module plfa.part2.Untyped where

In this chapter we play with variations on a theme:

  • Previous chapters consider intrinsically-typed calculi; here we consider one that is untyped but intrinsically scoped.

  • Previous chapters consider call-by-value calculi; here we consider call-by-name.

  • Previous chapters consider weak head normal form, where reduction stops at a lambda abstraction; here we consider full normalisation, where reduction continues underneath a lambda.

  • Previous chapters consider deterministic reduction, where there is at most one redex in a given term; here we consider non-deterministic reduction where a term may contain many redexes and any one of them may reduce.

  • Previous chapters consider reduction of closed terms, those with no free variables; here we consider open terms, those which may have free variables.

  • Previous chapters consider lambda calculus extended with natural numbers and fixpoints; here we consider a tiny calculus with just variables, abstraction, and application, in which the other constructs may be encoded.

In general, one may mix and match these features, save that full normalisation requires open terms and encoding naturals and fixpoints requires being untyped. The aim of this chapter is to give some appreciation for the range of different lambda calculi one may encounter.

Imports

import Relation.Binary.PropositionalEquality as Eq
open Eq using (_≡_; refl; sym; trans; cong)
open import Data.Empty using (; ⊥-elim)
open import Data.Nat using (; zero; suc; _+_; _∸_)
open import Data.Product using (_×_) renaming (_,_ to ⟨_,_⟩)
open import Data.Unit using (; tt)
open import Function using (_∘_)
open import Function.Equivalence using (_⇔_; equivalence)
open import Relation.Nullary using (¬_; Dec; yes; no)
open import Relation.Nullary.Decidable using (map)
open import Relation.Nullary.Negation using (contraposition)
open import Relation.Nullary.Product using (_×-dec_)

Untyped is Uni-typed

Our development will be close to that in Chapter DeBruijn, save that every term will have exactly the same type, written and pronounced “any”. This matches a slogan introduced by Dana Scott and echoed by Robert Harper: “Untyped is Uni-typed”. One consequence of this approach is that constructs which previously had to be given separately (such as natural numbers and fixpoints) can now be defined in the language itself.

Syntax

First, we get all our infix declarations out of the way:

infix  4  _⊢_
infix  4  _∋_
infixl 5  _,_

infix  6  ƛ_
infix  6  ′_
infixl 7  _·_

Types

We have just one type:

data Type : Set where
   : Type

Exercise (Type≃⊤) (practice)

Show that Type is isomorphic to , the unit type.

-- Your code goes here

Contexts

As before, a context is a list of types, with the type of the most recently bound variable on the right:

data Context : Set where
     : Context
  _,_ : Context  Type  Context

We let Γ and Δ range over contexts.

Exercise (Context≃ℕ) (practice)

Show that Context is isomorphic to .

-- Your code goes here

Variables and the lookup judgment

Intrinsically-scoped variables correspond to the lookup judgment. The rules are as before:

data _∋_ : Context  Type  Set where

  Z :  {Γ A}
     ---------
    Γ , A  A

  S_ :  {Γ A B}
     Γ  A
      ---------
     Γ , B  A

We could write the rules with all instances of A and B replaced by , but arguably it is clearer not to do so.

Because is the only type, the judgment doesn’t guarantee anything useful about types. But it does ensure that all variables are in scope. For instance, we cannot use S S Z in a context that only binds two variables.

Terms and the scoping judgment

Intrinsically-scoped terms correspond to the typing judgment, but with as the only type. The result is that we check that terms are well scoped — that is, that all variables they mention are in scope — but not that they are well typed:

data _⊢_ : Context  Type  Set where

  `_ :  {Γ A}
     Γ  A
      -----
     Γ  A

  ƛ_  :   {Γ}
     Γ ,   
      ---------
     Γ  

  _·_ :  {Γ}
     Γ  
     Γ  
      ------
     Γ  

Now we have a tiny calculus, with only variables, abstraction, and application. Below we will see how to encode naturals and fixpoints into this calculus.

