









Introduction to the Theory of Computation [Sipser, Michael] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Introduction to the Theory of Computation Review: First Thoughts: Very Mathematical; A Deep Treatment Of This Subject; Up To Date Too - This is a book I would recommend to third year university computer science and third year university pure mathematics students. Rather terse in style densely packed with challenging content, I really will have to take time to read it carefully to fully appreciate it. In my Bachelor of Science at the University of Melbourne years ago I studied some related content in a subject entitled 618-341 Mathematical Logic, and did not take the computer science subject 622-301 Theory Of Computation. Now, from the mathematician's point of view finitism is irrelevant it's a matter of axiom systems being consistent and proving things. The Godel number encoding of theorems and interiority arguments and clever free variable substitution arguments together with model theory were used to establish as true many powerful results ... I note that the terminology has changed since 1982; what was called then 'a recursive formula' is now called Turing decidable and what was called then 'a recursively enumerable formula' is now called 'Turing recognizable'. For example, this author would regard a Turing machine that took a blank tape and churned out the binary representation of pi 3.14159265358979323846 etc in some tape representation to an infinite number of places as a Turing machine that loops, even if such a Turing machine was reasonably well behaved in terms of its generally moving forwards ... This begs the question of real number representation; the bit string 0.11111111111 ... is essentially the same real value as 1.0000000000 ... This suggests to me that Turing theory has taken a more finitistic turn; whether this is to avoid paradoxes recently found I haven't worked out yet. In the real world with its quantum mechanics randomness and lack of apparent finititude it's quite concievable that a multi-tape Turing machine (as described in outline in section 3.2 p176ff) device could resolve a real number function evaluation so as to avoid a value ending in an infinite series of 1's that rightly should be rounded up, and store the real value as a constant in some 'set' device for storing real numbers ... However till we know more about the real truths underlying physics this is mere speculation ... There are a lot of topics that are quite new to me. For example, P less than NP less than PSPACE less than NPSPACE less then EXPTIME seems a rather more complex hypothesis regarding algorithms and their expected time to complete than I've met in other works ... Reading this section I hope will prove rewarding ... Overall it seems that the field has moved on since 1982 in many a way and I hope this book enables me to refresh my knowledge with the latest results. An excellent treatment of the whole field of theory of computation. The only criticism I can think to make is that this work seems to have a finitistic philosophy rather than a mathematical Platonist philosophy ... but then this is essential to the computer science approach rather than a pure mathematical one ... Review: Fantastic coverage of formal language and automata theory - I purchased this book on the advice of my PhD advisor as an additional resource for a formal language and automata theory course. It is not the textbook for the course I am in, but it could/should be. Prof. Sipser breaks down the subject clearly and when used with the recorded lectures from MIT available for free online, it's a fantastic resource for enriching understanding of the fundamentals of theoretical computer science.




| Best Sellers Rank | #58,528 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #12 in Machine Theory (Books) #83 in Computer Science (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (585) |
| Dimensions | 6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches |
| Edition | 3rd |
| ISBN-10 | 113318779X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1133187790 |
| Item Weight | 1.68 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 504 pages |
| Publication date | June 27, 2012 |
| Publisher | Cengage Learning |
A**R
First Thoughts: Very Mathematical; A Deep Treatment Of This Subject; Up To Date Too
This is a book I would recommend to third year university computer science and third year university pure mathematics students. Rather terse in style densely packed with challenging content, I really will have to take time to read it carefully to fully appreciate it. In my Bachelor of Science at the University of Melbourne years ago I studied some related content in a subject entitled 618-341 Mathematical Logic, and did not take the computer science subject 622-301 Theory Of Computation. Now, from the mathematician's point of view finitism is irrelevant it's a matter of axiom systems being consistent and proving things. The Godel number encoding of theorems and interiority arguments and clever free variable substitution arguments together with model theory were used to establish as true many powerful results ... I note that the terminology has changed since 1982; what was called then 'a recursive formula' is now called Turing decidable and what was called then 'a recursively enumerable formula' is now called 'Turing recognizable'. For example, this author would regard a Turing machine that took a blank tape and churned out the binary representation of pi 3.14159265358979323846 etc in some tape representation to an infinite number of places as a Turing machine that loops, even if such a Turing machine was reasonably well behaved in terms of its generally moving forwards ... This begs the question of real number representation; the bit string 0.11111111111 ... is essentially the same real value as 1.0000000000 ... This suggests to me that Turing theory has taken a more finitistic turn; whether this is to avoid paradoxes recently found I haven't worked out yet. In the real world with its quantum mechanics randomness and lack of apparent finititude it's quite concievable that a multi-tape Turing machine (as described in outline in section 3.2 p176ff) device could resolve a real number function evaluation so as to avoid a value ending in an infinite series of 1's that rightly should be rounded up, and store the real value as a constant in some 'set' device for storing real numbers ... However till we know more about the real truths underlying physics this is mere speculation ... There are a lot of topics that are quite new to me. For example, P less than NP less than PSPACE less than NPSPACE less then EXPTIME seems a rather more complex hypothesis regarding algorithms and their expected time to complete than I've met in other works ... Reading this section I hope will prove rewarding ... Overall it seems that the field has moved on since 1982 in many a way and I hope this book enables me to refresh my knowledge with the latest results. An excellent treatment of the whole field of theory of computation. The only criticism I can think to make is that this work seems to have a finitistic philosophy rather than a mathematical Platonist philosophy ... but then this is essential to the computer science approach rather than a pure mathematical one ...
