95 research outputs found

    Conditional Lindenmayer systems with subregular conditions : the extended case

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    We study the generative power of extended conditional Lindenmayer systems where the conditions are finite, monoidal, combinational, definite, nilpotent, strictly locally (k)-testable, commutative, circular, suffix-closed, starfree, and union-free regular languages. The results correspond to those obtained for conditional context-free languages

    Acta Cybernetica : Volume 22. Number 2.

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    生化学反応による計算能力の研究

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    早大学位記番号:新6514早稲田大

    Acta Cybernetica : Volume 19. Number 2.

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    What Are Polymorphically-Typed Ambients?

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    Abstract: The Ambient Calculus was developed by Cardelli and Gordon as a formal framework to study issues of mobility and migrant code. We consider an Ambient Calculus where ambients transport and exchange programs rather that just inert data. We propose different senses in which such a calculus can be said to be polymorphically typed, and design accordingly a polymorphic type system for it. Our type system assigns types to embedded programs and what we call behaviors to processes; a denotational semantics of behaviors is then proposed, here called trace semantics, underlying much of the remaining analysis. We state and prove a Subject Reduction property for our polymorphically typed calculus. Based on techniques borrowed from finite automata theory, type-checking of fully type-annotated processes is shown to be decidable; the time complexity of our decision procedure is exponential (this is a worst-case in theory, arguably not encountered in practice). Our polymorphically-typed calculus is a conservative extension of the typed Ambient Calculus originally proposed by Cardelli and Gordon

    Reliably composable language extensions

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    University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2017. Major: Computer Science. Advisor: Eric Van Wyk. 1 computer file (PDF); x, 300 pages.Many programming tasks are dramatically simpler when an appropriate domain-specific language can be used to accomplish them. These languages offer a variety of potential advantages, including programming at a higher level of abstraction, custom analyses specific to the problem domain, and the ability to generate very efficient code. But they also suffer many disadvantages as a result of their implementation techniques. Fully separate languages (such as YACC, or SQL) are quite flexible, but these are distinct monolithic entities and thus we are unable to draw on the features of several in combination to accomplish a single task. That is, we cannot compose their domain-specific features. "Embedded" DSLs (such as parsing combinators) accomplish something like a different language, but are actually implemented simply as libraries within a flexible host language. This approach allows different libraries to be imported and used together, enabling composition, but it is limited in analysis and translation capabilities by the host language they are embedded within. A promising combination of these two approaches is to allow a host language to be directly extended with new features (syntactic and semantic.) However, while there are plausible ways to attempt to compose language extensions, they can easily fail, making this approach unreliable. Previous methods of assuring reliable composition impose onerous restrictions, such as throwing out entirely the ability to introduce new analysis. This thesis introduces reliably composable language extensions as a technique for the implementation of DSLs. This technique preserves most of the advantages of both separate and "embedded" DSLs. Unlike many prior approaches to language extension, this technique ensures composition of multiple language extensions will succeed, and preserves strong properties about the behavior of the resulting composed compiler. We define an analysis on language extensions that guarantees the composition of several extensions will be well-defined, and we further define a set of testable properties that ensure the resulting compiler will behave as expected, along with a principle that assigns "blame" for bugs that may ultimately appear as a result of composition. Finally, to concretely compare our approach to our original goals for reliably composable language extension, we use these techniques to develop an extensible C compiler front-end, together with several example composable language extensions

    35th Symposium on Theoretical Aspects of Computer Science: STACS 2018, February 28-March 3, 2018, Caen, France

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