Writing variables as numerals

As before, we can convert a natural to the corresponding de Bruijn index. We no longer need to lookup the type in the context, since every variable has the same type:

count :  {Γ}    Γ  
count {Γ , } zero     =  Z
count {Γ , } (suc n)  =  S (count n)
count {}     _        =  ⊥-elim impossible
  where postulate impossible : 

We can then introduce a convenient abbreviation for variables:

#_ :  {Γ}    Γ  
# n  =  ` count n

Test examples

Our only example is computing two plus two on Church numerals:

twoᶜ :  {Γ}  Γ  
twoᶜ = ƛ ƛ (# 1 · (# 1 · # 0))

fourᶜ :  {Γ}  Γ  
fourᶜ = ƛ ƛ (# 1 · (# 1 · (# 1 · (# 1 · # 0))))

plusᶜ :  {Γ}  Γ  
plusᶜ = ƛ ƛ ƛ ƛ (# 3 · # 1 · (# 2 · # 1 · # 0))

2+2ᶜ :   
2+2ᶜ = plusᶜ · twoᶜ · twoᶜ

Before, reduction stopped when we reached a lambda term, so we had to compute plusᶜ · twoᶜ · twoᶜ · sucᶜ · `zero to ensure we reduced to a representation of the natural four. Now, reduction continues under lambda, so we don’t need the extra arguments. It is convenient to define a term to represent four as a Church numeral, as well as two.

Renaming

Our definition of renaming is as before. First, we need an extension lemma:

ext :  {Γ Δ}  (∀ {A}  Γ  A  Δ  A)
    -----------------------------------
   (∀ {A B}  Γ , B  A  Δ , B  A)
ext ρ Z      =  Z
ext ρ (S x)  =  S (ρ x)

We could replace all instances of A and B by , but arguably it is clearer not to do so.

Now it is straightforward to define renaming:

rename :  {Γ Δ}
   (∀ {A}  Γ  A  Δ  A)
    ------------------------
   (∀ {A}  Γ  A  Δ  A)
rename ρ (` x)          =  ` (ρ x)
rename ρ (ƛ N)          =  ƛ (rename (ext ρ) N)
rename ρ (L · M)        =  (rename ρ L) · (rename ρ M)

This is exactly as before, save that there are fewer term forms.

Simultaneous substitution

Our definition of substitution is also exactly as before. First we need an extension lemma:

exts :  {Γ Δ}  (∀ {A}  Γ  A  Δ  A)
    ----------------------------------
   (∀ {A B}  Γ , B  A  Δ , B  A)
exts σ Z      =  ` Z
exts σ (S x)  =  rename S_ (σ x)

Again, we could replace all instances of A and B by .

Now it is straightforward to define substitution:

subst :  {Γ Δ}
   (∀ {A}  Γ  A  Δ  A)
    ------------------------
   (∀ {A}  Γ  A  Δ  A)
subst σ (` k)          =  σ k
subst σ (ƛ N)          =  ƛ (subst (exts σ) N)
subst σ (L · M)        =  (subst σ L) · (subst σ M)

Again, this is exactly as before, save that there are fewer term forms.

Single substitution

It is easy to define the special case of substitution for one free variable:

subst-zero :  {Γ B}  (Γ  B)   {A}  (Γ , B  A)  (Γ  A)
subst-zero M Z      =  M
subst-zero M (S x)  =  ` x

_[_] :  {Γ A B}
         Γ , B  A
         Γ  B
          ---------
         Γ  A
_[_] {Γ} {A} {B} N M =  subst {Γ , B} {Γ} (subst-zero M) {A} N

Neutral and normal terms

Reduction continues until a term is fully normalised. Hence, instead of values, we are now interested in normal forms. Terms in normal form are defined by mutual recursion with neutral terms:

data Neutral :  {Γ A}  Γ  A  Set
data Normal  :  {Γ A}  Γ  A  Set

Neutral terms arise because we now consider reduction of open terms, which may contain free variables. A term is neutral if it is a variable or a neutral term applied to a normal term:

data Neutral where

  `_  :  {Γ A} (x : Γ  A)
      -------------
     Neutral (` x)

  _·_  :  {Γ} {L M : Γ  }
     Neutral L
     Normal M
      ---------------
     Neutral (L · M)

A term is a normal form if it is neutral or an abstraction where the body is a normal form. We use ′_ to label neutral terms. Like `_, it is unobtrusive:

data Normal where

  ′_ :  {Γ A} {M : Γ  A}
     Neutral M
      ---------
     Normal M

  ƛ_  :  {Γ} {N : Γ ,   }
     Normal N
      ------------
     Normal (ƛ N)

