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Pushdown automaton

In particular automata theory, pushdown automata (PDA) are abstract devices that recognize context-free languages.

Informally, a pushdown automaton is a finite automaton outfitted with access to a potentially unlimited amount of memory in the form of a single stack. The finite automaton in question is usually a nondeterministic finite state machine (resulting in a nondeterministic pushdown automaton or NPDA) since deterministic pushdown automata cannot recognize all context-free languages.

If we allow a finite automaton access to two stacks instead of just one, we obtain a more powerful device — equivalent in power to a Turing machine. A linear bounded automaton is a device which is more powerful than a pushdown automaton but less so than a Turing machine.

A NPDA W can be defined as a 7-tuple:

W = (Q,Σ,Φ,σ,s,Ω,F) where

  • Q is a finite set of states
  • Σ is a finite set of the input alphabet
  • Φ is a finite set of the stack alphabet
  • σ is a finite transition relation (Q \times ( \Sigma \cup \left \{ \epsilon \right \} ) \times \Phi) \longrightarrow ( Q \times \Phi ^{*} )
  • s is an element of Q the start state
  • Ω is the initial stack symbol
  • F is subset of Q, consisting of the final states.

There are two possible acceptance criteria: acceptance by empty stack and acceptance by final state. The two are easily shown to be equivalent: a final state can perform a pop loop to get to an empty stack, and a machine can detect an empty stack and enter a final state by detecting a unique symbol pushed by the initial state.

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