MORPHIC CHARACTERIZATIONS OF LANGUAGE FAMILIES IN TERMS OF INSERTION SYSTEMS AND STAR LANGUAGES

2011 ◽  
Vol 22 (01) ◽  
pp. 247-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
FUMIYA OKUBO ◽  
TAKASHI YOKOMORI

Insertion systems have a unique feature in that only string insertions are allowed, which is in marked contrast to a variety of the conventional computing devices based on string rewriting. This paper will mainly focus on those systems whose insertion operations are performed in a context-free fashion, called context-free insertion systems, and obtain several characterizations of language families with the help of other primitive languages (like star languages) as well as simple operations (like projections, weak-codings). For each k ≥ 1, a language L is a k-star language if L = F+ for some finite set F with the length of each string in F is no more than k. The results of this kind have already been presented in [10] by Păun et al., while the purpose of this paper is to prove enhanced versions of them. Specifically, we show that each context-free language L can be represented in the form L = h(L(γ)∩F+), where γ is an insertion system of weight (3, 0) (at most three symbols are inserted in a context-free manner), h is a projection, and F+ is a 2-star language. A similar characterization can be obtained for recursively enumerable languages, where insertion systems of weight (3, 3) and 2-star languages are involved.

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (01) ◽  
pp. 91-102
Author(s):  
Szilárd Zsolt Fazekas ◽  
Robert Mercaş ◽  
Daniel Reidenbach

This work answers some questions proposed by Bottoni, Labella, and Mitrana (Theoretical Computer Science 682, 2017) regarding the prefix–suffix reduction on words. The operation is defined as a reduction by one half of every square that is present as either a prefix or a suffix of a word, leading thus to a finite set of words associated to the starting one. The iterated case considers consecutive applications of the operations, on all the resulting words. We show that the classes of linear and context-free language are closed under iterated bounded prefix–suffix square reduction, and that for a given word we can determine in [Formula: see text] time all of its primitive prefix–suffix square roots.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 981-993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kalpana Mahalingam ◽  
Prithwineel Paul ◽  
Erkki Mäkinen

Derivation languages are language theoretical tools that describe halting derivation processes of a generating device. We consider two types of derivation languages, namely Szilard and control languages for splicing systems where iterated splicing is done in non-uniform way defined by Mitrana, Petre and Rogojin in 2010. The families of Szilard (rules and labels are mapped in a one to one manner) and control (more than one rule can share the same label) languages generated by splicing systems of this type are then compared with the family of languages in the Chomsky hierarchy. We show that context-free languages can be generated as Szilard and control languages and any non-empty context-free language is a morphic image of the Szilard language of this type of system with finite set of rules and axioms. Moreover, we show that these systems with finite set of axioms and regular set of rules are capable of generating any recursively enumerable language as a control language.


2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (06) ◽  
pp. 1293-1302 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARTIN KUTRIB ◽  
ANDREAS MALCHER

We investigate the intersection of Church-Rosser languages and (strongly) context-free languages. The intersection is still a proper superset of the deterministic context-free languages as well as of their reversals, while its membership problem is solvable in linear time. For the problem whether a given Church-Rosser or context-free language belongs to the intersection we show completeness for the second level of the arithmetic hierarchy. The equivalence of Church-Rosser and context-free languages is Π1-complete. It is proved that all considered intersections are pairwise incomparable. Finally, closure properties under several operations are investigated.


2014 ◽  
Vol 577 ◽  
pp. 917-920
Author(s):  
Long Pang ◽  
Xiao Hong Su ◽  
Pei Jun Ma ◽  
Ling Ling Zhao

The pointer alias is indispensable for program analysis. Comparing to point-to set, it’s more efficient to formulate the alias as the context free language (CFL) reachability problem. However, the precision is limited to flow-insensitivity. To solve this problem, we propose a flow sensitive, demand-driven analysis algorithm for answering may-alias queries. First the partial single static assignment is used to discriminate the address-taken pointers. Then the order of control flow is encoded in the level linearization code to ease comparison. Finally, the query of alias in demand driven is converted into the search of CFL reachability with feasible flows. The experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach.


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