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ATVA
2010
Springer

What's Decidable about Sequences?

14 years 1 months ago
What's Decidable about Sequences?
Abstract. We present a first-order theory of (finite) sequences with integer elements, Presburger arithmetic, and regularity constraints, which can model significant properties of data structures such as lists and queues. We give a decision procedure for the quantifier-free fragment, based on an encoding into the first-order theory of concatenation; the procedure has PSPACE complexity. The quantifier-free fragment of the theory of sequences can express properties such as sortedness and injectivity, as well as Boolean combinations of periodic and arithmetic facts relating the elements of the sequence and their positions (e.g., "for all even i's, the element at position i has value i + 3 or 2i"). The resulting expressive power is orthogonal to that of the most expressive decidable logics for arrays. Some examples demonstrate that the fragment is also suitable to reason about sequence-manipulating programs within the standard framework of axiomatic semantics.
Carlo A. Furia
Added 08 Nov 2010
Updated 08 Nov 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where ATVA
Authors Carlo A. Furia
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