1 Here's what we did in seminar on Monday 9/13,
3 Sometimes these notes will expand on things mentioned only briefly in class, or discuss useful tangents that didn't even make it into class. These notes expand on *a lot*, and some of this material will be reviewed next week.
8 We mentioned a number of linguistic and philosophical applications of the tools that we'd be helping you learn in the seminar. (We really do mean "helping you learn," not "teaching you." You'll need to aggressively browse and experiment with the material yourself, or nothing we do in a few two-hour sessions will succeed in inducing mastery of it.)
13 * generalized quantifiers are a special case of operating on continuations
15 * (Chris: fill in other applications...)
17 * expressives -- at the end of the seminar we gave a demonstration of modeling [[damn]] using continuations...see the [summary](/damn) for more explanation and elaboration
22 * the natural semantics for positive free logic is thought by some to have objectionable ontological commitments; Jim says that thought turns on not understanding the notion of a "union type", and conflating the folk notion of "naming" with the technical notion of semantic value. We'll discuss this in due course.
24 * those issues may bear on Russell's Gray's Elegy argument in "On Denoting"
26 * and on discussion of the difference between the meaning of "is beautiful" and "beauty," and the difference between the meaning of "that snow is white" and "the proposition that snow is white."
28 * the apparatus of monads, and techniques for statically representing the semantics of an imperatival language quite generally, are explicitly or implicitly invoked in dynamic semantics
30 * the semantics for mutation will enable us to make sense of a difference between numerical and qualitative identity---for purely mathematical objects!
32 * issues in that same neighborhood will help us better understand proposals like Kit Fine's that semantics is essentially coordinated, and that `R a a` and `R a b` can differ in interpretation even when `a` and `b` don't
37 Basics of Lambda Calculus
38 =========================
40 The lambda calculus we'll be focusing on for the first part of the course has no types. (Some prefer to say it instead has a single type---but if you say that, you have to say that functions from this type to this type also belong to this type. Which is weird.)
45 <strong>Variables</strong>: <code>x</code>, <code>y</code>, <code>z</code>...
48 Each variable is an expression. For any expressions M and N and variable a, the following are also expressions:
51 <strong>Abstract</strong>: <code>(λa M)</code>
54 We'll tend to write <code>(λa M)</code> as just `(\a M)`, so we don't have to write out the markup code for the <code>λ</code>. You can yourself write <code>(λa M)</code> or `(\a M)` or `(lambda a M)`.
57 <strong>Application</strong>: <code>(M N)</code>
60 Some authors reserve the term "term" for just variables and abstracts. We'll probably just say "term" and "expression" indiscriminately for expressions of any of these three forms.
62 Examples *of* expressions:
66 The lambda calculus has an associated proof theory. For now, we can regard the
67 proof theory as having just one rule, called the rule of **beta-reduction** or
68 "beta-contraction". Suppose you have some expression of the form:
72 that is, an application of an abstract to some other expression. This compound form is called a **redex**, meaning it's a "beta-reducible expression." `(\a M)` is called the **head** of the redex; `N` is called the **argument**, and `M` is called the **body**.
74 The rule of beta-reduction permits a transition from that expression to the following:
78 What this means is just `M`, with any *free occurrences* inside `M` of the variable `a` replaced with the term `N`.
80 What is a free occurrence?
82 > An occurrence of a variable `a` is **bound** in T if T has the form `(\a N)`.
84 > If T has the form `(M N)`, any occurrences of `a` that are bound in `M` are also bound in T, and so too any occurrences of `a` that are bound in `N`.
86 > An occurrence of a variable is **free** if it's not bound.
91 > T is defined to be `(x (\x (\y (x (y z)))))`
93 The first occurrence of `x` in T is free. The `\x` we won't regard as being an occurrence of `x`. The next occurrence of `x` occurs within a form that begins with `\x`, so it is bound as well. The occurrence of `y` is bound; and the occurrence of `z` is free.
95 Here's an example of beta-reduction:
103 We'll write that like this:
105 ((\x (y x)) z) ~~> (y z)
107 Different authors use different notations. Some authors use the term "contraction" for a single reduction step, and reserve the term "reduction" for the reflexive transitive closure of that, that is, for zero or more reduction steps. Informally, it seems easiest to us to say "reduction" for one or more reduction steps. So when we write:
111 We'll mean that you can get from M to N by one or more reduction steps. Hankin uses the symbol <code><big><big>→</big></big></code> for one-step contraction, and the symbol <code><big><big>↠</big></big></code> for zero-or-more step reduction. Hindley and Seldin use <code><big><big><big>⊳</big></big></big><sub>1</sub></code> and <code><big><big><big>⊳</big></big></big></code>.
