I have derived a statement (theorem?) that puzzles me. I wonder if my logic is sound.
Any commutative non-strict function
f :: a -> a -> bis a constant.
Commutativity is understood including the bottoms, i.e. f x y and f y x either both terminate, or both don't.
My informal reasoning is as follows. Suppose f is a non-strict function. Then there exists a such that either f a ⊥ or f ⊥ a terminate. If f is commutative, then both should terminate. But then f cannot scrutinise either of its arguments. (If it scrutinises the first argument first, then f ⊥ a must be ⊥, and vice versa). So it must be a constant function.
Is this reasoning correct?
It clearly fails if f is allowed to scrutinise both arguments at the same time and succeed if either one is not a ⊥. But are such functions allowed in (some reasonably conservative extension of) Haskell?
chi writes
One could argue that
f :: Int -> Int -> [Int] f x y = [x+y]is commutative, non-strict, and non-constant. This relies on
[ _|_ ]being distinct from_|_. If you for some reason consider this to be strict, you should more precisely define your strictness notion.
Indeed, this is the case! Given any non-constant, commutative function f, you can write a non-strict, non-constant, commutative function by wrapping an application of f in one or more lazy constructors.
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