LINEAR-ARITHMETIC

A description of the linear arithmetic decision procedure
Major Section:  MISCELLANEOUS

We describe the procedure very roughly here. Fundamental to the procedure is the notion of a linear polynomial inequality. A ``linear polynomial'' is a sum of terms, each of which is the product of a rational constant and an ``unknown.'' The ``unknown'' is permitted to be 1 simply to allow a term in the sum to be constant. Thus, an example linear polynomial is 3*x + 7*a + 2; here x and a are the (interesting) unknowns. However, the unknowns need not be variable symbols. For example, (length x) might be used as an unknown in a linear polynomial. Thus, another linear polynomial is 3*(length x) + 7*a. A ``linear polynomial inequality'' is an inequality (either < or <=) relation between two linear polynomials. Note that an equality may be considered as a pair of inequalities; e.q., 3*x + 7*a + 2 = 0 is the same as the conjunction of 3*x + 7*a + 2 <= 0 and 0 <= 3*x + 7*a + 2.

Certain linear polynomial inequalities can be combined by cross-multiplication and addition to permit the deduction of a third inequality with fewer unknowns. If this deduced inequality is manifestly false, a contradiction has been deduced from the assumed inequalities.

For example, suppose we have two assumptions

p1:       3*x + 7*a <  4 
p2:               3 <  2*x
and we wish to prove that, given p1 and p2, a < 0. As suggested above, we proceed by assuming the negation of our goal
p3:               0 <= a.
and looking for a contradiction.

By cross-multiplying and adding the first two inequalities, (that is, multiplying p1 by 2, p2 by 3 and adding the respective sides), we deduce the intermediate result

p4:  6*x + 14*a + 9 < 8 + 6*x
which, after cancellation, is:
p4:        14*a + 1 <  0.
If we then cross-multiply and add p3 to p4, we get
p5:               1 <= 0,
a contradiction. Thus, we have proved that p1 and p2 imply the negation of p3.

All of the unknowns of an inequality must be eliminated by cancellation in order to produce a constant inequality. We can choose to eliminate the unknowns in any order, but we eliminate them in term-order, largest unknowns first. (See term-order.) That is, two polys are cancelled against each other only when they have the same largest unknown. For instance, in the above example we see that x is the largest unknown in each of p1 and p2, and a in p3 and p4.

Now suppose that this procedure does not produce a contradiction but instead yields a set of nontrivial inequalities. A contradiction might still be deduced if we could add to the set some additional inequalities allowing further cancellations. That is where :linear lemmas come in. When the set of inequalities has stabilized under cross-multiplication and addition and no contradiction is produced, we search the data base of :linear rules for rules about the unknowns that are candidates for cancellation (i.e., are the largest unknowns in their respective inequalities). See linear for a description of how :linear rules are used.

See also non-linear-arithmetic for a description of an extension to the linear-arithmetic procedure described here.