Carlos Varela Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute September 4, 2015 Lambda Calculus (PDCS 2) alpha-renaming, beta reduction, eta conversion, applicative and normal evaluation orders, Church-Rosser theorem, combinators, higher-order programming, recursion combinator, numbers, booleans Carlos Varela Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute September 4, 2015 C. Varela
Lambda Calculus Syntax and Semantics The syntax of a -calculus expression is as follows: e ::= v variable | v.e functional abstraction | (e e) function application The semantics of a -calculus expression is called beta-reduction: (x.E M) E{M/x} where we alpha-rename the lambda abstraction E if necessary to avoid capturing free variables in M. C. Varela
Function Composition in Lambda Calculus S: x.(s x) (Square) I: x.(i x) (Increment) C: f.g.x.(f (g x)) (Function Composition) ((C S) I) ((f.g.x.(f (g x)) x.(s x)) x.(i x)) (g.x.(x.(s x) (g x)) x.(i x)) x.(x.(s x) (x.(i x) x)) x.(x.(s x) (i x)) x.(s (i x)) Recall semantics rule: (x.E M) E{M/x} C. Varela
Order of Evaluation in the Lambda Calculus Does the order of evaluation change the final result? Consider: x.(x.(s x) (x.(i x) x)) There are two possible evaluation orders: x.(x.(s x) (i x)) x.(s (i x)) and: x.(s (x.(i x) x)) Is the final result always the same? Recall semantics rule: (x.E M) E{M/x} Applicative Order Normal Order C. Varela
Church-Rosser Theorem If a lambda calculus expression can be evaluated in two different ways and both ways terminate, both ways will yield the same result. e e1 e2 e’ Also called the diamond or confluence property. Furthermore, if there is a way for an expression evaluation to terminate, using normal order will cause termination. C. Varela
Order of Evaluation and Termination Consider: (x.y (x.(x x) x.(x x))) There are two possible evaluation orders: (x.y (x.(x x) x.(x x))) and: y In this example, normal order terminates whereas applicative order does not. Recall semantics rule: (x.E M) E{M/x} Applicative Order Normal Order C. Varela
Free and Bound Variables The lambda functional abstraction is the only syntactic construct that binds variables. That is, in an expression of the form: v.e we say that occurrences of variable v in expression e are bound. All other variable occurrences are said to be free. E.g., (x.y.(x y) (y w)) Bound Variables Free Variables C. Varela
This reduction erroneously captures the free occurrence of y. Why -renaming? Alpha renaming is used to prevent capturing free occurrences of variables when reducing a lambda calculus expression, e.g., (x.y.(x y) (y w)) y.((y w) y) This reduction erroneously captures the free occurrence of y. A correct reduction first renames y to z, (or any other fresh variable) e.g., (x.z.(x z) (y w)) z.((y w) z) where y remains free. C. Varela
-renaming Alpha renaming is used to prevent capturing free occurrences of variables when beta-reducing a lambda calculus expression. In the following, we rename x to z, (or any other fresh variable): (x.(y x) x) (z.(y z) x) Only bound variables can be renamed. No free variables can be captured (become bound) in the process. For example, we cannot alpha-rename x to y. α→ C. Varela
b-reduction (x.E M) E{M/x} Beta-reduction may require alpha renaming to prevent capturing free variable occurrences. For example: (x.y.(x y) (y w)) (x.z.(x z) (y w)) z.((y w) z) Where the free y remains free. α→ b→ C. Varela
h-conversion x.(E x) E if x is not free in E. For example: (x.y.(x y) (y w)) (x.z.(x z) (y w)) z.((y w) z) (y w) α→ b→ h→ C. Varela
Combinators A lambda calculus expression with no free variables is called a combinator. For example: I: x.x (Identity) App: f.x.(f x) (Application) C: f.g.x.(f (g x)) (Composition) L: (x.(x x) x.(x x)) (Loop) Cur: f.x.y.((f x) y) (Currying) Seq: x.y.(z.y x) (Sequencing--normal order) ASeq: x.y.(y x) (Sequencing--applicative order) where y denotes a thunk, i.e., a lambda abstraction wrapping the second expression to evaluate. The meaning of a combinator is always the same independently of its context. C. Varela
Combinators in Functional Programming Languages Functional programming languages have a syntactic form for lambda abstractions. For example the identity combinator: x.x can be written in Oz as follows: fun {$ X} X end in Haskell as follows: \x -> x and in Scheme as follows: (lambda(x) x) C. Varela
Currying Combinator in Oz The currying combinator can be written in Oz as follows: fun {$ F} fun {$ X} fun {$ Y} {F X Y} end It takes a function of two arguments, F, and returns its curried version, e.g., {{{Curry Plus} 2} 3} 5 C. Varela
Recursion Combinator (Y or rec) Suppose we want to express a factorial function in the l calculus. 1 n=0 f(n) = n! = n*(n-1)! n>0 We may try to write it as: f: n.(if (= n 0) 1 (* n (f (- n 1)))) But f is a free variable that should represent our factorial function. C. Varela
Recursion Combinator (Y or rec) We may try to pass f as an argument (g) as follows: f: g.n.(if (= n 0) 1 (* n (g (- n 1)))) The type of f is: f: (Z Z) (Z Z) So, what argument g can we pass to f to get the factorial function? C. Varela
Recursion Combinator (Y or rec) f: (Z Z) (Z Z) (f f) is not well-typed. (f I) corresponds to: 1 n=0 f(n) = n*(n-1) n>0 We need to solve the fixpoint equation: (f X) = X C. Varela
Recursion Combinator (Y or rec) (f X) = X The X that solves this equation is the following: X: (lx.(g.n.(if (= n 0) 1 (* n (g (- n 1)))) ly.((x x) y)) lx.(g.n.(if (= n 0) ly.((x x) y))) C. Varela
Recursion Combinator (Y or rec) X can be defined as (Y f), where Y is the recursion combinator. Y: lf.(lx.(f ly.((x x) y)) lx.(f ly.((x x) y))) Y: lf.(lx.(f (x x)) lx.(f (x x))) You get from the normal order to the applicative order recursion combinator by h-expansion (h-conversion from right to left). Applicative Order Normal Order C. Varela
Natural Numbers in Lambda Calculus |0|: x.x (Zero) |1|: x.x.x (One) … |n+1|: x.|n| (N+1) s: ln.lx.n (Successor) (s 0) (n.x.n x.x) x.x.x Recall semantics rule: (x.E M) E{M/x} C. Varela
Booleans and Branching (if) in l Calculus |true|: x.y.x (True) |false|: x.y.y (False) |if|: b.lt.le.((b t) e) (If) (((if true) a) b) (((b.t.e.((b t) e) x.y.x) a) b) ((t.e.((x.y.x t) e) a) b) (e.((x.ly.x a) e) b) ((x.ly.x a) b) (y.a b) a Recall semantics rule: (x.E M) E{M/x} C. Varela
Exercises PDCS Exercise 2.11.7 (page 31). Prove that your addition operation is correct using induction. PDCS Exercise 2.11.12 (page 31). Test your representation of booleans in Haskell. C. Varela