113 When M and N are such that there's some P that M reduces to by zero or more steps, and that N also reduces to by zero or more steps, then we say that M and N are **beta-convertible**. We'll write that like this:
117 This is what plays the role of equality in the lambda calculus. Hankin uses the symbol `=` for this. So too do Hindley and Seldin. Personally, I keep confusing that with the relation to be described next, so let's use this notation instead. Note that `M <~~> N` doesn't mean that each of `M` and `N` are reducible to each other; that only holds when `M` and `N` are the same expression. (Or, with our convention of only saying "reducible" for one or more reduction steps, it never holds.)
119 In the metatheory, it's also sometimes useful to talk about formulas that are syntactically equivalent *before any reductions take place*. Hankin uses the symbol <code>≡</code> for this. So too do Hindley and Seldin. We'll use that too, and will avoid using `=` when discussing metatheory for the lambda calculus. Instead we'll use `<~~>` as we said above. When we want to introduce a stipulative definition, we'll write it out longhand, as in:
121 > T is defined to be `(M N)`.
123 We'll regard the following two expressions:
129 as syntactically equivalent, since they only involve a typographic change of a bound variable. Read Hankin section 2.3 for discussion of different attitudes one can take about this.
131 Note that neither of those expressions are identical to:
135 because here it's a free variable that's been changed. Nor are they identical to:
139 because here the second occurrence of `y` is no longer free.
141 There is plenty of discussion of this, and the fine points of how substitution works, in Hankin and in various of the tutorials we've linked to about the lambda calculus. We expect you have a good intuitive understanding of what to do already, though, even if you're not able to articulate it rigorously.
147 The grammar we gave for the lambda calculus leads to some verbosity. There are several informal conventions in widespread use, which enable the language to be written more compactly. (If you like, you could instead articulate a formal grammar which incorporates these additional conventions. Instead of showing it to you, we'll leave it as an exercise for those so inclined.)
150 **Dot notation** Dot means "put a left paren here, and put the right
151 paren as far the right as possible without creating unbalanced
156 can be abbreviated as:
168 This on the other hand:
176 **Parentheses** Outermost parentheses around applications can be dropped. Moreover, applications will associate to the left, so `M N P` will be understood as `((M N) P)`. Finally, you can drop parentheses around abstracts, but not when they're part of an application. So you can abbreviate:
184 but you should include the parentheses in:
192 **Merging lambdas** An expression of the form `(\x (\y M))`, or equivalently, `(\x. \y. M)`, can be abbreviated as:
196 Similarly, `(\x (\y (\z M)))` can be abbreviated as:
201 Lambda terms represent functions
202 --------------------------------
204 All (recursively computable) functions can be represented by lambda
205 terms (the untyped lambda calculus is Turing complete). For some lambda terms, it is easy to see what function they represent:
207 > `(\x x)` represents the identity function: given any argument `M`, this function
208 simply returns `M`: `((\x x) M) ~~> M`.
210 > `(\x (x x))` duplicates its argument:
211 `((\x (x x)) M) ~~> (M M)`
213 > `(\x (\y x))` throws away its second argument:
214 `(((\x (\y x)) M) N) ~~> M`
218 It is easy to see that distinct lambda expressions can represent the same
219 function, considered as a mapping from input to outputs. Obviously:
227 both represent the same function, the identity function. However, we said above that we would be regarding these expressions as synactically equivalent, so they aren't yet really examples of *distinct* lambda expressions representing a single function. However, all three of these are distinct lambda expressions:
235 yet when applied to any argument M, all of these will always return M. So they have the same extension. It's also true, though you may not yet be in a position to see, that no other function can differentiate between them when they're supplied as an argument to it. However, these expressions are all syntactically distinct.
237 The first two expressions are *convertible*: in particular the first reduces to the second. So they can be regarded as proof-theoretically equivalent even though they're not syntactically identical. However, the proof theory we've given so far doesn't permit you to reduce the second expression to the third. So these lambda expressions are non-equivalent.
