Table of Contents
Theory of Computing, Spring 2018
The goal of this course is to acquaint the students with the basic concepts in computation theory and to cultivate the students' ability in analyzing the complexity of computational problems.
Announcements
- next edition: Theory of Computing 2020.
- 07/08: grade report available; please send inquiries, if any, to the instructor by 2PM 07/09.
- 05/30: HW#10 due on 06/06.
- 05/30: notes/slides for Time Complexity and NP-Completeness available.
- 05/23: HW#9 due on 05/30.
- 05/16: notes/slides for Reducibility available.
- 05/16: HW#8 due on 05/23.
- 05/16: Suggested Solutions to Midterm Problems available.
- 05/09: notes/slides for Decidability available.
- 05/09: HW#7 due on 05/16.
- 05/02: notes/slides for Turing Machines available.
- 04/18: notes/slides for Context-Free Languages and Pushdown Automata revised.
- 04/18: old exams: 2000-2017.
- 04/18: HW#6 due on 05/01.
- 04/18: HW#5 due on 05/01.
- 04/11: HW#4 due on 04/18.
- 04/11: notes/slides for Context-Free Languages and Pushdown Automata available.
- 03/28: HW#3 due on 04/11.
- 03/21: HW#2 due on 03/28.
- 03/14: notes/slides for Finite Automata and Regular Languages available.
- 03/07: HW#1 due on 03/21.
- 03/07: notes/slides for Introduction and Mathematical Preliminaries available.
- 02/25: this website announced.
Instructor
Yih-Kuen Tsay (蔡益坤), NTU IM Dept.,
3366-1189, Xtsay@ntu.edu.twX
(between the enclosing pair of X's).
Lectures
Wednesday 2:20~5:20PM, Room 102, Management Building 2.
TA sessions will be
scheduled prior to some of the class meetings between 1:20 and 2:10PM; see the course schedule.
Office Hours
Tuesday 1:30~2:00PM, Wednesday 1:30~2:00PM, or by appointment, Room 1108, Management Building 2.
TA
林敬傑, Xr05725007@ntu.edu.twX
(between the enclosing pair of X's).
Textbook
- Introduction to the Theory of Computation, 3rd Edition, Michael Sipser, Cengage Learning, 2012. (歐亞圖書代理)
Syllabus/Schedule (with links to notes/slides)
This is an introductory course to the theory of computation. It covers
various mathematical models, including automata and Turing machines, for
physical computing machineries along with their computational
capabilities/limitations. In terms of specific topics and the order of their
exposition, the course will follow closely the book by Sipser.
(Note: a TA
session will precede a class meeting whose date is marked with an *. There
are four TA sessions on 3/28, 4/18, 5/16, and 6/13.)
- Finite Automata and Regular Languages (2.5 weeks: 3/14b, 3/21, 3/28*) [notes, slides, appendix:minimization]
- Midterm (2018/04/25)
- Final (2018/06/27)
References
- MIT OpenCourseWare: Automata, Computability, and Complexity
- Stanford Coursera: Automata
- Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation, John E. Hopcroft and Jeffrey D. Ullman, Addison-Wesley, 1979.
- Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation, 3rd Edition, John E. Hopcroft, Rajeev Motwani, and Jeffrey D. Ullman, Addison-Wesley, 2006.
- Elements of the Theory of Computation, 2nd Edition, Harry R. Lewis and Christos H. Papadimitriou, Prentice-Hall, 1998.
- Maillardet's Automaton at the Franklin Institute.
- What Is an Algorithm? (M.Y. Vardi, Communications of the ACM, Volume 55 Issue 3, March 2012)
- What Is Computation? (a lecture by Leslie Lamport, who received the 2013 Turing Award)
- Free Tool: GOAL
- Free Tool: JFLAP
Grading
Homework 20%, Participation 10%, Midterm 35%, Final 35%.