In computational complexity theory, the compression theorem is an important theorem about the complexity of computable functions.

The theorem states that there exists no largest complexity class, with computable boundary, which contains all computable functions.

Compression theorem edit

Given a Gödel numbering   of the computable functions and a Blum complexity measure   where a complexity class for a boundary function   is defined as

 

Then there exists a total computable function   so that for all  

 

and

 

References edit

  • Salomaa, Arto (1985), "Theorem 6.9", Computation and Automata, Encyclopedia of Mathematics and Its Applications, vol. 25, Cambridge University Press, pp. 149–150, ISBN 9780521302456.
  • Zimand, Marius (2004), "Theorem 2.4.3 (Compression theorem)", Computational Complexity: A Quantitative Perspective, North-Holland Mathematics Studies, vol. 196, Elsevier, p. 42, ISBN 9780444828415.