We introduce a convenient abbreviation for evidence that a variable is neutral:

#′_ :  {Γ} (n : )  Neutral {Γ} (# n)
#′ n  =  ` count n

For example, here is the evidence that the Church numeral two is in normal form:

_ : Normal (twoᶜ {})
_ = ƛ ƛ ( #′ 1 · ( #′ 1 · ( #′ 0)))

The evidence that a term is in normal form is almost identical to the term itself, decorated with some additional primes to indicate neutral terms, and using #′ in place of #

We will also need to characterise terms that are applications:

data Application :  {Γ A}  Γ  A  Set where

  ap :  {Γ} {L M : Γ  }
      -------------------
     Application (L · M)

Reduction step

The reduction rules are altered to switch from call-by-value to call-by-name and to enable full normalisation:

  • The rule ξ₁ remains the same as it was for the simply-typed lambda calculus.

  • In rule ξ₂, the requirement that the term L is a value is dropped. So this rule can overlap with ξ₁ and reduction is non-deterministic. One can choose to reduce a term inside either L or M.

  • In rule β, the requirement that the argument is a value is dropped, corresponding to call-by-name evaluation. This introduces further non-determinism, as β overlaps with ξ₂ when there are redexes in the argument.

  • A new rule ζ is added, to enable reduction underneath a lambda.

Here are the formalised rules:

infix 2 _—→_

data _—→_ :  {Γ A}  (Γ  A)  (Γ  A)  Set where

  ξ₁ :  {Γ} {L L′ M : Γ  }
     L —→ L′
      ----------------
     L · M —→ L′ · M

  ξ₂ :  {Γ} {L M M′ : Γ  }
     M —→ M′
      ----------------
     L · M —→ L · M′

  β :  {Γ} {N : Γ ,   } {M : Γ  }
      ---------------------------------
     (ƛ N) · M —→ N [ M ]

  ζ :  {Γ} {N N′ : Γ ,   }
     N —→ N′
      -----------
     ƛ N —→ ƛ N′

Exercise (variant-1) (practice)

How would the rules change if we want call-by-value where terms normalise completely? Assume that β should not permit reduction unless both terms are in normal form.

-- Your code goes here

Exercise (variant-2) (practice)

How would the rules change if we want call-by-value where terms do not reduce underneath lambda? Assume that β permits reduction when both terms are values (that is, lambda abstractions). What would 2+2ᶜ reduce to in this case?

-- Your code goes here

Reflexive and transitive closure

We cut-and-paste the previous definition:

infix  2 _—↠_
infix  1 begin_
infixr 2 _—→⟨_⟩_
infix  3 _∎

data _—↠_ :  {Γ A}  (Γ  A)  (Γ  A)  Set where

  _∎ :  {Γ A} (M : Γ  A)
      --------
     M —↠ M

  _—→⟨_⟩_ :  {Γ A} (L : Γ  A) {M N : Γ  A}
     L —→ M
     M —↠ N
      ---------
     L —↠ N

begin_ :  {Γ} {A} {M N : Γ  A}
   M —↠ N
    ------
   M —↠ N
begin M—↠N = M—↠N

Example reduction sequence

Here is the demonstration that two plus two is four:

_ : 2+2ᶜ —↠ fourᶜ
_ =
  begin
    plusᶜ · twoᶜ · twoᶜ
  —→⟨ ξ₁ β 
    (ƛ ƛ ƛ twoᶜ · # 1 · (# 2 · # 1 · # 0)) · twoᶜ
  —→⟨ β 
    ƛ ƛ twoᶜ · # 1 · (twoᶜ · # 1 · # 0)
  —→⟨ ζ (ζ (ξ₁ β)) 
    ƛ ƛ ((ƛ # 2 · (# 2 · # 0)) · (twoᶜ · # 1 · # 0))
  —→⟨ ζ (ζ β) 
    ƛ ƛ # 1 · (# 1 · (twoᶜ · # 1 · # 0))
  —→⟨ ζ (ζ (ξ₂ (ξ₂ (ξ₁ β)))) 
    ƛ ƛ # 1 · (# 1 · ((ƛ # 2 · (# 2 · # 0)) · # 0))
  —→⟨ ζ (ζ (ξ₂ (ξ₂ β))) 
   ƛ (ƛ # 1 · (# 1 · (# 1 · (# 1 · # 0))))
  

After just two steps the top-level term is an abstraction, and ζ rules drive the rest of the normalisation.

