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Bounded Queries in Recursion Theory (Hardcover, 1999 ed.): William Levine, Georgia Martin Bounded Queries in Recursion Theory (Hardcover, 1999 ed.)
William Levine, Georgia Martin
R3,004 Discovery Miles 30 040 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

One of the major concerns of theoretical computer science is the classifi cation of problems in terms of how hard they are. The natural measure of difficulty of a function is the amount of time needed to compute it (as a function of the length of the input). Other resources, such as space, have also been considered. In recursion theory, by contrast, a function is considered to be easy to compute if there exists some algorithm that computes it. We wish to classify functions that are hard, i.e., not computable, in a quantitative way. We cannot use time or space, since the functions are not even computable. We cannot use Turing degree, since this notion is not quantitative. Hence we need a new notion of complexity-much like time or spac that is quantitative and yet in some way captures the level of difficulty (such as the Turing degree) of a function."

Bounded Queries in Recursion Theory (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1999): William Levine, Georgia Martin Bounded Queries in Recursion Theory (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1999)
William Levine, Georgia Martin
R2,811 Discovery Miles 28 110 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

One of the major concerns of theoretical computer science is the classifi cation of problems in terms of how hard they are. The natural measure of difficulty of a function is the amount of time needed to compute it (as a function of the length of the input). Other resources, such as space, have also been considered. In recursion theory, by contrast, a function is considered to be easy to compute if there exists some algorithm that computes it. We wish to classify functions that are hard, i.e., not computable, in a quantitative way. We cannot use time or space, since the functions are not even computable. We cannot use Turing degree, since this notion is not quantitative. Hence we need a new notion of complexity-much like time or spac that is quantitative and yet in some way captures the level of difficulty (such as the Turing degree) of a function."

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