Skip to content

leanprover/verso

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date
Oct 19, 2024
Oct 24, 2024
Dec 6, 2024
Dec 18, 2024
Nov 4, 2024
Jul 11, 2024
Feb 27, 2024
Nov 1, 2023
Nov 6, 2024
Oct 18, 2024
Oct 25, 2024
Jun 27, 2024
Dec 6, 2024
Oct 18, 2024
Dec 2, 2024

Repository files navigation

Verso: An Authoring Tool for Lean

Writing about Lean takes many forms, including but not limited to:

  • Instructional books such as Theorem Proving in Lean, Functional Programming in Lean, and Mathematics in Lean
  • Software documentation, such as the Lean users' manual
  • In-source API documentation that is both displayed in IDEs and included in larger documents
  • Descriptions of formalization efforts that connect the formal artifact to mathematical text and guide the formalization, such as those made with Blueprint
  • Web sites and blog posts
  • Research papers in mathematics and computer science that use Lean formalizations in some essential way

Each of these genres needs different tool support than the others, and many different ways of writing about Lean have come into existence, including LeanInk, customizations to mdbook and Sphinx, bespoke Python document management scripts, and doc-gen. But many of these tools share overlapping concerns: most want to include accurately highlighted Lean source code, include links to official descriptions of Lean features, and have internal hyperlinking.

Verso is a collection of libraries for representing documents in Lean paired with an alternative concrete syntax that allows them to be written in something very much like Markdown. Documents written in Verso can make full use of the Lean metaprogramming API to create arbitrary new features, and these features can be made portable between genres. The goals of the project are:

  • Be a pleasant tool with which it is enjoyable to write
  • Solid IDE support
  • Support all of the above genres, with the ability for users to add their own genres
  • Empower users to conveniently add their own features to the documentation language
  • Enable but not require extensions to be usable in multiple genres

Please consult the in-progress Verso manual (HTML, PDF) for further details. Today, Verso is usable for running a website and blog, while the other genres are still under development.

Verso's design is primarily inspired by Scribble and Sphinx.

Contributions

The project is currently undergoing change at a rapid pace. If you'd like to contribute, please get in touch with David Thrane Christiansen and discuss your plans ahead of time, as there is not presently much extra time to onboard and supervise new contributors. This may change as the project matures.

However, one goal of the project is that users should be able to implement their own extensions without needing to modify the Verso libraries. If you've attempted to implement your desired feature as an extension and run into a limitation, please open an issue so we can try to make the system more extensible.

Building Documentation

To generate the Verso documentation for Verso itself, run generate.sh.

Highlighted Lean Code in Verso

Because Lean's parser is extensible, regular-expression-based syntax highlighting is incapable of accurately identifying keywords or other tokens. Verso includes libraries that can be used to include accurately highlighted Lean code in documents, with support for generating HTML with rich annotations. In particular, tactic proofs are annotated with their proof states, so the proof can be understood without having to open the file in a full Lean environment.

The user interface used to implement the display of proof states is inspired by the excellent Alectryon by Clément Pit-Claudel.

Examples of Verso

The examples directory contains example documents built with the default Verso genres.

Custom Genre

A minimal example of a Verso genre that includes nontrivial cross-references can be found in examples/custom-genre. To build and run it, with the output being placed in ./index.html, use:

lake exe simplepage

Website

To build the example website and place the results in _out/examples/demosite, run:

lake build
lake exe demosite --output _out/examples/demosite

To view the output, a local server will be needed. One way to get such a server is to use the one from the Python standard library, e.g.

python3 -m http.server 8800 --directory _out/examples/demosite &

after which http://localhost:8800/ will show the generated site.

Textbook

The textbook example is both an example that can serve as a template for a textbook project in Verso and a place where features can be developed for upstreaming into the manual genre proper.

To build the example website and place the results in _out/examples/demosite, run:

lake build
lake exe demotextbook --output _out/examples/demotextbook

To view the output, a local server will be needed. One way to get such a server is to use the one from the Python standard library, e.g.

python3 -m http.server 8880 --directory _out/examples/demotextbook/html-single &

after which http://localhost:8880/ will show the generated site.

Licenses

Verso is licensed under the Apache license - please see the file LICENSE for details.

Verso additionally includes third-party software made available under the MIT license. These components, and their copyright and licensing information, are in the vendored-js directory.

About

Lean documentation authoring tool

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages