remove_termtok : {term_name : string, tok : string} -> unit
STRUCTURE
SYNOPSIS
Removes a rule from the global grammar.
LIBRARY
Parse
DESCRIPTION
The remove_termtok removes parsing/printing rules from the global grammar. Rules to be removed are those that are for the term with the given name (term_name) and which include the string tok as part of their concrete representation. If multiple rules satisfy this criterion, they are all removed. If none match, the grammar is not changed.
FAILURE
Never fails.
EXAMPLE
If one wished to revert to the traditional HOL syntax for conditional expressions, this would be achievable as follows:
   - remove_termtok {term_name = "COND", tok = "if"};
   > val it = () : unit

   - Term`if p then q else r`;
   <<HOL message: inventing new type variable names: 'a, 'b, 'c, 'd, 'e, 'f.>>
   > val it = `if p then q else r` : term

   - Term`p => q | r`;
   <<HOL message: inventing new type variable names: 'a.>>
   > val it = `COND p q r` : term
The first invocation of the parser above demonstrates that once the rule for the if-then-else syntax has been removed, a string that used to parse as a conditional expression then parses as a big function application (the function if applied to five arguments).

The fact that the pretty-printer does not print the term using the old-style syntax, even after the if-then-else rule has been removed, is due to the fact that the corresponding rule in the grammar does not have its preferred flag set. This can be accomplished with prefer_form_with_tok as follows:

   - prefer_form_with_tok {term_name = "COND", tok = "=>"};
   > val it = () : unit

   - Term`p => q | r`;
   <<HOL message: inventing new type variable names: 'a.>>
   > val it = `p => q | r` : term

USES
Used to modify the global parsing/pretty-printing grammar by removing a rule, possibly as a prelude to adding another rule which would otherwise clash.
COMMENTS
As with other functions in the Parse structure, there is a companion temp_remove_termtok function, which has the same effect on the global grammar, but which does not cause this effect to persist when the current theory is exported.

The specification of a rule by term_name and one of its tokens is not perfect, but seems adequate in practice.

SEEALSO
HOL  Kananaskis-10