Intro To Automata Theory
Intro To Automata Theory
Intro To Automata Theory
3:1:0
Objectives:
To learn the core concepts of automata theory and
formal languages.
To learn fundamentals of Regular and Context Free
Grammars and Languages.
To understand the relation between Regular
Language and Finite Automata.
To understand the relation between Contexts free
Languages and PDA.
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Outcomes:
Acquire a fundamental understanding of the core concepts
in automata theory and formal languages
·Develop ability to model grammars and automata
(recognizers) for different language classes.
Develop an ability to identify formal language classes and
prove language membership properties.
Develop an ability to prove and disprove theorems
establishing key properties of formal languages and
automata.
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Unit I: Introduction to
Automata and Languages
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(A pioneer of automata theory)
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Theory of Computation: A
Historical Perspective
1930s • Alan Turing studies Turing machines
• Decidability
• Halting problem
1940-1950s • “Finite automata” machines studied
• Noam Chomsky proposes the
“Chomsky Hierarchy” for formal
languages
1969 Cook introduces “intractable” problems
or “NP-Hard” problems
1970- Modern computer science: compilers,
computational & complexity theory evolve
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Languages & Grammars
Languages: “A language is a
Or “words” collection of sentences of
finite length all constructed
from a finite alphabet of
symbols”
Grammars: “A grammar can
be regarded as a device that
enumerates the sentences
of a language” - nothing
more, nothing less
Regular Context-
(DFA) Context-
free Recursively-
sensitive
(PDA) enumerable
(LBA)
(TM)
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The Central Concepts of
Automata Theory
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Alphabet
An alphabet is a finite, non-empty set of
symbols
We use the symbol ∑ (sigma) to denote an
alphabet
Examples:
Binary: ∑ = {0,1}
All lower case letters: ∑ = {a,b,c,..z}
Alphanumeric: ∑ = {a-z, A-Z, 0-9}
DNA molecule letters: ∑ = {a,c,g,t}
…
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Strings
A string or word is a finite sequence of symbols
chosen from ∑
Empty string is (or “epsilon”)
∑* = ∑0 U ∑1 U ∑2 U …
∑+ = ∑ 1 U ∑ 2 U ∑ 3 U …
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Languages
L is a said to be a language over alphabet ∑, only if L ∑*
this is because ∑* is the set of all strings (of all possible
length including 0) over the given alphabet ∑
Examples:
1. Let L be the language of all strings consisting of n 0’s
followed by n 1’s:
L = {, 01, 0011, 000111,…}
2. Let L be the language of all strings of with equal number of
0’s and 1’s:
L = {, 01, 10, 0011, 1100, 0101, 1010, 1001,…}
Canonical ordering of strings in the language
Example:
Let w = 100011
Q) Is w the language of strings with
equal number of 0s and 1s?
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Finite Automata
Some Applications
Software for designing and checking the behavior
of digital circuits
Lexical analyzer of a typical compiler
Software for scanning large bodies of text (e.g.,
web pages) for pattern finding
Software for verifying systems of all types that
have a finite number of states (e.g., stock market
transaction, communication/network protocol)
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Finite Automata : Examples
action
On/Off switch state
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Deductive Proofs
From the given statement(s) to a conclusion
statement (what we want to prove)
Logical progression by direct implications
An example:
Theorem: The height of an n-node binary
tree is at least floor(lg n)
Lemma: Level i of a perfect binary tree has
2i nodes.
Corollary: A perfect binary tree of height h
has 2h+1-1 nodes.
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Quantifiers
“For all” or “For every”
Universal proofs
Notation=
“There exists”
Used in existential proofs
Notation=
Implication is denoted by =>
E.g., “IF A THEN B” can also be written as “A=>B”
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Proving techniques
By contradiction
Start with the statement contradictory to the given
statement
E.g., To prove (A => B), we start with:
(A and ~B)
… and then show that could never happen
By induction
(3 steps) Basis, inductive hypothesis, inductive step
By contrapositive statement
If A then B ≡ If ~B then ~A
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Proving techniques…
By counter-example
Show an example that disproves the claim
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Different ways of saying the same
thing
“If H then C”:
i. H implies C
ii. H => C
iii. C if H
iv. H only if C
v. Whenever H holds, C follows
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“If-and-Only-If” statements
“A if and only if B” (A <==> B)
(if part) if B then A ( <= )
(only if part) A only if B ( => )
(same as “if A then B”)
“If and only if” is abbreviated as “iff”
i.e., “A iff B”
Example:
Theorem: Let x be a real number. Then floor of x =
ceiling of x if and only if x is an integer.
Proofs for iff have two parts
One for the “if part” & another for the “only if part”
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Summary
Automata theory & a historical perspective
Chomsky hierarchy
Finite automata
Alphabets, strings/words/sentences, languages
Membership problem
Proofs:
Deductive, induction, contrapositive, contradiction,
counterexample
If and only if
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