Author:
Guha Shibashis,Jecker Ismaël,Lehtinen Karoliina,Zimmermann Martin
Abstract
We study the expressiveness and succinctness of history-deterministic
pushdown automata (HD-PDA) over finite words, that is, pushdown automata whose
nondeterminism can be resolved based on the run constructed so far, but
independently of the remainder of the input word. These are also known as
good-for-games pushdown automata. We prove that HD-PDA recognise more languages
than deterministic PDA (DPDA) but not all context-free languages (CFL). This
class is orthogonal to unambiguous CFL. We further show that HD-PDA can be
exponentially more succinct than DPDA, while PDA can be double-exponentially
more succinct than HD-PDA. We also study HDness in visibly pushdown automata
(VPA), which enjoy better closure properties than PDA, and for which we show
that deciding HDness is ExpTime-complete. HD-VPA can be exponentially more
succinct than deterministic VPA, while VPA can be exponentially more succinct
than HD-VPA. Both of these lower bounds are tight. We then compare HD-PDA with
PDA for which composition with games is well-behaved, i.e. good-for-games
automata. We show that these two notions coincide, but only if we consider
potentially infinitely branching games. Finally, we study the complexity of
resolving nondeterminism in HD-PDA. Every HDPDA has a positional resolver, a
function that resolves nondeterminism and that is only dependant on the current
configuration. Pushdown transducers are sufficient to implement the resolvers
of HD-VPA, but not those of HD-PDA. HD-PDA with finite-state resolvers are
determinisable.
Publisher
Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe (CCSD)