1,997 research outputs found

    Splicing Systems from Past to Future: Old and New Challenges

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    A splicing system is a formal model of a recombinant behaviour of sets of double stranded DNA molecules when acted on by restriction enzymes and ligase. In this survey we will concentrate on a specific behaviour of a type of splicing systems, introduced by P\u{a}un and subsequently developed by many researchers in both linear and circular case of splicing definition. In particular, we will present recent results on this topic and how they stimulate new challenging investigations.Comment: Appeared in: Discrete Mathematics and Computer Science. Papers in Memoriam Alexandru Mateescu (1952-2005). The Publishing House of the Romanian Academy, 2014. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1112.4897 by other author

    Flat Splicing Array Grammar Systems Generating Picture Arrays

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    While studying the recombinant behaviour of DNA molecules, Head (1987) introduced a new operation, called splicing on words or strings, which are finite sequences of symbols. There has been intensive research using the concept of splicing on strings in the context of DNA computing, establishing important theoretical results on computational universality. A particular class of splicing, known as flat splicing on strings was recently considered and this operation was extended to provide picture array generating two-dimensional models. Making use of the operation of flat splicing on arrays, we propose here a grammar system, called flat splicing regular array grammar system (FSRAGS), as a new model of picture generation. The components of a FSRAGS generate picture arrays working in parallel using the rules of a two-phase grammar called 2RLG and with two different components of the FSRAGS communicating using the array flat splicing operations on columns and rows of the arrays. We establish some comparison results bringing out the generative power of FSRAGS and also exhibit the power of FSRAGS in generating certain “floor designs”

    Circular Languages Generated by Complete Splicing Systems and Pure Unitary Languages

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    Circular splicing systems are a formal model of a generative mechanism of circular words, inspired by a recombinant behaviour of circular DNA. Some unanswered questions are related to the computational power of such systems, and finding a characterization of the class of circular languages generated by circular splicing systems is still an open problem. In this paper we solve this problem for complete systems, which are special finite circular splicing systems. We show that a circular language L is generated by a complete system if and only if the set Lin(L) of all words corresponding to L is a pure unitary language generated by a set closed under the conjugacy relation. The class of pure unitary languages was introduced by A. Ehrenfeucht, D. Haussler, G. Rozenberg in 1983, as a subclass of the class of context-free languages, together with a characterization of regular pure unitary languages by means of a decidable property. As a direct consequence, we characterize (regular) circular languages generated by complete systems. We can also decide whether the language generated by a complete system is regular. Finally, we point out that complete systems have the same computational power as finite simple systems, an easy type of circular splicing system defined in the literature from the very beginning, when only one rule is allowed. From our results on complete systems, it follows that finite simple systems generate a class of context-free languages containing non-regular languages, showing the incorrectness of a longstanding result on simple systems

    Communication as the Main Characteristic of Life

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    Information flow analysis for a dynamically typed language with staged metaprogramming

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    Web applications written in JavaScript are regularly used for dealing with sensitive or personal data. Consequently, reasoning about their security properties has become an important problem, which is made very difficult by the highly dynamic nature of the language, particularly its support for runtime code generation via eval. In order to deal with this, we propose to investigate security analyses for languages with more principled forms of dynamic code generation. To this end, we present a static information flow analysis for a dynamically typed functional language with prototype-based inheritance and staged metaprogramming. We prove its soundness, implement it and test it on various examples designed to show its relevance to proving security properties, such as noninterference, in JavaScript. To demonstrate the applicability of the analysis, we also present a general method for transforming a program using eval into one using staged metaprogramming. To our knowledge, this is the first fully static information flow analysis for a language with staged metaprogramming, and the first formal soundness proof of a CFA-based information flow analysis for a functional programming language
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