call to <a>select</a> with default
--   <tt>0</tt>.)
--   
--   <pre>
--   SWord64 fibLookup(const SWord64 x)
--   {
--     const SWord64 s0 = x;
--     static const SWord64 table0[] = {
--         0x0000000000000000ULL, 0x0000000000000001ULL,
--         0x0000000000000001ULL, 0x0000000000000002ULL,
--         0x0000000000000003ULL, 0x0000000000000005ULL,
--         0x0000000000000008ULL, 0x000000000000000dULL,
--         0x0000000000000015ULL, 0x0000000000000022ULL,
--         0x0000000000000037ULL, 0x0000000000000059ULL,
--         0x0000000000000090ULL, 0x00000000000000e9ULL,
--         0x0000000000000179ULL, 0x0000000000000262ULL,
--         0x00000000000003dbULL, 0x000000000000063dULL,
--         0x0000000000000a18ULL, 0x0000000000001055ULL,
--         0x0000000000001a6dULL, 0x0000000000002ac2ULL,
--         0x000000000000452fULL, 0x0000000000006ff1ULL,
--         0x000000000000b520ULL, 0x0000000000012511ULL,
--         0x000000000001da31ULL, 0x000000000002ff42ULL,
--         0x000000000004d973ULL, 0x000000000007d8b5ULL,
--         0x00000000000cb228ULL, 0x0000000000148addULL,
--         0x0000000000213d05ULL, 0x000000000035c7e2ULL,
--         0x00000000005704e7ULL, 0x00000000008cccc9ULL,
--         0x0000000000e3d1b0ULL, 0x0000000001709e79ULL,
--         0x0000000002547029ULL, 0x0000000003c50ea2ULL,
--         0x0000000006197ecbULL, 0x0000000009de8d6dULL,
--         0x000000000ff80c38ULL, 0x0000000019d699a5ULL,
--         0x0000000029cea5ddULL, 0x0000000043a53f82ULL,
--         0x000000006d73e55fULL, 0x00000000b11924e1ULL,
--         0x000000011e8d0a40ULL, 0x00000001cfa62f21ULL,
--         0x00000002ee333961ULL, 0x00000004bdd96882ULL,
--         0x00000007ac0ca1e3ULL, 0x0000000c69e60a65ULL,
--         0x0000001415f2ac48ULL, 0x000000207fd8b6adULL,
--         0x0000003495cb62f5ULL, 0x0000005515a419a2ULL,
--         0x00000089ab6f7c97ULL, 0x000000dec1139639ULL,
--         0x000001686c8312d0ULL, 0x000002472d96a909ULL,
--         0x000003af9a19bbd9ULL, 0x000005f6c7b064e2ULL, 0x000009a661ca20bbULL
--     };
--     const SWord64 s65 = s0 &gt;= 65 ? 0x0000000000000000ULL : table0[s0];
--     
--     return s65;
--   }
--   </pre>
genFib2 :: SWord64 -> IO ()


-- | Computing GCD symbolically, and generating C code for it. This example
--   illustrates symbolic termination related issues when programming with
--   SBV, when the termination of a recursive algorithm crucially depends
--   on the value of a symbolic variable. The technique we use is to
--   statically enforce termination by using a recursion depth counter.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.CodeGeneration.GCD

-- | The symbolic GCD algorithm, over two 8-bit numbers. We define <tt>sgcd
--   a 0</tt> to be <tt>a</tt> for all <tt>a</tt>, which implies <tt>sgcd 0
--   0 = 0</tt>. Note that this is essentially Euclid's algorithm, except
--   with a recursion depth counter. We need the depth counter since the
--   algorithm is not <i>symbolically terminating</i>, as we don't have a
--   means of determining that the second argument (<tt>b</tt>) will
--   eventually reach 0 in a symbolic context. Hence we stop after 12
--   iterations. Why 12? We've empirically determined that this algorithm
--   will recurse at most 12 times for arbitrary 8-bit numbers. Of course,
--   this is a claim that we shall prove below.
sgcd :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SWord8

-- | We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove sgcdIsCorrect
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
sgcdIsCorrect :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SBool

-- | This call will generate the required C files. The following is the
--   function body generated for <a>sgcd</a>. (We are not showing the
--   generated header, <tt>Makefile</tt>, and the driver programs for
--   brevity.) Note that the generated function is a constant time
--   algorithm for GCD. It is not necessarily fastest, but it will take
--   precisely the same amount of time for all values of <tt>x</tt> and
--   <tt>y</tt>.
--   
--   <pre>
--   /* File: "sgcd.c". Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit! */
--   
--   #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdlib.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;inttypes.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdint.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdbool.h&gt;
--   #include "sgcd.h"
--   
--   SWord8 sgcd(const SWord8 x, const SWord8 y)
--   {
--     const SWord8 s0 = x;
--     const SWord8 s1 = y;
--     const SBool  s3 = s1 == 0;
--     const SWord8 s4 = (s1 == 0) ? s0 : (s0 % s1);
--     const SWord8 s5 = s3 ? s0 : s4;
--     const SBool  s6 = 0 == s5;
--     const SWord8 s7 = (s5 == 0) ? s1 : (s1 % s5);
--     const SWord8 s8 = s6 ? s1 : s7;
--     const SBool  s9 = 0 == s8;
--     const SWord8 s10 = (s8 == 0) ? s5 : (s5 % s8);
--     const SWord8 s11 = s9 ? s5 : s10;
--     const SBool  s12 = 0 == s11;
--     const SWord8 s13 = (s11 == 0) ? s8 : (s8 % s11);
--     const SWord8 s14 = s12 ? s8 : s13;
--     const SBool  s15 = 0 == s14;
--     const SWord8 s16 = (s14 == 0) ? s11 : (s11 % s14);
--     const SWord8 s17 = s15 ? s11 : s16;
--     const SBool  s18 = 0 == s17;
--     const SWord8 s19 = (s17 == 0) ? s14 : (s14 % s17);
--     const SWord8 s20 = s18 ? s14 : s19;
--     const SBool  s21 = 0 == s20;
--     const SWord8 s22 = (s20 == 0) ? s17 : (s17 % s20);
--     const SWord8 s23 = s21 ? s17 : s22;
--     const SBool  s24 = 0 == s23;
--     const SWord8 s25 = (s23 == 0) ? s20 : (s20 % s23);
--     const SWord8 s26 = s24 ? s20 : s25;
--     const SBool  s27 = 0 == s26;
--     const SWord8 s28 = (s26 == 0) ? s23 : (s23 % s26);
--     const SWord8 s29 = s27 ? s23 : s28;
--     const SBool  s30 = 0 == s29;
--     const SWord8 s31 = (s29 == 0) ? s26 : (s26 % s29);
--     const SWord8 s32 = s30 ? s26 : s31;
--     const SBool  s33 = 0 == s32;
--     const SWord8 s34 = (s32 == 0) ? s29 : (s29 % s32);
--     const SWord8 s35 = s33 ? s29 : s34;
--     const SBool  s36 = 0 == s35;
--     const SWord8 s37 = s36 ? s32 : s35;
--     const SWord8 s38 = s33 ? s29 : s37;
--     const SWord8 s39 = s30 ? s26 : s38;
--     const SWord8 s40 = s27 ? s23 : s39;
--     const SWord8 s41 = s24 ? s20 : s40;
--     const SWord8 s42 = s21 ? s17 : s41;
--     const SWord8 s43 = s18 ? s14 : s42;
--     const SWord8 s44 = s15 ? s11 : s43;
--     const SWord8 s45 = s12 ? s8 : s44;
--     const SWord8 s46 = s9 ? s5 : s45;
--     const SWord8 s47 = s6 ? s1 : s46;
--     const SWord8 s48 = s3 ? s0 : s47;
--     
--     return s48;
--   }
--   </pre>
genGCDInC :: IO ()


-- | Computing population-counts (number of set bits) and automatically
--   generating C code.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.CodeGeneration.PopulationCount

-- | Given a 64-bit quantity, the simplest (and obvious) way to count the
--   number of bits that are set in it is to simply walk through all the
--   bits and add 1 to a running count. This is slow, as it requires 64
--   iterations, but is simple and easy to convince yourself that it is
--   correct. For instance:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; popCountSlow 0x0123456789ABCDEF
--   32 :: SWord8
--   </pre>
popCountSlow :: SWord64 -> SWord8

-- | Faster version. This is essentially the same algorithm, except we go 8
--   bits at a time instead of one by one, by using a precomputed table of
--   population-count values for each byte. This algorithm <i>loops</i>
--   only 8 times, and hence is at least 8 times more efficient.
popCountFast :: SWord64 -> SWord8

-- | Look-up table, containing population counts for all possible 8-bit
--   value, from 0 to 255. Note that we do not "hard-code" the values, but
--   merely use the slow version to compute them.
pop8 :: [SWord8]

-- | States the correctness of faster population-count algorithm, with
--   respect to the reference slow version. Turns out Z3's default solver
--   is rather slow for this one, but there's a magic incantation to make
--   it go fast. See <a>http://github.com/Z3Prover/z3/issues/1150</a> for
--   details.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let cmd = "(check-sat-using (then (using-params ackermannize_bv :div0_ackermann_limit 1000000) simplify bit-blast sat))"
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; proveWith z3{satCmd = cmd} fastPopCountIsCorrect
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
fastPopCountIsCorrect :: SWord64 -> SBool

-- | Not only we can prove that faster version is correct, but we can also
--   automatically generate C code to compute population-counts for us.
--   This action will generate all the C files that you will need,
--   including a driver program for test purposes.
--   
--   Below is the generated header file for <a>popCountFast</a>:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; genPopCountInC
--   == BEGIN: "Makefile" ================
--   # Makefile for popCount. Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit!
--   
--   # include any user-defined .mk file in the current directory.
--   -include *.mk
--   
--   CC?=gcc
--   CCFLAGS?=-Wall -O3 -DNDEBUG -fomit-frame-pointer
--   
--   all: popCount_driver
--   
--   popCount.o: popCount.c popCount.h
--   	${CC} ${CCFLAGS} -c $&lt; -o $@
--   
--   popCount_driver.o: popCount_driver.c
--   	${CC} ${CCFLAGS} -c $&lt; -o $@
--   
--   popCount_driver: popCount.o popCount_driver.o
--   	${CC} ${CCFLAGS} $^ -o $@
--   
--   clean:
--   	rm -f *.o
--   
--   veryclean: clean
--   	rm -f popCount_driver
--   == END: "Makefile" ==================
--   == BEGIN: "popCount.h" ================
--   /* Header file for popCount. Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit! */
--   
--   #ifndef __popCount__HEADER_INCLUDED__
--   #define __popCount__HEADER_INCLUDED__
--   
--   #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdlib.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;inttypes.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdint.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;stdbool.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;string.h&gt;
--   #include &lt;math.h&gt;
--   
--   /* The boolean type */
--   typedef bool SBool;
--   
--   /* The float type */
--   typedef float SFloat;
--   
--   /* The double type */
--   typedef double SDouble;
--   
--   /* Unsigned bit-vectors */
--   typedef uint8_t  SWord8;
--   typedef uint16_t SWord16;
--   typedef uint32_t SWord32;
--   typedef uint64_t SWord64;
--   
--   /* Signed bit-vectors */
--   typedef int8_t  SInt8;
--   typedef int16_t SInt16;
--   typedef int32_t SInt32;
--   typedef int64_t SInt64;
--   
--   /* Entry point prototype: */
--   SWord8 popCount(const SWord64 x);
--   
--   #endif /* __popCount__HEADER_INCLUDED__ */
--   == END: "popCount.h" ==================
--   == BEGIN: "popCount_driver.c" ================
--   /* Example driver program for popCount. */
--   /* Automatically generated by SBV. Edit as you see fit! */
--   
--   #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
--   #include "popCount.h"
--   
--   int main(void)
--   {
--     const SWord8 __result = popCount(0x1b02e143e4f0e0e5ULL);
--   
--     printf("popCount(0x1b02e143e4f0e0e5ULL) = %"PRIu8"\n", __result);
--   
--     return 0;
--   }
--   == END: "popCount_driver.c" ==================
--   == BEGIN: "popCount.c" ================
--   /* File: "popCount.c". Automatically generated by SBV. Do not edit! */
--   
--   #include "popCount.h"
--   
--   SWord8 popCount(const SWord64 x)
--   {
--     const SWord64 s0 = x;
--     static const SWord8 table0[] = {
--         0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 3, 1, 2, 2, 3, 2, 3, 3, 4, 1, 2, 2, 3, 2, 3,
--         3, 4, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 1, 2, 2, 3, 2, 3, 3, 4, 2, 3, 3, 4,
--         3, 4, 4, 5, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 1, 2,
--         2, 3, 2, 3, 3, 4, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5,
--         3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5,
--         5, 6, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 4, 5, 5, 6, 5, 6, 6, 7, 1, 2, 2, 3,
--         2, 3, 3, 4, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 3, 4,
--         4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6,
--         3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 4, 5, 5, 6, 5, 6, 6, 7, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4,
--         4, 5, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 4, 5, 5, 6,
--         5, 6, 6, 7, 3, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 5, 6, 4, 5, 5, 6, 5, 6, 6, 7, 4, 5,
--         5, 6, 5, 6, 6, 7, 5, 6, 6, 7, 6, 7, 7, 8
--     };
--     const SWord64 s11 = s0 &amp; 0x00000000000000ffULL;
--     const SWord8  s12 = table0[s11];
--     const SWord64 s14 = s0 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s15 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s14;
--     const SWord8  s16 = table0[s15];
--     const SWord8  s17 = s12 + s16;
--     const SWord64 s18 = s14 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s19 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s18;
--     const SWord8  s20 = table0[s19];
--     const SWord8  s21 = s17 + s20;
--     const SWord64 s22 = s18 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s23 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s22;
--     const SWord8  s24 = table0[s23];
--     const SWord8  s25 = s21 + s24;
--     const SWord64 s26 = s22 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s27 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s26;
--     const SWord8  s28 = table0[s27];
--     const SWord8  s29 = s25 + s28;
--     const SWord64 s30 = s26 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s31 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s30;
--     const SWord8  s32 = table0[s31];
--     const SWord8  s33 = s29 + s32;
--     const SWord64 s34 = s30 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s35 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s34;
--     const SWord8  s36 = table0[s35];
--     const SWord8  s37 = s33 + s36;
--     const SWord64 s38 = s34 &gt;&gt; 8;
--     const SWord64 s39 = 0x00000000000000ffULL &amp; s38;
--     const SWord8  s40 = table0[s39];
--     const SWord8  s41 = s37 + s40;
--   
--     return s41;
--   }
--   == END: "popCount.c" ==================
--   </pre>
genPopCountInC :: IO ()


