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Equivalence, DFA, NDFA Sequential Machine Theory Prof. K. J. Hintz
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Lecture 2 Updated and modified by Marek Perkowski
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Equivalence Relation on A
An Equivalence Relation (Not Relationship) Is Not an Equality Relation A Relation is an Equivalence Relation if and only if (iff) it is: Reflexive Symmetric Transitive
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Equivalence Relation on A
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Non-Algebraic Equivalence Relation Example
Equivalence Relation on the Set of All Triangles on a Plane “is congruent to” or “is similar to” Reflexive, each triangle is similar to itself,
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Equivalence Relation Example
Symmetric, if is similar to then
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Equivalence Relation Example
Transitive, if is similar to and then
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Inclusion Relation
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Inclusion Relation Example
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Partition Notation Overbar Indicates States Which Are Elements of the Same -block. Single States Are Not Normally Listed
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Relations May Be Orderings
Partial Ordering Total Ordering, aka Chain Well Ordering (not discussed here)
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Partial Ordering Given an Inclusion Relation, R: s s’, Defined on some Elements of the Set S such that s, s’ S, R Is a Partial Ordering If It Is: Reflexive Anti-Symmetric (asymmetric) Transitive Not all orderings are specified, therefore partial
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Properties of PO Reflexive Anti-Symmetric (asymmetric)
s s for all s S Anti-Symmetric (asymmetric) e.g., let : “older than” if Sam is older than Bill, then Bill cannot be older than Sam
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Properties of PO Transitive e.g., If the Redskins beat the Patriots
and the Patriots beat the Cowboys then the Redskins will beat the Cowboys
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Total Ordering aka Chain, simply ordered set, totally ordered set A Partial Ordering for Which All Orderings Are Specified A Chain Is “Connected” Because
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POSET Partially Ordered SET
A set on which a partial ordering is specified ( S, ) where is defined Not a chain since not all elements are connected We Will Revisit This Concept in a later part of the Course
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Finite Automata A Deterministic semi-automaton*, aka Completely Specified Deterministic Semi-automaton Is a Triple with no Mealy machine output function, Beta () * Ginzburg, 1968
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FSM Set Properties I ib sa sc S
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Language Recognizer aka, Rabin-Scott Automata (machine), Automaton, Language Recognizer A Recognizer Is a Quintuple of Sets with S, I, as before
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Kleene Star a* = e, a, aa, aaa, aaaa, ...
The Kleene Star, *, means NONE or more occurrences of something Star is an overloaded operator so be aware of context a+= ONE or more occurrences of something. a+ is Kleene Star less the null string, .
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Kleene Closure Kleene Closure Is Not Identical to Kleene Star
“*” Symbol is the same (overloaded) Kleene Closure/Star Closure Found in descriptions of formal language Language consisting of all strings over some alphabet
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String An Ordered Concatenation of Symbols From an Alphabet
Used in Place of “Word” to Decouple From Common Concept of Word in Informal Language If = { a, 1, 0, b, % } then a “1%0b” is a string.
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Recognizer If x I*, i.e., a string of input symbols selected from the set of allowable input symbols, and the application of x to the recognizer results in a final state F, then the recognizer “accepts” the string.
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Strings A String, x, Is Accepted by a Recognizer Left-most Letter First, i.e., if the input to a recognizer is a string w, and if w = w’ then is the first letter of the string which causes a state transition. Subsequent letters from left to right do the same.
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State Transition Let There Be Two Configurations for a Machine 1 q q’
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String Example Let w = a b b a then w = a w’ and w’ = b b a
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Recognizer as Directed Graph
Arbitrary State State Transition Start (initial) State Final State q 1 q q’ - or or +
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Recognizer Examples Let I = { a, b }
Accepts no strings since no final state Accepts all strings Dead State a, b - a, b a, b
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Recognizer Examples Accepts only , the null string a,b +/-
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Recognizer Example This Recognizer Accepts the Language
L= { ab, a (aa) b, a (aa) (aa) b, ... ab (bb), ab (bb) (bb), ... } L = a (aa)* b ( b (aa)* b )* - a b
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Rabin-Scott Example
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Rabin-Scott Example L (M) = { x I* | * ( 1, x ) = 4 }
L (M) = { a; , a+a; , a+a+a; , ... } a 2 3 4 + + ; ; a + ; 1
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Non-Deterministic FSM
A Non-deterministic Finite Automata Is a Quintuple with S, I, s0, F as in a recognizer, but,
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Non-Deterministic FSM
State May Change to two different states in response to the same input at the same state in response to a string rather than just a single element from the set of inputs in response to a null string input
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DFA-NDFA Theorem Every NDFA Can Be Replaced by an Equivalent DFA
Equivalent Means Not Only Accepting All Strings Accepted by the NDFA, but Also NOT Accepting Any Others
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NDFA Example Non-deterministic Since
( ( 1, a ), 2 ) and ( ( 1, a ), 3 ) a b 2 3 4 1 1
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NDFA Example Non-deterministic Since Not Completely Specified ab 1 abb
4 abb
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NDFA Example Non-deterministic Since State Changes in Response to a Null String. a b 2 3 4 1 bb
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NDFA to DFA Theorem Constructive Proof 4 Difficulties to Resolve
For each NDFA there is an equivalent DFA Constructive Proof 4 Difficulties to Resolve Missing transitions Single transitions due to | strings | > 1 Transitions due to strings Multiple transitions
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Problem: Missing Transitions
I = { a, b } In DFA, all i I must be accounted for in each state a b ?
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Solution: Missing Transitions
Add a “sink” state which is not a final state and terminate all missing transitions there. a b a, b
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Problem: | strings | > 1
Single transition due to string of size > 1 Add intermediate states and “sink”, other characters in those states go to “sink” state a ab a, b b
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Problem: Strings Can’t just combine states since a b a b b a a b
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Solution: Strings & Multiple Transitions
Eliminate by defining the set of next states which occur in response to no input, call this function E( ) E( ) is called the “equivalents of ( )
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NDFA Example > 1 2 3 4 a b
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State Equivalents E( 1 ) = {self, explicit alternative} = { 1, 3 }
Define a new machine based on the old using the E( ) states
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New Machine
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New Machine Transition Table
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New Machine Transition Table
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New Machine Transition Table
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DFA Equivalent of NDFA
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Reduced DFA Equivalent
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