ELSA
elsa is a tiny language designed to build
intuition about how the Lambda Calculus, or
more generally, computation-by-substitution works.
Rather than the usual interpreter that grinds
lambda terms down to values, elsa aims to be
a light-weight proof checker that determines
whether, under a given sequence of definitions,
a particular term reduces to to another.
Online Demo
You can try elsa online at this link
Install
You can locally build and run elsa by
- Installing stack
- Cloning this repo
- Building elsawithstack.
That is, to say
$ curl -sSL https://get.haskellstack.org/ | sh
$ git clone https://github.com/ucsd-progsys/elsa.git
$ cd elsa
$ stack install
Editor Plugins
Overview
elsa programs look like:
-- id_0.lc
let id   = \x -> x
let zero = \f x -> x
eval id_zero :
  id zero
  =d> (\x -> x) (\f x -> x)   -- expand definitions
  =a> (\z -> z) (\f x -> x)   -- alpha rename
  =b> (\f x -> x)             -- beta reduce
  =d> zero                    -- expand definitions
eval id_zero_tr :
  id zero  
  =*> zero                    -- transitive reductions
When you run elsa on the above, you should get the following output:
$ elsa ex1.lc
OK id_zero, id_zero_tr.
Partial Evaluation
If instead you write a partial sequence of
reductions, i.e. where the last term can
still be further reduced:
-- succ_1_bad.lc
let one  = \f x -> f x
let two  = \f x -> f (f x)
let incr = \n f x -> f (n f x)
eval succ_one :
  incr one
  =d> (\n f x -> f (n f x)) (\f x -> f x)
  =b> \f x -> f ((\f x -> f x) f x)
  =b> \f x -> f ((\x -> f x) x)
Then elsa will complain that
$ elsa ex2.lc
ex2.lc:11:7-30: succ_one can be further reduced
  11  |   =b> \f x -> f ((\x -> f x) x)
              ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You can fix the error by completing the reduction
-- succ_1.lc
let one  = \f x -> f x
let two  = \f x -> f (f x)
let incr = \n f x -> f (n f x)
eval succ_one :
  incr one
  =d> (\n f x -> f (n f x)) (\f x -> f x)
  =b> \f x -> f ((\f x -> f x) f x)
  =b> \f x -> f ((\x -> f x) x)
  =b> \f x -> f (f x)                 -- beta-reduce the above
  =d> two                             -- optional
Similarly, elsa rejects the following program,
-- id_0_bad.lc
let id   = \x -> x
let zero = \f x -> x
eval id_zero :
  id zero
  =b> (\f x -> x)
  =d> zero
with the error
$ elsa ex4.lc
ex4.lc:7:5-20: id_zero has an invalid beta-reduction
   7  |   =b> (\f x -> x)
          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You can fix the error by inserting the appropriate
intermediate term as shown in id_0.lc above.
Syntax of elsa Programs
An elsa program has the form
-- definitions
[let <id> = <term>]+
-- reductions
[<reduction>]*
where the basic elements are lambda-calulus terms
<term> ::=  <id>
          \ <id>+ -> <term>
            (<term> <term>)
and id are lower-case identifiers
<id>   ::= x, y, z, ...
A <reduction> is a sequence of terms chained together
with a <step>
<reduction> ::= eval <id> : <term> (<step> <term>)*
<step>      ::= =a>   -- alpha equivalence
                =b>   -- beta  equivalence
                =d>   -- def   equivalence
                =*>   -- trans equivalence
                =~>   -- normalizes to
Semantics of elsa programs
A reduction of the form t_1 s_1 t_2 s_2 ... t_n is valid if
- Each t_i s_i t_i+1is valid, and
- t_nis in normal form (i.e. cannot be further beta-reduced.)
Furthermore, a step of the form
- t =a> t'is valid if- tand- t'are equivalent up to alpha-renaming,
- t =b> t'is valid if- tbeta-reduces to- t'in a single step,
- t =d> t'is valid if- tand- t'are identical after let-expansion.
- t =*> t'is valid if- tand- t'are in the reflexive, transitive closure
of the union of the above three relations.
- t =~> t'is valid if- tnormalizes to- t'.
(Due to Michael Borkowski)
The difference between =*> and =~> is as follows.
- 
t =*> t'is any sequence of zero or more steps fromttot'.
So if you are working forwards from the start, backwards from the end,
or a combination of both, you could use=*>as a quick check to see
if you're on the right track.
 
- 
t =~> t'says thattreduces tot'in zero or more steps and
thatt'is in normal form (i.e.t'cannot be reduced further).
This means you can only place it as the final step.
 
So elsa would accept these three
eval ex1:
  (\x y -> x y) (\x -> x) b 
  =*> b
eval ex2:
  (\x y -> x y) (\x -> x) b 
  =~> b
eval ex3:
  (\x y -> x y) (\x -> x) (\z -> z) 
  =*> (\x -> x) (\z -> z) 
  =b> (\z -> z)
but elsa would not accept
eval ex3:
  (\x y -> x y) (\x -> x) (\z -> z) 
  =~> (\x -> x) (\z -> z) 
  =b> (\z -> z)
because the right hand side of =~> can still be reduced further.