-- | Demonstrates the use of uninterpreted functions for the purposes of
--   code generation. This facility is important when we want to take
--   advantage of native libraries in the target platform, or when we'd
--   like to hand-generate code for certain functions for various purposes,
--   such as efficiency, or reliability.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.CodeGeneration.Uninterpreted

-- | A definition of shiftLeft that can deal with variable length shifts.
--   (Note that the `<a>shiftL</a>` method from the <a>Bits</a> class
--   requires an <a>Int</a> shift amount.) Unfortunately, this'll generate
--   rather clumsy C code due to the use of tables etc., so we uninterpret
--   it for code generation purposes using the <a>cgUninterpret</a>
--   function.
shiftLeft :: SWord32 -> SWord32 -> SWord32

-- | Test function that uses shiftLeft defined above. When used as a normal
--   Haskell function or in verification the definition is fully used,
--   i.e., no uninterpretation happens. To wit, we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; tstShiftLeft 3 4 5
--   224 :: SWord32
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x y -&gt; tstShiftLeft x y 0 .== x + y
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
tstShiftLeft :: SWord32 -> SWord32 -> SWord32 -> SWord32

-- | Generate C code for "tstShiftLeft". In this case, SBV will *use* the
--   user given definition verbatim, instead of generating code for it.
--   (Also see the functions <a>cgAddDecl</a>, <a>cgAddLDFlags</a>, and
--   <a>cgAddPrototype</a>.)
genCCode :: IO ()


-- | An implementation of AES (Advanced Encryption Standard), using SBV.
--   For details on AES, see
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Encryption_Standard</a>.
--   
--   We do a T-box implementation, which leads to good C code as we can
--   take advantage of look-up tables. Note that we make virtually no
--   attempt to optimize our Haskell code. The concern here is not with
--   getting Haskell running fast at all. The idea is to program the T-Box
--   implementation as naturally and clearly as possible in Haskell, and
--   have SBV's code-generator generate fast C code automatically.
--   Therefore, we merely use ordinary Haskell lists as our
--   data-structures, and do not bother with any unboxing or strictness
--   annotations. Thus, we achieve the separation of concerns: Correctness
--   via clairty and simplicity and proofs on the Haskell side, performance
--   by relying on SBV's code generator. If necessary, the generated code
--   can be FFI'd back into Haskell to complete the loop.
--   
--   All 3 valid key sizes (128, 192, and 256) as required by the FIPS-197
--   standard are supported.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Crypto.AES

-- | An element of the Galois Field 2^8, which are essentially polynomials
--   with maximum degree 7. They are conveniently represented as values
--   between 0 and 255.
type GF28 = SWord8

-- | Multiplication in GF(2^8). This is simple polynomial multipliation,
--   followed by the irreducible polynomial <tt>x^8+x^4+x^3+x^1+1</tt>. We
--   simply use the <a>pMult</a> function exported by SBV to do the
--   operation.
gf28Mult :: GF28 -> GF28 -> GF28

-- | Exponentiation by a constant in GF(2^8). The implementation uses the
--   usual square-and-multiply trick to speed up the computation.
gf28Pow :: GF28 -> Int -> GF28

-- | Computing inverses in GF(2^8). By the mathematical properties of
--   GF(2^8) and the particular irreducible polynomial used
--   <tt>x^8+x^5+x^3+x^1+1</tt>, it turns out that raising to the 254 power
--   gives us the multiplicative inverse. Of course, we can prove this
--   using SBV:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x -&gt; x ./= 0 ==&gt; x `gf28Mult` gf28Inverse x .== 1
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that we exclude <tt>0</tt> in our theorem, as it does not have a
--   multiplicative inverse.
gf28Inverse :: GF28 -> GF28

-- | AES state. The state consists of four 32-bit words, each of which is
--   in turn treated as four GF28's, i.e., 4 bytes. The T-Box
--   implementation keeps the four-bytes together for efficient
--   representation.
type State = [SWord32]

-- | The key, which can be 128, 192, or 256 bits. Represented as a sequence
--   of 32-bit words.
type Key = [SWord32]

-- | The key schedule. AES executes in rounds, and it treats first and last
--   round keys slightly differently than the middle ones. We reflect that
--   choice by being explicit about it in our type. The length of the
--   middle list of keys depends on the key-size, which in turn determines
--   the number of rounds.
type KS = (Key, [Key], Key)

-- | Conversion from 32-bit words to 4 constituent bytes.
toBytes :: SWord32 -> [GF28]

-- | Conversion from 4 bytes, back to a 32-bit row, inverse of
--   <a>toBytes</a> above. We have the following simple theorems stating
--   this relationship formally:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \a b c d -&gt; toBytes (fromBytes [a, b, c, d]) .== [a, b, c, d]
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \r -&gt; fromBytes (toBytes r) .== r
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
fromBytes :: [GF28] -> SWord32

-- | Rotating a state row by a fixed amount to the right.
rotR :: [GF28] -> Int -> [GF28]

-- | Definition of round-constants, as specified in Section 5.2 of the AES
--   standard.
roundConstants :: [GF28]

-- | The <tt>InvMixColumns</tt> transformation, as described in Section
--   5.3.3 of the standard. Note that this transformation is only used
--   explicitly during key-expansion in the T-Box implementation of AES.
invMixColumns :: State -> State

-- | Key expansion. Starting with the given key, returns an infinite
--   sequence of words, as described by the AES standard, Section 5.2,
--   Figure 11.
keyExpansion :: Int -> Key -> [Key]

-- | The values of the AES S-box table. Note that we describe the S-box
--   programmatically using the mathematical construction given in Section
--   5.1.1 of the standard. However, the code-generation will turn this
--   into a mere look-up table, as it is just a constant table, all
--   computation being done at "compile-time".
sboxTable :: [GF28]

-- | The sbox transformation. We simply select from the sbox table. Note
--   that we are obliged to give a default value (here <tt>0</tt>) to be
--   used if the index is out-of-bounds as required by SBV's <a>select</a>
--   function. However, that will never happen since the table has all 256
--   elements in it.
sbox :: GF28 -> GF28

-- | The values of the inverse S-box table. Again, the construction is
--   programmatic.
unSBoxTable :: [GF28]

-- | The inverse s-box transformation.
unSBox :: GF28 -> GF28

-- | Prove that the <a>sbox</a> and <a>unSBox</a> are inverses. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove sboxInverseCorrect
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
sboxInverseCorrect :: GF28 -> SBool

-- | Adding the round-key to the current state. We simply exploit the fact
--   that addition is just xor in implementing this transformation.
addRoundKey :: Key -> State -> State

-- | T-box table generation function for encryption
t0Func :: GF28 -> [GF28]

-- | First look-up table used in encryption
t0 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Second look-up table used in encryption
t1 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Third look-up table used in encryption
t2 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Fourth look-up table used in encryption
t3 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | T-box table generating function for decryption
u0Func :: GF28 -> [GF28]

-- | First look-up table used in decryption
u0 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Second look-up table used in decryption
u1 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Third look-up table used in decryption
u2 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Fourth look-up table used in decryption
u3 :: GF28 -> SWord32

-- | Generic round function. Given the function to perform one round, a
--   key-schedule, and a starting state, it performs the AES rounds.
doRounds :: (Bool -> State -> Key -> State) -> KS -> State -> State

-- | One encryption round. The first argument indicates whether this is the
--   final round or not, in which case the construction is slightly
--   different.
aesRound :: Bool -> State -> Key -> State

-- | One decryption round. Similar to the encryption round, the first
--   argument indicates whether this is the final round or not.
aesInvRound :: Bool -> State -> Key -> State

-- | Key schedule. Given a 128, 192, or 256 bit key, expand it to get
--   key-schedules for encryption and decryption. The key is given as a
--   sequence of 32-bit words. (4 elements for 128-bits, 6 for 192, and 8
--   for 256.)
aesKeySchedule :: Key -> (KS, KS)

-- | Block encryption. The first argument is the plain-text, which must
--   have precisely 4 elements, for a total of 128-bits of input. The
--   second argument is the key-schedule to be used, obtained by a call to
--   <a>aesKeySchedule</a>. The output will always have 4 32-bit words,
--   which is the cipher-text.
aesEncrypt :: [SWord32] -> KS -> [SWord32]

-- | Block decryption. The arguments are the same as in <a>aesEncrypt</a>,
--   except the first argument is the cipher-text and the output is the
--   corresponding plain-text.
aesDecrypt :: [SWord32] -> KS -> [SWord32]

-- | 128-bit encryption test, from Appendix C.1 of the AES standard:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map hex8 t128Enc
--   ["69c4e0d8","6a7b0430","d8cdb780","70b4c55a"]
--   </pre>
t128Enc :: [SWord32]

-- | 128-bit decryption test, from Appendix C.1 of the AES standard:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map hex8 t128Dec
--   ["00112233","44556677","8899aabb","ccddeeff"]
--   </pre>
t128Dec :: [SWord32]

-- | 192-bit encryption test, from Appendix C.2 of the AES standard:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map hex8 t192Enc
--   ["dda97ca4","864cdfe0","6eaf70a0","ec0d7191"]
--   </pre>
t192Enc :: [SWord32]

-- | 192-bit decryption test, from Appendix C.2 of the AES standard:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map hex8 t192Dec
--   ["00112233","44556677","8899aabb","ccddeeff"]
--   </pre>
t192Dec :: [SWord32]

-- | 256-bit encryption, from Appendix C.3 of the AES standard:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map hex8 t256Enc
--   ["8ea2b7ca","516745bf","eafc4990","4b496089"]
--   </pre>
t256Enc :: [SWord32]

-- | 256-bit decryption, from Appendix C.3 of the AES standard:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; map hex8 t256Dec
--   ["00112233","44556677","8899aabb","ccddeeff"]
--   </pre>
t256Dec :: [SWord32]

-- | Correctness theorem for 128-bit AES. Ideally, we would run:
--   
--   <pre>
--   prove aes128IsCorrect
--   </pre>
--   
--   to get a proof automatically. Unfortunately, while SBV will
--   successfully generate the proof obligation for this theorem and ship
--   it to the SMT solver, it would be naive to expect the SMT-solver to
--   finish that proof in any reasonable time with the currently available
--   SMT solving technologies. Instead, we can issue:
--   
--   <pre>
--   quickCheck aes128IsCorrect
--   </pre>
--   
--   and get some degree of confidence in our code. Similar predicates can
--   be easily constructed for 192, and 256 bit cases as well.
aes128IsCorrect :: (SWord32, SWord32, SWord32, SWord32) -> (SWord32, SWord32, SWord32, SWord32) -> SBool

-- | Code generation for 128-bit AES encryption.
--   
--   The following sample from the generated code-lines show how T-Boxes
--   are rendered as C arrays:
--   
--   <pre>
--   static const SWord32 table1[] = {
--       0xc66363a5UL, 0xf87c7c84UL, 0xee777799UL, 0xf67b7b8dUL,
--       0xfff2f20dUL, 0xd66b6bbdUL, 0xde6f6fb1UL, 0x91c5c554UL,
--       0x60303050UL, 0x02010103UL, 0xce6767a9UL, 0x562b2b7dUL,
--       0xe7fefe19UL, 0xb5d7d762UL, 0x4dababe6UL, 0xec76769aUL,
--       ...
--       }
--   </pre>
--   
--   The generated program has 5 tables (one sbox table, and 4-Tboxes), all
--   converted to fast C arrays. Here is a sample of the generated
--   straightline C-code:
--   
--   <pre>
--   const SWord8  s1915 = (SWord8) s1912;
--   const SWord8  s1916 = table0[s1915];
--   const SWord16 s1917 = (((SWord16) s1914) &lt;&lt; 8) | ((SWord16) s1916);
--   const SWord32 s1918 = (((SWord32) s1911) &lt;&lt; 16) | ((SWord32) s1917);
--   const SWord32 s1919 = s1844 ^ s1918;
--   const SWord32 s1920 = s1903 ^ s1919;
--   </pre>
--   
--   The GNU C-compiler does a fine job of optimizing this straightline
--   code to generate a fairly efficient C implementation.
cgAES128BlockEncrypt :: IO ()

-- | Components of the AES-128 implementation that the library is generated
--   from
aes128LibComponents :: [(String, SBVCodeGen ())]

-- | Generate a C library, containing functions for performing 128-bit
--   enc<i>dec</i>key-expansion. A note on performance: In a very rough
--   speed test, the generated code was able to do 6.3 million block
--   encryptions per second on a decent MacBook Pro. On the same machine,
--   OpenSSL reports 8.2 million block encryptions per second. So, the
--   generated code is about 25% slower as compared to the highly optimized
--   OpenSSL implementation. (Note that the speed test was done somewhat
--   simplistically, so these numbers should be considered very rough
--   estimates.)
cgAES128Library :: IO ()

-- | For doctest purposes only
hex8 :: (SymWord a, Show a, Integral a) => SBV a -> String


