# How do you say \x -> y?

How is the expression \x -> y typically pronounced by Haskell programmers?

I ask because I ordinarily say "lambda eks dot why," because it's written λx.y in a general context and I was introduced to the lambda calculus through books and notes, without hearing anyone translate the terms into speech. But it's an arrow, not a dot, in Haskell.

I understand that computer-science people often elide the dot in speech ("lambda eks [short pause] y"). F# and C# programmers, the web tells me, often pronounce the equivalent expression x => y as "eks goes to why." I don't know how similar constructions are said in other contexts.

So among Haskellers is it "lambda eks arrow why," or what?

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I usually pronounce it "lambda x <indicative pause> y". But it's never smooth –  luqui Apr 11 '13 at 7:25

I usually pronounce it as "lambda x to y". This is very short and matches how you would type it in TeX: \lambda x \to y. (As a cute note, I have a TeX input mode in my editor, so I could type the above to get λ x → y. :P)

That said, I'm sure that everyone would understand you if you said "lambda x dot y"--most people are at least familiar with that notation and the it's very easy to guess what you mean from context.

I've never heard anybody say "goes to", however.

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I say A on to B as a result of hanging out with my set theorist friends. –  jozefg Apr 10 '13 at 3:42
Which editor is that? –  AndrewC Apr 10 '13 at 6:38
@AndrewC: Emacs. It's the TeX input mode: you can just do C- and enter TeX to choose it. –  Tikhon Jelvis Apr 10 '13 at 6:44
The same thing can be achieved just using (setq haskell-font-lock-symbols t) if you're using Haskell mode. (It automatically converts ascii to the unicode representation using font lock mode within the buffer, which is nice since TeX input mode is annoying with respect to some input such as hyphens.) –  Kristopher Micinski Apr 11 '13 at 2:51

Answering for myself: in my mind I often say it as "x goes to y", or simply "x to y" -- but I think it adapts a bit for some common higher order functions. If you had map (\x -> (x * 2) - 1) foo, I'd think of it as "map x to x times two minus one on foo". However, for something like filter (\x -> x /= 6) foo I'd read it as "filter x, x doesn't equal 6, on foo" -- effectively, the arrow becomes a comma in that case.

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