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some resources or description of rho-calculus?
the wikipedia disambiguation page says: The first is a formalism intended to combine the higher-order facilities of lambda calculus with the pattern matching of term rewriting. and it links to http://rho.loria.fr/  however the link seems to redirect to the main page. and i could not find any resources about it other than some french papers and a haskell repo. both of which languages i don't know. so if any you know what it was like or even some existing resources about it that i can understand: i'll be very thankful if you could share them...
10 Answers
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The Wikipedia link seems to be broken indeed, but the next Google hit gets you to the actual scientific paper, I think this is what you are after.
https://hal.inria.fr/inria-00001112
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Tibor Santa although that paper is interesting in it's own right, unfortunately it's not what i am after...
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Tibor Santa update: finally found what i was looking for:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1571066105825265
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Tibor Santa thanks for the compliment lol, but no, i'm not writing a thesis XD
(i'm reading in class 10...)
i was just thinking of making an "esolang" based on it. kinda like brainf.
well, yeah it is related to functional programming. in fact it ia a generalization of lambda calculus, the core of many FP languages, by integrating pattern matching into it.
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thanks for the link! i found it very interesting, perhaps more interesting than what i was looking for! i wonder if i should implement my new esolang based on what you shared instead? prehaps a mix of both?
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im now getting filled with too much excitement :D
thanks much for the link! i will check it out after my study...
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i finally read the essense of scala article, and found it very interesting! thanks for the help!
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Bot I'm glad you found it. May I ask what you are going to use it for? Are you writing a thesis?
The paper looks a bit too theoretical for me, somehow seems to be related to functional programming (Haskell, Scala)...
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Bot impressive! Good luck with your endeavour!
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I cannot really advise what you should use as base material, but I love the idea that a programming language can be based on solid mathematical foundations.
In fact that's what I found most exciting about Scala 3 which is based on "dependent object types" and hence their new compiler is called "dotty".
Even if you choose a different path and different ideas, you might find some inspiration and maybe methodological guidance in Martin Odersky's work:
https://www.scala-lang.org/blog/2016/02/03/essence-of-scala.html