John A. Hoffnagle, William D. Hinsberg, et al.
Microlithography 2003
We present a "parenthesis-free" dialect of LISP, in which (a) each primitive function has a fixed number of arguments, and (b) the parentheses associating a primitive function with its arguments are implicit and are omitted. The parenthesis-free complexity of an S-expression e is defined to be the minimum size in characters {divides}p{divides} of a parenthesis-free LISP expression p that has the value e. We develop a theory of program-size complexity for parenthesis-free LISP by showing (a) that the maximum possible parenthesis-free complexity of an n-bit string is ∼ βn, and (b) how to construct three parenthesis-free LISP halting probabilities Ωpf, Ω′pf and Ω″pf. © 1992.
John A. Hoffnagle, William D. Hinsberg, et al.
Microlithography 2003
Shu Tezuka
WSC 1991
Chai Wah Wu
Linear Algebra and Its Applications
Ehud Altman, Kenneth R. Brown, et al.
PRX Quantum