In intuitionistic type theory (ITT), a discipline within mathematical logic, induction-induction is for simultaneously declaring some inductive type and some inductive predicate over this type.
An inductive definition is given by rules for generating elements of some type.
One can then define some predicate on that type by providing constructors for forming the elements of the predicate, such inductively on the way the elements of the type are generated.
Induction-induction generalizes this situation since one can simultaneously define the type and the predicate, because the rules for generating elements of the type
Induction-induction can be used to define larger types including various universe constructions in type theory.
as having the following constructors, note the early reference to the predicate
as having the following constructors : A simple common example is the Universe à la Tarski type former.
inductively encodes each possible type to the corresponding element of
will require referring to the decoding-as-type of earlier codes, via the predicate