class.
You should always *aim* to complete the assignments by the "due" date,
-as this will fit best with the progress of the seminar. Let's take
-assignment 3 to be "due" on Sunday Oct 3 (the date of this
-announcement), but as we announced last week in seminar, you can take up
-until this coming Sunday to complete it. If you need to. Try to complete
-it, and get assistance completing it if you need it, sooner.
-
-* We'll shortly be posting another assignment, assignment 4, which will be
-"due" on the Sunday before our next seminar. That is, on Sunday Oct 17.
-(There's no seminar on Monday Oct 11.)
+as this will fit best with the progress of the seminar.
The assignments will tend to be quite challenging. Again, you should by
all means talk amongst yourselves, and to us, about strategies and
what is difficult, what you tried, why what you tried didn't work, and
what you think you need in order to solve the problem.
-<!--
- To play around with a **typed lambda calculus**, which we'll look at later
- in the course, have a look at the [Penn Lambda Calculator](http://www.ling.upenn.edu/lambda/).
- This requires installing Java, but provides a number of tools for evaluating
- lambda expressions and other linguistic forms. (Mac users will most likely
- already have Java installed.)
--->
-
## Lecture Notes and Assignments ##
> Topics: More on Fixed Points; Sets; Aborting List Traversals; [[Implementing Trees]]
-(18 Oct) Lecture notes for Week 5
+(18 Oct) Lecture notes for [[Week5]] (in progress).
> Topics: Types, Polymorphism