The linear-time simulation of 2-way deterministic pushdown automata (2DPDA) by the Cook and Jones constructions is revisited. Following the semantics-based approach by Jones, an interpreter is given which, when extended with random-access memory, performs a linear-time simulation of 2DPDA. The recursive interpreter works without the dump list of the original constructions, which makes Cook’s insight into linear-time simulation of exponential-time automata more intuitive and the complexity argument clearer. The simulation is then extended to 2-way nondeterministic pushdown automata (2NPDA) to provide for a cubic-time recognition of context-free languages. The time required to run the final construction depends on the degree of nondeterminism...
AbstractTwo-way nondeterministic pushdown automata (2PDA) are classical nondeterministic pushdown au...
AbstractWe present a relation between the sets accepted by two-way pushdown automataand certain tape...
In 1978 Sakoda and Sipser raised the question of the cost, in terms of size of representations, of t...
The linear-time simulation of 2-way deterministic pushdown automata (2DPDA) by the Cook and Jones co...
Cook has shown that any deterministic two-way pushdown automaton could be simulated by a uniform-co...
This paper reports two experiments with implementations of constructions from theoretical computer s...
AbstractCook demonstrated the possibility of simulating any given 2-way deterministic pushdown autom...
This paper reports two experiments with implementations of constructions from theoretical computer s...
We consider some of the important unsolved problems in the theory of computation concerning the rel...
The simulation of deterministic pushdown automata defined over a one letter alphabet by finite state...
We extend 2-way deterministic push-down au-tomata (2DPDAs) with a write-once-read-many (WORM) store....
It is demonstrated how a program making use of a single stack may be transformed, via memoization, i...
A linear time extension of determinis-tic pushdown automata is introduced that recognizes all determ...
Two-way nondeterministic pushdown automata (2PDA) are classical nondeterministic pushdown automata (...
Limited automata are one-tape Turing machines which are allowed to rewrite each tape cell only in th...
AbstractTwo-way nondeterministic pushdown automata (2PDA) are classical nondeterministic pushdown au...
AbstractWe present a relation between the sets accepted by two-way pushdown automataand certain tape...
In 1978 Sakoda and Sipser raised the question of the cost, in terms of size of representations, of t...
The linear-time simulation of 2-way deterministic pushdown automata (2DPDA) by the Cook and Jones co...
Cook has shown that any deterministic two-way pushdown automaton could be simulated by a uniform-co...
This paper reports two experiments with implementations of constructions from theoretical computer s...
AbstractCook demonstrated the possibility of simulating any given 2-way deterministic pushdown autom...
This paper reports two experiments with implementations of constructions from theoretical computer s...
We consider some of the important unsolved problems in the theory of computation concerning the rel...
The simulation of deterministic pushdown automata defined over a one letter alphabet by finite state...
We extend 2-way deterministic push-down au-tomata (2DPDAs) with a write-once-read-many (WORM) store....
It is demonstrated how a program making use of a single stack may be transformed, via memoization, i...
A linear time extension of determinis-tic pushdown automata is introduced that recognizes all determ...
Two-way nondeterministic pushdown automata (2PDA) are classical nondeterministic pushdown automata (...
Limited automata are one-tape Turing machines which are allowed to rewrite each tape cell only in th...
AbstractTwo-way nondeterministic pushdown automata (2PDA) are classical nondeterministic pushdown au...
AbstractWe present a relation between the sets accepted by two-way pushdown automataand certain tape...
In 1978 Sakoda and Sipser raised the question of the cost, in terms of size of representations, of t...