Advanced Topics in Term Rewriting (e-bog) af Ohlebusch, Enno
Ohlebusch, Enno (forfatter)

Advanced Topics in Term Rewriting e-bog

436,85 DKK (inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
Term rewriting techniques are applicable in various fields of computer sci- ence: in software engineering (e.g., equationally specified abstract data types), in programming languages (e.g., functional-logic programming), in computer algebra (e.g., symbolic computations, Grabner bases), in pro- gram verification (e.g., automatically proving termination of programs), in automated theorem proving ...
E-bog 436,85 DKK
Forfattere Ohlebusch, Enno (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 17 april 2013
Genrer Computer programming / software engineering
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781475736618
Term rewriting techniques are applicable in various fields of computer sci- ence: in software engineering (e.g., equationally specified abstract data types), in programming languages (e.g., functional-logic programming), in computer algebra (e.g., symbolic computations, Grabner bases), in pro- gram verification (e.g., automatically proving termination of programs), in automated theorem proving (e.g., equational unification), and in algebra (e.g., Boolean algebra, group theory). In other words, term rewriting has applications in practical computer science, theoretical computer science, and mathematics. Roughly speaking, term rewriting techniques can suc- cessfully be applied in areas that demand efficient methods for reasoning with equations. One of the major problems one encounters in the theory of term rewriting is the characterization of classes of rewrite systems that have a desirable property like confluence or termination. If a term rewriting system is conflu- ent, then the normal form of a given term is unique. A terminating rewrite system does not permit infinite computations, that is, every computation starting from a term must end in a normal form. Therefore, in a system that is both terminating and confluent every computation leads to a result that is unique, regardless of the order in which the rewrite rules are applied. This book provides a comprehensive study of termination and confluence as well as related properties.