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Graph structure and monadic second-order logic - 138

Part of the Encyclopedia of Mathematics and Its Applications series
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The study of graph structure has advanced in recent years with great strides: finite graphs can be described algebraically, enabling them to be constructed out of more basic elements.

Separately the properties of graphs can be studied in a logical language called monadic second-order logic.

In this book, these two features of graph structure are brought together for the first time in a presentation that unifies and synthesizes research over the last 25 years.

The authors not only provide a thorough description of the theory, but also detail its applications, on the one hand to the construction of graph algorithms, and, on the other to the extension of formal language theory to finite graphs.

Consequently the book will be of interest to graduate students and researchers in graph theory, finite model theory, formal language theory, and complexity theory.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1139633007 / 9781139633000
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
511.5
26/07/2013
England
English
728 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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