About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Free theorem provers, Interactive theorem proving software, Theorem prover languages, Mathematica, Planner, HOL theorem prover family, Isabelle, Logic for Computable Functions, Gandalf, ACL2, Metamath, Scientific community metaphor, KeY, Logic Theorist, Uclid, Epigram, MALPAS Software Static Analysis Toolset, Twelf, Nqthm, CARINE, Coq, Mizar system, HOL Light, Agda, Mathematics Mechanization and Automated Reasoning Platform, Beaver bit-vector decision procedure, Prover9, MASON, Vampire, SNARK, Automath, Prototype Verification System, Tau, Matita, Otter, PhoX, OBJ, Jape, Larch Prover, SPASS, EQP, OBJ3, Geometry Expert, Lean theorem prover, Theorem Proving System, Calculus of inductive constructions, Paradox. Excerpt: Mathematica is a computational software program used in scientific, engineering, and mathematical fields and other areas of technical computing. It was conceived by Stephen Wolfram and is developed by Wolfram Research of Champaign, Illinois. Dini's surface plotted with adjustable parametersFeatures of Mathematica include: Mathematica is split into two parts, the kernel and the front end. The kernel interprets expressions (Mathematica code) and returns result expressions. The front end, designed by Theodore Gray, provides a GUI, which allows the creation and editing of Notebook documents containing program code with prettyprinting, formatted text together with results including typeset mathematics, graphics, GUI components, tables, and sounds. All contents and formatting can be generated algorithmically or interactively edited. Most standard word processing capabilities are supported, but there is only one level of "undo." Documents can be structured using a hierarchy of cells, which allow for outlining and sectioning of a document and support automatic numbering index creation. Documents can be presented...