Here we go over the concept of a DFA computation, which can be a bit daunting. The idea is to record the states of the DFA one at a time as the string is being read. Instead of thinking about a set of states visited (which cannot distinguish what the string is), the sequence of states can actually tell us quite a bit about what the DFA did on the input string. I give some examples of computations on a given DFA, as well as some definitions that relate to strings.
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▶ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS◀
1. If the DFA has n states, what if the input string has length n?
2. Can you determine a necessary and sufficient condition for a DFA to accept an infinite number of strings?
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ryan.e.dougherty@icloud.com
▶ABOUT ME◀
I am a professor of Computer Science, and am passionate about CS theory. I have taught over 12 courses at Arizona State University, as well as Colgate University, including several sections of undergraduate theory.
▶ABOUT THIS CHANNEL◀
The theory of computation is perhaps the fundamental theory of computer science. It sets out to define, mathematically, what exactly computation is, what is feasible to solve using a computer, and also what is not possible to solve using a computer. The main objective is to define a computer mathematically, without the reliance on real-world computers, hardware or software, or the plethora of programming languages we have in use today. The notion of a Turing machine serves this purpose and defines what we believe is the crux of all computable functions.
This channel is also about weaker forms of computation, concentrating on two classes: regular languages and context-free languages. These two models help understand what we can do with restricted means of computation, and offer a rich theory using which you can hone your mathematical skills in reasoning with simple machines and the languages they define.
However, they are not simply there as a weak form of computation--the most attractive aspect of them is that problems formulated on them are tractable, i.e. we can build efficient algorithms to reason with objects such as finite automata, context-free grammars and pushdown automata. For example, we can model a piece of hardware (a circuit) as a finite-state system and solve whether the circuit satisfies a property (like whether it performs addition of 16-bit registers correctly). We can model the syntax of a programming language using a grammar, and build algorithms that check if a string parses according to this grammar.
On the other hand, most problems that ask properties about Turing machines
are undecidable. This KZitem channel will help you see and prove that several tasks involving Turing machines are unsolvable---i.e., no computer, no software, can solve it. For example, you will see that there is no software that can check whether a
C program will halt on a particular input. To prove something is possible is, of course, challenging. But to show something is impossible is rare in computer
science, and very humbling.
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