Progress

Progress adapts. Instead of claiming that every term either is a value or takes a reduction step, we claim that every term is either in normal form or takes a reduction step.

Previously, progress only applied to closed, well-typed terms. We had to rule out terms where we apply something other than a function (such as `zero) or terms with a free variable. Now we can demonstrate it for open, well-scoped terms. The definition of normal form permits free variables, and we have no terms that are not functions.

A term makes progress if it can take a step or is in normal form:

data Progress {Γ A} (M : Γ  A) : Set where

  step :  {N : Γ  A}
     M —→ N
      ----------
     Progress M

  done :
      Normal M
      ----------
     Progress M

If a term is well scoped then it satisfies progress:

progress :  {Γ A}  (M : Γ  A)  Progress M
progress (` x)                                 =  done ( ` x)
progress (ƛ N)  with  progress N
... | step N—→N′                               =  step (ζ N—→N′)
... | done NrmN                                =  done (ƛ NrmN)
progress (` x · M) with progress M
... | step M—→M′                               =  step (ξ₂ M—→M′)
... | done NrmM                                =  done ( (` x) · NrmM)
progress ((ƛ N) · M)                           =  step β
progress (L@(_ · _) · M) with progress L
... | step L—→L′                               =  step (ξ₁ L—→L′)
... | done ( NeuL) with progress M
...    | step M—→M′                            =  step (ξ₂ M—→M′)
...    | done NrmM                             =  done ( NeuL · NrmM)

We induct on the evidence that the term is well scoped:

  • If the term is a variable, then it is in normal form. (This contrasts with previous proofs, where the variable case was ruled out by the restriction to closed terms.)
  • If the term is an abstraction, recursively invoke progress on the body. (This contrast with previous proofs, where an abstraction is immediately a value.):
    • If it steps, then the whole term steps via ζ.
    • If it is in normal form, then so is the whole term.
  • If the term is an application, consider the function subterm:
    • If it is a variable, recursively invoke progress on the argument:
      • If it steps, then the whole term steps via ξ₂;
      • If it is normal, then so is the whole term.
    • If it is an abstraction, then the whole term steps via β.
    • If it is an application, recursively apply progress to the function subterm:
      • If it steps, then the whole term steps via ξ₁.
      • If it is normal, recursively apply progress to the argument subterm:
        • If it steps, then the whole term steps via ξ₂.
        • If it is normal, then so is the whole term.

The final equation for progress uses an at pattern of the form P@Q, which matches only if both pattern P and pattern Q match. Character @ is one of the few that Agda doesn’t allow in names, so spaces are not required around it. In this case, the pattern ensures that L is an application.

Evaluation

As previously, progress immediately yields an evaluator.

Gas is specified by a natural number:

data Gas : Set where
  gas :   Gas

When our evaluator returns a term N, it will either give evidence that N is normal or indicate that it ran out of gas:

data Finished {Γ A} (N : Γ  A) : Set where

   done :
       Normal N
       ----------
      Finished N

   out-of-gas :
       ----------
       Finished N

Given a term L of type A, the evaluator will, for some N, return a reduction sequence from L to N and an indication of whether reduction finished:

data Steps :  {Γ A}  Γ  A  Set where

  steps :  {Γ A} {L N : Γ  A}
     L —↠ N
     Finished N
      ----------
     Steps L

The evaluator takes gas and a term and returns the corresponding steps:

eval :  {Γ A}
   Gas
   (L : Γ  A)
    -----------
   Steps L
eval (gas zero)    L                     =  steps (L ) out-of-gas
eval (gas (suc m)) L with progress L
... | done NrmL                          =  steps (L ) (done NrmL)
... | step {M} L—→M with eval (gas m) M
...    | steps M—↠N fin                  =  steps (L —→⟨ L—→M  M—↠N) fin

The definition is as before, save that the empty context generalises to an arbitrary context Γ.

