- Closes#1642.
This pr introduces syntax for convenient record updates.
Example:
```
type Triple (A B C : Type) :=
| mkTriple {
fst : A;
snd : B;
thd : C;
};
main : Triple Nat Nat Nat;
main :=
let
p : Triple Nat Nat Nat := mkTriple 2 2 2;
p' :
Triple Nat Nat Nat :=
p @Triple{
fst := fst + 1;
snd := snd * 3
};
f : Triple Nat Nat Nat -> Triple Nat Nat Nat := (@Triple{fst := fst * 10});
in f p';
```
We write `@InductiveType{..}` to update the contents of a record. The
`@` is used for parsing. The `InductiveType` symbol indicates the type
of the record update. Inside the braces we have a list of `fieldName :=
newValue` items separated by semicolon. The `fieldName` is bound in
`newValue` with the old value of the field. Thus, we can write something
like `p @Triple{fst := fst + 1;}`.
Record updates `X@{..}` are parsed as postfix operators with higher
priority than application, so `f x y @X{q := 1}` is equivalent to `f x
(y @X{q := 1})`.
It is possible the use a record update with no argument by wrapping the
update in parentheses. See `f` in the above example.