Lf-lean: The frontier of verified software engineering

(theorem.dev)

13 points | by alpaylan 3 hours ago

1 comments

  • ngruhn 43 minutes ago
    Is this impressive? They just ported a bunch of theorems/proofs already written in Rocq into Lean. Also Logical Foundations is just a Rocq tutorial with the basics. An absolutely amazing tutorial and probably the best resource out there. But I'm not surprised AI can do that.
    • corysama 17 minutes ago
      I believe what they are bragging about is not the translated proofs, but the process of doing the translation.

      > produced by frontier AI with ~2 person-days of human effort versus an estimated ~2.75 person-years manually (a 350x speed-up). We achieve this through task-level specification generators...

    • benlivengood 36 minutes ago
      Impressive if for no other reason than there are various disparate formally verified projects (seL4, compcert, certikos) that could potentially be unified under a single proof system. Additionally it may be possible to quickly extend existing proofs (e.g. seL4's proofs) to other architectures.
      • ngruhn 31 minutes ago
        Not saying this is useless. But that article reads like they made some kind of breakthrough in automatic software verification. But is sounds like they rather ported a tutorial test suite from Go to Rust with AI and the tests are still passing.