X-Git-Url: http://lambda.jimpryor.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=lambda.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=week1.mdwn;h=6773a7714f358bdbc6da564719b018a5000ee271;hp=36ebdfcc6a48bf72288e2023a0186b9c6665de2d;hb=e47611204f506bac2a53a81dd9a0e6e85600575e;hpb=e8385d4bbe1cc7549cb8f7724f489370b5dcd426 diff --git a/week1.mdwn b/week1.mdwn index 36ebdfcc..6773a771 100644 --- a/week1.mdwn +++ b/week1.mdwn @@ -603,6 +603,7 @@ Here's how it looks to say the same thing in various of these languages. 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.) + Some more comparisons between Scheme and OCaml ----------------------------------------------