AbstractWe investigate factorizations of regular languages in terms of prime languages. A language is said to be strongly prime decomposable if any way of factorizing it yields a prime decomposition in a finite number of steps. We give a characterization of the strongly prime decomposable regular languages and using the characterization we show that every regular language over a unary alphabet has a prime decomposition. We show that there exist non-regular unary languages that do not have prime decompositions. We also consider infinite factorizations of unary languages
We continue the research on usefulness of information examining the effect of supplementary informat...
Regular languages are one of the oldest, well-known topics in formal language theory. Indeed, it has...
The article deals with a proof of one sufficient condition for the irregularity of languages. This c...
AbstractWe investigate factorizations of regular languages in terms of prime languages. A language i...
A regular language L of finite words is composite if there are regular languages L1, L2, Lt such tha...
AbstractWe continue the investigation of representing a language as a catenation of languages, each ...
AbstractGiven languages Z,L⊆Σ∗,Z is L-decomposable (finitely L-decomposable, resp.) if there exists ...
AbstractGiven languages Z,L⊆Σ∗,Z is L-decomposable (finitely L-decomposable, resp.) if there exists ...
We study the shuffle quotient operation and introduce equivalence relations it defines with respect ...
A regular language L of finite words is composite if there are regular languages L₁,L₂,…,L_t such th...
A string x is an outfix of a string y if there is a string w such that x(1) wx (2) = y and x = x(1) ...
A prefix-free language is a prime if it cannot be decomposed into a concatenation of two prefix-fre...
A procedure to resolve simple deterministic languages into the concatenation of other simple determi...
AbstractWe investigate a special variant of the shuffle decomposition problem for regular languages;...
AbstractA prefix-free language is prime if it cannot be decomposed into a concatenation of two prefi...
We continue the research on usefulness of information examining the effect of supplementary informat...
Regular languages are one of the oldest, well-known topics in formal language theory. Indeed, it has...
The article deals with a proof of one sufficient condition for the irregularity of languages. This c...
AbstractWe investigate factorizations of regular languages in terms of prime languages. A language i...
A regular language L of finite words is composite if there are regular languages L1, L2, Lt such tha...
AbstractWe continue the investigation of representing a language as a catenation of languages, each ...
AbstractGiven languages Z,L⊆Σ∗,Z is L-decomposable (finitely L-decomposable, resp.) if there exists ...
AbstractGiven languages Z,L⊆Σ∗,Z is L-decomposable (finitely L-decomposable, resp.) if there exists ...
We study the shuffle quotient operation and introduce equivalence relations it defines with respect ...
A regular language L of finite words is composite if there are regular languages L₁,L₂,…,L_t such th...
A string x is an outfix of a string y if there is a string w such that x(1) wx (2) = y and x = x(1) ...
A prefix-free language is a prime if it cannot be decomposed into a concatenation of two prefix-fre...
A procedure to resolve simple deterministic languages into the concatenation of other simple determi...
AbstractWe investigate a special variant of the shuffle decomposition problem for regular languages;...
AbstractA prefix-free language is prime if it cannot be decomposed into a concatenation of two prefi...
We continue the research on usefulness of information examining the effect of supplementary informat...
Regular languages are one of the oldest, well-known topics in formal language theory. Indeed, it has...
The article deals with a proof of one sufficient condition for the irregularity of languages. This c...