Here are a bunch of pre-tested operations for the untyped lambda calculus. In some cases multiple versions are offered. Some of these are drawn from: * [[!wikipedia Lambda calculus]] * [[!wikipedia Church encoding]] * Oleg's [Basic Lambda Calculus Terms](http://okmij.org/ftp/Computation/lambda-calc.html#basic) and all sorts of other places. Others of them are our own handiwork. **Spoilers!** Below you'll find implementations of map and filter for v3 lists, and several implementations of leq for Church numerals. Those were all requested in Assignment 2; so if you haven't done that yet, you should try to figure them out on your own. (You can find implementations of these all over the internet, if you look for them, so these are no great secret. In fact, we'll be delighted if you're interested enough in the problem to try to think through alternative implementations.) ; booleans let true = \y n. y in ; aka K let false = \y n. n in ; aka K I let and = \p q. p q false in ; or let and = \p q. p q p in ; aka S C I let or = \p q. p true q in ; or let or = \p q. p p q in ; aka M let not = \p. p false true in ; or let not = \p y n. p n y in ; aka C let xor = \p q. p (not q) q in let iff = \p q. not (xor p q) in ; or let iff = \p q. p q (not q) in ; pairs let make_pair = \x y f. f x y in let get_fst = \x y. x in ; aka true let get_snd = \x y. y in ; aka false ; triples let make_triple = \x y z f. f x y z in ; Church numerals: basic operations let zero = \s z. z in ; aka false let one = \s z. s z in ; aka I let succ = \n s z. s (n s z) in ; for any Church numeral n > zero : n (K y) z ~~> y let iszero = \n. n (\x. false) true in ; version 3 lists let empty = \f z. z in let make_list = \h t f z. f h (t f z) in let isempty = \lst. lst (\h sofar. false) true in let head = \lst. lst (\h sofar. h) junk in let tail_empty = empty in let tail = \lst. (\shift. lst shift (make_pair empty tail_empty) get_snd) ; where shift is (\h p. p (\t y. make_pair (make_list h t) t)) in let length = \lst. lst (\h sofar. succ sofar) 0 in let map = \f lst. lst (\h sofar. make_list (f h) sofar) empty in let filter = \f lst. lst (\h sofar. f h (make_list h sofar) sofar) empty in ; or let filter = \f lst. lst (\h. f h (make_list h) I) empty in let singleton = \x f z. f x z in ; append [a;b;c] [x;y;z] ~~> [a;b;c;x;y;z] let append = \left right. left make_list right in ; very inefficient but correct reverse let reverse = \lst. lst (\h sofar. append sofar (singleton h)) empty in ; or ; more efficient reverse builds a left-fold instead ; (make_left_list a (make_left_list b (make_left_list c empty)) ~~> \f z. f c (f b (f a z)) let reverse = (\make_left_list lst. lst make_left_list empty) (\h t f z. t f (f h z)) in ; zip [a;b;c] [x;y;z] ~~> [(a,x);(b,y);(c,z)] let zip = \left right. (\base build. reverse left build base (\x y. reverse x)) ; where base is (make_pair empty (map (\h u. u h) right)) ; and build is (\h sofar. sofar (\x y. isempty y sofar (make_pair (make_list (\u. head y (u h)) x) (tail y)) )) in let all = \f lst. lst (\h sofar. and sofar (f h)) true in let any = \f lst. lst (\h sofar. or sofar (f h)) false in ; version 1 lists let empty = make_pair true junk in let make_list = \h t. make_pair false (make_pair h t) in let isempty = \lst. lst get_fst in let head = \lst. isempty lst err (lst get_snd get_fst) in let tail_empty = empty in let tail = \lst. isempty lst tail_empty (lst get_snd get_snd) in ; more math with Church numerals let add = \m n. m succ n in ; or let add = \m n s z. m s (n s z) in let mul = \m n. m (\z. add n z) zero in ; or let mul = \m n s. m (n s) in let pow = \b exp. exp (mul b) one in ; or ; b succ : adds b ; b (b succ) ; adds b b times, ie adds b^2 ; b (b (b succ)) ; adds b^2 b times, ie adds b^3 ; exp b succ ; adds b^exp let pow = \b exp s z. exp b s z in ; three strategies for predecessor let pred_zero = zero in let pred = (\shift n. n shift (make_pair zero pred_zero) get_snd) ; where shift is (\p. p (\x y. make_pair (succ x) x)) in ; or ; from Oleg; observe that for any Church numeral n: n I ~~> I let pred = \n. iszero n zero ; else (n (\x. x I ; when x is the base term, this will be K zero ; when x is a Church numeral, it will be I (succ x)) ; base term (K (K zero)) ) in ; from Bunder/Urbanek let pred = \n s z. n (\u v. v (u s)) (K z) I in ; or ; inefficient but simple comparisons let leq = \m n. iszero (n pred m) in let lt = \m n. not (leq n m) in let eq = \m n. and (leq m n) (leq n m) in ; or ; more efficient comparisons, Oleg's gt provided some simplifications let leq = (\base build consume. \m n. n consume (m build base) get_fst) ; where base is (make_pair true junk) ; and build is (\p. make_pair false p) ; and consume is (\p. p get_fst p (p get_snd)) in let lt = \m n. not (leq n m) in let eq = (\base build consume. \m n. n consume (m build base) get_fst) ; 2nd element of a pair will now be of the form (K sthg) or I ; we supply the pair being consumed itself as an argument ; getting back either sthg or the pair we just consumed ; base is (make_pair true (K (make_pair false I))) ; and build is (\p. make_pair false (K p)) ; and consume is (\p. p get_snd p) in ; -n is a fixedpoint of \x. add (add n x) x ; but unfortunately Y that_function doesn't normalize ; instead: let sub = \m n. n pred m in ; or ; how many times we can succ n until m <= result let sub = \m n. (\base build. m build base (\cur fin sofar. sofar)) ; where base is (make_triple n false zero) ; and build is (\t. t (\cur fin sofar. or fin (leq m cur) (make_triple cur true sofar) ; enough (make_triple (succ cur) false (succ sofar)) ; continue )) in ; or let sub = (\base build consume. \m n. n consume (m build base) get_fst) ; where base is (make_pair zero I) ; see second defn of eq for explanation of 2nd element ; and build is (\p. p (\x y. make_pair (succ x) (K p))) ; and consume is (\p. p get_snd p) in let min = \m n. sub m (sub m n) in let max = \m n. add n (sub m n) in ; (m/n) is a fixedpoint of \x. add (sub (mul n x) m) x ; but unfortunately Y that_function doesn't normalize ; instead: ; how many times we can sub n from m while n <= result let div = \m n. (\base build. m build base (\cur go sofar. sofar)) ; where base is (make_triple m true zero) ; and build is (\t. t (\cur go sofar. and go (leq n cur) (make_triple (sub cur n) true (succ sofar)) ; continue (make_triple cur false sofar) ; enough )) in ; what's left after sub n from m while n <= result let mod = \m n. (\base build. m build base (\cur go. cur)) ; where base is (make_pair m true) ; and build is (\p. p (\cur go. and go (leq n cur) (make_pair (sub cur n) true) ; continue (make_pair cur false) ; enough )) in ; or let divmod = (\base build mtail. \m n. (\dhead. m (mtail dhead) (\sel. dhead (sel 0 0))) (n build base (\x y z. z junk)) (\t u x y z. make_pair t u) ) ; where base is (make_triple succ (K 0) I) ; see second defn of eq for explanation of 3rd element ; and build is (\t. make_triple I succ (K t)) ; and mtail is (\dhead d. d (\dz mz df mf drest sel. drest dhead (sel (df dz) (mf mz)))) in let div = \n d. divmod n d get_fst in let mod = \n d. divmod n d get_snd in ; sqrt n is a fixedpoint of \x. div (div (add n (mul x x)) 2) x ; but unfortunately Y that_function doesn't normalize ; (log base b of m) is a fixedpoint of \x. add (sub (pow b x) m) x ; but unfortunately Y that_function doesn't normalize ; instead: ; how many times we can mul b by b while result <= m let log = \m b. (\base build. m build base (\cur go sofar. sofar)) ; where base is (make_triple b true 0) ; and build is (\t. t (\cur go sofar. and go (leq cur m) (make_triple (mul cur b) true (succ sofar)) ; continue (make_triple cur false sofar) ; enough )) in ; Rosenbloom's fixed point combinator let Y = \f. (\h. f (h h)) (\h. f (h h)) in ; Turing's fixed point combinator let Theta = (\u f. f (u u f)) (\u f. f (u u f)) in ; length for version 1 lists let length = Y (\self lst. isempty lst 0 (succ (self (tail lst)))) in true