-- | An implementation of RC4 (AKA Rivest Cipher 4 or Alleged RC4/ARC4),
--   using SBV. For information on RC4, see:
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RC4</a>.
--   
--   We make no effort to optimize the code, and instead focus on a clear
--   implementation. In fact, the RC4 algorithm relies on in-place update
--   of its state heavily for efficiency, and is therefore unsuitable for a
--   purely functional implementation.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Crypto.RC4

-- | RC4 State contains 256 8-bit values. We use the symbolically
--   accessible full-binary type <a>STree</a> to represent the state, since
--   RC4 needs access to the array via a symbolic index and it's important
--   to minimize access time.
type S = STree Word8 Word8

-- | Construct the fully balanced initial tree, where the leaves are simply
--   the numbers <tt>0</tt> through <tt>255</tt>.
initS :: S

-- | The key is a stream of <a>Word8</a> values.
type Key = [SWord8]

-- | Represents the current state of the RC4 stream: it is the <tt>S</tt>
--   array along with the <tt>i</tt> and <tt>j</tt> index values used by
--   the PRGA.
type RC4 = (S, SWord8, SWord8)

-- | Swaps two elements in the RC4 array.
swap :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> S -> S

-- | Implements the PRGA used in RC4. We return the new state and the next
--   key value generated.
prga :: RC4 -> (SWord8, RC4)

-- | Constructs the state to be used by the PRGA using the given key.
initRC4 :: Key -> S

-- | The key-schedule. Note that this function returns an infinite list.
keySchedule :: Key -> [SWord8]

-- | Generate a key-schedule from a given key-string.
keyScheduleString :: String -> [SWord8]

-- | RC4 encryption. We generate key-words and xor it with the input. The
--   following test-vectors are from Wikipedia
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RC4</a>:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; concatMap hex2 $ encrypt "Key" "Plaintext"
--   "bbf316e8d940af0ad3"
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; concatMap hex2 $ encrypt "Wiki" "pedia"
--   "1021bf0420"
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; concatMap hex2 $ encrypt "Secret" "Attack at dawn"
--   "45a01f645fc35b383552544b9bf5"
--   </pre>
encrypt :: String -> String -> [SWord8]

-- | RC4 decryption. Essentially the same as decryption. For the above test
--   vectors we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; decrypt "Key" [0xbb, 0xf3, 0x16, 0xe8, 0xd9, 0x40, 0xaf, 0x0a, 0xd3]
--   "Plaintext"
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; decrypt "Wiki" [0x10, 0x21, 0xbf, 0x04, 0x20]
--   "pedia"
--   </pre>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; decrypt "Secret" [0x45, 0xa0, 0x1f, 0x64, 0x5f, 0xc3, 0x5b, 0x38, 0x35, 0x52, 0x54, 0x4b, 0x9b, 0xf5]
--   "Attack at dawn"
--   </pre>
decrypt :: String -> [SWord8] -> String

-- | Prove that round-trip encryption/decryption leaves the plain-text
--   unchanged. The theorem is stated parametrically over key and
--   plain-text sizes. The expression performs the proof for a 40-bit key
--   (5 bytes) and 40-bit plaintext (again 5 bytes).
--   
--   Note that this theorem is trivial to prove, since it is essentially
--   establishing xor'in the same value twice leaves a word unchanged
--   (i.e., <tt>x <a>xor</a> y <a>xor</a> y = x</tt>). However, the proof
--   takes quite a while to complete, as it gives rise to a fairly large
--   symbolic trace.
rc4IsCorrect :: IO ThmResult

-- | For doctest purposes only
hex2 :: (SymWord a, Show a, Integral a) => SBV a -> String


-- | This program demonstrates the use of the existentials and the QBVF
--   (quantified bit-vector solver). We generate CRC polynomials of degree
--   16 that can be used for messages of size 48-bits. The query finds all
--   such polynomials that have hamming distance is at least 4. That is, if
--   the CRC can't tell two different 48-bit messages apart, then they must
--   differ in at least 4 bits.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Existentials.CRCPolynomial

-- | SBV doesn't support 48 bit words natively. So, we represent them as a
--   tuple, 32 high-bits and 16 low-bits.
type SWord48 = (SWord32, SWord16)

-- | Compute the 16 bit CRC of a 48 bit message, using the given polynomial
crc_48_16 :: SWord48 -> SWord16 -> [SBool]

-- | Count the differing bits in the message and the corresponding CRC
diffCount :: (SWord48, [SBool]) -> (SWord48, [SBool]) -> SWord8

-- | Given a hamming distance value <tt>hd</tt>, <a>crcGood</a> returns
--   <tt>true</tt> if the 16 bit polynomial can distinguish all messages
--   that has at most <tt>hd</tt> different bits. Note that we express this
--   conversely: If the <tt>sent</tt> and <tt>received</tt> messages are
--   different, then it must be the case that that must differ from each
--   other (including CRCs), in more than <tt>hd</tt> bits.
crcGood :: SWord8 -> SWord16 -> SWord48 -> SWord48 -> SBool

-- | Generate good CRC polynomials for 48-bit words, given the hamming
--   distance <tt>hd</tt>.
genPoly :: SWord8 -> IO ()

-- | Find and display all degree 16 polynomials with hamming distance at
--   least 4, for 48 bit messages.
--   
--   When run, this function prints:
--   
--   <pre>
--   Polynomial #1. x^16 + x^2 + x + 1
--   Polynomial #2. x^16 + x^15 + x^2 + 1
--   Polynomial #3. x^16 + x^15 + x^2 + x + 1
--   Polynomial #4. x^16 + x^14 + x^10 + 1
--   Polynomial #5. x^16 + x^14 + x^9 + 1
--   ...
--   
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that different runs can produce different results, depending on
--   the random numbers used by the solver, solver version, etc. (Also, the
--   solver will take some time to generate these results. On my machine,
--   the first five polynomials were generated in about 5 minutes.)
findHD4Polynomials :: IO ()


-- | Finding minimal natural number solutions to linear Diophantine
--   equations, using explicit quantification.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Existentials.Diophantine

-- | For a homogeneous problem, the solution is any linear combination of
--   the resulting vectors. For a non-homogeneous problem, the solution is
--   any linear combination of the vectors in the second component plus one
--   of the vectors in the first component.
data Solution
Homogeneous :: [[Integer]] -> Solution
NonHomogeneous :: [[Integer]] -> [[Integer]] -> Solution

-- | ldn: Solve a (L)inear (D)iophantine equation, returning minimal
--   solutions over (N)aturals. The input is given as a rows of equations,
--   with rhs values separated into a tuple. The first parameter limits the
--   search to bound: In case there are too many solutions, you might want
--   to limit your search space.
ldn :: Maybe Int -> [([Integer], Integer)] -> IO Solution

-- | Find the basis solution. By definition, the basis has all non-trivial
--   (i.e., non-0) solutions that cannot be written as the sum of two other
--   solutions. We use the mathematically equivalent statement that a
--   solution is in the basis if it's least according to the lexicographic
--   order using the ordinary less-than relation. (NB. We explicitly tell
--   z3 to use the logic AUFLIA for this problem, as the BV solver that is
--   chosen automatically has a performance issue. See:
--   <a>http://z3.codeplex.com/workitem/88</a>.)
basis :: Maybe Int -> [[SInteger]] -> IO [[Integer]]

-- | Solve the equation:
--   
--   <pre>
--   2x + y - z = 2
--   </pre>
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; test
--   NonHomogeneous [[0,2,0],[1,0,0]] [[0,1,1],[1,0,2]]
--   </pre>
--   
--   which means that the solutions are of the form:
--   
--   <pre>
--   (1, 0, 0) + k (0, 1, 1) + k' (1, 0, 2) = (1+k', k, k+2k')
--   </pre>
--   
--   OR
--   
--   <pre>
--   (0, 2, 0) + k (0, 1, 1) + k' (1, 0, 2) = (k', 2+k, k+2k')
--   </pre>
--   
--   for arbitrary <tt>k</tt>, <tt>k'</tt>. It's easy to see that these are
--   really solutions to the equation given. It's harder to see that they
--   cover all possibilities, but a moments thought reveals that is indeed
--   the case.
test :: IO Solution

-- | A puzzle: Five sailors and a monkey escape from a naufrage and reach
--   an island with coconuts. Before dawn, they gather a few of them and
--   decide to sleep first and share the next day. At night, however, one
--   of them awakes, counts the nuts, makes five parts, gives the remaining
--   nut to the monkey, saves his share away, and sleeps. All other sailors
--   do the same, one by one. When they all wake up in the morning, they
--   again make 5 shares, and give the last remaining nut to the monkey.
--   How many nuts were there at the beginning?
--   
--   We can model this as a series of diophantine equations:
--   
--   <pre>
--     x_0 = 5 x_1 + 1
--   4 x_1 = 5 x_2 + 1
--   4 x_2 = 5 x_3 + 1
--   4 x_3 = 5 x_4 + 1
--   4 x_4 = 5 x_5 + 1
--   4 x_5 = 5 x_6 + 1
--   </pre>
--   
--   We need to solve for x_0, over the naturals. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sailors
--   [15621,3124,2499,1999,1599,1279,1023]
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is:
--   
--   <pre>
--   * There was a total of 15621 coconuts
--   * 1st sailor: 15621 = 3124*5+1, leaving 15621-3124-1 = 12496
--   * 2nd sailor: 12496 = 2499*5+1, leaving 12496-2499-1 =  9996
--   * 3rd sailor:  9996 = 1999*5+1, leaving  9996-1999-1 =  7996
--   * 4th sailor:  7996 = 1599*5+1, leaving  7996-1599-1 =  6396
--   * 5th sailor:  6396 = 1279*5+1, leaving  6396-1279-1 =  5116
--   * In the morning, they had: 5116 = 1023*5+1.
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that this is the minimum solution, that is, we are guaranteed
--   that there's no solution with less number of coconuts. In fact, any
--   member of <tt>[15625*k-4 | k &lt;- [1..]]</tt> is a solution, i.e., so
--   are <tt>31246</tt>, <tt>46871</tt>, <tt>62496</tt>, <tt>78121</tt>,
--   etc.
--   
--   Note that we iteratively deepen our search by requesting increasing
--   number of solutions to avoid the all-sat pitfall.
sailors :: IO [Integer]
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Existentials.Diophantine.Solution


-- | Demonstrates use of bounded list utilities, proving a simple mutex
--   algorithm correct up to given bounds.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex

-- | Each agent can be in one of the three states
data State

-- | Regular work
Idle :: State

-- | Intention to enter critical state
Ready :: State

-- | In the critical state
Critical :: State

-- | The type synonym <a>SState</a> is mnemonic for symbolic state.
type SState = SBV State

-- | Symbolic version of <a>Idle</a>
idle :: SState

-- | Symbolic version of <a>Ready</a>
ready :: SState

-- | Symbolic version of <a>Critical</a>
critical :: SState

-- | A bounded mutex property holds for two sequences of state transitions,
--   if they are not in their critical section at the same time up to that
--   given bound.
mutex :: Int -> SList State -> SList State -> SBool

-- | A sequence is valid upto a bound if it starts at <a>Idle</a>, and
--   follows the mutex rules. That is:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>From <a>Idle</a> it can switch to <a>Ready</a> or stay
--   <a>Idle</a></li>
--   <li>From <a>Ready</a> it can switch to <a>Critical</a> if it's its
--   turn</li>
--   <li>From <a>Critical</a> it can either stay in <a>Critical</a> or go
--   back to <a>Idle</a></li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   The variable <tt>me</tt> identifies the agent id.
validSequence :: Int -> Integer -> SList Integer -> SList State -> SBool

-- | The mutex algorithm, coded implicity as an assignment to turns. Turns
--   start at <tt>1</tt>, and at each stage is either <tt>1</tt> or
--   <tt>2</tt>; giving preference to that process. The only condition is
--   that if either process is in its critical section, then the turn value
--   stays the same. Note that this is sufficient to satisfy safety (i.e.,
--   mutual exclusion), though it does not guarantee liveness.
validTurns :: Int -> SList Integer -> SList State -> SList State -> SBool

-- | Check that we have the mutex property so long as <a>validSequence</a>
--   and <a>validTurns</a> holds; i.e., so long as both the agents and the
--   arbiter act according to the rules. The check is bounded up-to-the
--   given concrete bound; so this is an example of a
--   bounded-model-checking style proof. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; checkMutex 20
--   All is good!
--   </pre>
checkMutex :: Int -> IO ()

-- | Our algorithm is correct, but it is not fair. It does not guarantee
--   that a process that wants to enter its critical-section will always do
--   so eventually. Demonstrate this by trying to show a bounded trace of
--   length 10, such that the second process is ready but never transitions
--   to critical. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   ghci&gt; notFair 10
--   Fairness is violated at bound: 10
--   P1: [Idle,Idle,Ready,Critical,Idle,Idle,Ready,Critical,Idle,Idle]
--   P2: [Idle,Ready,Ready,Ready,Ready,Ready,Ready,Ready,Ready,Ready]
--   Ts: [1,2,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1]
--   </pre>
--   
--   As expected, P2 gets ready but never goes critical since the arbiter
--   keeps picking P1 unfairly. (You might get a different trace depending
--   on what z3 happens to produce!)
--   
--   Exercise for the reader: Change the <a>validTurns</a> function so that
--   it alternates the turns from the previous value if neither process is
--   in critical. Show that this makes the <a>notFair</a> function below no
--   longer exhibits the issue. Is this sufficient? Concurrent programming
--   is tricky!
notFair :: Int -> IO ()
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.BoundedMutex.State


-- | Define the fibonacci sequence as an SBV symbolic list.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.Fibonacci

