posted on 2018-11-16, 12:29authored byLukas Fleischer, Manfred Kufleitner
Piecewise testable languages are a subclass of the regular languages. There are many equivalent ways of defining them; Simon’s congruence ∼kis one of the most classical approaches. Two words are ∼k-equivalent if they have the same set of (scattered) subwords of length at most k. A language L is piecewise testable if there exists some k such that L is a union of ∼k-classes. For each equivalence class of ∼k, one can define a canonical representative in shortlex normal form, that is, the minimal word with respect to the lexicographic order among the shortest words in ∼k. We present an algorithm for computing the canonical representative of the ∼k-class of a given word w ∈ A∗of length n. The running time of our algorithm is in O(|A|n) even if k ≤ n is part of the input. This is surprising since the number of possible subwords grows exponentially in k. The case k > n is not interesting since then, the equivalence class of w is a singleton. If the alphabet is fixed, the running time of our algorithm is linear in the size of the input word. Moreover, for fixed alphabet, we show that the computation of shortlex normal forms for ∼kis possible in deterministic logarithmic space. One of the consequences of our algorithm is that one can check with the same complexity whether two words are ∼k-equivalent (with k being part of the input).
History
School
Science
Department
Computer Science
Published in
MFCS 2018
Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics, LIPIcs
Volume
117
Citation
FLEISCHER, L. and KUFLEITNER, M., 2018.. Testing Simon’s congruence. IN: Potapov, I., Spirakis, P. and Worrell, J. (Eds.) 43rd International Symposium on Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science (MFCS 2018) Volume 117, Article No. 62; pp. 62:1–62:13, August 27-31, 2018, Liverpool, UK.
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