Addressing Machines as models of lambda-calculus
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Published:2022-07-29
Issue:
Volume:Volume 18, Issue 3
Page:
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ISSN:1860-5974
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Container-title:Logical Methods in Computer Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:
Author:
Della Penna Giuseppe,Intrigila Benedetto,Manzonetto Giulio
Abstract
Turing machines and register machines have been used for decades in
theoretical computer science as abstract models of computation. Also the
$\lambda$-calculus has played a central role in this domain as it allows to
focus on the notion of functional computation, based on the substitution
mechanism, while abstracting away from implementation details. The present
article starts from the observation that the equivalence between these
formalisms is based on the Church-Turing Thesis rather than an actual encoding
of $\lambda$-terms into Turing (or register) machines. The reason is that these
machines are not well-suited for modelling $\lambda$-calculus programs.
We study a class of abstract machines that we call "addressing machine" since
they are only able to manipulate memory addresses of other machines. The
operations performed by these machines are very elementary: load an address in
a register, apply a machine to another one via their addresses, and call the
address of another machine. We endow addressing machines with an operational
semantics based on leftmost reduction and study their behaviour. The set of
addresses of these machines can be easily turned into a combinatory algebra. In
order to obtain a model of the full untyped $\lambda$-calculus, we need to
introduce a rule that bares similarities with the $\omega$-rule and the rule
$\zeta_\beta$ from combinatory logic.
Publisher
Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe (CCSD)
Subject
General Computer Science,Theoretical Computer Science