-- | Compute a prefix of the fibonacci numbers. We have: &gt;&gt;&gt;
--   mkFibs 10 [1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34,55]
mkFibs :: Int -> IO [Integer]

-- | Generate fibonacci numbers as a sequence. Note that we constrain only
--   the first 200 entries.
genFibs :: Symbolic [Integer]


-- | Demonstrates nested lists
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Lists.Nested

-- | Simple example demonstrating the use of nested lists. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; nestedExample
--   [[1,2,3],[4,5,6,7],[8,9,10],[11,12,13]]
--   </pre>
nestedExample :: IO ()


-- | Demonstrates model construction with auxiliary variables. Sometimes we
--   need to introduce a variable in our problem as an existential
--   variable, but it's "internal" to the problem and we do not consider it
--   as part of the solution. Also, in an <a>allSat</a> scenario, we may
--   not care for models that only differ in these auxiliaries. SBV allows
--   designating such variables as <a>isNonModelVar</a> so we can still use
--   them like any other variable, but without considering them explicitly
--   in model construction.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Auxiliary

-- | A simple predicate, based on two variables <tt>x</tt> and <tt>y</tt>,
--   true when <tt>0 &lt;= x &lt;= 1</tt> and <tt>x - abs y</tt> is
--   <tt>0</tt>.
problem :: Predicate

-- | Generate all satisfying assignments for our problem. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; allModels
--   Solution #1:
--     x = 0 :: Integer
--     y = 0 :: Integer
--   Solution #2:
--     x = 1 :: Integer
--     y = 1 :: Integer
--   Solution #3:
--     x =  1 :: Integer
--     y = -1 :: Integer
--   Found 3 different solutions.
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that solutions <tt>2</tt> and <tt>3</tt> share the value <tt>x =
--   1</tt>, since there are multiple values of <tt>y</tt> that make this
--   particular choice of <tt>x</tt> satisfy our constraint.
allModels :: IO AllSatResult

-- | Generate all satisfying assignments, but we first tell SBV that
--   <tt>y</tt> should not be considered as a model problem, i.e., it's
--   auxiliary. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; modelsWithYAux
--   Solution #1:
--     x = 0 :: Integer
--   Solution #2:
--     x = 1 :: Integer
--   Found 2 different solutions.
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that we now have only two solutions, one for each unique value of
--   <tt>x</tt> that satisfy our constraint.
modelsWithYAux :: IO AllSatResult


-- | Demonstrates how enumerations can be translated to their SMT-Lib
--   counterparts, without losing any information content. Also see
--   <a>Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge</a> for a more detailed
--   example involving enumerations.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate

-- | A simple enumerated type, that we'd like to translate to SMT-Lib
--   intact; i.e., this type will not be uninterpreted but rather preserved
--   and will be just like any other symbolic type SBV provides.
--   
--   Also note that we need to have the following <tt>LANGUAGE</tt> options
--   defined: <tt>TemplateHaskell</tt>, <tt>StandaloneDeriving</tt>,
--   <tt>DeriveDataTypeable</tt>, <tt>DeriveAnyClass</tt> for this to work.
data E
A :: E
B :: E
C :: E

-- | Give a name to the symbolic variants of <a>E</a>, for convenience
type SE = SBV E

-- | Have the SMT solver enumerate the elements of the domain. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; elts
--   Solution #1:
--     s0 = B :: E
--   Solution #2:
--     s0 = A :: E
--   Solution #3:
--     s0 = C :: E
--   Found 3 different solutions.
--   </pre>
elts :: IO AllSatResult

-- | Shows that if we require 4 distinct elements of the type <a>E</a>, we
--   shall fail; as the domain only has three elements. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; four
--   Unsatisfiable
--   </pre>
four :: IO SatResult

-- | Enumerations are automatically ordered, so we can ask for the maximum
--   element. Note the use of quantification. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; maxE
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     maxE = C :: E
--   </pre>
maxE :: IO SatResult

-- | Similarly, we get the minumum element. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; minE
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     minE = A :: E
--   </pre>
minE :: IO SatResult
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Enumerate.E


-- | Several examples involving IEEE-754 floating point numbers, i.e.,
--   single precision <a>Float</a> (<a>SFloat</a>) and double precision
--   <a>Double</a> (<a>SDouble</a>) types.
--   
--   Note that arithmetic with floating point is full of surprises; due to
--   precision issues associativity of arithmetic operations typically do
--   not hold. Also, the presence of <tt>NaN</tt> is always something to
--   look out for.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Floating

-- | Prove that floating point addition is not associative. For
--   illustration purposes, we will require one of the inputs to be a
--   <tt>NaN</tt>. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ assocPlus (0/0)
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     s0 = 0.0 :: Float
--     s1 = 0.0 :: Float
--   </pre>
--   
--   Indeed:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let i = 0/0 :: Float
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; i + (0.0 + 0.0)
--   NaN
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ((i + 0.0) + 0.0)
--   NaN
--   </pre>
--   
--   But keep in mind that <tt>NaN</tt> does not equal itself in the
--   floating point world! We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let nan = 0/0 :: Float in nan == nan
--   False
--   </pre>
assocPlus :: SFloat -> SFloat -> SFloat -> SBool

-- | Prove that addition is not associative, even if we ignore
--   <tt>NaN</tt>/<tt>Infinity</tt> values. To do this, we use the
--   predicate <a>fpIsPoint</a>, which is true of a floating point number
--   (<a>SFloat</a> or <a>SDouble</a>) if it is neither <tt>NaN</tt> nor
--   <tt>Infinity</tt>. (That is, it's a representable point in the
--   real-number line.)
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; assocPlusRegular
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     x =  3.7634227e-37 :: Float
--     y = -3.7612938e-37 :: Float
--     z = -1.1036833e-38 :: Float
--   </pre>
--   
--   Indeed, we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let  x =  3.7634227e-37 :: Float
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let  y = -3.7612938e-37 :: Float
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let  z = -1.1036833e-38 :: Float
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; x + (y + z)
--   -1.0823943e-38
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; (x + y) + z
--   -1.0823947e-38
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note the difference between two additions!
assocPlusRegular :: IO ThmResult

-- | Demonstrate that <tt>a+b = a</tt> does not necessarily mean <tt>b</tt>
--   is <tt>0</tt> in the floating point world, even when we disallow the
--   obvious solution when <tt>a</tt> and <tt>b</tt> are <tt>Infinity.</tt>
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; nonZeroAddition
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     a =  -4.611686e18 :: Float
--     b = 1.3552526e-20 :: Float
--   </pre>
--   
--   Indeed, we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; (-4.611686e18 + 1.3552526e-20) == (-4.611686e18 :: Float)
--   True
--   </pre>
--   
--   But:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; 1.3552526e-20 == (0 :: Float)
--   False
--   </pre>
nonZeroAddition :: IO ThmResult

-- | This example illustrates that <tt>a * (1/a)</tt> does not necessarily
--   equal <tt>1</tt>. Again, we protect against division by <tt>0</tt> and
--   <tt>NaN</tt>/<tt>Infinity</tt>.
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; multInverse
--   Falsifiable. Counter-example:
--     a = 8.988465676670122e307 :: Double
--   </pre>
--   
--   Indeed, we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; let a = 8.988465676670122e307 :: Double
--   
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; a * (1/a)
--   1.0000000000000002
--   </pre>
multInverse :: IO ThmResult

-- | One interesting aspect of floating-point is that the chosen
--   rounding-mode can effect the results of a computation if the exact
--   result cannot be precisely represented. SBV exports the functions
--   <a>fpAdd</a>, <a>fpSub</a>, <a>fpMul</a>, <a>fpDiv</a>, <a>fpFMA</a>
--   and <a>fpSqrt</a> which allows users to specify the IEEE supported
--   <a>RoundingMode</a> for the operation. This example illustrates how
--   SBV can be used to find rounding-modes where, for instance, addition
--   can produce different results. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; roundingAdd
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     rm = RoundTowardPositive :: RoundingMode
--     x  =           255.96877 :: Float
--     y  =             255.875 :: Float
--   </pre>
--   
--   (Note that depending on your version of Z3, you might get a different
--   result.) Unfortunately we can't directly validate this result at the
--   Haskell level, as Haskell only supports <a>RoundNearestTiesToEven</a>.
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; 255.96877 + 255.875 :: Float
--   511.84375
--   </pre>
--   
--   While we cannot directly see the result when the mode is
--   <a>RoundTowardPositive</a> in Haskell, we can use SBV to provide us
--   with that result thusly:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \z -&gt; z .== fpAdd sRoundTowardPositive 255.96877 (255.875 :: SFloat)
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     s0 = 511.84378 :: Float
--   </pre>
--   
--   We can see why these two resuls are indeed different: The
--   <a>RoundTowardPositive</a> (which rounds towards positive-infinity)
--   produces a larger result. Indeed, if we treat these numbers as
--   <a>Double</a> values, we get:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; 255.96877 + 255.875 :: Double
--   511.84377
--   </pre>
--   
--   we see that the "more precise" result is larger than what the
--   <a>Float</a> value is, justifying the larger value with
--   <a>RoundTowardPositive</a>. A more detailed study is beyond our
--   current scope, so we'll merely -- note that floating point
--   representation and semantics is indeed a thorny subject, and point to
--   <a>http://ece.uwaterloo.ca/~dwharder/NumericalAnalysis/02Numerics/Double/paper.pdf</a>
--   as an excellent guide.
roundingAdd :: IO SatResult


-- | Demonstrates use of programmatic model extraction. When programming
--   with SBV, we typically use <a>sat</a>/<a>allSat</a> calls to compute
--   models automatically. In more advanced uses, however, the user might
--   want to use programmable extraction features to do fancier
--   programming. We demonstrate some of these utilities here.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.ModelExtract

-- | A simple function to generate a new integer value, that is not in the
--   given set of values. We also require the value to be non-negative
outside :: [Integer] -> IO SatResult

-- | We now use "outside" repeatedly to generate 10 integers, such that we
--   not only disallow previously generated elements, but also any value
--   that differs from previous solutions by less than 5. Here, we use the
--   <a>getModelValue</a> function. We could have also extracted the
--   dictionary via <a>getModelDictionary</a> and did fancier programming
--   as well, as necessary. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; genVals
--   [45,40,35,30,25,20,15,10,5,0]
--   </pre>
genVals :: IO [Integer]


-- | Demonstrates SBV's assertion checking facilities
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.NoDiv0

-- | A simple variant of division, where we explicitly require the caller
--   to make sure the divisor is not 0.
checkedDiv :: ?loc :: CallStack => SInt32 -> SInt32 -> SInt32

-- | Check whether an arbitrary call to <a>checkedDiv</a> is safe. Clearly,
--   we do not expect this to be safe:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; test1
--   [Documentation/SBV/Examples/Misc/NoDiv0.hs:36:14:checkedDiv: Divisor should not be 0: Violated. Model:
--     s0 = 0 :: Int32
--     s1 = 0 :: Int32]
--   </pre>
test1 :: IO [SafeResult]

-- | Repeat the test, except this time we explicitly protect against the
--   bad case. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; test2
--   [Documentation/SBV/Examples/Misc/NoDiv0.hs:44:41:checkedDiv: Divisor should not be 0: No violations detected]
--   </pre>
test2 :: IO [SafeResult]


-- | Simple usage of polynomials over GF(2^n), using Rijndael's finite
--   field:
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_field_arithmetic#Rijndael.27s_finite_field</a>
--   
--   The functions available are:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li><i><i>pMult</i></i> GF(2^n) Multiplication</li>
--   <li><i><i>pDiv</i></i> GF(2^n) Division</li>
--   <li><i><i>pMod</i></i> GF(2^n) Modulus</li>
--   <li><i><i>pDivMod</i></i> GF(2^n) Division/Modulus, packed
--   together</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   Note that addition in GF(2^n) is simply <a>xor</a>, so no custom
--   function is provided.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Polynomials

-- | Helper synonym for representing GF(2^8); which are merely 8-bit
--   unsigned words. Largest term in such a polynomial has degree 7.
type GF28 = SWord8

-- | Multiplication in Rijndael's field; usual polynomial multiplication
--   followed by reduction by the irreducible polynomial. The irreducible
--   used by Rijndael's field is the polynomial <tt>x^8 + x^4 + x^3 + x +
--   1</tt>, which we write by giving it's <i>exponents</i> in SBV. See:
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_field_arithmetic#Rijndael.27s_finite_field</a>.
--   Note that the irreducible itself is not in GF28! It has a degree of 8.
--   
--   NB. You can use the <a>showPoly</a> function to print polynomials
--   nicely, as a mathematician would write.
gfMult :: GF28 -> GF28 -> GF28

-- | States that the unit polynomial <tt>1</tt>, is the unit element
multUnit :: GF28 -> SBool

-- | States that multiplication is commutative
multComm :: GF28 -> GF28 -> SBool

-- | States that multiplication is associative, note that associativity
--   proofs are notoriously hard for SAT/SMT solvers
multAssoc :: GF28 -> GF28 -> GF28 -> SBool

-- | States that the usual multiplication rule holds over GF(2^n)
--   polynomials Checks:
--   
--   <pre>
--   if (a, b) = x <a>pDivMod</a> y then x = y <a>pMult</a> a + b
--   </pre>
--   
--   being careful about <tt>y = 0</tt>. When divisor is 0, then quotient
--   is defined to be 0 and the remainder is the numerator. (Note that
--   addition is simply <a>xor</a> in GF(2^8).)
polyDivMod :: GF28 -> GF28 -> SBool

-- | Queries
testGF28 :: IO ()


-- | Demonstrates soft-constraints, i.e., those that the solver is free to
--   leave unsatisfied. Solvers will try to satisfy this constraint, unless
--   it is impossible to do so to get a model. Can be good in modeling
--   default values, for instance.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.SoftConstrain

