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Necessary and sufficient condition for a formal language to be regular From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the theory of formal languages, the Myhill–Nerode theorem provides a necessary and sufficient condition for a language to be regular. The theorem is named for John Myhill and Anil Nerode, who proved it at the University of Chicago in 1957 (Nerode & Sauer 1957, p. ii).
Given a language , and a pair of strings and , define a distinguishing extension to be a string such that exactly one of the two strings and belongs to . Define a relation on strings as if there is no distinguishing extension for and . It is easy to show that is an equivalence relation on strings, and thus it divides the set of all strings into equivalence classes.
The Myhill–Nerode theorem states that a language is regular if and only if has a finite number of equivalence classes, and moreover, that this number is equal to the number of states in the minimal deterministic finite automaton (DFA) accepting . Furthermore, every minimal DFA for the language is isomorphic to the canonical one (Hopcroft & Ullman 1979).
Myhill, Nerode (1957) — (1) is regular if and only if has a finite number of equivalence classes.
(2) This number is equal to the number of states in the minimal deterministic finite automaton (DFA) accepting .
(3) Any minimal DFA acceptor for the language is isomorphic to the following one:
Generally, for any language, the constructed automaton is a state automaton acceptor. However, it does not necessarily have finitely many states. The Myhill–Nerode theorem shows that finiteness is necessary and sufficient for language regularity.
Some authors refer to the relation as Nerode congruence,[1][2] in honor of Anil Nerode.
(1) If is regular. construct a minimal DFA to accept it. Clearly, if end up in the same state after running through the DFA, then , thus the number of equivalence classes of is at most the number of DFA states, which must be finite.
Conversely, if has a finite number of equivalence classes, then the state automaton constructed in the theorem is a DFA acceptor, thus the language is regular.
(2) By the construction in (1).
(3) Given a minimal DFA acceptor , we construct an isomorphism to the canonical one.
Construct the following equivalence relation: if and only if end up on the same state when running through .
Since is an acceptor, if then . Thus each equivalence class is a union of one or more equivalence classes of . Further, since is minimal, the number of states of is equal to the number of equivalence classes of by part (2). Thus .
Now this gives us a bijection between states of and the states of the canonical acceptor. It is clear that this bijection also preserves the transition rules, thus it is an isomorphism of DFA.
The Myhill–Nerode theorem may be used to show that a language is regular by proving that the number of equivalence classes of is finite. This may be done by an exhaustive case analysis in which, beginning from the empty string, distinguishing extensions are used to find additional equivalence classes until no more can be found. For example, the language consisting of binary representations of numbers that can be divided by 3 is regular. Given the empty string, (or ), , and are distinguishing extensions resulting in the three classes (corresponding to numbers that give remainders 0, 1 and 2 when divided by 3), but after this step there is no distinguishing extension anymore. The minimal automaton accepting our language would have three states corresponding to these three equivalence classes.
Another immediate corollary of the theorem is that if for a language the relation has infinitely many equivalence classes, it is not regular. It is this corollary that is frequently used to prove that a language is not regular.
The Myhill–Nerode theorem can be generalized to tree automata.[3]
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