239 There's an extension of the proof-theory we've presented so far which does permit this further move. And in that extended proof theory, all computable functions with the same extension do turn out to be equivalent (convertible). However, at that point, we still won't be working with the traditional mathematical notion of a function as a set of ordered pairs. One reason is that the latter but not the former permits uncomputable functions. A second reason is that the latter but not the former prohibits functions from applying to themselves. We discussed this some at the end of Monday's meeting (and further discussion is best pursued in person).
246 Our definition of these is reviewed in [[Assignment1]].
249 It's possible to do the assignment without using a Scheme interpreter, however
250 you should take this opportunity to [get Scheme installed on your
251 computer](/how_to_get_the_programming_languages_running_on_your_computer), and
252 [get started learning Scheme](/learning_scheme). It will help you test out
253 proposed answers to the assignment.
260 Declarative/functional vs Imperatival/dynamic models of computation
261 ===================================================================
263 Many of you, like us, will have grown up thinking the paradigm of computation is a sequence of changes. Let go of that. It will take some care to separate the operative notion of "sequencing" here from other notions close to it, but once that's done, you'll see that languages that have no significant notions of sequencing or changes are Turing complete: they can perform any computation we know how to describe. In itself, that only puts them on equal footing with more mainstream, imperatival programming languages like C and Java and Python, which are also Turing complete. But further, the languages we want you to become familiar with can reasonably be understood to be more fundamental. They embody the elemental building blocks that computer scientists use when reasoning about and designing other languages.
265 Jim offered the metaphor: think of imperatival languages, which include "mutation" and "side-effects" (we'll flesh out these keywords as we proceeed), as the pâté of computation. We want to teach you about the meat and potatoes, where as it turns out there is no sequencing and no changes. There's just the evaluation or simplification of complex expressions.
267 Now, when you ask the Scheme interpreter to simplify an expression for you, that's a kind of dynamic interaction between you and the interpreter. You may wonder then why these languages should not also be understood imperatively. The difference is that in a purely declarative or functional language, there are no dynamic effects in the language itself. It's just a static semantic fact about the language that one expression reduces to another. You may have verified that fact through your dynamic interactions with the Scheme interpreter, but that's different from saying that there are dynamic effects in the language itself.
269 What the latter would amount to will become clearer as we build our way up to languages which are genuinely imperatival or dynamic.
271 Many of the slogans and keywords we'll encounter in discussions of these issues call for careful interpretation. They mean various different things.
273 For example, you'll encounter the claim that declarative languages are distinguished by their **referential transparency.** What's meant by this is not always exactly the same, and as a cluster, it's related to but not the same as this means for philosophers and linguists.
275 The notion of **function** that we'll be working with will be one that, by default, sometimes counts as non-identical functions that map all their inputs to the very same outputs. For example, two functions from jumbled decks of cards to sorted decks of cards may use different algorithms and hence be different functions.
277 It's possible to enhance the lambda calculus so that functions do get identified when they map all the same inputs to the same outputs. This is called making the calculus **extensional**. Church called languages which didn't do this **intensional**. If you try to understand that kind of "intensionality" in terms of functions from worlds to extensions (an idea also associated with Church), you may hurt yourself. So too if you try to understand it in terms of mental stereotypes, another notion sometimes designated by "intension."
279 It's often said that dynamic systems are distinguished because they are the ones in which **order matters**. However, there are many ways in which order can matter. If we have a trivalent boolean system, for example---easily had in a purely functional calculus---we might choose to give a truth-table like this for "and":
285 true and false = false
289 false and true = false
291 false and false = false
294 And then we'd notice that `* and false` has a different intepretation than `false and *`. (The same phenomenon is already present with the material conditional in bivalent logics; but seeing that a non-symmetric semantics for `and` is available even for functional languages is instructive.)
296 Another way in which order can matter that's present even in functional languages is that the interpretation of some complex expressions can depend on the order in which sub-expressions are evaluated. Evaluated in one order, the computations might never terminate (and so semantically we interpret them as having "the bottom value"---we'll discuss this). Evaluated in another order, they might have a perfectly mundane value. Here's an example, though we'll reserve discussion of it until later:
298 (\x. y) ((\x. x x) (\x. x x))
300 Again, these facts are all part of the metatheory of purely functional languages. But *there is* a different sense of "order matters" such that it's only in imperatival languages that order so matters.
