Jump to content

Overlap (term rewriting)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

In mathematics, computer science and logic, overlap, as a property of the reduction rules in term rewriting system, describes a situation where a number of different reduction rules specify potentially contradictory ways of reducing a reducible expression, also known as a redex, within a term.[1]

More precisely, if a number of different reduction rules share function symbols on the left-hand side, overlap can occur. Often we do not consider trivial overlap with a redex and itself.

Examples

Consider the term rewriting system defined by the following reduction rules:

The term can be reduced via ρ1 to yield y, but it can also be reduced via ρ2 to yield . Note how the redex is contained in the redex . The result of reducing different redexes is described in a what is known as a critical pair; the critical pair arising out of this term rewriting system is .

Overlap may occur with fewer than two reduction rules.

Consider the term rewriting system defined by the following reduction rule:

The term has overlapping redexes, which can be either applied to the innermost occurrence or to the outermost occurrence of the term.

References

  1. ^ Marc Bezem; Jan Willem Klop; Roel de Vrijer (2003). Term Rewriting Systems. Cambridge Tracts in Theoretical Computer Science. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 48. ISBN 0-521-39115-6.