AbstractWe investigate the following classes of equational theories which are important in unification theory: permutative, finite, Noetherian, simple, almost collapse free, collapse free, regular, and Ω-free theories. We show some relationships between the particular classes and their connections to the unification hierarchy. Especially, we study conditions, under which minimal and complete sets of unifiers always exist.We have some undecidability results for the membership problem of equational theories to these classes (the ‘class problem’): simplicity, almost collapse freeness, and Ω-freeness are undecidable properties. Finiteness is known to be also undecidable, and the other investigated properties, permutativity, regularity, and coll...
This paper presents a method for combining equational unification algorithms to handle terms contain...
The unification problem in a disjoint combination of equational theories, E1+...+En, is reduced to a...
We consider the problem of combining procedures that decide solvability of (dis)unification problems...
AbstractWe investigate the following classes of equational theories which are important in unificati...
In unification theory, equational theories can be classified according to the existence and cardinalit...
An equational theory E is permutative if for all terms s, t: s =E t implies that the terms s and t c...
An equational theory ℰ is permutative if for all terms s, t: s = ℰt implies that the terms s and t c...
AbstractWe propose an abstract framework to present unification and matching problems. We argue abou...
We show that unification in certain extensions of shallow equational theories is decidable. Our ext...
We show that unification in certain extensions of shallow equational theories is decidable. Our exte...
AbstractMost of the work on the combination of unification algorithms for the union of disjoint equa...
AbstractAn equational formula is a first-order formula over an alphabet F of function symbols and th...
AbstractSolving equations in the free algebra T(F, X) (i.e., unification) uses the two rules: ƒ(s) =...
In this report we present some results on decidability, undecidability, semi-decidability, and non-s...
AbstractUnification is the problem to solve equations of first order terms by finding (all) substitu...
This paper presents a method for combining equational unification algorithms to handle terms contain...
The unification problem in a disjoint combination of equational theories, E1+...+En, is reduced to a...
We consider the problem of combining procedures that decide solvability of (dis)unification problems...
AbstractWe investigate the following classes of equational theories which are important in unificati...
In unification theory, equational theories can be classified according to the existence and cardinalit...
An equational theory E is permutative if for all terms s, t: s =E t implies that the terms s and t c...
An equational theory ℰ is permutative if for all terms s, t: s = ℰt implies that the terms s and t c...
AbstractWe propose an abstract framework to present unification and matching problems. We argue abou...
We show that unification in certain extensions of shallow equational theories is decidable. Our ext...
We show that unification in certain extensions of shallow equational theories is decidable. Our exte...
AbstractMost of the work on the combination of unification algorithms for the union of disjoint equa...
AbstractAn equational formula is a first-order formula over an alphabet F of function symbols and th...
AbstractSolving equations in the free algebra T(F, X) (i.e., unification) uses the two rules: ƒ(s) =...
In this report we present some results on decidability, undecidability, semi-decidability, and non-s...
AbstractUnification is the problem to solve equations of first order terms by finding (all) substitu...
This paper presents a method for combining equational unification algorithms to handle terms contain...
The unification problem in a disjoint combination of equational theories, E1+...+En, is reduced to a...
We consider the problem of combining procedures that decide solvability of (dis)unification problems...