Example

We reiterate our previous example. Two plus two is four, with Church numerals:

_ : eval (gas 100) 2+2ᶜ 
  steps
   ((ƛ
     (ƛ
      (ƛ
       (ƛ
        (` (S (S (S Z)))) · (` (S Z)) ·
        ((` (S (S Z))) · (` (S Z)) · (` Z))))))
    · (ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z))))
    · (ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z))))
   —→⟨ ξ₁ β 
    (ƛ
     (ƛ
      (ƛ
       (ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z)))) · (` (S Z)) ·
       ((` (S (S Z))) · (` (S Z)) · (` Z)))))
    · (ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z))))
   —→⟨ β 
    ƛ
    (ƛ
     (ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z)))) · (` (S Z)) ·
     ((ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z)))) · (` (S Z)) · (` Z)))
   —→⟨ ζ (ζ (ξ₁ β)) 
    ƛ
    (ƛ
     (ƛ (` (S (S Z))) · ((` (S (S Z))) · (` Z))) ·
     ((ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z)))) · (` (S Z)) · (` Z)))
   —→⟨ ζ (ζ β) 
    ƛ
    (ƛ
     (` (S Z)) ·
     ((` (S Z)) ·
      ((ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z)))) · (` (S Z)) · (` Z))))
   —→⟨ ζ (ζ (ξ₂ (ξ₂ (ξ₁ β)))) 
    ƛ
    (ƛ
     (` (S Z)) ·
     ((` (S Z)) ·
      ((ƛ (` (S (S Z))) · ((` (S (S Z))) · (` Z))) · (` Z))))
   —→⟨ ζ (ζ (ξ₂ (ξ₂ β))) 
    ƛ (ƛ (` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · ((` (S Z)) · (` Z)))))
   )
   (done
    (ƛ
     (ƛ
      (
       (` (S Z)) ·
       ( (` (S Z)) · ( (` (S Z)) · ( (` (S Z)) · ( (` Z)))))))))
_ = refl

Naturals and fixpoint

We could simulate naturals using Church numerals, but computing predecessor is tricky and expensive. Instead, we use a different representation, called Scott numerals, where a number is essentially defined by the expression that corresponds to its own case statement.

Recall that Church numerals apply a given function for the corresponding number of times. Using named terms, we represent the first three Church numerals as follows:

zero  =  ƛ s ⇒ ƛ z ⇒ z
one   =  ƛ s ⇒ ƛ z ⇒ s · z
two   =  ƛ s ⇒ ƛ z ⇒ s · (s · z)

In contrast, for Scott numerals, we represent the first three naturals as follows:

zero = ƛ s ⇒ ƛ z ⇒ z
one  = ƛ s ⇒ ƛ z ⇒ s · zero
two  = ƛ s ⇒ ƛ z ⇒ s · one

Each representation expects two arguments, one corresponding to the successor branch of the case (it expects an additional argument, the predecessor of the current argument) and one corresponding to the zero branch of the case. (The cases could be in either order. We put the successor case first to ease comparison with Church numerals.)

Here is the representation of naturals encoded with de Bruijn indexes:

`zero :  {Γ}  (Γ  )
`zero = ƛ ƛ (# 0)

`suc_ :  {Γ}  (Γ  )  (Γ  )
`suc_ M  = (ƛ ƛ ƛ (# 1 · # 2)) · M

case :  {Γ}  (Γ  )  (Γ  )  (Γ ,   )   (Γ  )
case L M N = L · (ƛ N) · M

Here we have been careful to retain the exact form of our previous definitions. The successor branch expects an additional variable to be in scope (as indicated by its type), so it is converted to an ordinary term using lambda abstraction.

We can also define fixpoint. Using named terms, we define:

μ f = (ƛ x ⇒ f · (x · x)) · (ƛ x ⇒ f · (x · x))

This works because:

  μ f
≡
  (ƛ x ⇒ f · (x · x)) · (ƛ x ⇒ f · (x · x))
—→
  f · ((ƛ x ⇒ f · (x · x)) · (ƛ x ⇒ f · (x · x)))
≡
  f · (μ f)

With de Bruijn indices, we have the following:

μ_ :  {Γ}  (Γ ,   )  (Γ  )
μ N  =  (ƛ ((ƛ (# 1 · (# 0 · # 0))) · (ƛ (# 1 · (# 0 · # 0))))) · (ƛ N)

The argument to fixpoint is treated similarly to the successor branch of case.

