Files
lambda/pkg/debruijn/stringify.go
M.V. Hutz 528956b033 feat: add De Bruijn indexed reduction engine
Add a new interpreter option (-i debruijn) that uses De Bruijn indices
for variable representation, eliminating the need for variable renaming
during substitution.

- Add -i flag to select interpreter (lambda or debruijn)
- Create debruijn package with Expression types (Variable with index,
  Abstraction without parameter, Application)
- Implement shift and substitute operations for De Bruijn indices
- Add conversion functions between lambda and De Bruijn representations
- Update CLI to support switching between interpreters
- Add De Bruijn tests to verify all samples pass

Closes #26
2026-01-16 19:36:05 -05:00

36 lines
749 B
Go

package debruijn
import (
"strconv"
"strings"
)
type stringifyVisitor struct {
builder strings.Builder
}
func (v *stringifyVisitor) VisitVariable(a *Variable) {
v.builder.WriteString(strconv.Itoa(a.index))
}
func (v *stringifyVisitor) VisitAbstraction(f *Abstraction) {
v.builder.WriteRune('\\')
v.builder.WriteRune('.')
f.body.Accept(v)
}
func (v *stringifyVisitor) VisitApplication(c *Application) {
v.builder.WriteRune('(')
c.abstraction.Accept(v)
v.builder.WriteRune(' ')
c.argument.Accept(v)
v.builder.WriteRune(')')
}
// Stringify converts a De Bruijn expression to its string representation.
func Stringify(e Expression) string {
b := &stringifyVisitor{builder: strings.Builder{}}
e.Accept(b)
return b.builder.String()
}