AbstractA recent paper Fan et al. (2006) [10] showed that the occurrence of two squares at the same position in a string, together with the occurrence of a third near by, is possible only in very special circumstances, represented by 14 well-defined cases. Similar results were published in Simpson (2007) [19]. In this paper we begin the process of extending this research in two ways: first, by proving a “two squares” lemma for a case not considered in Fan et al. (2006) [10]; second, by showing that in other cases, when three squares occur, more precise results — a breakdown into highly periodic substrings easily recognized in a left-to-right scan of the string — can be obtained with weaker assumptions. The motivation for this research is, f...
AbstractA run in a string is a nonextendable (with the same minimal period) periodic segment in a st...
Counting the types of squares rather than their occurrences, we consider the problem of bounding the...
Abstract. We investigate the function σd(n) = max{s(x) | x is a (d, n)-string}, where s(x) denotes...
AbstractA recent paper Fan et al. (2006) [10] showed that the occurrence of two squares at the same ...
AbstractThree recent papers (Fan et al., 2006; Simpson, 2007; Kopylova and Smyth, 2012) [5,11,8] hav...
In 2006, the New Periodicity Lemma (NPL) was published, showing that the occurrence of two squares...
Given a string x = x[1..n], a repetition of period p in x is a substring u r = x[i..i + rp − 1], p ...
The “Three Squares Lemma” [9] famously explored the consequences of supposing that three squares occ...
AbstractPartial words, or sequences over a finite alphabet that may have do-not-know symbols or hole...
AbstractThe article is an overview of basic issues related to repetitions in strings, concentrating ...
International audienceThe article is an overview of basic issues related to repetitions in strings, ...
Repeating structures in strings is one of the most fundamental characteristics of strings, and has b...
AbstractWe first give an elementary proof of the periodicity lemma for strings containing one hole (...
Given a string x = x[1..n], a repetition of period p in x is a substring ur = x[i..i+rp−1], p = |u|,...
Given a string $\s{x}=\s{x}[1..n]$, a repetition of period p in {\mbox{\boldmath x}} is a substring ...
AbstractA run in a string is a nonextendable (with the same minimal period) periodic segment in a st...
Counting the types of squares rather than their occurrences, we consider the problem of bounding the...
Abstract. We investigate the function σd(n) = max{s(x) | x is a (d, n)-string}, where s(x) denotes...
AbstractA recent paper Fan et al. (2006) [10] showed that the occurrence of two squares at the same ...
AbstractThree recent papers (Fan et al., 2006; Simpson, 2007; Kopylova and Smyth, 2012) [5,11,8] hav...
In 2006, the New Periodicity Lemma (NPL) was published, showing that the occurrence of two squares...
Given a string x = x[1..n], a repetition of period p in x is a substring u r = x[i..i + rp − 1], p ...
The “Three Squares Lemma” [9] famously explored the consequences of supposing that three squares occ...
AbstractPartial words, or sequences over a finite alphabet that may have do-not-know symbols or hole...
AbstractThe article is an overview of basic issues related to repetitions in strings, concentrating ...
International audienceThe article is an overview of basic issues related to repetitions in strings, ...
Repeating structures in strings is one of the most fundamental characteristics of strings, and has b...
AbstractWe first give an elementary proof of the periodicity lemma for strings containing one hole (...
Given a string x = x[1..n], a repetition of period p in x is a substring ur = x[i..i+rp−1], p = |u|,...
Given a string $\s{x}=\s{x}[1..n]$, a repetition of period p in {\mbox{\boldmath x}} is a substring ...
AbstractA run in a string is a nonextendable (with the same minimal period) periodic segment in a st...
Counting the types of squares rather than their occurrences, we consider the problem of bounding the...
Abstract. We investigate the function σd(n) = max{s(x) | x is a (d, n)-string}, where s(x) denotes...