Hi Guido!

Thanks for the additional information, very exciting!

On 10.04.20 16:17, Guido Stepken wrote:
> Hi Andreas!
>
> My implementation not really is a pure Lambda calculus, but rather a
> so called "Krivine Machine" that, in fact, consists of 4 instructions,
> als 'subset' of the more universal MOV instruction.
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krivine_machine
>
> Also see the famous "Landin Machine" with 10 instructions.
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SECD_machine
>
> There are a couple of "Weird Instruction Set Machines" out in the
> wild, all built, suited for special purposes ...
>
> I was surprised, how small miniPicoLisp is and - als fully featured
> programming language - it fits onto such kind of hardware (low
> transistor count === very low energy consumption **while running**)
> architectures.
>
> Have fun!
>
> Guido Stepken
>
> Am Freitag, 10. April 2020 schrieb <andr...@itship.ch
> <mailto:andr...@itship.ch>>:
> >>
> >> Only 1 - in words "ONE" - single instruction left: MOV.
> > congratulations, you discovered lambda expressions, the fundamental idea
> > on which the concept of LISP is based.
> >
> > Thanks for your post, very interesting!
> > Keep on! Our group of radical IT purists is growing ;-)
> >
> > This crisis will only increase the demand for quickly to create,
> > flexible & maintainable software - so let's picolisping :-)
> >
> >
> > --
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