1. Review of formal languages and automata theory; 2. Combinatorics on words; 3. Finite automata and regular languages; 4. Context-free grammars and languages; 5. Parsing and recognition; 6. Turing machines; 7. Other language classes.
A textbook for a graduate course on formal languages and automata theory, building on prior knowledge of theoretical computer models.
Jeffrey Shallit is Professor of the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo. He is the author of Algorithmic Number Theory (co-authored with Eric Bach) and Automatic Sequences: Theory, Applications, Generalizations (co-authored with Jean-Paul Allouche). He has published approximately 90 articles on number theory, algebra, automata theory, complexity theory, and the history of mathematics and computing.
'First courses in automata theory are now essential for both mathematicians and computer scientists, and there are some fine books from which one can learn the basics. But the question is: what next? … There is … a niche for second courses on automata theory that point the way to future study in the field without bludgeoning the reader under the weight of pages. At a shade under 250 pages Jeffrey Shallit's book is just such a second course. … The writing is crisp and no nonsense … Shallit has written a mathematically rigorous book that has avoided the pitfall of being unduly fussy.' SIAM Review
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