A recursive transition network ("RTN") is a graph theoretical schematic used to represent the rules of a context-free grammar. RTNs have application to programming languages, natural language and lexical analysis. Any sentence that is constructed according to the rules of an RTN[1] is said to be "well-formed". The structural elements of a well-formed sentence may also be well-formed sentences by themselves, or they may be simpler structures. This is why RTNs are described as recursive.[2]
Notes and references
edit- ^ A sentence is generated by a RTN by applying the generative rules specified in the RTN itself. These represent any set of rules or a function consisting of a finite number of steps.
- ^ Ela Kumar (20 September 2008). Artificial Intelligence. I. K. International Pvt Ltd. pp. 324–. ISBN 978-81-906566-6-5.
See also
edit- Syntax diagram
- Computational linguistics
- Context free language
- Finite state machine
- Formal grammar
- Parse tree
- Parsing
- Augmented transition network