-- | Create two strings, requiring one to be a particular value,
--   constraining the other to be different than another constant string.
--   But also add soft constraints to indicate our preferences for each of
--   these variables. We get:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; example
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     x = "x-must-really-be-hello" :: String
--     y =        "default-y-value" :: String
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note how the value of <tt>x</tt> is constrained properly and thus the
--   default value doesn't kick in, but <tt>y</tt> takes the default value
--   since it is acceptable by all the other hard constraints.
example :: IO SatResult


-- | Demonstrates how new sizes of word/int types can be defined and used
--   with SBV.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4

-- | Word4 as a newtype. Invariant: <tt>Word4 x</tt> should satisfy <tt>x
--   &lt; 16</tt>.
newtype Word4
Word4 :: Word8 -> Word4

-- | Smart constructor; simplifies conversion from Word8
word4 :: Word8 -> Word4

-- | SWord4 type synonym
type SWord4 = SBV Word4
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.Core.Model.SDivisible Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.SWord4
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Enum.Bounded Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Enum.Enum Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Num.Num Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Real.Real Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance GHC.Real.Integral Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.Bits.Bits Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance System.Random.Random Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.Core.Model.SDivisible Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.Core.Model.SIntegral Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4
instance Data.SBV.Core.Splittable.Splittable GHC.Word.Word8 Documentation.SBV.Examples.Misc.Word4.Word4


-- | Demonstrates the extension field (<tt>oo</tt>/<tt>epsilon</tt>)
--   optimization results.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Optimization.ExtField

-- | Optimization goals where min/max values might require assignments to
--   values that are infinite (integer case), or infinite/epsion (real
--   case). This simple example demostrates how SBV can be used to extract
--   such values.
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; optimize Independent problem
--   Objective "one-x": Optimal in an extension field:
--     one-x =                    oo :: Integer
--     min_y = 7.0 + (2.0 * epsilon) :: Real
--     min_z =         5.0 + epsilon :: Real
--   Objective "min_y": Optimal in an extension field:
--     one-x =                    oo :: Integer
--     min_y = 7.0 + (2.0 * epsilon) :: Real
--     min_z =         5.0 + epsilon :: Real
--   Objective "min_z": Optimal in an extension field:
--     one-x =                    oo :: Integer
--     min_y = 7.0 + (2.0 * epsilon) :: Real
--     min_z =         5.0 + epsilon :: Real
--   </pre>
problem :: Goal


-- | Simple linear optimization example, as found in operations research
--   texts.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Optimization.LinearOpt

-- | Taken from
--   <a>http://people.brunel.ac.uk/~mastjjb/jeb/or/morelp.html</a>
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>maximize 5x1 + 6x2</li>
--   <li>subject to<ol><li>x1 + x2 &lt;= 10</li><li>x1 - x2 &gt;=
--   3</li><li>5x1 + 4x2 &lt;= 35</li><li>x1 &gt;= 0</li><li>x2 &gt;=
--   0</li></ol></li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; optimize Lexicographic problem
--   Optimal model:
--     x1   =  47 % 9 :: Real
--     x2   =  20 % 9 :: Real
--     goal = 355 % 9 :: Real
--   </pre>
problem :: Goal


-- | Solves a simple linear optimization problem
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Optimization.Production

-- | Taken from
--   <a>http://people.brunel.ac.uk/~mastjjb/jeb/or/morelp.html</a>
--   
--   A company makes two products (X and Y) using two machines (A and B).
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Each unit of X that is produced requires 50 minutes processing
--   time on machine A and 30 minutes processing time on machine B.</li>
--   <li>Each unit of Y that is produced requires 24 minutes processing
--   time on machine A and 33 minutes processing time on machine B.</li>
--   <li>At the start of the current week there are 30 units of X and 90
--   units of Y in stock. Available processing time on machine A is
--   forecast to be 40 hours and on machine B is forecast to be 35
--   hours.</li>
--   <li>The demand for X in the current week is forecast to be 75 units
--   and for Y is forecast to be 95 units.</li>
--   <li>Company policy is to maximise the combined sum of the units of X
--   and the units of Y in stock at the end of the week.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   How much of each product should we make in the current week?
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; optimize Lexicographic production
--   Optimal model:
--     X     = 45 :: Integer
--     Y     =  6 :: Integer
--     stock =  1 :: Integer
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is, we should produce 45 X's and 6 Y's, with the final maximum
--   stock of just 1 expected!
production :: Goal


-- | Solves a VM allocation problem using optimization features
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Optimization.VM

-- | The allocation problem. Inspired by:
--   <a>http://rise4fun.com/Z3/tutorialcontent/optimization#h25</a>
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>We have three virtual machines (VMs) which require 100, 50 and 15
--   GB hard disk respectively.</li>
--   <li>There are three servers with capabilities 100, 75 and 200 GB in
--   that order.</li>
--   <li>Find out a way to place VMs into servers in order
--   to<ul><li>Minimize the number of servers used</li><li>Minimize the
--   operation cost (the servers have fixed daily costs 10, 5 and 20 USD
--   respectively.)</li></ul></li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; optimize Lexicographic allocate
--   Optimal model:
--     x11         = False :: Bool
--     x12         = False :: Bool
--     x13         =  True :: Bool
--     x21         = False :: Bool
--     x22         = False :: Bool
--     x23         =  True :: Bool
--     x31         = False :: Bool
--     x32         = False :: Bool
--     x33         =  True :: Bool
--     noOfServers =     1 :: Integer
--     cost        =    20 :: Integer
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is, we should put all the jobs on the third server, for a total
--   cost of 20.
allocate :: Goal


-- | This is a formalization of the Cheryl's birthday problem, which went
--   viral in April 2015. (See
--   <a>http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/15/science/a-math-problem-from-singapore-goes-viral-when-is-cheryls-birthday.html</a>.)
--   
--   Here's the puzzle:
--   
--   <pre>
--   Albert and Bernard just met Cheryl. “When’s your birthday?” Albert asked Cheryl.
--   
--   Cheryl thought a second and said, “I’m not going to tell you, but I’ll give you some clues.” She wrote down a list of 10 dates:
--   
--     May 15, May 16, May 19
--     June 17, June 18
--     July 14, July 16
--     August 14, August 15, August 17
--   
--   “My birthday is one of these,” she said.
--   
--   Then Cheryl whispered in Albert’s ear the month — and only the month — of her birthday. To Bernard, she whispered the day, and only the day. 
--   “Can you figure it out now?” she asked Albert.
--   
--   Albert: I don’t know when your birthday is, but I know Bernard doesn’t know, either.
--   Bernard: I didn’t know originally, but now I do.
--   Albert: Well, now I know, too!
--   
--   When is Cheryl’s birthday?
--   </pre>
--   
--   NB. Thanks to Amit Goel for suggesting the formalization strategy used
--   in here.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Birthday

-- | Represent month by 8-bit words; We can also use an uninterpreted type,
--   but numbers work well here.
type Month = SWord8

-- | Represent day by 8-bit words; Again, an uninterpreted type would work
--   as well.
type Day = SWord8

-- | Months referenced in the problem.
may :: SWord8

-- | Months referenced in the problem.
june :: SWord8

-- | Months referenced in the problem.
july :: SWord8

-- | Months referenced in the problem.
august :: SWord8

-- | Check that a given month/day combo is a possible birth-date.
valid :: Month -> Day -> SBool

-- | Assert that the given function holds for one of the possible days.
existsDay :: (Day -> SBool) -> SBool

-- | Assert that the given function holds for all of the possible days.
forallDay :: (Day -> SBool) -> SBool

-- | Assert that the given function holds for one of the possible months.
existsMonth :: (Month -> SBool) -> SBool

-- | Assert that the given function holds for all of the possible months.
forallMonth :: (Month -> SBool) -> SBool

-- | Encode the conversation as given in the puzzle.
--   
--   NB. Lee Pike pointed out that not all the constraints are actually
--   necessary! (Private communication.) The puzzle still has a unique
--   solution if the statements <tt>a1</tt> and <tt>b1</tt> (i.e., Albert
--   and Bernard saying they themselves do not know the answer) are
--   removed. To experiment you can simply comment out those statements and
--   observe that there still is a unique solution. Thanks to Lee for
--   pointing this out! In fact, it is instructive to assert the
--   conversation line-by-line, and see how the search-space gets reduced
--   in each step.
puzzle :: Predicate

-- | Find all solutions to the birthday problem. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; cheryl
--   Solution #1:
--     birthDay   = 16 :: Word8
--     birthMonth =  7 :: Word8
--   This is the only solution.
--   </pre>
cheryl :: IO ()


-- | Solves the following puzzle:
--   
--   <pre>
--   You and a friend pass by a standard coin operated vending machine and you decide to get a candy bar.
--   The price is US $0.95, but after checking your pockets you only have a dollar (US $1) and the machine
--   only takes coins. You turn to your friend and have this conversation:
--     you: Hey, do you have change for a dollar?
--     friend: Let's see. I have 6 US coins but, although they add up to a US $1.15, I can't break a dollar.
--     you: Huh? Can you make change for half a dollar?
--     friend: No.
--     you: How about a quarter?
--     friend: Nope, and before you ask I cant make change for a dime or nickel either.
--     you: Really? and these six coins are all US government coins currently in production? 
--     friend: Yes.
--     you: Well can you just put your coins into the vending machine and buy me a candy bar, and I'll pay you back?
--     friend: Sorry, I would like to but I cant with the coins I have.
--   What coins are your friend holding?
--   </pre>
--   
--   To be fair, the problem has no solution <i>mathematically</i>. But
--   there is a solution when one takes into account that vending machines
--   typically do not take the 50 cent coins!
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Coins

-- | We will represent coins with 16-bit words (more than enough precision
--   for coins).
type Coin = SWord16

-- | Create a coin. The argument Int argument just used for naming the
--   coin. Note that we constrain the value to be one of the valid U.S.
--   coin values as we create it.
mkCoin :: Int -> Symbolic Coin

-- | Return all combinations of a sequence of values.
combinations :: [a] -> [[a]]

-- | Constraint 1: Cannot make change for a dollar.
c1 :: [Coin] -> SBool

-- | Constraint 2: Cannot make change for half a dollar.
c2 :: [Coin] -> SBool

-- | Constraint 3: Cannot make change for a quarter.
c3 :: [Coin] -> SBool

-- | Constraint 4: Cannot make change for a dime.
c4 :: [Coin] -> SBool

-- | Constraint 5: Cannot make change for a nickel
c5 :: [Coin] -> SBool

-- | Constraint 6: Cannot buy the candy either. Here's where we need to
--   have the extra knowledge that the vending machines do not take 50 cent
--   coins.
c6 :: [Coin] -> SBool

-- | Solve the puzzle. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; puzzle
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     c1 = 50 :: Word16
--     c2 = 25 :: Word16
--     c3 = 10 :: Word16
--     c4 = 10 :: Word16
--     c5 = 10 :: Word16
--     c6 = 10 :: Word16
--   </pre>
--   
--   i.e., your friend has 4 dimes, a quarter, and a half dollar.
puzzle :: IO SatResult


-- | Consider the sentence:
--   
--   <pre>
--   In this sentence, the number of occurrences of 0 is _, of 1 is _, of 2 is _,
--   of 3 is _, of 4 is _, of 5 is _, of 6 is _, of 7 is _, of 8 is _, and of 9 is _.
--   </pre>
--   
--   The puzzle is to fill the blanks with numbers, such that the sentence
--   will be correct. There are precisely two solutions to this puzzle,
--   both of which are found by SBV successfully.
--   
--   References:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Douglas Hofstadter, Metamagical Themes, pg. 27.</li>
--   
--   <li><a>http://mathcentral.uregina.ca/mp/archives/previous2002/dec02sol.html</a></li>
--   </ul>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Counts

-- | We will assume each number can be represented by an 8-bit word, i.e.,
--   can be at most 128.
type Count = SWord8

-- | Given a number, increment the count array depending on the digits of
--   the number
count :: Count -> [Count] -> [Count]

-- | Encoding of the puzzle. The solution is a sequence of 10 numbers for
--   the occurrences of the digits such that if we count each digit, we
--   find these numbers.
puzzle :: [Count] -> SBool

-- | Finds all two known solutions to this puzzle. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; counts
--   Solution #1
--   In this sentence, the number of occurrences of 0 is 1, of 1 is 7, of 2 is 3, of 3 is 2, of 4 is 1, of 5 is 1, of 6 is 1, of 7 is 2, of 8 is 1, of 9 is 1.
--   Solution #2
--   In this sentence, the number of occurrences of 0 is 1, of 1 is 11, of 2 is 2, of 3 is 1, of 4 is 1, of 5 is 1, of 6 is 1, of 7 is 1, of 8 is 1, of 9 is 1.
--   Found: 2 solution(s).
--   </pre>
counts :: IO ()


-- | Puzzle: Spend exactly 100 dollars and buy exactly 100 animals. Dogs
--   cost 15 dollars, cats cost 1 dollar, and mice cost 25 cents each. You
--   have to buy at least one of each. How many of each should you buy?
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.DogCatMouse

-- | Prints the only solution:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; puzzle
--   Solution #1:
--     dog   =  3 :: Integer
--     cat   = 41 :: Integer
--     mouse = 56 :: Integer
--   This is the only solution.
--   </pre>
puzzle :: IO AllSatResult


-- | A solution to Project Euler problem #185:
--   <a>http://projecteuler.net/index.php?section=problems&amp;id=185</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Euler185

-- | The given guesses and the correct digit counts, encoded as a simple
--   list.
guesses :: [(String, SWord8)]

-- | Encode the problem, note that we check digits are within 0-9 as we use
--   8-bit words to represent them. Otherwise, the constraints are simply
--   generated by zipping the alleged solution with each guess, and making
--   sure the number of matching digits match what's given in the problem
--   statement.
euler185 :: Symbolic SBool

