| author | Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de> | 
| Wed, 25 Sep 2019 23:56:36 +0100 | |
| changeset 631 | 60608e227478 | 
| parent 550 | a62357075346 | 
| child 639 | d14dac77a866 | 
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
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\usepackage{../style}
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\begin{document}
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\section*{Homework 1}
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\HEADER  | 
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\begin{enumerate}
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\item {\bf (Optional)} If you want to run the code presented
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in the lectures, install the Scala programming language  | 
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available (for free) from  | 
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\begin{center}
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\url{http://www.scala-lang.org}
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\end{center}
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If you want to follow the code I present during the  | 
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lectures, read the handout about Scala.  | 
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\item {\bf (Optional)} Have a look at the crawler programs.
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Can you find a usage for them in your daily programming  | 
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life? Can you improve them? For example in cases there  | 
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are links that appear on different recursion levels, the  | 
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crawlers visit such web-pages several times. Can this be  | 
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avoided? Also, the crawlers flag as problematic any page  | 
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that gives an error, but probably only 404 Not Found  | 
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errors should be flagged. Can you change that?)  | 
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\item Read the handout of the first lecture and the handout  | 
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about notation. Make sure you understand the concepts of  | 
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strings and languages. In the context of the CFL-course,  | 
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      what is meant by the term \emph{language}?
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\item Give the definition for regular expressions---this is an  | 
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inductive datatype. What is the  | 
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meaning of a regular expression? (Hint: The meaning is  | 
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defined recursively.)  | 
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\item Assume the concatenation operation of two strings is  | 
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written as $s_1 @ s_2$. Define the operation of  | 
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      \emph{concatenating} two sets of strings. This operation
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is also written as $\_ \,@\, \_$. According to  | 
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      this definition, what is $A \,@\, \{\}$ equal to?
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Is in general $A\,@\,B$ equal to $B\,@\,A$?  | 
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\item Assume a set $A$ contains 4 strings and a set $B$  | 
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contains 7 strings. None of the strings is the empty  | 
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string. How many strings are in $A \,@\, B$?  | 
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\item How is the power of a language defined? (Hint: There are two  | 
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  rules, one for $\_^0$ and one for $\_^{n+1}$.)
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\item Let $A = \{[a], [b], [c], [d]\}$. (1) How many strings
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are in $A^4$? (2) Consider also the case of $A^4$ where one of  | 
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the strings in $A$ is the empty string, for example $A =  | 
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      \{[a], [b], [c], []\}$.
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\item (1) How many basic regular expressions are there to match  | 
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the string $abcd$? (2) How many if they cannot include  | 
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$\ONE$ and $\ZERO$? (3) How many if they are also not  | 
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allowed to contain stars? (4) How many if they are also  | 
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not allowed to contain $\_ + \_$?  | 
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\item When are two regular expressions equivalent? Can you  | 
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think of instances where two regular expressions match  | 
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the same strings, but it is not so obvious that they do?  | 
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For example $a + b$ and $b + a$ do not count\ldots they  | 
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obviously match the same strings, namely $[a]$ and  | 
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$[b]$.  | 
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\item What is meant by the notions \emph{evil regular expressions}
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      and by \emph{catastrophic backtracking}? 
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\item \POSTSCRIPT  | 
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\end{enumerate}
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\end{document}
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