Trees that grow introduces a lot of boilerplate but is bound to be essentially necessary
when I add in the type checker and all sorts of builtin data types.
(I know this because I already *implemented* those things;
it's mostly a matter of trying to merge it all into this codebase).
Accomplishing this also involved restructuring the project
and rewriting a few algorithms in the process,
but those changes are fundamentally intwined with this one.
* The expression printer now knows how to use `let`, multi-argument lambdas and applications, and block arguments when appropriate.
* There is a separate type, AbstractSyntax, which separates parsing/printing logic from removing/reintroducing the more advanced syntax described above.
* Expression is now its own module because its 'show' depends on AbstractSyntax,
and I don't want the ast2expr/expr2ast stuff to be in the same module as the real lambda calculus stuff.