* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download 310409-Theory of computation
Turing's proof wikipedia , lookup
Structure (mathematical logic) wikipedia , lookup
Axiom of reducibility wikipedia , lookup
Mathematical logic wikipedia , lookup
History of the function concept wikipedia , lookup
Mathematical proof wikipedia , lookup
Computability theory wikipedia , lookup
Computable function wikipedia , lookup
Truth-bearer wikipedia , lookup
List of first-order theories wikipedia , lookup
Komate AMPHAWAN
310409-THEORY OF
COMPUTATION
1
2
DESCRIPTION-1
• Studies concepts of:
grammars,
automata,
languages,
computability and complexity
3
DESCRIPTION-2
• the relationship between automata and
various classes of languages
• Turing machine and equivalent models of
computation
• the Chomsky hierarchy context-free
grammar, push-down automata,
• Pumping lemmas and variants, closure
properties and decision properties;
parsing algorithms.
4
Computability
• What is “Computation”?
• What is Computable?
Problem of determining whether a
mathematical statement is true or false.
5
Evaluation and Grading
•
•
•
•
Midterm exam
Final exam
Quiz
Class attendance
40%
40%
10%
10%
6
Text-1
• “Introduction to Languages and the
Theory of Computation”—John C.
Martin,4ed, 2010.
7
Text-2
• “Introduction to the Theory of
Computation”—Michael Sipser, 2ed,
2005.
8
Main topic
• We shall study different types of
theoretical machines that are
mathematical models for actual physical
processes.
9
Machine Model-1
10
Machine Model-2
11
Machine Model-3
12
Prerequisites
• Set Theory
• Relations and Functions „Relations and
Functions
• Elementary Graph Theory
• Boolean Logic
• Proof Mechanisms
13
14
SET
15
Sets-1
• A set is a collection of "things," called
the elements or members of the set.
• It is essential to have a criterion for
determining, for any given thing,
whether it is or is not a member of the
given set.
• This criterion is called the membership
criterion of the set.
16
Sets-2
• There are two common ways of
indicating the members of a set:
List all the elements, e.g. {a, e, i, o, u}
Provide some sort of an algorithm or rule,
such as a grammar
17
Sets-3
• Notation:
To indicate that x is a member of set S, we
write x S
We denote the empty set (the set with no
members) as { } or
If every element of set A is also an element of
set B, we say that A is a subset of B, and write
AB
If every element of set A is also an element of
set B, but B also has some elements not
contained in A, we say that A is a proper
subset of B, and write A B
18
Operations on Sets
• The union of sets A and B, written
A B, is a set that contains everything
that is in A, or in B, or in both.
• The intersection of sets A and B,
written A B, is a set that contains
exactly those elements that are in both
A and B.
• The set difference of set A and set B,
written A - B, is a set that contains
everything that is in A but not in B.
19
Additional terminology
• The cardinality of a set A, written |A|, is
the number of elements in a set A.
• The powerset of a set Q, written 2Q, is
the set of all subsets of Q. The notation
suggests the fact that a set
containing n elements has a powerset
containing 2n elements.
• Two sets are disjoint if they have no
elements in common, that is, if A B = .
20
RELATIONS AND
FUNCTIONS
21
Relations and Functions-1
• A relation on sets S and T is a set of
ordered pairs (s, t), where
s S (s is a member of S),
t T,
S and T need not be different,
The set of all first elements (s) is
the domain of the relation, and
The set of all second elements is
the range of the relation.
22
Relations and Functions-2
• A relation is a function iff every
element of S occurs once and only once
as a first element of the relation.
• A relation is a partial function iff every
element of S occurs at most once as an
element of the relation.
23
GRAPHS
24
Graph-1
• A graph consists of two sets
A set V of vertices (or nodes), and
A set E of edges (or arcs).
• An edge consists of a pair of vertices in
V. If the edges are ordered, the graph
is a digraph (a contraction of "directed
graph").
25
Graph-2
• A walk is a sequence of edges, where the
finish vertex of each edge is the start
vertex of the next edge. Example: (a, e),
(e, i), (i, o), (o, u).
• A path is a walk with no repeated edges.
• A simple path is a path with no repeated
vertices.
26
TREES
27
Trees-1
• A tree is a kind of digraph:
It has one distinguished vertex called
the root;
There is exactly one path from the root to
each vertex; and
The level of a vertex is the length of the
path to it from the root.
28
Trees-2
• Terminology:
• if there is an edge from A to B, then A is
the parent of B, and B is the child of A.
• A leaf is a node with no children.
• The height of a tree is the largest level
number of any vertex.
29
PROOF TECHNIQUES
30
Importance
• Because this is a formal subject, the
textbook is full of proofs
• Proofs are encapsulated understanding
• You may be asked to learn a very few
important proofs
31
Proof by induction
• Prove something about P1 (the basis)
• Prove that if it is true for Pn, then it is
true for Pn+1 (the inductive assumption)
• Conclude that it is true for all P
32
Proof by contradiction
•
•
•
•
also called reduction ad absurdum
Assume some fact P is false
Show that this leads to a contradiction
Conclude P must be true
33