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category | name | contributors | |||
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Algorithms & Data Structures | Lambda Calculus |
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Lambda Calculus
Lambda calculus (λ-calculus), originally created by Alonzo Church, is the world's smallest programming language. Despite not having numbers, strings, booleans, or any non-function datatype, lambda calculus can be used to represent any Turing Machine!
Lambda calculus is composed of 3 elements: variables, functions, and applications.
Name | Syntax | Example | Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
Variable | <name> |
x |
a variable named "x" |
Function | λ<parameters>.<body> |
λx.x |
a function with parameter "x" and body "x" |
Application | <function><variable or function> |
(λx.x)a |
calling the function "λx.x" with argument "a" |
The most basic function is the identity function: λx.x
which is equivalent to
f(x) = x
. The first "x" is the function's argument, and the second is the
body of the function.
Free vs. Bound Variables:
- In the function
λx.x
, "x" is called a bound variable because it is both in the body of the function and a parameter. - In
λx.y
, "y" is called a free variable because it is never declared before hand.
Evaluation:
Evaluation is done via β-Reduction, which is essentially lexically-scoped substitution.
When evaluating the
expression (λx.x)a
, we replace all occurences of "x" in the function's body
with "a".
(λx.x)a
evaluates to:a
(λx.y)a
evaluates to:y
You can even create higher-order functions:
(λx.(λy.x))a
evaluates to:λy.a
Although lambda calculus traditionally supports only single parameter functions, we can create multi-parameter functions using a technique called currying.
(λx.λy.λz.xyz)
is equivalent tof(x, y, z) = x(y(z))
Sometimes λxy.<body>
is used interchangeably with: λx.λy.<body>
It's important to recognize that traditional lambda calculus doesn't have numbers, characters, or any non-function datatype!
Boolean Logic:
There is no "True" or "False" in lambda calculus. There isn't even a 1 or 0.
Instead:
T
is represented by: λx.λy.x
F
is represented by: λx.λy.y
First, we can define an "if" function λbtf
that
returns t
if b
is True and f
if b
is False
IF
is equivalent to: λb.λt.λf.b t f
Using IF
, we can define the basic boolean logic operators:
a AND b
is equivalent to: λab.IF a b F
a OR b
is equivalent to: λab.IF a T b
a NOT b
is equivalent to: λa.IF a F T
Note: IF a b c
is essentially saying: IF(a(b(c)))
Numbers:
Although there are no numbers in lambda calculus, we can encode numbers using Church numerals.
For any number n: n = λf.fn
so:
0 = λf.λx.x
1 = λf.λx.f x
2 = λf.λx.f(f x)
3 = λf.λx.f(f(f x))
To increment a Church numeral,
we use the successor function S(n) = n + 1
which is:
S = λn.λf.λx.f((n f) x)
Using successor, we can define add:
ADD = λab.(a S)n
Challenge: try defining your own multiplication function!