6533b871fe1ef96bd12d0e0f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Inductive synthesis of dot expressions

Alvis Brazma

subject

AlgebraComputationObject languageEuclidean geometryFormal languageInductive reasoningEquivalence (formal languages)AlgorithmExpression (mathematics)DecidabilityMathematics

description

We consider the problem of the synthesis of algorithms by sample computations. We introduce a formal language, namely, the so-called dot expressions, which is based on a formalization of the intuitive notion of ellipsis (‘...’). Whilst formally the dot expressions are simply a language describing sets of words, on the other hand, it can be considered as a programming language supporting quite a wide class of programs. Equivalence and asymptotical equivalence of dot expressions are defined and proved to be decidable. A formal example of a dot expression is defined in the way that, actually, it represents a sample computation of the program presented by the given dot expression. A system of simple inductive inference rules synthesizing dot expressions (programs) by their formal examples (sample computations) is developed and proved to synthesize a correct (i.e., asymptotically equivalent to the given) expression by one sufficiently long example. Some instances of the application of the model for program inductive synthesis are also given. Particularly, there are given examples of the euclidean and bubblesort algorithm synthesis within acceptable time from completely natural sample descriptions.

https://doi.org/10.1007/bfb0019359