AbstractConsider a class C of hyperedge-replacement graph grammars and a numeric function on graphs like the number of edges, the degree (i.e., the maximum of the degrees of all nodes of a graph), the number of simple paths, the size of a maximum set of independent nodes, etc. Each such function induces a boundedness problem for the class C: Given a grammar HRG in C, are the function values of all graphs in the language L(HRG), generated by HRG, bounded by an integer or not? We show that the boundedness problem is decidable if the corresponding function is compatible with the derivation process of the grammars in C and if it is composed of maxima, sums, and products in a certain way. This decidability result applies particularly to the exam...
AbstractOnce the set of finite graphs is equipped with an algebra structure (arising from the defini...
Two types of hypergraph rewriting grammar are considered: the well-known context-free hypergraph gra...
We give examples to show that not even c-edNCE, the most general known notion of context-free graph...
AbstractConsider a class C of hyperedge-replacement graph grammars and a numeric function on graphs ...
AbstractThe degree of a graph H is the maximum among the degrees of its nodes. A set of graphs L is ...
AbstractWe establish that a Vertex Replacement set of graphs, i.e., a set of graphs generated by a C...
AbstractWe establish that a Vertex Replacement set of graphs, i.e., a set of graphs generated by a C...
AbstractThe complexity of the bounded degree problem is analyzed for graph languages generated by eN...
AbstractThe degree of a graph H is the maximum among the degrees of its nodes. A set of graphs L is ...
AbstractThe bounded Kn,n-problem is the question whether or not a graph language of a given graph gr...
AbstractContext-free hypergraph grammars and boundary graph grammars of bounded nonterminal degree h...
AbstractThe complexity of the bounded degree problem is analyzed for graph languages generated by eN...
AbstractIn the theory of hyperedge-replacement grammars and languages, one encounters three types of...
AbstractThe bounded Kn,n-problem is the question whether or not a graph language of a given graph gr...
AbstractIt is shown that except for the vertex labelling BNLC grammars of bounded nonterminal degree...
AbstractOnce the set of finite graphs is equipped with an algebra structure (arising from the defini...
Two types of hypergraph rewriting grammar are considered: the well-known context-free hypergraph gra...
We give examples to show that not even c-edNCE, the most general known notion of context-free graph...
AbstractConsider a class C of hyperedge-replacement graph grammars and a numeric function on graphs ...
AbstractThe degree of a graph H is the maximum among the degrees of its nodes. A set of graphs L is ...
AbstractWe establish that a Vertex Replacement set of graphs, i.e., a set of graphs generated by a C...
AbstractWe establish that a Vertex Replacement set of graphs, i.e., a set of graphs generated by a C...
AbstractThe complexity of the bounded degree problem is analyzed for graph languages generated by eN...
AbstractThe degree of a graph H is the maximum among the degrees of its nodes. A set of graphs L is ...
AbstractThe bounded Kn,n-problem is the question whether or not a graph language of a given graph gr...
AbstractContext-free hypergraph grammars and boundary graph grammars of bounded nonterminal degree h...
AbstractThe complexity of the bounded degree problem is analyzed for graph languages generated by eN...
AbstractIn the theory of hyperedge-replacement grammars and languages, one encounters three types of...
AbstractThe bounded Kn,n-problem is the question whether or not a graph language of a given graph gr...
AbstractIt is shown that except for the vertex labelling BNLC grammars of bounded nonterminal degree...
AbstractOnce the set of finite graphs is equipped with an algebra structure (arising from the defini...
Two types of hypergraph rewriting grammar are considered: the well-known context-free hypergraph gra...
We give examples to show that not even c-edNCE, the most general known notion of context-free graph...