From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In type theory, a typing environment (or typing context) represents the association between variable names and data types.
More formally, an environment
is a set or ordered list of pairs
, usually written as
, where
is a variable and
its type.
The judgement

is read as "
has type
in context
".[1]
For each function body type checks:

Typing Rules Example:
In statically typed programming languages, these environments are used and maintained by typing rules to type check a given program or expression.