We present a new method to infer upper bounds on the innermost runtime complexity of term rewrite systems (TRSs), which benefits from recent advances on complexity analysis of integer transition systems (ITSs). To this end, we develop a transformation from TRSs to a generalized notion of ITSs with (possibly non-tail) recursion. To analyze their complexity, we introduce a modular technique which allows us to use existing tools for standard ITSs in order to infer complexity bounds for our generalized ITSs. The key idea of our technique is a summarization method that allows us to analyze components of the transition system independently. We implemented our contributions in the tool AProVE, and our experiments show that one can now infer bounds...
Abstract. We revisit known transformations from object-oriented byte-code programs to rewrite system...
. For a string rewriting system, it is known that termination by a simplification ordering implies m...
International audienceIn this workshop paper, we revisit the notion of parallel-innermost term rewri...
We present the first approach to deduce lower bounds for innermost runtime complexity of term rewrit...
Besides functional correctness, one of the most important prerequisites for the success of a piece o...
We present the first approach to deduce lower bounds for innermost runtime complexity of term rewrit...
We revisit parallel-innermost term rewriting as a model of parallel computation on inductive data st...
Derivational complexity of term rewriting considers the length of the longest rewrite sequence for a...
We recall the recent approach by (Zankl and Korp, 2010) to prove upper bounds on the (derivational) ...
In this paper, we present a variant of the dependency pair method for analysing runtime complexities...
This thesis is concerned with investigations into the "complexity of term rewriting systems". Moreov...
In this paper we introduce a modular framework which allows to infer (feasible) upper bounds on the ...
We propose a notion of complexity for oriented conditional term rewritesystems satisfying certain re...
For term rewrite systems (TRSs), a huge number of automated termination analysis tech-niques have be...
We show how the complexity of higher-order functional programs can be analysed automatically by appl...
Abstract. We revisit known transformations from object-oriented byte-code programs to rewrite system...
. For a string rewriting system, it is known that termination by a simplification ordering implies m...
International audienceIn this workshop paper, we revisit the notion of parallel-innermost term rewri...
We present the first approach to deduce lower bounds for innermost runtime complexity of term rewrit...
Besides functional correctness, one of the most important prerequisites for the success of a piece o...
We present the first approach to deduce lower bounds for innermost runtime complexity of term rewrit...
We revisit parallel-innermost term rewriting as a model of parallel computation on inductive data st...
Derivational complexity of term rewriting considers the length of the longest rewrite sequence for a...
We recall the recent approach by (Zankl and Korp, 2010) to prove upper bounds on the (derivational) ...
In this paper, we present a variant of the dependency pair method for analysing runtime complexities...
This thesis is concerned with investigations into the "complexity of term rewriting systems". Moreov...
In this paper we introduce a modular framework which allows to infer (feasible) upper bounds on the ...
We propose a notion of complexity for oriented conditional term rewritesystems satisfying certain re...
For term rewrite systems (TRSs), a huge number of automated termination analysis tech-niques have be...
We show how the complexity of higher-order functional programs can be analysed automatically by appl...
Abstract. We revisit known transformations from object-oriented byte-code programs to rewrite system...
. For a string rewriting system, it is known that termination by a simplification ordering implies m...
International audienceIn this workshop paper, we revisit the notion of parallel-innermost term rewri...