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| | ===6.7. Basic Notions of Formal Language Theory=== | | ===6.7. Basic Notions of Formal Language Theory=== |
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| − | <pre>
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| | This section collects the material on formal language theory that is needed for the rest of this work. | | This section collects the material on formal language theory that is needed for the rest of this work. |
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| | + | <pre> |
| | A "formal language" is a countable set of "expressions", each of which is a finite sequence of elements taken from a finite set of "symbols". The primitive symbols that are used to generate the expressions of a formal language are collectively called its "alphabet" or its "lexicon", depending on whether the expressions of the language are intuitively regarded as "words" or as "sentences", respectively. | | A "formal language" is a countable set of "expressions", each of which is a finite sequence of elements taken from a finite set of "symbols". The primitive symbols that are used to generate the expressions of a formal language are collectively called its "alphabet" or its "lexicon", depending on whether the expressions of the language are intuitively regarded as "words" or as "sentences", respectively. |
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