Page 1

Displaying 1 – 7 of 7

Showing per page

Weak mixing and eigenvalues for Arnoux-Rauzy sequences

Julien Cassaigne, Sébastien Ferenczi, Ali Messaoudi (2008)

Annales de l’institut Fourier

We define by simple conditions two wide subclasses of the so-called Arnoux-Rauzy systems; the elements of the first one share the property of (measure-theoretic) weak mixing, thus we generalize and improve a counter-example to the conjecture that these systems are codings of rotations; those of the second one have eigenvalues, which was known hitherto only for a very small set of examples.

Well quasi-orders, unavoidable sets, and derivation systems

Flavio D'Alessandro, Stefano Varricchio (2006)

RAIRO - Theoretical Informatics and Applications

Let I be a finite set of words and I * be the derivation relation generated by the set of productions {ε → u | u ∈ I}. Let L I ϵ be the set of words u such that ϵ I * u . We prove that the set I is unavoidable if and only if the relation I * is a well quasi-order on the set L I ϵ . This result generalizes a theorem of [Ehrenfeucht et al.,Theor. Comput. Sci.27 (1983) 311–332]. Further generalizations are investigated.

Words over an ordered alphabet and suffix permutations

Jean-Pierre Duval, Arnaud Lefebvre (2002)

RAIRO - Theoretical Informatics and Applications - Informatique Théorique et Applications

Given an ordered alphabet and a permutation, according to the lexicographic order, on the set of suffixes of a word w , we present in this article a linear time and space method to determine whether a word w ' has the same permutation on its suffixes. Using this method, we are then also able to build the class of all the words having the same permutation on their suffixes, first of all the smallest one. Finally, we note that this work can lead to a method for generating a Lyndon word randomly in linear...

Words over an ordered alphabet and suffix permutations

Jean-Pierre Duval, Arnaud Lefebvre (2010)

RAIRO - Theoretical Informatics and Applications

Given an ordered alphabet and a permutation, according to the lexicographic order, on the set of suffixes of a word w, we present in this article a linear time and space method to determine whether a word w' has the same permutation on its suffixes. Using this method, we are then also able to build the class of all the words having the same permutation on their suffixes, first of all the smallest one. Finally, we note that this work can lead to a method for generating a Lyndon word...

Currently displaying 1 – 7 of 7

Page 1