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% Chapter Template
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\chapter{A Better Bound and Other Extensions} % Main chapter title
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\label{Chapter5} %In Chapter 5\ref{Chapter5} we discuss stronger simplifications to improve the finite bound
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%in Chapter 4 to a polynomial one, and demonstrate how one can extend the
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%algorithm to include constructs such as bounded repetitions and negations.
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%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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% SECTION strongsimp
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%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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\section{A Stronger Version of Simplification Inspired by Antimirov}
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%TODO: search for isabelle proofs of algorithms that check equivalence
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%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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% SECTION 1
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%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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\section{Adding Support for the Negation Construct, and its Correctness Proof}
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We now add support for the negation regular expression:
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\[ r ::= \ZERO \mid \ONE
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\mid c
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\mid r_1 \cdot r_2
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\mid r_1 + r_2
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\mid r^*
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\mid \sim r
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\]
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The $\textit{nullable}$ function's clause for it would be
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\[
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\textit{nullable}(~r) = \neg \nullable(r)
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\]
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The derivative would be
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\[
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~r \backslash c = ~ (r \backslash c)
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\]
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The most tricky part of lexing for the $~r$ regex
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is creating a value for it.
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For other regular expressions, the value aligns with the
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structure of the regex:
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\[
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\vdash \Seq(\Char(a), \Char(b)) : a \cdot b
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\]
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But for the $~r$ regex, $s$ is a member of it if and only if
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$s$ does not belong to $L(r)$.
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That means when there
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is a match for the not regex, it is not possible to generate how the string $s$ matched
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with $r$.
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What we can do is preserve the information of how $s$ was not matched by $r$,
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and there are a number of options to do this.
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We could give a partial value when there is a partial match for the regex inside
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the $\mathbf{not}$ construct.
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For example, the string $ab$ is not in the language of $(a\cdot b) \cdot c$,
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A value for it could be
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\[
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\vdash \textit{Not}(\Seq(\Char(a), \Char(b))) : ~((a \cdot b ) \cdot c)
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\]
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The above example demonstrates what value to construct
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when the string $s$ is at most a real prefix
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of the strings in $L(r)$. When $s$ instead is not a prefix of any strings
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in $L(r)$, it becomes unclear what to return as a value inside the $\textit{Not}$
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constructor.
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Another option would be to either store the string $s$ that resulted in
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a mis-match for $r$ or a dummy value as a placeholder:
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\[
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\vdash \textit{Not}(abcd) : ~(a^*)
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\]
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or
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\[
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\vdash \textit{Not}(\textit{Dummy}) : ~(a^*)
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\]
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We choose to implement this as it is most straightforward:
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\[
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\mkeps(~(r)) = \textit{if}(\nullable(r)) \; \textit{Error} \; \textit{else} \; \textit{Not}(\textit{Dummy})
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\]
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%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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% SECTION 2
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%----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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\section{Bounded Repetitions}
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