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Lambda calculus
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== Semantics == The fact that lambda calculus terms act as functions on other lambda calculus terms, and even on themselves, led to questions about the semantics of the lambda calculus. Could a sensible meaning be assigned to lambda calculus terms? The natural semantics was to find a set ''D'' isomorphic to the function space ''D'' β ''D'', of functions on itself. However, no nontrivial such ''D'' can exist, by [[cardinality]] constraints because the set of all functions from ''D'' to ''D'' has greater cardinality than ''D'', unless ''D'' is a [[singleton set]]. In the 1970s, [[Dana Scott]] showed that if only [[Scott continuity|continuous functions]] were considered, a set or [[Domain theory|domain]] ''D'' with the required property could be found, thus providing a [[Model theory|model]] for the lambda calculus.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Scott | first1 = Dana | date = 1993 | title = A type-theoretical alternative to ISWIM, CUCH, OWHY | url = https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~crary/819-f09/Scott93.pdf | journal = Theoretical Computer Science | volume = 121 | issue = 1β2 | pages = 411β440 | doi = 10.1016/0304-3975(93)90095-B | access-date = 2022-12-01 }} Written 1969, widely circulated as an unpublished manuscript.</ref> This work also formed the basis for the [[denotational semantics]] of programming languages.
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