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  2. Terminal and nonterminal symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_and_nonterminal...

    Applying the rules recursively to a source string of symbols will usually terminate in a final output string consisting only of terminal symbols. Consider a grammar defined by two rules. In this grammar, the symbol Б is a terminal symbol and Ψ is both a non-terminal symbol and the start symbol. The production rules for creating strings are as ...

  3. Metasyntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metasyntax

    Metalanguages have their own metasyntax each composed of terminal symbols, nonterminal symbols, and metasymbols. A terminal symbol, such as a word or a token, is a stand-alone structure in a language being defined. A nonterminal symbol represents a syntactic category, which defines one or more valid phrasal or sentence structure consisted of an ...

  4. Context-free grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Context-free_grammar

    Nonterminal symbols are blue and terminal symbols are red. In formal language theory, a context-free grammar (CFG) is a formal grammar whose production rules can be applied to a nonterminal symbol regardless of its context. In particular, in a context-free grammar, each production rule is of the form

  5. Formal grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formal_grammar

    It also distinguishes a special nonterminal symbol, called the start symbol. The language generated by the grammar is defined to be the set of all strings without any nonterminal symbols that can be generated from the string consisting of a single start symbol by (possibly repeated) application of its rules in whatever way possible.

  6. Syntax (programming languages) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntax_(programming_languages)

    Parse tree of Python code with inset tokenization. The syntax of textual programming languages is usually defined using a combination of regular expressions (for lexical structure) and Backus–Naur form (a metalanguage for grammatical structure) to inductively specify syntactic categories (nonterminal) and terminal symbols. [7]

  7. Context-sensitive grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Context-sensitive_grammar

    Let us notate a formal grammar as = (,,,), with a set of nonterminal symbols, a set of terminal symbols, a set of production rules, and the start symbol.. A string () directly yields, or directly derives to, a string (), denoted as , if v can be obtained from u by an application of some production rule in P, that is, if = and =, where () is a production rule, and , is the unaffected left and ...

  8. Probabilistic context-free grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probabilistic_context-free...

    A probabilistic context free grammar consists of terminal and nonterminal variables. Each feature to be modeled has a production rule that is assigned a probability estimated from a training set of RNA structures. Production rules are recursively applied until only terminal residues are left.

  9. Chomsky normal form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chomsky_normal_form

    where A, B, and C are nonterminal symbols, the letter a is a terminal symbol (a symbol that represents a constant value), S is the start symbol, and ε denotes the empty string. Also, neither B nor C may be the start symbol, and the third production rule can only appear if ε is in L(G), the language produced by the context-free grammar G.