Names, equations, relations: Practical ways to reason about new

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Abstract

The nu-calculus of Pitts and Stark is a typed lambda calculus, extended with state in the form of dynamically-generated names. These names can be created locally, passed around, and compared with one another. Through the interaction between names and functions, the language can capture notions of scope, visibility and sharing. Originally motivated by the study of references in Standard ML, the nu-calculus has connections to other kinds of local declaration, and to the mobile processes of the π-calculus. This paper introduces a logic of equations and relations which allows one to reason about expressions of the nu-calculus: this uses a simple representation of the private and public scope of names, and allows straightforward proofs of contextual equivalence (also known as observational, or observable, equivalence). The logic is based on earlier operational techniques, providing the same power but in a much more accessible form. In particular it allows intuitive and direct proofs of all contextual equivalences between first-order functions with local names.

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APA

Stark, I. (1997). Names, equations, relations: Practical ways to reason about new. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 1210, pp. 336–353). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-62688-3_45

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