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Shuji Jimbo

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3 papers
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3

TCS Journal 2004 Journal Article

Equivalence of regular binoid expressions and regular expressions denoting binoid languages over free binoids

  • Kosaburo Hashiguchi
  • Naoto Sakakibara
  • Shuji Jimbo

A free binoid Σ∗(∘, •) over a finite alphabet Σ is a free algebra generated by Σ with two independent associative operators, ∘ and •. It has also the same identity λ to both operations. Any element of Σ∗(∘, •) is denoted uniquely by a sequence of symbols from the extended alphabet E(Σ)=Σ∪{∘, •, (,)}, and any subset of a free binoid is called a binoid language. The set of regular binoid expressions are introduced so that all languages denoted by regular binoid expressions are those which contain finite binoid languages, and closed under five operations, ∪, ∘-concatenation, •-concatenation, ∘-closure and •-closure. It is shown that for any regular (monoid) expression denoting a binoid language R, there exists a regular binoid expression denoting R. This result together with the main result in a previous paper implies that the class of binoid languages denoted by binoid regular expressions is the same as the class of binoid languages denoted by regular expressions over free binoids.

TCS Journal 2003 Journal Article

Regular binoid expressions and regular binoid languages

  • Kosaburo Hashiguchi
  • Yoshito Wada
  • Shuji Jimbo

A bisemigroup consists of a set of elements and two associative operations. A bimonoid is a bisemigroup which has an identity to each associative operation. A binoid is a bimonoid which has the same identity to the two associative operations. In a previous paper, we introduced these three notions, and studied formal languages over free binoids (which are subsets of a free binoid where any element of a free binoid is denoted by its standard form which is a sequence of symbols). In this paper, we introduce a class of expressions called regular binoid expressions and show that any binoid language denoted by a regular binoid expression can be regarded to be a set of the standard forms of elements of a free binoid which can be recognized as a regular (monoid) language.