1 / 21

CS 3240: Languages and Computation

Turing Machine. CS 3240: Languages and Computation. Turing and Turing Machine. Alan Turing (1912–1954), British mathematician/engineer. In 1936, Turing introduced his abstract model for computation in his article “ On Computable Numbers, with an application to the Entscheidungsproblem ”

santa
Download Presentation

CS 3240: Languages and Computation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Turing Machine CS 3240: Languages and Computation

  2. Turing and Turing Machine Alan Turing (1912–1954), British mathematician/engineer. In 1936, Turing introduced his abstract model for computation in his article “On Computable Numbers, with an application to the Entscheidungsproblem” Near the same time, Alonzo Church published similar ideas and results. Turing machine is the ultimate model of computation.

  3. Comparison of TM and FA TM has tape you can read from and write to Read-write head can be moved in either direction Tape is infinite Accept and reject states take effect immediately

  4. Example I Language { w#w | w  {0,1}* } How can we design a Turing machine to test its membership? Zig-zag across tape to corresponding positions on either side of # to check whether they contain same symbol. If not or if no # found, reject. Cross off symbols as they are checked When all symbols to the left of # are crossed off, if anything remain to the right o #, reject; otherwise, accept. Example: test on string 011001$011001

  5. Formaldefinition of TM Definition: A Turing machine is a 7-tuple (Q,,,,q0,qaccept,qreject), where Q, , and  are finite sets and Q is the set of states,  is the input alphabet not containing the special blank symbol ~  is tape alphabet, where {~}, : QQ{L,R} is the transition function,

  6. Formal definition of a TM Definition: A Turing machine is a 7-tuple (Q,,,,q0,qaccept,qreject), where Q, , and  are finite sets and q0Q is the start state, qacceptQ is the accept state, and qrejectQ is the reject state, where qrejectqaccept

  7. More on Transition Function Q = set of states,  = tape alphabet : QQ{L,R} Given: The current internal state  Q The symbol on the current tape cell Then  tells us what the TM does: Changes to new internal state  Q Either writes new symbol  Or moves one cell left or right

  8. Computing with TM M receives input w = w1w2…wn* on leftmost n squares of tape Rest of tape is blank (all ~ symbols)‏ Head position begins at leftmost square of tape Computation follows rules of  Head never moves left of leftmost square of the tape If  says to move L, head stays put!

  9. Completing computation Continue following  transition rules until M reaches qaccept or qreject Halt at these states May never halt if machine never reaches one of these states!

  10. Turing machine notation (qi,b)=(qk,c,D), where D = L or R, is represented by the following transition b  c, D qi qk • In the special case where (qi,b)=(qk,b,D), i.e., the tape is unchanged, the right-hand side will just display the direction

  11. Revisiting Example I (q1, 0) = (q2, x, R); (q2, 0) = (q2, 0, R); (q2, 1) = (q2, 1, R); (q2, #) = (q4, #, R)‏ (q4, x)=(q4, x, R); (q4, 0)=(q6, x, L)‏ (q1, 1) = (q3, x, R)‏ (q3, 0) = (q3, 0, R); (q3, 1) = (q3, 1, R); (q3, #) = (q5, #, R)‏ (q5, x)=(q5, x, R); (q5, 1)=(q6, x, L)‏ (q6, a)=(q6, a, L) for a=0, 1, or x (q6, #)= (q7, #, L); (q7, 0)= (q7, 0, L); (q7, 1)= (q7, 1, L); (q7, x)= (q1, x, R)‏ (q1, #) = (q8, #, R); (q8, x) = (q8, x, R); (q8, ~) = (qaccept, ~, R)‏

  12. TM state diagram

  13. Example • E={#x1#x2#x3…#xn | xi{0,1}* and xi≠xj for i ≠j} • Basic idea: Compare each pair of (xi ,xj) by zig-zagging. Use special marks to replace # to indicate which pair of (xi ,xj) is being compared • Must take care special cases such as n=0, n=1, missing #, etc.

  14. Question • How to detect whether we have reached left-most cell? • Alternative 1: If leftmost cell marked by special symbol, then easy • Alternative 2: Use special property that TM “stays put” at left-most cell by replacing cell with special symbol and then recover

  15. TM configurations The configuration of a Turing machine is the current setting Current state Current tape contents Current tape location Notation uqv Current state = q Current tape contents = uv Only ~ symbols after last symbol of v Current tape location = first symbol of v

  16. Configuration C1 yields C2 C1 yields C2 if the TM can legally go from C1 to C2 in one step Assume a, b  and u, v * uaqibv yields uqkacv if (qi,b)=(qk,c,L)‏ uaqibv yields uacqkv if (qi,b)=(qk,c,R)‏

  17. Configuration C1 yields C2 Special cases if head is at beginning or end of tape uaqibv yields uqjacv if (qi,b)=(qk,c,L)‏ uaqibv yields uacqkv if (qi,b)=(qk,c,R)‏ Special case: qibv~ yields qkcv~ if (qi,b)=(qk,c,L) and tape head is at beginning of tape

  18. Specialconfigurations Start configuration q0w Halting configurations Accepting configuration: uqacceptv Rejecting configuration: uqrejectv u, v *

  19. Strings accepted by a TM A Turing machine M accepts input sequence w if a sequence of configurations C1, C2, …, Ck exist, where C1 is the start configuration of M on input w each Ci yields Ci+1 for i = 1, 2, …, k-1 Ck is an accepting configuration

  20. Language of a TM The language of M, denoted L(M), is L(M) = {w | M accepts w} A language is called Turing-recognizable if some Turing machine recognizes it

  21. Deciders A Turing machine is called a decider if every string in * is either accepted or rejected A language is called Turing-decidable if some Turing machine decides it These languages are often just called decidable

More Related