
On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 12:49:52 +0200, Miguel Mitrofanov
- the lambda expressions can be written (input) but cannot be printed (output) This is a fundamental property of the language. A lambda expression is programme and at runtime the system doesn't know one lambda expression from another (all it can do with one is apply it to something). Even C can apply a function variable to an argument (function pointers).
Yes, and Haskell can do it also. But C, I guess, can't print out a source code for a function (well, there can be some weird dialects of C I'm not aware about). Haskell can't do it either.
Well, LISP can, if I remember it right. ________ Information from NOD32 ________ This message was checked by NOD32 Antivirus System for Linux Mail Servers. part000.txt - is OK http://www.eset.com