This document explains a more controlled installation procedure for Lean and mathlib on Linux distributions derived from Debian (Debian itself, Ubuntu, LMDE,...). There is a quicker way described in the main install page but it requires more trust. Of course you can get even more details about what is going on by reading the bash scripts that will be downloaded below: elan_init and remote-install-update-mathlib. All commands below should be typed inside a terminal.
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Lean itself doesn't depend on much infrastructure, but supporting tools needed by most users require
git
,curl
, andpython
. So the first step is:sudo apt install git curl python3 python3-pip
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There are two editors you can use with Lean, VS Code and emacs. The recommended choice is Visual Studio Code.
wget -O code.deb https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=760868 sudo apt install ./code.deb rm code.deb code --install-extension jroesch.lean
Now open VS Code, and verify Lean is working, for example by saving a file
test.lean
and entering#eval 1+1
. A green line should appear underneath#eval 1+1
, and hovering the mouse over it you should see2
displayed.The alternative is to use Emacs, and its lean-mode.
Everything else will be installed in user-space (no sudo required).
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The next step installs a small tool called
elan
which will handle updating Lean according to the needs of your current project (hit Enter when a question is asked). It will live in$HOME/.elan
and add a line to$HOME/.profile
.curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Kha/elan/master/elan-init.sh -sSf | sh
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Then we install a small tool called
update-mathlib
that which will handle updating mathlib according to the needs of your current project. It will live in$HOME/.mathlib
and add a line to$HOME/.profile
.curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/leanprover-community/mathlib-tools/master/scripts/remote-install-update-mathlib.sh -sSf | bash
You can now read instructions about creating and working on Lean projects