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Extraordinary Ordinals

21 pointsby marvinbornerlast Tuesday at 1:03 AM11 commentsview on HN

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tromptoday at 8:00 AM

The author presents most known numeral systems (ways of representing natural numbers) in lambda calculus, classified by whether the term use their bound variables exactly one time (linear), at most one time (affine), or multiple times (non-linear). Mackie's paper [0] (one of the references) provides a good introduction to these.

He illustrates some numerals in each system with a graphical notation that strongly reminds me of interaction nets [1], a computational model closely related to lambda calculus. The notation they use for lambda terms is rather non-standard. Compare

> In β-reduction, k[(x⇒b)←a]⊳k[b{a/x}]k[(x⇒b)←a]⊳k[b{a/x}]

with Wikipedia's [2]

> The β-reduction rule states that a β-redex, an application of the form (λx. t) s, reduces to the term t[x:=s].

The k[...] part means that β-reduction steps can happen in arbitrary contexts.

[0] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323000057_Linear_Nu...

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interaction_nets

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambda_calculus

Sharlintoday at 8:37 AM

The author unfortunately only describes about half of the syntax they use, or rather, they describe the syntax of the language but assume the reader is familiar with the (rather obscure even in a PLT context) metalanguage.

lefratoday at 7:36 AM

I think I lack context to see what this is about. The line graphs are pretty though, and I'd like to understand more.

throwaway81523today at 8:06 AM

Hmm nice I guess, but I expected it was going to be about transfinite ordinals. I wonder if it can be extended to them.

p1esktoday at 6:45 AM

I didn’t understand that notation. Can someone please explain?

show 2 replies
bananaflagtoday at 6:59 AM

This should be "numerals"

dnnddidiejtoday at 7:57 AM

This is beautiful art