Proper complexity function
From HandWiki
A proper complexity function is a function f mapping a natural number to a natural number such that:
- f is nondecreasing;
- there exists a k-string Turing machine M such that on any input of length n, M halts after O(n + f(n)) steps, uses O(f(n)) space, and outputs f(n) consecutive blanks.
If f and g are two proper complexity functions, then f + g, fg, and 2f are also proper complexity functions.
Similar notions include honest functions, space-constructible functions, and time-constructible functions.
References
Myashnikov, Alexei; Shpilrain, Vladimir; Ushakov, Vladimir (2008). Group-based Cryptography. Birkhauser. p. 28. ISBN 978-3-7643-8826-3.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proper complexity function.
Read more |