Friedberg Numbering

From Handwiki

In computability theory, a Friedberg numbering is a numbering (enumeration) of the set of all uniformly recursively enumerable sets that has no repetitions: each recursively enumerable set appears exactly once in the enumeration (Vereščagin and Shen 2003:30). The existence of such numberings was established by Richard M. Friedberg in 1958 (Cutland 1980:78).

References

  • Nigel Cutland (1980), Computability: An Introduction to Recursive Function Theory, Cambridge University Press. ISBN:9780521294652.
  • Richard M. Friedberg (1958), Three Theorems on Recursive Enumeration. I. Decomposition. II. Maximal Set. III. Enumeration Without Duplication, Journal of Symbolic Logic 23:3, pp. 309–316.
  • Nikolaj K. Vereščagin and A. Shen (2003), Computable Functions, American Mathematical Soc.

External links

  • Institute of Mathematics




Retrieved from "https://handwiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=Friedberg_numbering&oldid=3357755"

Categories: [Computability theory]


Download as ZWI file | Last modified: 07/28/2024 11:38:16 | 19 views
☰ Source: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Friedberg_numbering | License: CC BY-SA 3.0

ZWI is not signed. [what is this?]