It's well-known that over an infinite integral domain $R$, the ring of univariate polynomials $R\left[X_{1}\right]$ is isomorphic to a ring of one-argument "polynomial functions" (see, for example, Mac Lane and Birkhoff's Algebra).
It seems to me that this result should extend by induction to $R\left[X_{1},X_{2},\ldots,X_{n}\right]$ with the corresponding function ring of maps from $R^{n}$ to $R$, but I have been unable to find the more general result written down.
Is it true? If so, can someone provide a citation?
Edit: since no one has jumped at the chance to tell me that I'm blind, I'll add a bit more information for future searchers.
Over an infinite field, this result is well-known to algebraic geometers. For example, it's Corollary 6 on page 6 of Cox, Little, and O'Shea's Ideals, Varieties, and Algorithms. Fulton gives it as an exercise. Eisenbud mentions it in Commutative Algebra with a View Toward Algebraic Geometry. The proof, at least in the first case, is by a root-counting argument, which is why I suspect that it should work unmodified with an infinite integral domain.
Why bother? Suppose we rename one of the indeterminates, so that we're working in $R\left[X_{1},X_{2},\ldots,X_{n},\Lambda\right]$. Now we can consider (among other options) the maps from $R^{n}$ to $R\left[\Lambda\right]$ that take $n$ coordinates and return a univariate polynomial. The ring of these functions becomes relevant in linear algebra when we start to look at minimal and characteristic polynomials, and should also wind up being isomorphic to the polynomial ring from which it arises.