Skip to content

advancedresearch/last_order_logic

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Last Order Logic

An experimental logical language.

Based on paper Last Order Logic.

=== Last Order Logic 0.2 ===
Type `help` for more information.
> a := 1 ~= 0
a := 1 ~= 0
LOL: Added `a` to definitions
> a ~ 0
a ~ 0
> ty
1

To run LOL from your Terminal, type:

cargo install --example lolz last_order_logic

Then, to run:

lolz

How to learn LOL

To learn how to use LOL, type "help" in LOLZ. This command lists all topics, e.g. "help path".

Examples

Motivation

In First Order Logic, the truth values of quantified expressions depend on evaluation. This means that an automated theorem prover must annotate expressions with their truth values in order to operate efficiently under modifications to the source. The user of the language has no direct access to this information.

Last Order Logic bridges the gap between usability and automated theorem proving.

  • Increased readability and improved communication
  • Efficient reuse of truth values
  • Extensible to higher dimensional truth values

For example:

∀ x { ... } - It is not easy to see whether this is true or false.

With other words, First Order Logic is not computationally progressive.

Last Order Logic fixes this problem by having quantified expressions evaluate to themselves, while the truth value is encoded in the type.

∀ x : I { ... } : un(1) - It is easy to see this is true.

Types are used to communicate intentions of programs. Last Order Logic uses this feature to increase readability.

The un(..) syntax stands for "uniform" which is un(1) for and un(0) for . Correspondingly, nu(..) stands for "non-uniform" which is nu(1) for and nu(0) for .

Another reason is to express truth over paths, e.g. un(0 ~= 1). These are higher dimensional truth values, not expressible in First Order Logic.

The distinction between uniform and non-uniform sense of truth comes from the theory of Avatar Extensions. Only non-uniform truth has a meaningful example that shows its truth value.

File formats

  • Regular text format (.lol.txt)
  • Markdown text format (.lol.md)

The Markdown format is designed for readability:

  • Must start with # (markdown title)
  • A codeblock must use 3 backticks and lol

Special commands in the LOLZ environment are not supported. To refer to LOLZ usage, use 3 backticks and text.

About

An experimental logical language

Resources

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages