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We prove the following theorem. Suppose that $M$ is a trim DFA on the Boolean alphabet $0,1$. The language $L(M)$ is well-ordered by the lexicographic order $slex$ iff whenever the non sink states $q,q.0$ are in the same strong component, then $q.1$ is a sink. It is easy to see that this property is sufficient. In order to show the necessity, we analyze the behavior of a $slex$-descending sequence of words. This property is used to obtain a polynomial time algorithm to determine, given a DFA $M$, whether $L(M)$ is well-ordered by the lexicographic order. Last, we apply an argument in cite{BE,BEa} to give a proof that the least nonregular ordinal is $omega^omega $.
We compute all synchronizing DFAs with 7 states and synchronization length >= 29. Furthermore, we compute alphabet size ranges for maximal, minimal and semi-minimal synchronizing DFAs with up to 7 states.
In this paper, we consider the transition complexity of regular languages based on the incomplete deterministic finite automata. A number of results on Boolean operations have been obtained. It is shown that the transition complexity results for unio
This paper contains results which arose from the research which led to arXiv:1801.10436, but which did not fit in arXiv:1801.10436. So arXiv:1801.10436 contains the highlight results, but there are more results which are interesting enough to be shared.
The purposes of this note are the following two; we first generalize Okada-Takeutis well quasi ordinal diagram theory, utilizing the recent result of Dershowitz-Tzamerets version of tree embedding theorem with gap conditions. Second, we discuss possi
This is an auxiliary note to [12]. To be precise, here we have gathered the proofs of all the statements in [12, Section 5] that happen to have points of contact with techniques recently developed in Chousionis-Pratt [5] and Chunaev [6].