306 Here the comparison in the last line will evaluate to true.
312 Here the comparison in the last line will evaluate to false.
314 One of our goals for this course is to get you to understand *what is* that new
315 sense such that only so matters in imperatival languages.
317 Finally, you'll see the term **dynamic** used in a variety of ways in the literature for this course:
319 * dynamic versus static typing
321 * dynamic versus lexical scoping
323 * dynamic versus static control operators
325 * finally, we're used ourselves to talking about dynamic versus static semantics
327 For the most part, these uses are only loosely connected to each other. We'll tend to use "imperatival" to describe the kinds of semantic properties made available in dynamic semantics, languages which have robust notions of sequencing changes, and so on.
334 <td width=30%>Scheme (functional part)</td>
335 <td width=30%>OCaml (functional part)</td>
336 <td width=30%>C, Java, Pasval<br>
337 Scheme (imperative part)<br>
338 OCaml (imperative part)</td>
340 <td width=30%>lambda calculus<br>
341 combinatorial logic</td>
343 <td colspan=3 align=center>--------------------------------------------------- Turing complete ---------------------------------------------------</td>
346 <td width=30%>more advanced type systems, such as polymorphic types
350 <td width=30%>simply-typed lambda calculus (what linguists mostly use)
358 Here's how it looks to say the same thing in various of these languages.
360 1. Binding suitable values to the variables `three` and `two`, and adding them.
374 Notice OCaml lets you write the `+` in between the `three` and `two`, as you're accustomed to. However most functions need to come leftmost, even if they're binary. And you can do this with `+` too, if you enclose it in parentheses so that the OCaml parser doesn't get confused by your syntax:
380 In the lambda calculus: here we're on our own, we don't have predefined constants like `+` and `3` and `2` to work with. We've got to build up everything from scratch. We'll be seeing how to do that over the next weeks.
382 But supposing you had constructed appropriate values for `+` and `3` and `2`, you'd place them in the ellided positions in:
384 (((\three (\two ((... three) two))) ...) ...)
386 In an ordinary imperatival language like C:
394 In C this looks almost the same as what we had before:
399 Here we first initialize `x` to hold the value 3; then we mutate `x` to hold a new value.
401 In (the imperatival part of) Scheme, this could be done as:
406 In general, mutating operations in Scheme are named with a trailing `!`. There are other imperatival constructions, though, like `(print ...)`, that don't follow that convention.
408 In (the imperatival part of) OCaml, this could be done as:
413 Of course you don't need to remember any of this syntax. We're just illustrating it so that you see that in Scheme and OCaml it looks somewhat different than we had above. The difference is much more obvious than it is in C.
415 In the lambda calculus: sorry, you can't do mutation. At least, not natively. Later in the term we'll be learning how in fact, really, you can embed mutation inside the lambda calculus even though the lambda calculus has no primitive facilities for mutation.
421 3. Anonymous functions
423 Functions are "first-class values" in the lambda calculus, in Scheme, and in OCaml. What that means is that they can be arguments to other functions. They can be the results of the application of other functions to some arguments. They can be stored in data structures. And so on.
425 First, we'll show what "anonymous" functions look like. These are functions that have not been bound as values to any variables. That is, there are no variables whose value they are.
427 In the lambda calculus:
431 is always anonymous! Here `M` stands for any expression of the language, simple or complex. It's only when you do
435 that `(\x M)` has a "name" (it's named `y` during the evaluation of `N`).
437 In Scheme, the same thing is written:
441 Not very different, right? For example, if `M` stands for `(+ 3 x)`, then this is an anonymous function that adds 3 to whatever argument it's given:
445 Scheme uses a lot of parentheses, and they are always significant, never optional. In `(+ 3 x)` the parentheses mean "apply the function `+` to the arguments `3` and `x`. In `(lambda (x) ...)` the parentheses have a different meaning: they mark where the anonymous function you're defining begins and ends, and so on. As you'll see, parentheses have yet further roles in Scheme. I know it's confusing.
447 In OCaml, we write our anonymous function like this:
455 In OCaml, parentheses only serve a grouping function and they often can be omitted. Or more could be added. For instance, we could equally well say:
461 (fun x -> (( + ) (3) (x)))
463 As we saw above, parentheses can often be omitted in the lambda calculus too. But not in Scheme. Every parentheses has a specific role.
