Removes checkEntailed from Solver.
Removes isEntailed, isNotEntailed, isEntailedUnknown from Result.
Removes isSubsortOf, isFunctionLike, getUninterpretedSortName, getSortConstructorName from Sort.
Updates examples and unit tests.
This PR does multiple things:
- the kinds are changed from custom objects to a proper enum.Enum class
(including according changes to the cython code and the kind generation scripts)
- all examples and tests are modified to account for the change how to use kinds
(Kind instead of kinds)
- add docstrings to the kind enum values
- add a custom documenter that properly renders enums via autodoc
- extend doxygen setup so that we can write comments as rst (allowing us to copy
the documentation for kinds from the cpp api to the other apis)
If building with python bindings, check the pytest is installed, and adds a command to run pytest after the existing make check tests. If built without python bindings, it just uses a null command. Note: the current semantics are such that the pytest tests will not run if the ctest run fails (unless you pass the correct flag to make to continue --ignore-errors I believe). I can look into changing this semantics if that would be preferred.
This PR adds mkInteger to the API and update mkReal to ensure that the returned term has real sort.
The parsers are modified to parse numbers like "0" "5" as integers and "0.0" and "15.0" as reals.
This means subtyping is effectively eliminated from all theories except arithmetic.
Other changes:
Term::isValue is removed which was introduced to support parsing for constant arrays. It is no longer needed after this PR.
Benchmarks are updated to match the changes in the parsers
Co-authored-by: Andrew Reynolds andrew-reynolds@uiowa.edu
Fixes#5024. This commit adds a conversion from constant string terms to
native Python Unicode strings in Term.toPythonObj() and improves
Solver.mkString() to accept strings containing characters outside of
the printable range.
This PR addresses issue https://github.com/CVC4/CVC4/issues/5014. It simply interprets the SMT-LIB string representation and produces a Python object. It currently supports booleans, ints, reals, bit-vectors, and arrays. The method (`toPythonObj`) is only valid to call if `isConst` returns true.