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  2. Recursively enumerable language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Recursively_enumerable_language

    In mathematics, logic and computer science, a formal language is called recursively enumerable (also recognizable, partially decidable, semidecidable, Turing-acceptable or Turing-recognizable) if it is a recursively enumerable subset in the set of all possible words over the alphabet of the language, i.e., if there exists a Turing machine which will enumerate all valid strings of the language.

  3. Computably enumerable set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computably_enumerable_set

    The definition of a computably enumerable set as the domain of a partial function, rather than the range of a total computable function, is common in contemporary texts. This choice is motivated by the fact that in generalized recursion theories, such as α-recursion theory, the definition corresponding to domains has been found to be more ...

  4. Recursive language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_language

    A recursive language is a formal language for which there exists a Turing machine that, when presented with any finite input string, halts and accepts if the string is in the language, and halts and rejects otherwise. The Turing machine always halts: it is known as a decider and is said to decide the recursive language. By the second definition ...

  5. RE (complexity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RE_(complexity)

    The set of recursive languages is a subset of both RE and co-RE. [3] In fact, it is the intersection of those two classes, because we can decide any problem for which there exists a recogniser and also a co-recogniser by simply interleaving them until one obtains a result.

  6. Computable set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computable_set

    A more general class of sets than the computable ones consists of the computably enumerable (c.e.) sets, also called semidecidable sets. For these sets, it is only required that there is an algorithm that correctly decides when a number is in the set; the algorithm may give no answer (but not the wrong answer) for numbers not in the set.

  7. Computable function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computable_function

    A language is computably enumerable (synonyms: recursively enumerable, semidecidable) if there is a computable function f such that f(w) is defined if and only if the word w is in the language. The term enumerable has the same etymology as in computably enumerable sets of natural numbers.

  8. Computability theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computability_theory

    Thus the halting problem is an example of a computably enumerable (c.e.) set, which is a set that can be enumerated by a Turing machine (other terms for computably enumerable include recursively enumerable and semidecidable). Equivalently, a set is c.e. if and only if it is the range of some computable function.

  9. Enumerator (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enumerator_(computer_science)

    An Enumerable Language is Turing Recognizable. It's very easy to construct a Turing Machine that recognizes the enumerable language . We can have two tapes. On one tape we take the input string and on the other tape, we run the enumerator to enumerate the strings in the language one after another.