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| Tags: calculus, etareduction, implementation, lambda, looking, pure, realtime |
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Hello,
After long searching and studying literature about Explicit Substitutions and Term Rewriting Systems, the first paper discussing the Eta reduction in the context of Explicit Substitutions I found became "Eta-Conversion for the Languages of Explicit Substitutions" by Therese Hardin (http://www.springerlink.com/content/ p778664h6lwk4653/). Unfortunately, this paper does not offer a system that has a well-defined algorithm for evaluation. Hence my further search was focused at Term Rewriting Systems with Eta reduction implementation. Later, the paper "An explicit Eta rewrite rule" by Daniel Briaud (http://hal.inria.fr/docs/00/07/42/58/PDF/RR-2417.pdf) was found. This paper appends an "Eta" rewrite rules to the \lambda\upsilon version of Explicit Substitutions theory. The resulting \lambda\upsilon\eta theory is indeed a TRS with a finite number of rewriting rules. However, this theory does not satisfy for implementing it in the form of an abstract machine, since a normal form for its terms representing computable functions does not match that of Pure Lambda Calculus, and the latter one even cannot be achieved from the \lambda\upsilon\eta normal form. For example, the following expression, which has already been a normal form, is reduced with the \lambda\upsilon\eta theory's rewrite rules to another expression, which does not contain enough information for recovering the initial term: \x. ((x x) x) = \((1 1) 1) -Eta- (1 1)[\bot/] - 1[\bot/] 1[\bot/] - \bot \bot = \bot \bot. In turn, the strong reduction in the combinatory logic appeared to require an infinite number of axioms - that had been proved in the paper "Axioms for Strong Reduction in Combinatory Logic" by Roger Hindley (http://links.jstor.org/sici? sici=0022-4812(196706)32%3A2%3C224%3AAFSRIC%3E2.0.CO%3B2- D&origin=crossref). Therefore, the combinatory logic is also useless for creating an abstract machine for strong reduction. Indeed, it is easier to use Pure Lambda Calculus for that reason. On the other hand, naive implementation of Pure Lambda Calculus' Eta reduction is extremely inefficient. I also attempted to use the style of Micro-Lambda Calculus, which had been considered in J. Klop's Ustica notes (http://web.mac.com/ janwillemklop/Site/Courses_and_Notes_files/ustica-lectures.pdf), for the Eta reduction: \x. (x x) - not a redex, \x. (y x) - y, \x. (\y. M x) - an expression containing a Beta redex, \x. ((M N) x)... Unfortunately, for the application case, it is not clear for me how to perform Eta reduction without analyzing both M and N subexpressions. As far as know, the question whether an equivalent of Eta for Micro- Lambda Calculus exists remains unresolved. I would be grateful for any help in studying possible ways to implement Eta reduction in abstract reduction machines. With best regards, Anton Salikhmetov |
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