Search results for "Formal Language"

showing 10 items of 357 documents

Block-Deterministic Regular Languages

2001

We introduce the notions of blocked, block-marked and blockdeterministic regular expressions. We characterize block-deterministic regular expressions with deterministic Glushkov block automata. The results can be viewed as a generalization of the characterization of one-unambiguous regular expressions with deterministic Glushkov automata. In addition, when a language L has a block-deterministic expression E, we can construct a deterministic finite-state automaton for L that has size linear in the size of E.

Deterministic pushdown automatonDiscrete mathematicsDeterministic finite automatonNested wordDeterministic automatonDeterministic context-free grammarQuantum finite automataTwo-way deterministic finite automatonNondeterministic finite automatonComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryMathematics
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Epichristoffel Words and Minimization of Moore Automata

2014

This paper is focused on the connection between the combinatorics of words and minimization of automata. The three main ingredients are the epichristoffel words, Moore automata and a variant of Hopcroft's algorithm for their minimization. Epichristoffel words defined in [14] generalize some properties of circular sturmian words. Here we prove a factorization property and the existence of the reduction tree, that uniquely identifies the structure of the word. Furthermore, in the paper we investigate the problem of the minimization of Moore automata by defining a variant of Hopcroft's minimization algorithm. The use of this variant makes simpler the computation of the running time and consequ…

Discrete mathematicsAlgebra and Number TheoryReduction (recursion theory)Structure (category theory)Tree (graph theory)Theoretical Computer ScienceAutomatonCombinatoricsComputational Theory and MathematicsDFA minimizationFactorizationMinificationComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryWord (computer architecture)Information SystemsMathematicsFundamenta Informaticae
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On the Shuffle of Star-Free Languages

2012

Motivated by the general problem to characterize families of languages closed under shuffle, we investigate some conditions under which the shuffle of two star-free languages is star-free. Some of the special cases here approached give rise to new problems in combinatorics on words.

Discrete mathematicsAlgebra and Number TheorySettore INF/01 - Informaticapure submonoidGeneral problemAbstract family of languagesRegular languageComputer Science::Computation and Language (Computational Linguistics and Natural Language and Speech Processing)Star (graph theory)star-free languageCone (formal languages)shuffle of languagePumping lemma for regular languagesTheoretical Computer ScienceCombinatorics on wordsComputational Theory and MathematicsRegular languagecombinatorics on words.Information SystemsMathematicsFundamenta Informaticae
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A note on renewal systems

1992

Abstract A renewal system is a symbolic dynamical system generated by free concatenations of a finite set of words. In this paper we prove that, given two systems which are both renewal and Markov systems, it is decidable whether they are topologically conjugate. The proof makes use of the methods and the techniques of formal language theory.

Discrete mathematicsAlgebraGeneral Computer ScienceFormal languageMarkov systemsDynamical system (definition)Topological conjugacyFinite setComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryDecidabilityMathematicsTheoretical Computer ScienceComputer Science(all)Theoretical Computer Science
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Regularly Algebraizable Logics

2001

A sentential logic (S, C) is regularly algebraizable (alias 1-algebraizable) if it possesses a non-empty system E(p, q) of equivalence sentences such that E(p, q) ⊆ C(p, q).

Discrete mathematicsAliasEquivalence (formal languages)Propositional calculusMathematics
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On Sturmian Graphs

2007

AbstractIn this paper we define Sturmian graphs and we prove that all of them have a certain “counting” property. We show deep connections between this counting property and two conjectures, by Moser and by Zaremba, on the continued fraction expansion of real numbers. These graphs turn out to be the underlying graphs of compact directed acyclic word graphs of central Sturmian words. In order to prove this result, we give a characterization of the maximal repeats of central Sturmian words. We show also that, in analogy with the case of Sturmian words, these graphs converge to infinite ones.

Discrete mathematicsApplied MathematicsCDAWGsContinued fractionsSturmian wordSturmian wordsCharacterization (mathematics)RepeatsDirected acyclic graphCombinatoricsIndifference graphSturmian words CDAWGs Continued fractions RepeatsChordal graphComputer Science::Discrete MathematicsDiscrete Mathematics and CombinatoricsContinued fractionWord (group theory)Computer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryReal numberMathematics
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A decidable word problem without equivalent canonical term rewriting system

1989

We present a weak associative single-axiom system having the following property: the word problem is decidable with an efficient algorithm even though there does not exist any finite equivalent canonical term rewriting system.

Discrete mathematicsApplied MathematicsPost canonical systemComputer Science ApplicationsDecidabilityPhilosophy of languageComputational Theory and MathematicsConfluenceComputingMethodologies_SYMBOLICANDALGEBRAICMANIPULATIONWord problem (mathematics)RewritingEquivalence (formal languages)Computer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryAssociative propertyMathematicsInternational Journal of Computer Mathematics
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Forbidden words in symbolic dynamics

2000

AbstractWe introduce an equivalence relation≃between functions from N to N. By describing a symbolic dynamical system in terms of forbidden words, we prove that the≃-equivalence class of the function that counts the minimal forbidden words of a system is a topological invariant of the system. We show that the new invariant is independent from previous ones, but it is not characteristic. In the case of sofic systems, we prove that the≃-equivalence of the corresponding functions is a decidable question. As a more special application, we show, by using the new invariant, that two systems associated to Sturmian words having “different slope” are not conjugate.

Discrete mathematicsApplied Mathematicsautomata and formal languages010102 general mathematics[INFO.INFO-DS]Computer Science [cs]/Data Structures and Algorithms [cs.DS]Symbolic dynamics[INFO.INFO-DS] Computer Science [cs]/Data Structures and Algorithms [cs.DS]0102 computer and information sciencesFunction (mathematics)16. Peace & justice01 natural sciencesDecidabilitysymbolic dynamics010201 computation theory & mathematicsEquivalence relationcombinatoric on words0101 mathematicsInvariant (mathematics)Dynamical system (definition)Equivalence (measure theory)Computer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryWord (group theory)ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSMathematics
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Algorithmic Information Theory and Computational Complexity

2013

We present examples where theorems on complexity of computation are proved using methods in algorithmic information theory. The first example is a non-effective construction of a language for which the size of any deterministic finite automaton exceeds the size of a probabilistic finite automaton with a bounded error exponentially. The second example refers to frequency computation. Frequency computation was introduced by Rose and McNaughton in early sixties and developed by Trakhtenbrot, Kinber, Degtev, Wechsung, Hinrichs and others. A transducer is a finite-state automaton with an input and an output. We consider the possibilities of probabilistic and frequency transducers and prove sever…

Discrete mathematicsAverage-case complexityAlgorithmic information theoryTheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESKolmogorov complexityDescriptive complexity theoryComputational physicsStructural complexity theoryTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESDeterministic finite automatonAsymptotic computational complexityComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryComputational number theoryMathematics
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Transition Function Complexity of Finite Automata

2011

State complexity of finite automata in some cases gives the same complexity value for automata which intuitively seem to have completely different complexities. In this paper we consider a new measure of descriptional complexity of finite automata -- BC-complexity. Comparison of it with the state complexity is carried out here as well as some interesting minimization properties are discussed. It is shown that minimization of the number of states can lead to a superpolynomial increase of BC-complexity.

Discrete mathematicsAverage-case complexityTheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESFinite-state machineDFA minimizationContinuous spatial automatonAutomata theoryQuantum finite automataDescriptive complexity theoryω-automatonComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryMathematics
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