A**R
Fantastic coverage of formal language and automata theory
I purchased this book on the advice of my PhD advisor as an additional resource for a formal language and automata theory course. It is not the textbook for the course I am in, but it could/should be. Prof. Sipser breaks down the subject clearly and when used with the recorded lectures from MIT available for free online, it's a fantastic resource for enriching understanding of the fundamentals of theoretical computer science.
B**R
Excellent for industry practitioners as well as students
This is a very practical book as well as theoretical. The exercises are great and help reinforce the material. I used this on the job to learn parser theory. It helped me implement an ANTLR parser for SQL. There is nothing more practical than a good theory. The writing is crisp, clear, and the theory easy to follow because of the book's excellent use of examples and diagrams. I highly recommend this book, not just to students taking a course, but for practitioners working in industry. It was expensive, but well worth the price.
D**K
Ive mainly decided to keep this for reference primarily because ...
Ive mainly decided to keep this for reference primarily because the topics covered in this book basically combine all the aspects of mathmatics in the realm of computer science, as well as providing the benefit of talking over the topics of computation and complexity. The pricing of this book was also very cheap at the time of purchase, and for my ciriculum this covers 2 semesters worth of material and can be applied to multiple topics in computer science, from compilers, cryptography, and even algorithms.
J**A
This is a great intro to complexity theory
This is a great intro to complexity theory, though expensive for my tastes. I bought it for an autonama class, never read it during the class, but came back to it for the special topics. This only dips into the special topics, but introduces many of the important classes, and their relation to other complexity classes. Such classes as L, BPP, IP, Alternating, NC, and of course P, NP, exptime, PSPACE, and more. It is very well written. It ussually explains the proof ideas before starting, and gives detailed proofs. If you can afford it, this book makes a great intro to complexity theory. However, this is an intro. This book does not discuss advanced topics in depth, just enough to understand the most common comexity classes and their known relationships.
D**I
Excellent introduction to computer science theory
Recently took an introductory course on computer science theory, and this was part of the recommended reading. It is an excellent book - well worth the price. It offers concise and clear descriptions of theoretical concepts, and explains complicated proofs thoroughly and without confusion. It is difficult to find any online resources that cover the same topics as this book - let alone any that are as clear as sipser's explanations. I sell many of my textbooks after using them, but I plan on keeping this book as a reference for a very long time.
A**M
THIS IS THE INTERNATIONAL EDITION
I got this book thinking I got a great deal on a hard copy of a required text for my class. There's a pdf of this book online- just google it, it's the first result. I would not have bought this book if I knew it was the INTERNATIONAL EDITION. I was given 2 weeks to do an assignment, and I did it pretty slowly because the problems were easy. Well, turns out I was doing the wrong problems. Now it's due in two days, and with an exam that night, I DO NOT have time to start over. I looked at the listing- it mentions at the VERY BOTTOM of the product description that it is the international edition. I didn't read the entire description because...Why would I? I read the first few lines to confirm it was the right book, and ordered. I am very upset. On the bright side, it is a pretty decent book. But not a good enough book to get back a star.
M**A
One of the few university books I can actually read
D**V
The best book about functional programming I've found as so far. Really hard to read, but it worth it
K**R
Apart from CS lectures, this book is one of the best books that is written for anyone who wants to learn more about computation. I believe this is a book that is hidden unlike D. Knuth’s series.
R**R
too mathematical
N**C
Great print quality, no damage => 5/5. Content => 5/5. Awesome explanations, perfect.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 mes
Hace 2 semanas