<p>Computer science seeks to provide a scientific basis for the study of inform aΒ tion processing, the solution of problems by algorithms, and the design and programming of computers. The last forty years have seen increasing sophistication in the science, in the microelectronics which has made mac
A basis for theoretical computer science
β Scribed by Kfoury, A. J.; Arbib, Michael A.; Moll, Robert N
- Publisher
- Springer New York
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 228
- Series
- Texts and Monographs in Computer Science The AKM Series in Theoretical Computer Science
- Edition
- Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1981
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Computer science seeks to provide a scientific basis for the study of inform aΒ tion processing, the solution of problems by algorithms, and the design and programming of computers. The last forty years have seen increasing sophistication in the science, in the microelectronics which has made machines of staggering complexity economically feasible, in the advances in programming methodology which allow immense programs to be designed with increasing speed and reduced error, and in the development of mathematical techniques to allow the rigorous specification of program, process, and machine. The present volume is one of a series, The AKM Series in Theoretical Computer Science, designed to make key matheΒ matical developments in computer science readily accessible to underΒ graduate and beginning graduate students. Specifically, this volume takes readers with little or no mathematical background beyond high school algebra, and gives them a taste of a number of topics in theoretical computer science while laying the mathematical foundation for the later, more detailed, study of such topics as formal language theory, computability theory, programming language semantics, and the study of program verification and correctness. Chapter 1 introduces the basic concepts of set theory, with special emphasis on functions and relations, using a simple algorithm to provide motivation. Chapter 2 presents the notion of inductive proof and gives the reader a good grasp on one of the most important notions of computer science: the recursive definition of functions and data structures
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-viii
Sets, Maps, and Relations....Pages 1-30
Induction, Strings, and Languages....Pages 31-72
Counting, Recurrences, and Trees....Pages 73-110
Switching Circuits, Proofs, and Logic....Pages 111-144
Binary Relations, Lattices, and Infinity....Pages 145-174
Graphs, Matrices, and Machines....Pages 175-208
Back Matter....Pages 209-220
β¦ Subjects
Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages; Computation by Abstract Devices; Combinatorics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<span>Using basic category theory, this Element describes all the central concepts and proves the main theorems of theoretical computer science. Category theory, which works with functions, processes, and structures, is uniquely qualified to present the fundamental results of theoretical computer sc
<p>R.E. Miller: Parallel program schemata.- D.E. Muller: Theory of automata.- R. Karp: Computational complexity of combinatorial and graph-theoretic problems.</p>
<p>R.E. Miller: Parallel program schemata.- D.E. Muller: Theory of automata.- R. Karp: Computational complexity of combinatorial and graph-theoretic problems.</p>