Lazy ML
Lazy ML (LML) is a functional programming language developed in the early 1980s by Lennart Augustsson and Thomas Johnsson at Chalmers University of Technology, prior to Miranda and Haskell. LML is a strongly typed, statically scoped implementation of ML, with lazy evaluation.
The key innovation of LML was to demonstrate how to compile a lazy functional language. Until then, lazy languages had been implemented via interpreted graph reduction. LML compiled to G-machine code.
LML is also notable as the language in which HBC, the Haskell B Compiler, was implemented.
Example programs
Hello, world:
"hello world\n"
Factorial:
let rec fact 0 = 1 ||
fact n = n*fact(n-1)
External links
- Lazy ML (LML) Examples
- A Compiler for Lazy ML, Lennart Augustsson, Proceedings of the 1984 ACM Symposium on LISP and functional programming, 1984.
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