-- | Print out the solution nicely. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; solveEuler185
--   4640261571849533
--   Number of solutions: 1
--   </pre>
solveEuler185 :: IO ()


-- | Solves the following logic puzzle:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>The Briton lives in the red house.</li>
--   <li>The Swede keeps dogs as pets.</li>
--   <li>The Dane drinks tea.</li>
--   <li>The green house is left to the white house.</li>
--   <li>The owner of the green house drinks coffee.</li>
--   <li>The person who plays football rears birds.</li>
--   <li>The owner of the yellow house plays baseball.</li>
--   <li>The man living in the center house drinks milk.</li>
--   <li>The Norwegian lives in the first house.</li>
--   <li>The man who plays volleyball lives next to the one who keeps
--   cats.</li>
--   <li>The man who keeps the horse lives next to the one who plays
--   baseball.</li>
--   <li>The owner who plays tennis drinks beer.</li>
--   <li>The German plays hockey.</li>
--   <li>The Norwegian lives next to the blue house.</li>
--   <li>The man who plays volleyball has a neighbor who drinks water.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   Who owns the fish?
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish

-- | Colors of houses
data Color
Red :: Color
Green :: Color
White :: Color
Yellow :: Color
Blue :: Color

-- | Nationalities of the occupants
data Nationality
Briton :: Nationality
Dane :: Nationality
Swede :: Nationality
Norwegian :: Nationality
German :: Nationality

-- | Beverage choices
data Beverage
Tea :: Beverage
Coffee :: Beverage
Milk :: Beverage
Beer :: Beverage
Water :: Beverage

-- | Pets they keep
data Pet
Dog :: Pet
Horse :: Pet
Cat :: Pet
Bird :: Pet
Fish :: Pet

-- | Sports they engage in
data Sport
Football :: Sport
Baseball :: Sport
Volleyball :: Sport
Hockey :: Sport
Tennis :: Sport

-- | We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; fishOwner
--   German
--   </pre>
--   
--   It's not hard to modify this program to grab the values of all the
--   assignments, i.e., the full solution to the puzzle. We leave that as
--   an exercise to the interested reader!
fishOwner :: IO ()
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Sport
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Pet
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Beverage
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Nationality
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Fish.Color


-- | The origin of this puzzle is Raymond Smullyan's "The Flower Garden"
--   riddle:
--   
--   In a certain flower garden, each flower was either red, yellow, or
--   blue, and all three colors were represented. A statistician once
--   visited the garden and made the observation that whatever three
--   flowers you picked, at least one of them was bound to be red. A second
--   statistician visited the garden and made the observation that whatever
--   three flowers you picked, at least one was bound to be yellow.
--   
--   Two logic students heard about this and got into an argument. The
--   first student said: “It therefore follows that whatever three flowers
--   you pick, at least one is bound to be blue, doesn’t it?” The second
--   student said: “Of course not!”
--   
--   Which student was right, and why?
--   
--   We slightly modify the puzzle. Assuming the first student is right, we
--   use SBV to show that the garden must contain exactly 3 flowers. In any
--   other case, the second student would be right.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden

-- | Colors of the flowers
data Color
Red :: Color
Yellow :: Color
Blue :: Color

-- | Represent flowers by symbolic integers
type Flower = SInteger

-- | The uninterpreted function <a>col</a> assigns a color to each flower.
col :: Flower -> SBV Color

-- | Describe a valid pick of three flowers <tt>i</tt>, <tt>j</tt>,
--   <tt>k</tt>, assuming we have <tt>n</tt> flowers to start with.
--   Essentially the numbers should be within bounds and distinct.
validPick :: SInteger -> Flower -> Flower -> Flower -> SBool

-- | Count the number of flowers that occur in a given set of flowers.
count :: Color -> [Flower] -> SInteger

-- | Smullyan's puzzle.
puzzle :: Goal

-- | Solve the puzzle. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; flowerCount
--   Solution #1:
--     N = 3 :: Integer
--   This is the only solution. (Unique up to prefix existentials.)
--   </pre>
--   
--   So, a garden with 3 flowers is the only solution. (Note that we simply
--   skip over the prefix existentials for model purposes here, as they
--   don't represent a different solution.)
flowerCount :: IO ()
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Garden.Color


-- | A solution to the hexagon solver puzzle:
--   <a>http://www5.cadence.com/2018ClubVQuiz_LP.html</a> In case the above
--   URL goes dead, here's an ASCII rendering of the problem.
--   
--   We're given a board, with 19 hexagon cells. The cells are arranged as
--   follows:
--   
--   <pre>
--       01  02  03
--     04  05  06  07
--   08  09  10  11  12
--     13  14  15  16
--       17  18  19
--   </pre>
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>Each cell has a color, one of <tt>BLACK</tt>, <tt>BLUE</tt>,
--   <tt>GREEN</tt>, or <tt>RED</tt>.</li>
--   <li>At each step, you get to press one of the center buttons. That is,
--   one of 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 14, or 15.</li>
--   <li>Pressing a button that is currently colored <tt>BLACK</tt> has no
--   effect.</li>
--   <li>Otherwise (i.e., if the pressed button is not <tt>BLACK</tt>),
--   then colors rotate clockwise around that button. For instance if you
--   press 15 when it is not colored <tt>BLACK</tt>, then 11 moves to 16,
--   16 moves to 19, 19 moves to 18, 18 moves to 14, 14 moves to 10, and 10
--   moves to 11.</li>
--   <li>Note that by "move," we mean the colors move: We still refer to
--   the buttons with the same number after a move.</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   You are given an initial board coloring, and a final one. Your goal is
--   to find a minimal sequence of button presses that will turn the
--   original board to the final one.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle

-- | Colors we're allowed
data Color
Black :: Color
Blue :: Color
Green :: Color
Red :: Color

-- | Give symbolic colors a name for convenience.
type SColor = SBV Color

-- | Use 8-bit words for button numbers, even though we only have 1 to 19.
type Button = Word8

-- | Symbolic version of button.
type SButton = SBV Button

-- | The grid is an array mapping each button to its color.
type Grid = SFunArray Button Color

-- | Given a button press, and the current grid, compute the next grid. If
--   the button is "unpressable", i.e., if it is not one of the center
--   buttons or it is currently colored black, we return the grid
--   unchanged.
next :: SButton -> Grid -> Grid

-- | Iteratively search at increasing depths of button-presses to see if we
--   can transform from the initial board position to a final board
--   position.
search :: [Color] -> [Color] -> IO ()

-- | A particular example run. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; example
--   Searching at depth: 0
--   Searching at depth: 1
--   Searching at depth: 2
--   Searching at depth: 3
--   Searching at depth: 4
--   Searching at depth: 5
--   Searching at depth: 6
--   Found: [10,10,11,9,14,6]
--   Found: [10,10,9,11,14,6]
--   There are no more solutions.
--   </pre>
example :: IO ()
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.HexPuzzle.Color


-- | Puzzle:
--   
--   You are standing in front of three rooms and must choose one. In one
--   room is a Lady (whom you could and wish to marry), in the other two
--   rooms are tigers (that if you choose either of these rooms, the tiger
--   invites you to breakfast – the problem is that you are the main
--   course). Your job is to choose the room with the Lady. The signs on
--   the doors are:
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li>A Tiger is in this room</li>
--   <li>A Lady is in this room</li>
--   <li>A Tiger is in room two</li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   At most only 1 statement is true. Where’s the Lady?
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.LadyAndTigers

-- | Prints the only solution:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ladyAndTigers
--   Solution #1:
--     sign1  = False :: Bool
--     sign2  = False :: Bool
--     sign3  =  True :: Bool
--     tiger1 = False :: Bool
--     tiger2 =  True :: Bool
--     tiger3 =  True :: Bool
--   This is the only solution.
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is, the lady is in room 1, and only the third room's sign is
--   true.
ladyAndTigers :: IO AllSatResult


-- | Solves the magic-square puzzle. An NxN magic square is one where all
--   entries are filled with numbers from 1 to NxN such that sums of all
--   rows, columns and diagonals is the same.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.MagicSquare

-- | Use 32-bit words for elements.
type Elem = SWord32

-- | A row is a list of elements
type Row = [Elem]

-- | The puzzle board is a list of rows
type Board = [Row]

-- | Checks that all elements in a list are within bounds
check :: Elem -> Elem -> [Elem] -> SBool

-- | Get the diagonal of a square matrix
diag :: [[a]] -> [a]

-- | Test if a given board is a magic square
isMagic :: Board -> SBool

-- | Group a list of elements in the sublists of length <tt>i</tt>
chunk :: Int -> [a] -> [[a]]

-- | Given <tt>n</tt>, magic <tt>n</tt> prints all solutions to the
--   <tt>nxn</tt> magic square problem
magic :: Int -> IO ()


-- | Solves the NQueens puzzle:
--   <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_queens_puzzle</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.NQueens

-- | A solution is a sequence of row-numbers where queens should be placed
type Solution = [SWord8]

-- | Checks that a given solution of <tt>n</tt>-queens is valid, i.e., no
--   queen captures any other.
isValid :: Int -> Solution -> SBool

-- | Given <tt>n</tt>, it solves the <tt>n-queens</tt> puzzle, printing all
--   possible solutions.
nQueens :: Int -> IO ()


-- | Solves the classic <tt>send + more = money</tt> puzzle.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.SendMoreMoney

-- | Solve the puzzle. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sendMoreMoney
--   Solution #1:
--     s = 9 :: Integer
--     e = 5 :: Integer
--     n = 6 :: Integer
--     d = 7 :: Integer
--     m = 1 :: Integer
--     o = 0 :: Integer
--     r = 8 :: Integer
--     y = 2 :: Integer
--   This is the only solution.
--   </pre>
--   
--   That is:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; 9567 + 1085 == 10652
--   True
--   </pre>
sendMoreMoney :: IO AllSatResult


-- | The Sudoku solver, quintessential SMT solver example!
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.Sudoku

-- | A row is a sequence of 8-bit words, too large indeed for representing
--   1-9, but does not harm
type Row = [SWord8]

-- | A Sudoku board is a sequence of 9 rows
type Board = [Row]

-- | Given a series of elements, make sure they are all different and they
--   all are numbers between 1 and 9
check :: [SWord8] -> SBool

-- | Given a full Sudoku board, check that it is valid
valid :: Board -> SBool

-- | A puzzle is a pair: First is the number of missing elements, second is
--   a function that given that many elements returns the final board.
type Puzzle = (Int, [SWord8] -> Board)

-- | Solve a given puzzle and print the results
sudoku :: Puzzle -> IO ()

-- | Helper function to display results nicely, not really needed, but
--   helps presentation
dispSolution :: Puzzle -> (Bool, [Word8]) -> IO ()

-- | Find all solutions to a puzzle
solveAll :: Puzzle -> IO ()

-- | Find an arbitrary good board
puzzle0 :: Puzzle

-- | A random puzzle, found on the internet..
puzzle1 :: Puzzle

-- | Another random puzzle, found on the internet..
puzzle2 :: Puzzle

-- | Another random puzzle, found on the internet..
puzzle3 :: Puzzle

-- | According to the web, this is the toughest sudoku puzzle ever.. It
--   even has a name: Al Escargot:
--   <a>http://zonkedyak.blogspot.com/2006/11/worlds-hardest-sudoku-puzzle-al.html</a>
puzzle4 :: Puzzle

-- | This one has been called diabolical, apparently
puzzle5 :: Puzzle

-- | The following is nefarious according to
--   <a>http://haskell.org/haskellwiki/Sudoku</a>
puzzle6 :: Puzzle

-- | Solve them all, this takes a fraction of a second to run for each case
allPuzzles :: IO ()


-- | The famous U2 bridge crossing puzzle:
--   <a>http://www.braingle.com/brainteasers/515/u2.html</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge

-- | U2 band members. We want to translate this to SMT-Lib as a data-type,
--   and hence the call to mkSymbolicEnumeration.
data U2Member
Bono :: U2Member
Edge :: U2Member
Adam :: U2Member
Larry :: U2Member

-- | Symbolic shorthand for a <a>U2Member</a>
type SU2Member = SBV U2Member

-- | Shorthands for symbolic versions of the members
bono :: SU2Member

-- | Shorthands for symbolic versions of the members
edge :: SU2Member

-- | Shorthands for symbolic versions of the members
adam :: SU2Member

-- | Shorthands for symbolic versions of the members
larry :: SU2Member

-- | Model time using 32 bits
type Time = Word32

-- | Symbolic variant for time
type STime = SBV Time

-- | Crossing times for each member of the band
crossTime :: U2Member -> Time

-- | The symbolic variant.. The duplication is unfortunate.
sCrossTime :: SU2Member -> STime

-- | Location of the flash
data Location
Here :: Location
There :: Location

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>Location</a>
type SLocation = SBV Location

-- | Shorthands for symbolic versions of locations
here :: SLocation

-- | Shorthands for symbolic versions of locations
there :: SLocation

-- | The status of the puzzle after each move
--   
--   This type is equipped with an automatically derived <a>Mergeable</a>
--   instance because each field is <a>Mergeable</a>. A <a>Generic</a>
--   instance must also be derived for this to work, and the
--   <tt>DeriveAnyClass</tt> language extension must be enabled. The
--   derived <a>Mergeable</a> instance simply walks down the structure
--   field by field and merges each one. An equivalent hand-written
--   <a>Mergeable</a> instance is provided in a comment below.
data Status
Status :: STime -> SLocation -> SLocation -> SLocation -> SLocation -> SLocation -> Status

-- | elapsed time
[time] :: Status -> STime

-- | location of the flash
[flash] :: Status -> SLocation

-- | location of Bono
[lBono] :: Status -> SLocation

-- | location of Edge
[lEdge] :: Status -> SLocation

-- | location of Adam
[lAdam] :: Status -> SLocation

-- | location of Larry
[lLarry] :: Status -> SLocation

-- | Start configuration, time elapsed is 0 and everybody is <a>here</a>
start :: Status

-- | A puzzle move is modeled as a state-transformer
type Move a = State Status a

-- | Read the state via an accessor function
peek :: (Status -> a) -> Move a

-- | Given an arbitrary member, return his location
whereIs :: SU2Member -> Move SLocation

-- | Transferring the flash to the other side
xferFlash :: Move ()

-- | Transferring a person to the other side
xferPerson :: SU2Member -> Move ()

-- | Increment the time, when only one person crosses
bumpTime1 :: SU2Member -> Move ()

-- | Increment the time, when two people cross together
bumpTime2 :: SU2Member -> SU2Member -> Move ()

-- | Symbolic version of <a>when</a>
whenS :: SBool -> Move () -> Move ()

-- | Move one member, remembering to take the flash
move1 :: SU2Member -> Move ()

-- | Move two members, again with the flash
move2 :: SU2Member -> SU2Member -> Move ()

-- | A move action is a sequence of triples. The first component is
--   symbolically True if only one member crosses. (In this case the third
--   element of the triple is irrelevant.) If the first component is
--   (symbolically) False, then both members move together
type Actions = [(SBool, SU2Member, SU2Member)]

-- | Run a sequence of given actions.
run :: Actions -> Move [Status]

-- | Check if a given sequence of actions is valid, i.e., they must all
--   cross the bridge according to the rules and in less than 17 seconds
isValid :: Actions -> SBool

-- | See if there is a solution that has precisely <tt>n</tt> steps
solveN :: Int -> IO Bool

-- | Solve the U2-bridge crossing puzzle, starting by testing solutions
--   with increasing number of steps, until we find one. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; solveU2
--   Checking for solutions with 1 move.
--   Checking for solutions with 2 moves.
--   Checking for solutions with 3 moves.
--   Checking for solutions with 4 moves.
--   Checking for solutions with 5 moves.
--   Solution #1:
--    0 --&gt; Edge, Bono
--    2 &lt;-- Bono
--    3 --&gt; Larry, Adam
--   13 &lt;-- Edge
--   15 --&gt; Edge, Bono
--   Total time: 17
--   Solution #2:
--    0 --&gt; Edge, Bono
--    2 &lt;-- Edge
--    4 --&gt; Larry, Adam
--   14 &lt;-- Bono
--   15 --&gt; Edge, Bono
--   Total time: 17
--   Found: 2 solutions with 5 moves.
--   </pre>
--   
--   Finding all possible solutions to the puzzle.
solveU2 :: IO ()
instance Data.SBV.Core.Model.Mergeable Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Status
instance GHC.Generics.Generic Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Status
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Location
instance Data.SBV.Core.Model.Mergeable a => Data.SBV.Core.Model.Mergeable (Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.Move a)
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Puzzles.U2Bridge.U2Member


-- | When we would like to find all solutions to a problem, we can query
--   the solver repeatedly, telling it to give us a new model each time.
--   SBV already provides <a>allSat</a> that precisely does this. However,
--   this example demonstrates how the query mode can be used to achieve
--   the same, and can also incorporate extra conditions with easy as we
--   walk through solutions.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.AllSat

-- | Find all solutions to <tt>x + y .== 10</tt> for positive <tt>x</tt>
--   and <tt>y</tt>, but at each iteration we would like to ensure that the
--   value of <tt>x</tt> we get is at least twice as large as the previous
--   one. This is rather silly, but demonstrates how we can dynamically
--   query the result and put in new constraints based on those.
goodSum :: Symbolic [(Integer, Integer)]

-- | Run the query. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; demo
--   Starting the all-sat engine!
--   Iteration: 1
--   Current solution is: (0,10)
--   Iteration: 2
--   Current solution is: (1,9)
--   Iteration: 3
--   Current solution is: (2,8)
--   Iteration: 4
--   Current solution is: (4,6)
--   Iteration: 5
--   Current solution is: (8,2)
--   Iteration: 6
--   No other solution!
--   [(0,10),(1,9),(2,8),(4,6),(8,2)]
--   </pre>
demo :: IO ()


-- | A couple of demonstrations for the <a>caseSplit</a> function.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.CaseSplit

-- | A simple floating-point problem, but we do the sat-analysis via a
--   case-split. Due to the nature of floating-point numbers, a case-split
--   on the characteristics of the number (such as NaN, negative-zero, etc.
--   is most suitable.)
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; csDemo1
--   Case fpIsNegativeZero: Starting
--   Case fpIsNegativeZero: Unsatisfiable
--   Case fpIsPositiveZero: Starting
--   Case fpIsPositiveZero: Unsatisfiable
--   Case fpIsNormal: Starting
--   Case fpIsNormal: Unsatisfiable
--   Case fpIsSubnormal: Starting
--   Case fpIsSubnormal: Unsatisfiable
--   Case fpIsPoint: Starting
--   Case fpIsPoint: Unsatisfiable
--   Case fpIsNaN: Starting
--   Case fpIsNaN: Satisfiable
--   ("fpIsNaN",NaN)
--   </pre>
csDemo1 :: IO (String, Float)

-- | Demonstrates the "coverage" case.
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; csDemo2
--   Case negative: Starting
--   Case negative: Unsatisfiable
--   Case less than 8: Starting
--   Case less than 8: Unsatisfiable
--   Case Coverage: Starting
--   Case Coverage: Satisfiable
--   ("Coverage",10)
--   </pre>
csDemo2 :: IO (String, Integer)


-- | Demonstrates the use of enumeration values during queries.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums

-- | Days of the week. We make it symbolic using the
--   <a>mkSymbolicEnumeration</a> splice.
data Day
Monday :: Day
Tuesday :: Day
Wednesday :: Day
Thursday :: Day
Friday :: Day
Saturday :: Day
Sunday :: Day

-- | The type synonym <a>SDay</a> is the symbolic variant of <a>Day</a>.
--   (Similar to 'SInteger'/'Integer' and others.)
type SDay = SBV Day

-- | A trivial query to find three consecutive days that's all before
--   <a>Thursday</a>. The point here is that we can perform queries on such
--   enumerated values and use <a>getValue</a> on them and return their
--   values from queries just like any other value. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; findDays
--   [Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday]
--   </pre>
findDays :: IO [Day]
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Enums.Day


-- | A query based solution to the four-fours puzzle. Inspired by
--   <a>http://www.gigamonkeys.com/trees/</a>
--   
--   <pre>
--   Try to make every number between 0 and 20 using only four 4s and any
--   mathematical operation, with all four 4s being used each time.
--   </pre>
--   
--   We pretty much follow the structure of
--   <a>http://www.gigamonkeys.com/trees/</a>, with the exception that we
--   generate the trees filled with symbolic operators and ask the SMT
--   solver to find the appropriate fillings.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours

-- | Supported binary operators. To keep the search-space small, we will
--   only allow division by <tt>2</tt> or <tt>4</tt>, and exponentiation
--   will only be to the power <tt>0</tt>. This does restrict the search
--   space, but is sufficient to solve all the instances.
data BinOp
Plus :: BinOp
Minus :: BinOp
Times :: BinOp
Divide :: BinOp
Expt :: BinOp

-- | Supported unary operators. Similar to <a>BinOp</a> case, we will
--   restrict square-root and factorial to be only applied to the value @4.
data UnOp
Negate :: UnOp
Sqrt :: UnOp
Factorial :: UnOp

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>BinOp</a>.
type SBinOp = SBV BinOp

-- | Symbolic variant of <a>UnOp</a>.
type SUnOp = SBV UnOp

-- | The shape of a tree, either a binary node, or a unary node, or the
--   number <tt>4</tt>, represented hear by the constructor <tt>F</tt>. We
--   parameterize by the operator type: When doing symbolic computations,
--   we'll fill those with <a>SBinOp</a> and <a>SUnOp</a>. When finding the
--   shapes, we will simply put unit values, i.e., holes.
data T b u
B :: b -> T b u -> T b u -> T b u
U :: u -> T b u -> T b u
F :: T b u

-- | Construct all possible tree shapes. The argument here follows the
--   logic in <a>http://www.gigamonkeys.com/trees/</a>: We simply construct
--   all possible shapes and extend with the operators. The number of such
--   trees is:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; length allPossibleTrees
--   640
--   </pre>
--   
--   Note that this is a <i>lot</i> smaller than what is generated by
--   <a>http://www.gigamonkeys.com/trees/</a>. (There, the number of trees
--   is 10240000: 16000 times more than what we have to consider!)
allPossibleTrees :: [T () ()]

-- | Given a tree with hols, fill it with symbolic operators. This is the
--   <i>trick</i> that allows us to consider only 640 trees as opposed to
--   over 10 million.
fill :: T () () -> Symbolic (T SBinOp SUnOp)

-- | Minor helper for writing "symbolic" case statements. Simply walks down
--   a list of values to match against a symbolic version of the key.
sCase :: (SymWord a, Mergeable v) => SBV a -> [(a, v)] -> v

-- | Evaluate a symbolic tree, obtaining a symbolic value. Note how we
--   structure this evaluation so we impose extra constraints on what
--   values square-root, divide etc. can take. This is the power of the
--   symbolic approach: We can put arbitrary symbolic constraints as we
--   evaluate the tree.
eval :: T SBinOp SUnOp -> Symbolic SInteger

-- | In the query mode, find a filling of a given tree shape <i>t</i>, such
--   that it evalutes to the requested number <i>i</i>. Note that we return
--   back a concrete tree.
generate :: Integer -> T () () -> IO (Maybe (T BinOp UnOp))

-- | Given an integer, walk through all possible tree shapes (at most 640
--   of them), and find a filling that solves the puzzle.
find :: Integer -> IO ()

-- | Solution to the puzzle. When you run this puzzle, the solver can
--   produce different results than what's shown here, but the expressions
--   should still be all valid!
--   
--   <pre>
--   ghci&gt; puzzle
--    0 [OK]: (4 - (4 + (4 - 4)))
--    1 [OK]: (4 / (4 + (4 - 4)))
--    2 [OK]: sqrt((4 + (4 * (4 - 4))))
--    3 [OK]: (4 - (4 ^ (4 - 4)))
--    4 [OK]: (4 + (4 * (4 - 4)))
--    5 [OK]: (4 + (4 ^ (4 - 4)))
--    6 [OK]: (4 + sqrt((4 * (4 / 4))))
--    7 [OK]: (4 + (4 - (4 / 4)))
--    8 [OK]: (4 - (4 - (4 + 4)))
--    9 [OK]: (4 + (4 + (4 / 4)))
--   10 [OK]: (4 + (4 + (4 - sqrt(4))))
--   11 [OK]: (4 + ((4 + 4!) / 4))
--   12 [OK]: (4 * (4 - (4 / 4)))
--   13 [OK]: (4! + ((sqrt(4) - 4!) / sqrt(4)))
--   14 [OK]: (4 + (4 + (4 + sqrt(4))))
--   15 [OK]: (4 + ((4! - sqrt(4)) / sqrt(4)))
--   16 [OK]: (4 * (4 * (4 / 4)))
--   17 [OK]: (4 + ((sqrt(4) + 4!) / sqrt(4)))
--   18 [OK]: -(4 + (4 - (sqrt(4) + 4!)))
--   19 [OK]: -(4 - (4! - (4 / 4)))
--   20 [OK]: (4 * (4 + (4 / 4)))
--   </pre>
puzzle :: IO ()
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp
instance GHC.Show.Show (Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.T Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.UnOp)
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance Data.SBV.Control.Utils.SMTValue Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp
instance Data.SBV.SMT.SMT.SatModel Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.FourFours.BinOp


-- | A simple number-guessing game implementation via queries. Clearly an
--   SMT solver is hardly needed for this problem, but it is a nice demo
--   for the interactive-query programming.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.GuessNumber

-- | Use the backend solver to guess the number given as argument. The
--   number is assumed to be between <tt>0</tt> and <tt>1000</tt>, and we
--   use a simple binary search. Returns the sequence of guesses we
--   performed during the search process.
guess :: Integer -> Symbolic [Integer]

-- | Play a round of the game, making the solver guess the secret number
--   42. Note that you can generate a random-number and make the solver
--   guess it too! We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; play
--   Current bounds: (0,1000)
--   Current bounds: (0,521)
--   Current bounds: (21,521)
--   Current bounds: (31,521)
--   Current bounds: (36,521)
--   Current bounds: (39,521)
--   Current bounds: (40,521)
--   Current bounds: (41,521)
--   Current bounds: (42,521)
--   Solved in: 9 guesses:
--     1000 0 21 31 36 39 40 41 42
--   </pre>
play :: IO ()


-- | Demonstrates extraction of interpolants via queries.
--   
--   N.B. As of Z3 version 4.8.0; Z3 no longer supports interpolants. You
--   need to use the MathSAT backend for this example to work.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.Interpolants

