Running this code:
j = let x = 4
    in let x = x * x
       in x
in the interpreter:
ghci> j
... no response ...
hangs with very little CPU utilization.  Why is this?  I expected j = 16.
Running this code:
j = let x = 4
    in let x = x * x
       in x
in the interpreter:
ghci> j
... no response ...
hangs with very little CPU utilization.  Why is this?  I expected j = 16.
 
    
    According to the Haskell report, section 3.12:
Let expressions have the general form let { d1 ; … ; dn } in e, and introduce a nested, lexically-scoped, mutually-recursive list of declarations (let is often called letrec in other languages). The scope of the declarations is the expression e and the right hand side of the declarations.
(emphasis mine)
So in the second let, where x = x * x, all xs refer to the same binding, none refer to the outer x = 4 binding. 