465 4. Supplying an argument to an anonymous function
467 Just because the functions we built aren't named doesn't mean we can't do anything with them. We can give them arguments. For example, in Scheme we can say:
469 ((lambda (x) (+ 3 x)) 2)
471 The outermost parentheses here mean "apply the function `(lambda (x) (+ 3 x))` to the argument `2`.
475 (fun x -> ( + ) 3 x) 2
478 5. Binding variables to values with "let"
480 Let's go back and re-consider this Scheme expression:
486 Scheme also has a simple `let` (without the ` *`), and it permits you to group several variable bindings together in a single `let`- or `let*`-statement, like this:
488 (let* ((three 3) (two 2))
491 Often you'll get the same results whether you use `let*` or `let`. However, there are cases where it makes a difference, and in those cases, `let*` behaves more like you'd expect. So you should just get into the habit of consistently using that. It's also good discipline for this seminar, especially while you're learning, to write things out the longer way, like this:
497 However, here you've got the double parentheses in `(let* ((three 3)) ...)`. They're doubled because the syntax permits more assignments than just the assignment of the value `3` to the variable `three`. Myself I tend to use `[` and `]` for the outer of these parentheses: `(let* [(three 3)] ...)`. Scheme can be configured to parse `[...]` as if they're just more `(...)`.
499 Someone asked in seminar if the `3` could be replaced by a more complex expression. The answer is "yes". You could also write:
501 (let* [(three (+ 1 2))]
505 The question also came up whether the `(+ 1 2)` computation would be performed before or after it was bound to the variable `three`. That's a terrific question. Let's say this: both strategies could be reasonable designs for a language. We are going to discuss this carefully in coming weeks. In fact Scheme and OCaml make the same design choice. But you should think of the underlying form of the `let`-statement as not settling this by itself.
507 Repeating our starting point for reference:
513 Recall in OCaml this same computation was written:
519 6. Binding with "let" is the same as supplying an argument to a lambda
521 The preceding expression in Scheme is exactly equivalent to:
523 (((lambda (three) (lambda (two) (+ three two))) 3) 2)
525 The preceding expression in OCaml is exactly equivalent to:
527 (fun three -> (fun two -> ( + ) three two)) 3 2
529 Read this several times until you understand it.
531 7. Functions can also be bound to variables (and hence, cease being "anonymous").
535 (let* [(bar (lambda (x) B))] M)
537 then wherever `bar` occurs in `M` (and isn't rebound by a more local "let" or "lambda"), it will be interpreted as the function `(lambda (x) B)`.
541 let bar = fun x -> B in
546 (let* [(bar (lambda (x) B))] (bar A))
548 as we've said, means the same as:
550 ((lambda (bar) (bar A)) (lambda (x) B))
552 which, as we'll see, is equivalent to:
556 and that means the same as:
560 in other words: evaluate `B` with `x` assigned to the value `A`.
562 Similarly, this in OCaml:
564 let bar = fun x -> B in
571 and that means the same as:
576 8. Pushing a "let"-binding from now until the end
578 What if you want to do something like this, in Scheme?
580 (let* [(x A)] ... for the rest of the file or interactive session ...)
585 ... for the rest of the file or interactive session ...
587 Scheme and OCaml have syntactic shorthands for doing this. In Scheme it's written like this:
590 ... rest of the file or interactive session ...
592 In OCaml it's written like this:
595 ... rest of the file or interactive session ...
597 It's easy to be lulled into thinking this is a kind of imperative construction. *But it's not!* It's really just a shorthand for the compound "let"-expressions we've already been looking at, taking the maximum syntactically permissible scope. (Compare the "dot" convention in the lambda calculus, discussed above.)
602 OCaml permits you to abbreviate:
604 let bar = fun x -> B in
612 It also permits you to abbreviate:
614 let bar = fun x -> B;;
620 Similarly, Scheme permits you to abbreviate:
622 (define bar (lambda (x) B))
628 and this is the form you'll most often see Scheme definitions written in.
630 However, conceptually you should think backwards through the abbreviations and equivalences we've just presented.
636 (define bar (lambda (x) B))
640 (let* [(bar (lambda (x) B))] ... rest of the file or interactive session ...)
644 (lambda (bar) ... rest of the file or interactive session ...) (lambda (x) B)
646 or in other words, interpret the rest of the file or interactive session with `bar` assigned the function `(lambda (x) B)`.
