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Name: Anonymous 2009-01-09 2:25

So I started my foundations of computer science course today (finite state machines, Turing machines, computability, etc), and the professor handed out a bunch of stuff.  Among this was a sample test from before, which had the following question:

Give an estimate of the maximum number of different four-state non-deterministic finite state accepters that can be on a three letter alphabet.  Explain your answer.

Since I've already looked at some of the basics before, I was able to answer this, and then give a general solution for an alphabet of size n and an s-state machine.  I then realized that given n and s, you could determine the number of bits necessary to represent the entire design of a non-deterministic finite state accepter.  So then I had this idea:  design a machine that takes in a string containing first 2 numbers (s and n) and then a series of 0's and 1's representing the nfsa to be simulated.  The machine would be able to go back and forth and have some kind of auxiliary memory.

Discuss this /prog/, or have you only read SICP and nothing more?

Name: =+=*=F=R=O=Z=E=N==V=O=I=D=*=+= !FrOzEn2BUo 2009-01-10 11:08

>>12
They buy these useless(and even superfluous copies like >>10 has) SICP books due spam and their cultish promotion.
Have you noticed how much "Read Your SICP" meme is benefiting its target commercially? The books aren't free at all.
They could share all the information for free, by using their SICP wiki
but they prefer the commercial solution.

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