Reduction Strategies for Left-Linear Term Rewriting Systems

Huet and Lévy (1979) showed that needed reduction is a normalizing strategy for orthogonal (i.e., left-linear and non-overlapping) term rewriting systems. In order to obtain a decidable needed reduction strategy, they proposed the notion of strongly sequential approximation. Extending their seminal...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inProcesses, Terms and Cycles: Steps on the Road to Infinity pp. 198 - 223
Main Author Toyama, Yoshihito
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2005
SeriesLecture Notes in Computer Science
Subjects
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ISBN354030911X
9783540309116
ISSN0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI10.1007/11601548_13

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Summary:Huet and Lévy (1979) showed that needed reduction is a normalizing strategy for orthogonal (i.e., left-linear and non-overlapping) term rewriting systems. In order to obtain a decidable needed reduction strategy, they proposed the notion of strongly sequential approximation. Extending their seminal work, several better decidable approximations of left-linear term rewriting systems, for example, NV approximation, shallow approximation, growing approximation, etc., have been investigated in the literature. In all of these works, orthogonality is required to guarantee approximated decidable needed reductions are actually normalizing strategies. This paper extends these decidable normalizing strategies to left-linear overlapping term rewriting systems. The key idea is the balanced weak Church-Rosser property. We prove that approximated external reduction is a computable normalizing strategy for the class of left-linear term rewriting systems in which every critical pair can be joined with root balanced reductions. This class includes all weakly orthogonal left-normal systems, for example, combinatory logic CL with the overlapping rules pred ·(succ ·x) →x and succ ·(pred ·x) →x, for which leftmost-outermost reduction is a computable normalizing strategy.
Bibliography:A part of this paper was published as preliminary version in [24].
ISBN:354030911X
9783540309116
ISSN:0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI:10.1007/11601548_13