In formal reasoning, in particular in mathematical logic, computer algebra, and automated theorem proving, a fresh variable is a variable that did not occur in the context considered so far.[1] The concept is often used without explanation.[2]
Example
For example, in term rewriting, before applying a rule to a given term , each variable in should be replaced by a fresh one to avoid clashes with variables occurring in . Given the rule
and the term
- ,
attempting to find a matching substitution of the rule's left-hand side, , within will fail, since cannot match . However, if the rule is replaced by a fresh copy[lower-alpha 1]
before, matching will succeed with the answer substitution .
Notes
- ↑ that is, a copy with each variable consistently replaced by a fresh variable
References
- ↑ Carmen Bruni (2018). Predicate Logic: Natural Deduction (PDF) (Lecture Slides). Univ. of Waterloo. Here: slide 13/26.
- ↑ Michael Färber (Feb 2023). Denotational Semantics and a Fast Interpreter for jq (Technical Report). Univ. of Innsbruck. arXiv:2302.10576. Here: p.4.
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