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by danparsonson
66 days ago
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Yes but, without wishing to be snarky, did you read the article? There is no program as such, in either sense - the announcement from Lean only mentions "a C compression library" (zlib). Not only that, but since we're talking about formal verification, a programmer would likely understand that that is about proving a bounded, specific codebase at source code level, and not operating on a binary along with its associated dependencies (again caveat my limited understanding of these things). My feeling is that if you told the average non-technical user that some person/organisation had produced a formally verified version of a C compression library, you would likely get a blank look, so I think it's reasonable to assume that both Lean's intended audience, and the audience of the blog post linked here, correspond with number 1. in your list. |
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The bounded, specific codebase that you refer to is typically the library *and all of its dependencies*, which in this case includes the Lean runtime. This is why formal verification is difficult: the proof chain needs to extend all the way down to the foundations. In this case the original gushing claim that everything was verified is incorrect and premature. The article seems like a good exposition of why.