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We prove a characterization of first-order string-to-string transduction via -terms typed in non-commutative affine logic that compute with Church encoding, extending the analogous known characterization of star-free languages. We show that every first-order transduction can be computed by a -term using a known Krohn-Rhodes-style decomposition lemma. The converse direction is given by compiling -terms into two-way reversible planar transducers. The soundness of this translation involves showing that the transition functions of those transducers live in a monoidal closed category of diagrams in which we can interpret purely affine -terms. One challenge is that the unit of the tensor of the category in question is not a terminal object. As a result, our interpretation does not identify -equivalent terms, but it does turn -reductions into inequalities in a poset-enrichment of the category of diagrams.
Pradic et al. (Fri,) studied this question.