2001
DOI: 10.1007/3-540-45127-7_14
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Context Unification and Traversal Equations

Abstract: Abstract. Context unification was originally defined by H. Comon in ICALP'92, as the problem of finding a unifier for a set of equations containing first-order variables and context variables. These context variables have arguments, and can be instantiated by contexts. In other words, they are second-order variables that are restricted to be instantiated by linear terms (a linear term is a λ-expression λx 1 · · · λxn . t where every xi occurs exactly once in t). In this paper, we prove that, if the so called r… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The previous lemma proves the rank-bound conjecture of [20] for a variant of context unification. Therefore, we can conclude decidability of LHCU from a small modification of the results of that paper.…”
Section: Definitionsupporting
confidence: 57%
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“…The previous lemma proves the rank-bound conjecture of [20] for a variant of context unification. Therefore, we can conclude decidability of LHCU from a small modification of the results of that paper.…”
Section: Definitionsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Therefore, this reduction proves decidability of LHCU. The reduction is based on some ideas from [20]. There, it is proved (see Corollary 21) that if the rank-bound conjecture is true, then CU is decidable.…”
Section: Left-hole Context Unification Decidabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The reduction also works for Context Unification [5,24,31] and for Bounded Second-Order Unification [21,29]. Context Unification is a variant of Second-Order Unification.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%