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by flostk
736 days ago
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I'm sure this also depends a lot on the field within mathematics. Areas like mathematical logic or algebra have a pretty formal style anyway, so it's comparatively less effort to translate proofs to lean. I would expect more people from these areas to use proof checkers than say from low-dimensional topology, which has a more "intuitive" style. Of course by "intuitive" I don't mean it's any less rigorous. But a picture proof of some homotopy equivalence is just much harder to translate to something lean can understand than some sequence of inequalities. To add a data point, I'm in geometry/topology and I've never seen or heard of anyone who uses this stuff (so far). |
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It was a project in which we formalised a version of Gromov's (open, ample) h-principle for first order differential relations. Part of the reason it was carried out was to demonstrate what is involved formalising something in differential topology.
1. https://leanprover-community.github.io/sphere-eversion/