X-Git-Url: http://lambda.jimpryor.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=lambda.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=exercises%2F_assignment4.mdwn;h=f998e7ac73a33c66d353463a62b91aa7b403d710;hp=f5e22c75fddbf7961df95483575ab7d72a31da0e;hb=ea4c96609b8d02f5e83a8027cf567bab5562cb5b;hpb=26c6874795933a9609ac336db9bf19e18ac357de diff --git a/exercises/_assignment4.mdwn b/exercises/_assignment4.mdwn index f5e22c75..f998e7ac 100644 --- a/exercises/_assignment4.mdwn +++ b/exercises/_assignment4.mdwn @@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ is unchanged after adding 1 to it. It makes a certain amount of sense to use this object to model arithmetic infinity. For instance, depending on implementation details, it might happen that `leq n ξ` is true for all (finite) natural numbers `n`. However, the fixed point -you found for `succ` and `(+n)` may not be a fixed point for `(*n)` or for +you found for `succ` and `(+n)` (recall this is shorthand for `\x. add x n`) may not be a fixed point for `(*n)` or for `(^n)`.