--- a/Paper/Paper.thy Fri Oct 29 15:37:24 2010 +0100
+++ b/Paper/Paper.thy Fri Nov 05 15:21:10 2010 +0000
@@ -524,11 +524,11 @@
swapping two fresh atoms, say @{text a} and @{text b}, leaves
@{text x} unchanged, namely if @{text "a \<FRESH> x"} and @{text "b \<FRESH> x"}
then @{term "(a \<rightleftharpoons> b) \<bullet> x"}.
-
+ %
%\begin{myproperty}\label{swapfreshfresh}
%@{thm[mode=IfThen] swap_fresh_fresh[no_vars]}
%\end{myproperty}
-
+ %
%While often the support of an object can be relatively easily
%described, for example for atoms, products, lists, function applications,
%booleans and permutations as follows
@@ -553,7 +553,7 @@
%\noindent
%in some cases it can be difficult to characterise the support precisely, and
%only an approximation can be established (as for functions above).
-
+ %
%Reasoning about
%such approximations can be simplified with the notion \emph{supports}, defined
%as follows:
@@ -603,7 +603,7 @@
%Using freshness, the nominal logic work provides us with general means for renaming
%binders.
%
- \noindent
+ %\noindent
While in the older version of Nominal Isabelle, we used extensively
%Property~\ref{swapfreshfresh}
this property to rename single binders, it %%this property