A Concise Introduction to Languages and Machines

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Springer Science & Business Media, Jun 29, 2009 - Computers - 346 pages

This easy-to-follow text provides an accessible introduction to the key topics of formal languages and abstract machines within Computer Science. The author follows the successful formula of his first book on this subject, this time making these core computing topics more fundamental and providing an excellent foundation for undergraduates.

The book is divided into two parts, Languages and Machines and Machines and Computation. The first part is concerned with formal language theory, as it applies to Computer Science, whereas Part 2 considers the computational properties of the machines in more detail. This text is deliberately non-mathematical and, wherever possible, links theory to practical considerations, in particular the implications for programming, computation and problem solving. Written in an informal style, this textbook assumes only a basic knowledge of programming on the part of the reader.

Features:

• Clear explanations of formal notation and jargon

• Extensive use of examples to illustrate algorithms and proofs

• Pictorial representations of key concepts

• Chapter-opening overviews providing an introduction and guidance to each topic

• An introductory chapter supplies the reader with a solid overview

• End-of-chapter exercises and solutions

This reader-friendly textbook has been written with undergraduates in mind and will be suitable for use on courses covering formal languages, computability, automata theory and computational linguistics. It will also make an excellent supplementary text for courses on algorithm complexity and compilers.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Elements of Formal Languages
10
Syntax Semantics and Ambiguity
43
Regular Languages and Finite State Recognisers
55
Context Free Languages and Pushdown Recognisers
93
Important Features of Regular and Context Free Languages
124
Phrase Structure Languages and Turing Machines
155
Finite State Transducers
189
Turing Machines as Computers
208
Turings Thesis and the Universality of the Turing Machine
237
Computability Solvability and the Halting Problem
269
Dimensions of Computation
290
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