5 research outputs found

    Decomposition and Descriptional Complexity of Shuffle on Words and Finite Languages

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    We investigate various questions related to the shuffle operation on words and finite languages. First we investigate a special variant of the shuffle decomposition problem for regular languages, namely, when the given regular language is the shuffle of finite languages. The shuffle decomposition into finite languages is, in general not unique. Thatis,therearelanguagesL^,L2,L3,L4withLiluL2= £3luT4but{L\,L2}^ {I/3, L4}. However, if all four languages are singletons (with at least two combined letters), it follows by a result of Berstel and Boasson [6], that the solution is unique; that is {L\,L2} = {L3,L4}. We extend this result to show that if L\ and L2 are arbitrary finite sets and Lz and Z-4 are singletons (with at least two letters in each), the solution is unique. This is as strong as it can be, since we provide examples showing that the solution can be non-unique already when (1) both L\ and L2 are singleton sets over different unary alphabets; or (2) L\ contains two words and L2 is singleton. We furthermore investigate the size of shuffle automata for words. It was shown by Campeanu, K. Salomaa and Yu in [11] that the minimal shuffle automaton of two regular languages requires 2mn states in the worst case (where the minimal automata of the two component languages had m and n states, respectively). It was also recently shown that there exist words u and v such that the minimal shuffle iii DFA for u and v requires an exponential number of states. We study the size of shuffle DFAs for restricted cases of words, namely when the words u and v are both periods of a common underlying word. We show that, when the underlying word obeys certain conditions, then the size of the minimal shuffle DFA for u and v is at most quadratic. Moreover we provide an efficient algorithm, which decides for a given DFA A and two words u and v, whether u lu u C L(A)

    Some Single and Combined Operations on Formal Languages: Algebraic Properties and Complexity

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    In this thesis, we consider several research questions related to language operations in the following areas of automata and formal language theory: reversibility of operations, generalizations of (comma-free) codes, generalizations of basic operations, language equations, and state complexity. Motivated by cryptography applications, we investigate several reversibility questions with respect to the parallel insertion and deletion operations. Among the results we obtained, the following result is of particular interest. For languages L1, L2 ⊆ Σ∗, if L2 satisfies the condition L2ΣL2 ∩ Σ+L2Σ+ = ∅, then any language L1 can be recovered after first parallel-inserting L2 into L1 and then parallel-deleting L2 from the result. This property reminds us of the definition of comma-free codes. Following this observation, we define the notions of comma codes and k-comma codes, and then generalize them to comma intercodes and k-comma intercodes, respectively. Besides proving all these new codes are indeed codes, we obtain some interesting properties, as well as several hierarchical results among the families of the new codes and some existing codes such as comma-free codes, infix codes, and bifix codes. Another topic considered in this thesis are some natural generalizations of basic language operations. We introduce block insertion on trajectories and block deletion on trajectories, which properly generalize several sequential as well as parallel binary language operations such as catenation, sequential insertion, k-insertion, parallel insertion, quotient, sequential deletion, k-deletion, etc. We obtain several closure properties of the families of regular and context-free languages under the new operations by using some relationships between these new operations and shuffle and deletion on trajectories. Also, we obtain several decidability results of language equation problems with respect to the new operations. Lastly, we study the state complexity of the following combined operations: L1L2∗, L1L2R, L1(L2 ∩ L3), L1(L2 ∪ L3), (L1L2)R, L1∗L2, L1RL2, (L1 ∩ L2)L3, (L1 ∪ L2)L3, L1L2 ∩ L3, and L1L2 ∪ L3 for regular languages L1, L2, and L3. These are all the combinations of two basic operations whose state complexities have not been studied in the literature

    Decidability of trajectory-based equations

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    We consider the decidability of existence of solutions to language equations involving the operations of shuffle and deletion along trajectories. These operations generalize the operations of concatenation, insertion, shuffle, quotient, sequential and scattered deletion, as well as many others. Our results are constructive in the sense that if a solution exists, it can be effectively represented. We show both positive and negative decidability results.
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