"Langages formels." . . "Màquines, Teoria de." . . "Turing-gép." . . "Autómatas matemáticos, Teoría de." . . "Matematikai nyelvészet számítógépes nyelvészet formális nyelvek." . . "Autòmats." . . "Automatentheorie Formale Sprache Lehrbuch." . . "Számítástudomány." . . "Lenguajes formales." . . "Teoria de màquines" . . "Llenguatges formals." . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Problems and exercises" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Electronic books"@en . . "\"Recent applications to biomolecular science and DNA computing have created a new audience for automata theory and formal languages. This is the only introductory book to cover such applications. It begins with a clear and readily understood exposition of the fundamentals that assumes only a background in discrete mathematics. The first five chapters give a gentle but rigorous coverage of basic ideas as well as topics not found in other texts at this level, including codes, retracts and semiretracts. Chapter 6 introduces combinatorics on words and uses it to describe a visually inspired approach to languages. The final chapter explains recently-developed language theory coming from developments in bioscience and DNA computing. With over 350 exercises (for which solutions are available), many examples and illustrations, this text will make an ideal contemporary introduction for students; others, new to the field, will welcome it for self-learning.\"--Publisher's website."@en . "Recent applications to bioscience have created a new audience for automata theory and formal languages. This is the only introduction to cover such applications. With over 350 exercises, many examples and illustrations, this is an ideal contemporary introduction for students; others, new to the field, will welcome it for self-learning."@en . . . "Problems, exercises, etc"@en . . . "Automata theory with modern applications"@en . "Automata theory with modern applications" . . . . . . "COMPUTERS Machine Theory." . . "Automates mathématiques, Théorie des." . . "Automaták elmélete." . . "Théorie des automates." . . . .