Skip to content

chore(Data/Rel): small fixes to SetRel docs#40066

Open
khwilson wants to merge 1 commit into
leanprover-community:masterfrom
khwilson:fix-docs-setrel
Open

chore(Data/Rel): small fixes to SetRel docs#40066
khwilson wants to merge 1 commit into
leanprover-community:masterfrom
khwilson:fix-docs-setrel

Conversation

@khwilson
Copy link
Copy Markdown
Contributor

Small grammar changes and a typo in the documented definition of SetRel. Follows on #39515 which fixed other typos.


Open in Gitpod

Small grammar changes and a typo in the documented definition of `SetRel`
@khwilson
Copy link
Copy Markdown
Contributor Author

easy

@github-actions github-actions Bot added easy < 20s of review time. See the lifecycle page for guidelines. t-data Data (lists, quotients, numbers, etc) labels May 31, 2026
@github-actions
Copy link
Copy Markdown

PR summary a9b44c0ede

Import changes for modified files

No significant changes to the import graph

Import changes for all files
Files Import difference

Declarations diff

No declarations were harmed in the making of this PR! 🐙

You can run this locally as follows
## from your `mathlib4` directory:
git clone https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib-ci.git ../mathlib-ci

## summary with just the declaration names:
../mathlib-ci/scripts/pr_summary/declarations_diff.sh <optional_commit>

## more verbose report:
../mathlib-ci/scripts/pr_summary/declarations_diff.sh long <optional_commit>

The doc-module for scripts/pr_summary/declarations_diff.sh in the mathlib-ci repository contains some details about this script.


No changes to strong technical debt.
No changes to weak technical debt.

Current commit a9b44c0ede
Reference commit 971b90233b

This script lives in the mathlib-ci repository. To run it locally, from your mathlib4 directory:

git clone https://github.com/leanprover-community/mathlib-ci.git ../mathlib-ci
../mathlib-ci/scripts/reporting/technical-debt-metrics.sh pr_summary
  • The relative value is the weighted sum of the differences with weight given by the inverse of the current value of the statistic.
    • The absolute value is the relative value divided by the total sum of the inverses of the current values (i.e. the weighted average of the differences).

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment

Labels

easy < 20s of review time. See the lifecycle page for guidelines. t-data Data (lists, quotients, numbers, etc)

Projects

None yet

Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

1 participant