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            • A Tiny Warning Sign
            • About the Prompt
            • ACL2 Symbols
            • Common Lisp
              • About Types
              • The Event Summary
              • An Example of ACL2 in Use
              • The Tours
              • Corroborating Models
              • The Proof of the Associativity of App
              • Guards in ACL2
              • Numbers in ACL2
              • About the Admission of Recursive Definitions
              • Free Variables in Top-Level Input
              • Common Lisp as a Modeling Language
              • ACL2 as an Interactive Theorem Prover (cont)
              • A Flying Tour of ACL2
              • Analyzing Common Lisp Models
              • A Walking Tour of ACL2
              • The Theorem that App is Associative
              • The End of the Walking Tour
              • Proving Theorems about Models
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              • About the ACL2 Home Page
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    Common Lisp

    Common Lisp

    The logic of ACL2 is based on Common Lisp.

    Common Lisp is the standard list processing programming language. It is documented in: Guy L. Steele, Common Lisp The Language, Digital Press, 12 Crosby Drive, Bedford, MA 01730, 1990.

    ACL2 formalizes only a subset of Common Lisp. It includes such familiar Lisp functions as cons, car and cdr for creating and manipulating list structures, various arithmetic primitives such as +, *, expt and <=, and intern and symbol-name for creating and manipulating symbols. Control primitives include cond, case and if, as well as function call, including recursion. New functions are defined with defun and macros with defmacro. See programming for a list of the Common Lisp primitives supported by ACL2.

    ACL2 supports five of Common Lisp's datatypes:

    * the precisely represented, unbounded numbers (integers, rationals, and the complex numbers with rational components, called the ``complex rationals'' here),

    * the characters with ASCII codes between 0 and 255

    * strings of such characters

    * symbols (including packages)

    * conses

    ACL2 is a large subset of the first-order applicative part of Common Lisp. (Roughly speaking, a language is applicative if it follows the rules of function application. For example, f(x) must be equal to f(x), which means, among other things, that the value of f must not be affected by ``global variables'' and the object x must not change over time.) It does not support higher-order features of Common Lisp, like functional objects and apply. It does not support Common Lisp primitives that have side-effects such as setq, setf, the Common Lisp Object System, etc. However, ACL2 does provide some special features that can be used efficiently to do many of the same jobs as these omitted Common Lisp primitives. The ACL2 system is largely implemented in the language it supports.