-- | Compute the interpolant for the following sets of formulas:
--   
--   <pre>
--   {x - 3y &gt;= -1, x + y &gt;= 0}
--   </pre>
--   
--   AND
--   
--   <pre>
--   {z - 2x &gt;= 3, 2z &lt;= 1}
--   </pre>
--   
--   where the variables are integers. Note that these sets of formulas are
--   themselves satisfiable, but not taken all together. The pair <tt>(x,
--   y) = (0, 0)</tt> satisfies the first set. The pair <tt>(x, z) = (-2,
--   0)</tt> satisfies the second. However, there's no triple <tt>(x, y,
--   z)</tt> that satisfies all these four formulas together. We can use
--   SBV to check this fact:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; sat $ \x y z -&gt; bAnd [x - 3*y .&gt;= -1, x + y .&gt;= 0, z - 2*x .&gt;= 3, 2 * z .&lt;= (1::SInteger)]
--   Unsatisfiable
--   </pre>
--   
--   An interpolant for these sets would only talk about the variable
--   <tt>x</tt> that is common to both. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; runSMTWith mathSAT example
--   "(&lt;= 0 s0)"
--   </pre>
--   
--   Notice that we get a string back, not a term; so there's some
--   back-translation we need to do. We know that <tt>s0</tt> is <tt>x</tt>
--   through our translation mechanism, so the interpolant is saying that
--   <tt>x &gt;= 0</tt> is entailed by the first set of formulas, and is
--   inconsistent with the second. Let's use SBV to indeed show that this
--   is the case:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x y -&gt; (x - 3*y .&gt;= -1 &amp;&amp;&amp; x + y .&gt;= 0) ==&gt; (x .&gt;= (0::SInteger))
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   And:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove $ \x z -&gt; (z - 2*x .&gt;= 3 &amp;&amp;&amp; 2 * z .&lt;= 1) ==&gt; bnot (x .&gt;= (0::SInteger))
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
--   
--   This establishes that we indeed have an interpolant!
example :: Symbolic String


-- | Demonstrates extraction of unsat-cores via queries.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Queries.UnsatCore

-- | A simple goal with three constraints, two of which are conflicting
--   with each other. The third is irrelevant, in the sense that it does
--   not contribute to the fact that the goal is unsatisfiable.
p :: Symbolic (Maybe [String])

-- | Extract the unsat-core of <a>p</a>. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; ucCore
--   Unsat core is: ["less than 5","more than 10"]
--   </pre>
--   
--   Demonstrating that the constraint <tt>a .&gt; b</tt> is <i>not</i>
--   needed for unsatisfiablity in this case.
ucCore :: IO ()


-- | This example solves regex crosswords from
--   <a>http://regexcrossword.com</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Strings.RegexCrossword

-- | Solve a given crossword, returning the corresponding rows
solveCrossword :: [RegExp] -> [RegExp] -> IO [String]

-- | Solve
--   <a>http://regexcrossword.com/challenges/intermediate/puzzles/1</a>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; puzzle1
--   ["ATO","WEL"]
--   </pre>
puzzle1 :: IO [String]

-- | Solve
--   <a>http://regexcrossword.com/challenges/intermediate/puzzles/2</a>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; puzzle2
--   ["WA","LK","ER"]
--   </pre>
puzzle2 :: IO [String]

-- | Solve
--   <a>http://regexcrossword.com/challenges/palindromeda/puzzles/3</a>
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; puzzle3
--   ["RATS","ABUT","TUBA","STAR"]
--   </pre>
puzzle3 :: IO [String]


-- | Implement the symbolic evaluation of a language which operates on
--   strings in a way similar to bash. It's possible to do different
--   analyses, but this example finds program inputs which result in a
--   query containing a SQL injection.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Strings.SQLInjection

-- | Simple expression language
data SQLExpr
Query :: SQLExpr -> SQLExpr
Const :: String -> SQLExpr
Concat :: SQLExpr -> SQLExpr -> SQLExpr
ReadVar :: SQLExpr -> SQLExpr

-- | Evaluation monad. The state argument is the environment to store
--   variables as we evaluate.
type M = StateT (SFunArray String String) (WriterT [SString] Symbolic)

-- | Given an expression, symbolically evaluate it
eval :: SQLExpr -> M SString

-- | A simple program to query all messages with a given topic id. In SQL
--   like notation:
--   
--   <pre>
--   query ("SELECT msg FROM msgs where topicid='" ++ my_topicid ++ "'")
--   </pre>
exampleProgram :: SQLExpr

-- | Limit names to be at most 7 chars long, with simple letters.
nameRe :: RegExp

-- | Strings: Again, at most of lenght 5, surrounded by quotes.
strRe :: RegExp

-- | A "select" command:
selectRe :: RegExp

-- | A "drop" instruction, which can be exploited!
dropRe :: RegExp

-- | We'll greatly simplify here and say a statement is either a select or
--   a drop:
statementRe :: RegExp

-- | The exploit: We're looking for a DROP TABLE after at least one
--   legitimate command.
exploitRe :: RegExp

-- | Analyze the program for inputs which result in a SQL injection. There
--   are other possible injections, but in this example we're only looking
--   for a <tt>DROP TABLE</tt> command.
--   
--   Remember that our example program (in pseudo-code) is:
--   
--   <pre>
--   query ("SELECT msg FROM msgs WHERE topicid='" ++ my_topicid ++ "'")
--   </pre>
--   
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; findInjection exampleProgram
--   "  f'; DROP TABLE 'users"
--   </pre>
--   
--   Indeed, if we substitute the suggested string, we get the program:
--   
--   <pre>
--   query ("SELECT msg FROM msgs WHERE topicid='  f'; DROP TABLE 'users'")
--   </pre>
--   
--   which would query for topic <tt>' f'</tt> and then delete the users
--   table!
findInjection :: SQLExpr -> IO String
instance Data.String.IsString Documentation.SBV.Examples.Strings.SQLInjection.SQLExpr


-- | Formalizes and proves the following theorem, about arithmetic,
--   uninterpreted functions, and arrays. (For reference, see
--   <a>http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/redmond/projects/z3/fmcad06-slides.pdf</a>
--   slide number 24):
--   
--   <pre>
--   x + 2 = y  implies  f (read (write (a, x, 3), y - 2)) = f (y - x + 1)
--   </pre>
--   
--   We interpret the types as follows (other interpretations certainly
--   possible):
--   
--   <ul>
--   <li><i><i>x</i></i> <a>SWord32</a> (32-bit unsigned address)</li>
--   <li><i><i>y</i></i> <a>SWord32</a> (32-bit unsigned address)</li>
--   <li><i><i>a</i></i> An array, indexed by 32-bit addresses, returning
--   32-bit unsigned integers</li>
--   <li><i><i>f</i></i> An uninterpreted function of type
--   <tt><a>SWord32</a> -&gt; <a>SWord64</a></tt></li>
--   </ul>
--   
--   The function <tt>read</tt> and <tt>write</tt> are usual array
--   operations.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.AUF

-- | Uninterpreted function in the theorem
f :: SWord32 -> SWord64

-- | Correctness theorem. We state it for all values of <tt>x</tt>,
--   <tt>y</tt>, and the given array <tt>a</tt>. Note that we're being
--   generic in the type of array we're expecting.
thm :: SymArray a => SWord32 -> SWord32 -> a Word32 Word32 -> SBool

-- | Prove it using SMT-Lib arrays.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; proveSArray
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
proveSArray :: IO ThmResult

-- | Prove it using SBV's internal functional arrays.
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; proveSFunArray
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
proveSFunArray :: IO ThmResult


-- | Demonstrates uninterpreted sorts and how they can be used for
--   deduction. This example is inspired by the discussion at
--   <a>http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10635783/using-axioms-for-deductions-in-z3</a>,
--   essentially showing how to show the required deduction using SBV.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce

-- | The uninterpreted sort <a>B</a>, corresponding to the carrier. To
--   prevent SBV from translating it to an enumerated type, we simply
--   attach an unused field
newtype B
B :: () -> B

-- | Handy shortcut for the type of symbolic values over <a>B</a>
type SB = SBV B

-- | Uninterpreted logical connective <a>and</a>
and :: SB -> SB -> SB

-- | Uninterpreted logical connective <a>or</a>
or :: SB -> SB -> SB

-- | Uninterpreted logical connective <a>not</a>
not :: SB -> SB

-- | Distributivity of OR over AND, as an axiom in terms of the
--   uninterpreted functions we have introduced. Note how variables range
--   over the uninterpreted sort <a>B</a>.
ax1 :: [String]

-- | One of De Morgan's laws, again as an axiom in terms of our
--   uninterpeted logical connectives.
ax2 :: [String]

-- | Double negation axiom, similar to the above.
ax3 :: [String]

-- | Proves the equivalence <tt>NOT (p OR (q AND r)) == (NOT p AND NOT q)
--   OR (NOT p AND NOT r)</tt>, following from the axioms we have specified
--   above. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; test
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
test :: IO ThmResult
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Deduce.B


-- | Demonstrates function counter-examples
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Function

-- | An uninterpreted function
f :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SWord16

-- | Asserts that <tt>f x z == f (y+2) z</tt> whenever <tt>x == y+2</tt>.
--   Naturally correct:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; prove thmGood
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
thmGood :: SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SWord8 -> SBool


-- | Proves (instances of) Shannon's expansion theorem and other relevant
--   facts. See: <a>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shannon's_expansion</a>
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Shannon

-- | A ternary boolean function
type Ternary = SBool -> SBool -> SBool -> SBool

-- | A binary boolean function
type Binary = SBool -> SBool -> SBool

-- | Positive Shannon cofactor of a boolean function, with respect to its
--   first argument
pos :: (SBool -> a) -> a

-- | Negative Shannon cofactor of a boolean function, with respect to its
--   first argument
neg :: (SBool -> a) -> a

-- | Shannon's expansion over the first argument of a function. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; shannon
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
shannon :: IO ThmResult

-- | Alternative form of Shannon's expansion over the first argument of a
--   function. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; shannon2
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
shannon2 :: IO ThmResult

-- | Computing the derivative of a boolean function (boolean difference).
--   Defined as exclusive-or of Shannon cofactors with respect to that
--   variable.
derivative :: Ternary -> Binary

-- | The no-wiggle theorem: If the derivative of a function with respect to
--   a variable is constant False, then that variable does not "wiggle" the
--   function; i.e., any changes to it won't affect the result of the
--   function. In fact, we have an equivalence: The variable only changes
--   the result of the function iff the derivative with respect to it is
--   not False:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; noWiggle
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
noWiggle :: IO ThmResult

-- | Universal quantification of a boolean function with respect to a
--   variable. Simply defined as the conjunction of the Shannon cofactors.
universal :: Ternary -> Binary

-- | Show that universal quantification is really meaningful: That is, if
--   the universal quantification with respect to a variable is True, then
--   both cofactors are true for those arguments. Of course, this is a
--   trivial theorem if you think about it for a moment, or you can just
--   let SBV prove it for you:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; univOK
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
univOK :: IO ThmResult

-- | Existential quantification of a boolean function with respect to a
--   variable. Simply defined as the conjunction of the Shannon cofactors.
existential :: Ternary -> Binary

-- | Show that existential quantification is really meaningful: That is, if
--   the existential quantification with respect to a variable is True,
--   then one of the cofactors must be true for those arguments. Again,
--   this is a trivial theorem if you think about it for a moment, but we
--   will just let SBV prove it:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; existsOK
--   Q.E.D.
--   </pre>
existsOK :: IO ThmResult


-- | Demonstrates uninterpreted sorts, together with axioms.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort

-- | A new data-type that we expect to use in an uninterpreted fashion in
--   the backend SMT solver. Note the custom <tt>deriving</tt> clause,
--   which takes care of most of the boilerplate. The () field is needed so
--   SBV will not translate it to an enumerated data-type
newtype Q
Q :: () -> Q

-- | Declare an uninterpreted function that works over Q's
f :: SBV Q -> SBV Q

-- | A satisfiable example, stating that there is an element of the domain
--   <a>Q</a> such that <a>f</a> returns a different element. Note that
--   this is valid only when the domain <a>Q</a> has at least two elements.
--   We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; t1
--   Satisfiable. Model:
--     x = Q!val!0 :: Q
--   </pre>
t1 :: IO SatResult

-- | This is a variant on the first example, except we also add an axiom
--   for the sort, stating that the domain <a>Q</a> has only one element.
--   In this case the problem naturally becomes unsat. We have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; t2
--   Unsatisfiable
--   </pre>
t2 :: IO SatResult
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.Sort.Q


-- | Demonstrates uninterpreted sorts and how all-sat behaves for them.
--   Thanks to Eric Seidel for the idea.
module Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat

-- | A "list-like" data type, but one we plan to uninterpret at the SMT
--   level. The actual shape is really immaterial for us, but could be used
--   as a proxy to generate test cases or explore data-space in some other
--   part of a program. Note that we neither rely on the shape of this
--   data, nor need the actual constructors.
data L
Nil :: L
Cons :: Int -> L -> L

-- | An uninterpreted "classify" function. Really, we only care about the
--   fact that such a function exists, not what it does.
classify :: SBV L -> SInteger

-- | Formulate a query that essentially asserts a cardinality constraint on
--   the uninterpreted sort <a>L</a>. The goal is to say there are
--   precisely 3 such things, as it might be the case. We manage this by
--   declaring four elements, and asserting that for a free variable of
--   this sort, the shape of the data matches one of these three instances.
--   That is, we assert that all the instances of the data <a>L</a> can be
--   classified into 3 equivalence classes. Then, allSat returns all the
--   possible instances, which of course are all uninterpreted.
--   
--   As expected, we have:
--   
--   <pre>
--   &gt;&gt;&gt; genLs
--   Solution #1:
--     l  = L!val!0 :: L
--     l0 = L!val!0 :: L
--     l1 = L!val!1 :: L
--     l2 = L!val!2 :: L
--   Solution #2:
--     l  = L!val!1 :: L
--     l0 = L!val!0 :: L
--     l1 = L!val!1 :: L
--     l2 = L!val!2 :: L
--   Solution #3:
--     l  = L!val!2 :: L
--     l0 = L!val!0 :: L
--     l1 = L!val!1 :: L
--     l2 = L!val!2 :: L
--   Found 3 different solutions.
--   </pre>
genLs :: IO AllSatResult
instance Data.Data.Data Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
instance GHC.Read.Read Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
instance GHC.Show.Show Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
instance GHC.Classes.Ord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
instance GHC.Classes.Eq Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
instance Data.SBV.Core.Data.SymWord Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
instance Data.SBV.Core.Kind.HasKind Documentation.SBV.Examples.Uninterpreted.UISortAllSat.L
