I am trying to get the habit to use Dafny as a friendly SAT-QBF solver for some simple formulae, since doing it in, for instance, Z3 is too uncomfortable.
The context for this is that I have implemented Cooper's algorithm for quantifier elimination and, when all the variables are bounded, it can be used as a decision procedure: therefore, I want to know which is the result that I should get before executing it.
However, I encountered a problem in Dafny.
Let us raise, for instance, this formula (written in Dafny):
assert forall x_1: int :: exists y_1: int :: forall x_2: int :: exists y_2 : int
:: (y_2<y_1) && (x_2<y_2) && (x_1<x_2);
In my Cooper, it returns False
, while Dafny returns assertion violation
(along with the typical triggers
warnings), which I interpret as False
too. Okay, so no problem with this.
But if I raise:
assert exists x_1: int :: exists y_1: int :: exists x_2: int :: exists y_2 : int
:: (y_2<y_1) && (x_2<y_2) && (x_1<x_2);
In my Cooper, it returns True
, while Dafny also returns assertion violation
. I have done a manual Cooper execution (pencil and paper) and I think the True
is right one.
Any idea of what is going on?
PS: I have not tried it in Z3, yet, because I am doing first other attempts with other theories.
EDIT
Trigger warnings can be avoided using a simple trick to instantiate the quantified variables: creating an uninterpreted function.
method Main() {
assert exists x_1 : int {:trigger P(x_1)} :: exists y_1: int {:trigger P(y_1)}
:: exists x_2: int {:trigger P(x_2)} :: exists y_2 : int {:trigger P(y_2)}
:: (y_2<y_1) && (x_2<y_2) && (x_1<x_2);
}
predicate P(a: int)
{
true
}