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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Third
International Conference on Typed Lambda Calculi and Applications,
TLCA '97, held in Nancy, France, in April 1997.
The 24 revised full papers presented in the book were carefully
selected from a total of 54 submissions. The book reports the main
research advances achieved in the area of typed lambda calculi
since the predecessor conference, held in 1995, and competently
reflects the state of the art in the area.
Combinatory logic and lambda-calculus, originally devised in the
1920's, have since developed into linguistic tools, especially
useful in programming languages. The authors' previous book served
as the main reference for introductory courses on lambda-calculus
for over 20 years: this long-awaited new version is thoroughly
revised and offers a fully up-to-date account of the subject, with
the same authoritative exposition. The grammar and basic properties
of both combinatory logic and lambda-calculus are discussed,
followed by an introduction to type-theory. Typed and untyped
versions of the systems, and their differences, are covered.
Lambda-calculus models, which lie behind much of the semantics of
programming languages, are also explained in depth. The treatment
is as non-technical as possible, with the main ideas emphasized and
illustrated by examples. Many exercises are included, from routine
to advanced, with solutions to most at the end of the book.
Type theory is one of the most important tools in the design of
higher-level programming languages, such as ML. This book
introduces and teaches its techniques by focusing on one
particularly neat system and studying it in detail. By
concentrating on the principles that make the theory work in
practice, the author covers all the key ideas without getting
involved in the complications of more advanced systems. This book
takes a type-assignment approach to type theory, and the system
considered is the simplest polymorphic one. The author covers all
the basic ideas, including the system's relation to propositional
logic, and gives a careful treatment of the type-checking algorithm
that lies at the heart of every such system. Also featured are two
other interesting algorithms that until now have been buried in
inaccessible technical literature. The mathematical presentation is
rigorous but clear, making it the first book at this level that can
be used as an introduction to type theory for computer scientists.
Type theory is one of the most important tools in the design of higher-level programming languages, such as ML. This book introduces and teaches its techniques by focusing on one particularly neat system and studying it in detail. By concentrating on the principles that make the theory work in practice, the author covers all the key ideas without getting involved in the complications of more advanced systems. This book takes a type-assignment approach to type theory, and the system considered is the simplest polymorphic one. The author covers all the basic ideas, including the system's relation to propositional logic, and gives a careful treatment of the type-checking algorithm that lies at the heart of every such system. Also featured are two other interesting algorithms that until now have been buried in inaccessible technical literature. The mathematical presentation is rigorous but clear, making it the first book at this level that can be used as an introduction to type theory for computer scientists.
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