We can now define two plus two exactly as before:

infix 5 μ_

two :  {Γ}  Γ  
two = `suc `suc `zero

four :  {Γ}  Γ  
four = `suc `suc `suc `suc `zero

plus :  {Γ}  Γ  
plus = μ ƛ ƛ (case (# 1) (# 0) (`suc (# 3 · # 0 · # 1)))

Because `suc is now a defined term rather than primitive, it is no longer the case that plus · two · two reduces to four, but they do both reduce to the same normal term.

Exercise plus-eval (practice)

Use the evaluator to confirm that plus · two · two and four normalise to the same term.

-- Your code goes here

Use the encodings above to translate your definition of multiplication from previous chapters with the Scott representation and the encoding of the fixpoint operator. Confirm that two times two is four.

-- Your code goes here

Exercise encode-more (stretch)

Along the lines above, encode all of the constructs of Chapter More, save for primitive numbers, in the untyped lambda calculus.

-- Your code goes here

Multi-step reduction is transitive

In our formulation of the reflexive transitive closure of reduction, i.e., the —↠ relation, there is not an explicit rule for transitivity. Instead the relation mimics the structure of lists by providing a case for an empty reduction sequence and a case for adding one reduction to the front of a reduction sequence. The following is the proof of transitivity, which has the same structure as the append function _++_ on lists.

—↠-trans : ∀{Γ}{A}{L M N : Γ  A}
          L —↠ M
          M —↠ N
          L —↠ N
—↠-trans (M ) mn = mn
—↠-trans (L —→⟨ r  lm) mn = L —→⟨ r  (—↠-trans lm mn)

The following notation makes it convenient to employ transitivity of —↠.

infixr 2 _—↠⟨_⟩_

_—↠⟨_⟩_ :  {Γ A} (L : Γ  A) {M N : Γ  A}
     L —↠ M
     M —↠ N
      ---------
     L —↠ N
L —↠⟨ L—↠M  M—↠N = —↠-trans L—↠M M—↠N

Multi-step reduction is a congruence

Recall from Chapter Induction that a relation R is a congruence for a given function f if it is preserved by that function, i.e., if R x y then R (f x) (f y). The term constructors ƛ_ and _·_ are functions, and so the notion of congruence applies to them as well. Furthermore, when a relation is a congruence for all of the term constructors, we say that the relation is a congruence for the language in question, in this case the untyped lambda calculus.

The rules ξ₁, ξ₂, and ζ ensure that the reduction relation is a congruence for the untyped lambda calculus. The multi-step reduction relation —↠ is also a congruence, which we prove in the following three lemmas.

appL-cong :  {Γ} {L L' M : Γ  }
          L —↠ L'
           ---------------
          L · M —↠ L' · M
appL-cong {Γ}{L}{L'}{M} (L ) = L · M 
appL-cong {Γ}{L}{L'}{M} (L —→⟨ r  rs) = L · M —→⟨ ξ₁ r  appL-cong rs

The proof of appL-cong is by induction on the reduction sequence L —↠ L'.

  • Suppose L —↠ L by L ∎. Then we have L · M —↠ L · M by L · M ∎.
  • Suppose L —↠ L'' by L —→⟨ r ⟩ rs, so L —→ L' by r and L' —↠ L'' by rs. We have L · M —→ L' · M by ξ₁ r and L' · M —↠ L'' · M by the induction hypothesis applied to rs. We conclude that L · M —↠ L'' · M by putting these two facts together using _—→⟨_⟩_.

The proofs of appR-cong and abs-cong follow the same pattern as the proof for appL-cong.

appR-cong :  {Γ} {L M M' : Γ  }
          M —↠ M'
           ---------------
          L · M —↠ L · M'
appR-cong {Γ}{L}{M}{M'} (M ) = L · M 
appR-cong {Γ}{L}{M}{M'} (M —→⟨ r  rs) = L · M —→⟨ ξ₂ r  appR-cong rs
abs-cong :  {Γ} {N N' : Γ ,   }
          N —↠ N'
           ----------
          ƛ N —↠ ƛ N'
abs-cong (M ) = ƛ M 
abs-cong (L —→⟨ r  rs) = ƛ L —→⟨ ζ r  abs-cong rs

Unicode

This chapter uses the following unicode:

★  U+2605  BLACK STAR (\st)

The \st command permits navigation among many different stars; the one we use is number 7.