Thursday, 08-Jan-2009 17:16:28 GMT Tell a friendLink to this pageRandom Article
 
 
Online encyclopedia

 


Undecidable language

In computability theory, a decision problem is undecidable if there is no algorithm that can always give the correct answer.

If there is an algorithm that answers YES when the correct answer is YES, and runs forever when the correct answer is NO, then the problem is partially decidable. A problem can be both undecidable and partially decidable. One example of this is the halting problem.

If there is an algorithm that always answers correctly, both for YES and NO answers, then the problem is decidable, and is not undecidable.

A formal language is said to be undecidable if the decision problem "is a given string in this language" is undecidable.

 

Tell a friend about this page.
Send this page
Bookmark Undecidable language.

 

Link to this page: The easy way to educate your website visitors. Post a link to definition / meaning of " Undecidable language " on your site.
HTML code: Resulting link:

Undecidable language

 

This online educational article is provided by contributions of Wikimedia Foundation.
Licensed under the GNU free documentation license. View live article. Copyright & Disclaimer - Contact

Partners: Digital Gadgets | Logo Design | Business Articles | Online Calculators

Anti-Spam Coalition