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2014-12-12Print nested let-abbreviations in ExprSMTLIBPrinterRaimondas Sasnauskas
This patch introduces nested let-abbreviations in the ExprSMTLIBPrinter to reduce the size of the SMTLIBv2 queries and the corresponding processing time (bugfix for #170). The current implementation of the let abbreviation mode does not consider expression intra-dependencies and prints all abbreviations in the same let scope. For a (simplified) example, it prints (assert (let ( (?B1 (A + B)) (?B2 (A + B + C)) ) (= ?B1 ?B2) ) ). This is extremely inefficient if the expressions (and there many of these!) extensively reuse their subexpressions. Therefore, it's better to print the query with nested let-expressions by reusing existing expression bindings in the new let scope: (assert (let ( (?B1 (A + B)) ) (let ( (?B2 (?B1 + C)) ) (= ?B1 ?B2) ) ) ). This patch adds a new function ExprSMTLIBPrinter::scanBindingExprDeps() that scans bindings for expression dependencies. The result is a vector of new bindings (orderedBindings) that represents the expression dependency tree. When printing in the let-abbreviation mode, the new code starts with abbreviating expressions that have no dependencies and then gradually makes these new bindings available in the upcoming let-scopes where expressions with dependencies reuse them. The effect of nested let-abbreviations is comparable to :named abbreviations. However, the latter mode is not supported by the majority of the solvers.
2014-12-02The printing of constraints and the QueryExpr have been merged into aDan Liew
single method with two different implementations. There is one version of this method for human readability (printHumanReadableQuery()) and a version for machine consumption (printMachineReadableQuery()). The reason for having two versions is because different behaviour is needed in different scenarios * In machine readable mode the entire query is printed inside a single ``(assert ...)``. This is done to allow ``(let ...)`` to abbreviate as much as possible. * In human readable mode each constraint and query expression is printed inside its own ``(assert ...)`` unless the abbreviation mode is ABBR_LET in which case all constraints and query expr are printed inside a single ``(assert ...)`` much like in the machine readable mode Whilst I was here I also fixed a bug handling identation when printing ``(let ...)`` expressions in printAssert()
2014-12-02Implement :named and let abbreviation modes in ExprSMTLIBPrinterRaimondas Sasnauskas
* Set the default abbreviation mode to let (ExprSMTLIBPrinter::ABBR_LET) * Remove the now defunct ExprSMTLIBLetPrinter * Improve performance of ExprSMTLIBPrinter::scan() by keeping track of visited Expr to avoid visiting them again * Rename ExprSMTLIBPrinter::printQuery() to ExprSMTLIBPrinter::printQueryExpr()