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* <tt>\probexpr{EXRP}</tt> command takes a B expression <tt>EXPR</tt>as argument and evaluates it. By default it shows the B expression and the value of the expression. Example: <tt>\probexpr{{1}\/{2**10}}</tt> will be replaced by <tt>{1,1024}</tt> | * <tt>\probexpr{EXRP}</tt> command takes a B expression <tt>EXPR</tt>as argument and evaluates it. By default it shows the B expression and the value of the expression. Example: <tt>\probexpr{{1}\/{2**10}}</tt> will be replaced by <tt>{1,1024}</tt> | ||
* <tt>\probrepl{CMD}</tt> command takes a probcli REPL command <tt>CMD</tt>as argument and executes it. By default it shows only the output of the execution, e.g., in case it is a predicate TRUE or FALSE. Example: <tt>\probrepl{let DOM = 1..3}</tt>. | * <tt>\probrepl{CMD}</tt> command takes a probcli REPL command <tt>CMD</tt> as argument and executes it. By default it shows only the output of the execution, e.g., in case it is a predicate TRUE or FALSE. Example: <tt>\probrepl{let DOM = 1..3}</tt>. | ||
* <tt>\probtable{EXRP}</tt> command takes a B expression <tt>EXPR</tt>as argument, evaluates it and shows it as a Latex table. | * <tt>\probtable{EXRP}</tt> command takes a B expression <tt>EXPR</tt>as argument, evaluates it and shows it as a Latex table. |
ProB can (as of version 1.6.1) be used to process Latex files, i.e., the command-line tool probcli scans a given Latex file and replaces certain commands by processed results.
A typical usage would be as follows:
probcli FILE -init -latex Raw.tex Final.tex
Note: the FILE and -init commands are optional; they are required in case you want to process the commands in the context of a certain model. Currently the probcli Latex commands mainly support B and Event-B models, TLA+ and Z models can also be processed but all commands below expect B syntax. You can add more commands if you wish, e.g., set preferences using -p PREF VAL or run model checking --model-check. The Latex processing will take place after most other commands, such as model checking.
You will probably want to put the probcli call into a Makefile, in particular when you want to generate dot graphics using ProB.
The distribution folder of ProB contains an example with a Makefile, producing the following file, which at the same time documents the core features:
The commands are described in the PDF document above. Here is a short summary of some of the commands: