Question

What is the minimum set of primitives required such that a language is Turing complete and a lisp variant?

Seems like car, cdr and some flow control and something for REPL is enough. It be nice if there is such list.

Assume there are only 3 types of data, integers, symbols and lists.(like in picolisp)

Was it helpful?

Solution

There's a good discussion of this in the Lisp FAQ. It depends on your choice of primitives. McCarthy's original "LISP 1.5 Programmer's Manual" did it with five functions: CAR, CDR, CONS, EQ, and ATOM.

OTHER TIPS

The lambda calculus is turing complete. It has one primitive - the lambda. Translating that to a lisp syntax is pretty trivial.

I believe the minimum set is what John McCarthy published in the original paper.

The Roots of Lisp.

The code.

The best way to actually know this for sure is if you implement it. I used 3 summers to create Zozotez which is a McCarty-ish LISP running on Brainfuck.

I tried to find out what I needed and on a forum you'll find a thread that says You only need lambda. Thus, you can make a whole LISP in lambda calculus if you'd like. I found it interesting, but it's hardly the way to go if you want something that eventually has side effects and works in the real world.

For a Turing complete LISP I used Paul Grahams explanation of McCarthy's paper and all you really need is:

  • symbol-evaluation
  • special form quote
  • special form if (or cond)
  • special form lambda (similar to quote)
  • function eq
  • function atom
  • function cons
  • function car
  • function cdr
  • function-dispatch (basically apply but not actually exposed to the system so it handles a list where first element is a function)

Thats 10. In addition to this, to have a implementation that you can test and not just on a drawing board:

  • function read
  • function write

Thats 12. In my Zozotez I implemeted set and flambda (anonymous macroes, like lambda) as well. I could feed it a library implementing any dynamic bound lisp (Elisp, picoLisp) with the exception of file I/O (because the underlying BF does not support it other than stdin/stdout).

I recommend anyone to implement a LISP1-interpreter, in both LISP and (not LISP), to fully understand how a language is implemented. LISP has a very simple syntax so it's a good starting point. For all other programming languages how you implement an interpreter is very similar. Eg. in the SICP videos the wizards make an interpreter for a logical language, but the structure and how to implement it is very similar to a lisp interpreter even though this language is completely different than Lisp.

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