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2010

Adaptive star grammars and their languages

13 years 9 months ago
Adaptive star grammars and their languages
Motivated by applications that require mechanisms for describing the structure of object-oriented programs, adaptive star grammars are introduced, and their fundamental properties are studied. In adaptive star grammars, rules are actually schemata which, via the cloning of so-called multiple nodes, may adapt to potentially infinitely many contexts when they are applied. This mechanism makes adaptive star grammars more powerful than context-free graph grammars. Nevertheless, they turn out to be restricted enough to share some of the basic characteristics of context-free devices. In particular, the underlying substitution operator enjoys associativity and confluence properties quite similar to those of context-free graph grammars, and the membership problem for adaptive star grammars is decidable.
Frank Drewes, Berthold Hoffmann, Dirk Janssens, Ma
Added 31 Jan 2011
Updated 31 Jan 2011
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where TCS
Authors Frank Drewes, Berthold Hoffmann, Dirk Janssens, Mark Minas
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