651 You can override a binding with a more inner binding to the same variable. For instance the following expression in OCaml:
657 will evaluate to 2, not to 3. It's easy to be lulled into thinking this is the same as what happens when we say in C:
662 <em>but it's not the same!</em> In the latter case we have mutation, in the former case we don't. You will learn to recognize the difference as we proceed.
664 The OCaml expression just means:
666 (fun x -> ((fun x -> x) 2) 3)
668 and there's no more mutation going on there than there is in:
671 <code>∀x. (F x or ∀x (not (F x)))</code>
674 When a previously-bound variable is rebound in the way we see here, that's called **shadowing**: the outer binding is shadowed during the scope of the inner binding.
677 Some more comparisons between Scheme and OCaml
678 ----------------------------------------------
680 11. Simple predefined values
682 Numbers in Scheme: `2`, `3`
685 Booleans in Scheme: `#t`, `#f`
686 In OCaml: `true`, `false`
688 The eighth letter in the Latin alphabet, in Scheme: `#\h`
693 These are values which are built up out of (zero or more) simple values.
695 Ordered pairs in Scheme: `'(2 . 3)`
698 Lists in Scheme: `'(2 3)`
700 We'll be explaining the difference between pairs and lists next week.
702 The empty list, in Scheme: `'()`
705 The string consisting just of the eighth letter of the Latin alphabet, in Scheme: `"h"`
708 A longer string, in Scheme: `"horse"`
711 A shorter string, in Scheme: `""`
714 13. Function application
716 Binary functions in OCaml: `foo 2 3`
720 These are the same as: `((foo 2) 3)`. In other words, functions in OCaml are "curried". `foo 2` returns a `2`-fooer, which waits for an argument like `3` and then foos `2` to it. `( + ) 2` returns a `2`-adder, which waits for an argument like `3` and then adds `2` to it.
722 In Scheme, on the other hand, there's a difference between `((foo 2) 3)` and `(foo 2 3)`. Scheme distinguishes between unary functions that return unary functions and binary functions. For our seminar purposes, it will be easiest if you confine yourself to unary functions in Scheme as much as possible.
724 Additionally, as said above, Scheme is very sensitive to parentheses and whenever you want a function applied to any number of arguments, you need to wrap the function and its arguments in a parentheses.
727 What "sequencing" is and isn't
728 ------------------------------
730 We mentioned before the idea that computation is a sequencing of some changes. I said we'd be discussing (fragments of, and in some cases, entire) languages that have no native notion of change.
732 Neither do they have any useful notion of sequencing. But what this would be takes some care to identify.
734 First off, the mere concatenation of expressions isn't what we mean by sequencing. Concatenation of expressions is how you build syntactically complex expressions out of simpler ones. The complex expressions often express a computation where a function is applied to one (or more) arguments,
736 Second, the kind of rebinding we called "shadowing" doesn't involve any changes or sequencing. All the precedence facts about that kind of rebinding are just consequences of the compound syntactic structures in which it occurs.
738 Third, the kinds of bindings we see in:
749 don't involve any changes or sequencing in the sense we're trying to identify. As we said, these programs are just syntactic variants of (single) compound syntactic structures involving "let"s and "lambda"s.
751 Since Scheme and OCaml also do permit imperatival constructions, they do have syntax for genuine sequencing. In Scheme it looks like this:
755 In OCaml it looks like this:
763 In the presence of imperatival elements, sequencing order is very relevant. For example, these will behave differently:
765 (begin (print "under") (print "water"))
767 (begin (print "water") (print "under"))
771 begin x := 3; x := 2; x end
773 begin x := 2; x := 3; x end
775 However, if A and B are purely functional, non-imperatival expressions, then:
779 just evaluates to C (so long as A and B evaluate to something at all). So:
783 contributes no more to a larger context in which it's embedded than C does. This is the sense in which functional languages have no serious notion of sequencing.
785 We'll discuss this more as the seminar proceeds.
790 1. Declarative vs imperatival models of computation.
791 2. Variety of ways in which "order can matter."
792 3. Variety of meanings for "dynamic."
793 4. Schoenfinkel, Curry, Church: a brief history
794 5. Functions as "first-class values"
795 6. "Curried" functions
798 1. Encoding pairs (and triples and ...)