Comment by LegionMammal978
16 days ago
Thank you for that information, all I could find on the website was that "The source code of the Mizar verifier and accompanying tools is available to the members of SUM" [0], which of course does not reflect the newer status quo.
> Mizar is indeed "scarcely advertised", but all the information is publicly available, who wants to know knows.
Yes, there indeed seems to be a good bit of information available, especially about the library and its articles. But some parts seem to be scattered about, unless you already know where to look, or know someone who knows. Perhaps it's a matter of taste.
(For comparison, I've recently been dabbling a fair bit with Metamath: it's not really advertised outside of its small circle these days, but the website does a good job at introducing the system, while also offering a complete reference in the form of the Metamath book. From there, the primary challenges to a new user are the fiddly tooling, the cryptic labeling scheme, and the puzzling DV conditions.)
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