Deterministic pushdown automaton
In automata theory, a deterministic pushdown automaton is a variation of the pushdown automaton. The class of deterministic pushdown automata accepts the deterministic context-free languages, a proper subset of context-free languages.
Machine transitions are based on the current state and input symbol, and also the current topmost symbol of the stack. Symbols lower in the stack are not visible and have no immediate effect. Machine actions include pushing, popping, or replacing the stack top. A deterministic pushdown automaton has at most one legal transition for the same combination of input symbol, state, and top stack symbol. This is where it differs from the nondeterministic pushdown automaton.
Formal definition
A PDA can be defined as a 7-tuple:where
- is a finite set of states
- is a finite set of input symbols
- is a finite set of stack symbols
- is the start state
- is the starting stack symbol
- , where is the set of accepting, or final, states
- is a transition function, where
- For any, the set has at most one element.
- For any, if, then for every
The usual acceptance criterion is final state, and it is this acceptance criterion which is used to define the deterministic context-free languages.
Languages recognized
If is a language accepted by a PDA, it can also be accepted by a DPDA if and only if there is a single computation from the initial configuration until an accepting one for all strings belonging to. If can be accepted by a PDA it is a context free language and if it can be accepted by a DPDA it is a deterministic context-free language.Not all context-free languages are deterministic. This makes the DPDA a strictly weaker device than the PDA. For example, the language Lp of even-length palindromes on the alphabet of 0 and 1 has the context-free grammar S → 0S0 | 1S1 | ε. If a DPDA for this language exists, and it sees a string 0n, it must use its stack to memorize the length n, in order to be able to distinguish its possible continuations and Hence, after reading comparing the post-"11" length to the pre-"11" length will make the stack empty again. For this reason, the strings and cannot be distinguished.
Restricting the DPDA to a single state reduces the class of languages accepted to the LL(1) languages, which is a proper subclass of the DCFL. In the case of a PDA, this restriction has no effect on the class of languages accepted.
Properties
Closure
Closure properties of deterministic context-free languages are drastically different from the context-free languages. As an example they are closed under complementation, but not closed under union. To prove that the complement of a language accepted by a deterministic PDA is also accepted by a deterministic PDA is tricky because one has to avoid infinite computations and correctly handle transitions that manipulate the stack without reading input symbols.As a consequence of the complementation it is decidable whether a deterministic PDA accepts all words over its input alphabet, by testing its complement for emptiness. This is not possible for context-free grammars.