392 research outputs found

    Decidability of the HD0L ultimate periodicity problem

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    In this paper we prove the decidability of the HD0L ultimate periodicity problem

    Cobham-Semenov theorem and \NN^d-subshifts

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    We give a new proof of the Cobham's first theorem using ideas from symbolic dynamics and of the Cobham-Semenov theorem (in the primitive case) using ideas from tiling dynamics.Comment: 24 page

    Automatic winning shifts

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    To each one-dimensional subshift XX, we may associate a winning shift W(X)W(X) which arises from a combinatorial game played on the language of XX. Previously it has been studied what properties of XX does W(X)W(X) inherit. For example, XX and W(X)W(X) have the same factor complexity and if XX is a sofic subshift, then W(X)W(X) is also sofic. In this paper, we develop a notion of automaticity for W(X)W(X), that is, we propose what it means that a vector representation of W(X)W(X) is accepted by a finite automaton. Let SS be an abstract numeration system such that addition with respect to SS is a rational relation. Let XX be a subshift generated by an SS-automatic word. We prove that as long as there is a bound on the number of nonzero symbols in configurations of W(X)W(X) (which follows from XX having sublinear factor complexity), then W(X)W(X) is accepted by a finite automaton, which can be effectively constructed from the description of XX. We provide an explicit automaton when XX is generated by certain automatic words such as the Thue-Morse word.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl

    Systèmes de numération abstraits : reconnaissabilité, décidabilité, mots S-automatiques multidimensionnels et nombres réels

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    In this dissertation we study and we solve several questions regarding abstract numeration systems. Each particular problem is the focus of a chapter. The first problem concerns the study of the preservation of recognizability under multiplication by a constant in abstract numeration systems built on polynomial regular languages. The second is a decidability problem, which has been already studied notably by J. Honkala and A. Muchnik and which is studied here for two new cases: the linear positional numeration systems and the abstract numeration systems. Next, we focus on the extension to the multidimensional setting of a result of A. Maes and M. Rigo regarding S-automatic infinite words. Finally, we propose a formalism to represent real numbers in the general framework of abstract numeration systems built on languages that are not necessarily regular. We end by a list of open questions in the continuation of the present work.Dans cette dissertation, nous étudions et résolvons plusieurs questions autour des systèmes de numération abstraits. Chaque problème étudié fait l'objet d'un chapitre. Le premier concerne l'étude de la conservation de la reconnaissabilité par la multiplication par une constante dans des systèmes de numération abstraits construits sur des langages réguliers polynomiaux. Le deuxième est un problème de décidabilité déjà étudié notamment par J. Honkala et A. Muchnik et ici décliné en deux nouvelles versions : les systèmes de numération de position linéaires et les systèmes de numération abstraits. Ensuite, nous nous penchons sur l'extension au cas multidimensionnel d'un résultat d'A. Maes et de M. Rigo à propos des mots infinis S-automatiques. Finalement, nous proposons un formalisme de la représentation des nombres réels dans le cadre général des systèmes de numération abstraits basés sur des langages qui ne sont pas nécessairement réguliers. Nous terminons par une liste de questions ouvertes dans la continuité de ce travail

    From combinatorial games to shape-symmetric morphisms

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    The general aim of these lectures is to present some interplay between combinatorial game theory (CGT) and combinatorics on (multidimensional) words. In the first introductory lecture, we present some basic concepts from combinatorial game theory (positions of a game, Nim-sum, Sprague-Grundy function, Wythoff's game, ...). We also review some concepts from combinatorics on words. We thus introduce the well-known k-automatic sequences and review some of their characterizations (in terms of morphisms, finiteness of their k-kernel,...). These sequences take values in a finite set but the Sprague-Grundy function of a game, such as Nim of Wythoff, is usually unbounded. This provides a motivation to introduce k-regular sequences (in the sense of Allouche and Shallit) whose k-kernel is not finite, but finitely generated. In the second lecture, games played on several piles of token naturally give rise to a multidimensional setting. Thus, we reconsider k-automatic and k-regular sequences in this extended framework. In particular, determining the structure of the bidimensional array encoding the (loosing) P-positions of the Wythoff's game is a long-standing and challenging problem in CGT. Wythoff's game is linked to non-standard numeration system: P-positions can be determined by writing those in the Fibonacci system. Next, we present the concept of shape-symmetric morphism: instead of iterating a morphism where images of letters are (hyper-)cubes of a fixed length k, one can generalize the procedure to images of various parallelepipedic shape. The shape-symmetry condition introduced twenty years ago by Maes permits to have well-defined fixed point. In the last lecture, we move to generalized numeration systems: abstract numeration systems (built on a regular language) and link them to morphic (multidimensional) words. In particular, pictures obtained by shape-symmetric morphisms coincide with automatic sequences associated with an abstract numeration system. We conclude these lectures with some work in progress about games with a finite rule-set. This permits us to discuss a bit Presburger definable sets

    Dynamical Directions in Numeration

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    International audienceWe survey definitions and properties of numeration from a dynamical point of view. That is we focuse on numeration systems, their associated compactifications, and the dynamical systems that can be naturally defined on them. The exposition is unified by the notion of fibred numeration system. A lot of examples are discussed. Various numerations on natural, integral, real or complex numbers are presented with a special attention payed to beta-numeration and its generalisations, abstract numeration systems and shift radix systems. A section of applications ends the paper
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