Formal languages

Cyclic language

In computer science, more particularly in formal language theory, a cyclic language is a set of strings that is closed with respect to repetition, root, and cyclic shift. (Wikipedia).

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the C language (part 2 of 5)

Introduction to the C programming language. Part of a larger series teaching programming. See http://codeschool.org

From playlist The C language

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the C language (part 5 of 5)

Introduction to the C programming language. Part of a larger series teaching programming. See http://codeschool.org

From playlist The C language

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Clojure - creating macros

Part of a series teaching the Clojure language. For other programming topics, visit http://codeschool.org

From playlist the Clojure language

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SYN_018 - Linguistic Micro-Lectures: Recursion

In this short micro-lecture, Victoria Galarneau, one of Prof. Handke's students, discusses the term 'recursion', a central notion in syntax.

From playlist Micro-Lectures - Syntax

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Language Change

In this module, Prof. Simon Horobin (University of Oxford) introduces the concept of semantic change, focusing in particular on the word 'literally'. As we move through the module, we consider: (i) the etymology of the word from the Latin 'littera' (letter), and the original meaning of the

From playlist English Language

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Clojure - the Reader and Evaluator (4/4)

Part of a series teaching the Clojure language. For other programming topics, visit http://codeschool.org

From playlist the Clojure language

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The C programming language (unit 2) - 4 of 5 (old version; watch new version instead)

A continuation of discussing the C programming language. This unit goes more into depths on pointers and arrays. Visit http://codeschool.org

From playlist The C language (unit 2)

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Laura Ciobanu: Formal conjugacy growth and hyperbolicity

Find this video and other talks given by worldwide mathematicians on CIRM's Audiovisual Mathematics Library: http://library.cirm-math.fr. And discover all its functionalities: - Chapter markers and keywords to watch the parts of your choice in the video - Videos enriched with abstracts, b

From playlist Algebra

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Live CEOing Ep 122: Chemistry Functions in Wolfram Language

Watch Stephen Wolfram and teams of developers in a live, working, language design meeting. This episode is about Chemistry Functions in the Wolfram Language.

From playlist Behind the Scenes in Real-Life Software Design

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The abstract chromatic number - Leonardo Nagami Coregliano

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I Topic: The abstract chromatic number Speaker: Leonardo Nagami Coregliano Affiliation: University of Chicago Date: March 22, 2021 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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Interview at Cirm : Thomas LECUIT

Thomas Lecuit est directeur de recherche au CNRS, professeur au Collège de France, titulaire de la chaire Dynamiques du vivant. Il dirige une équipe de recherche à l’Institut de Biologie du Développement de Marseille (IBDM - Aix-Marseille université, CNRS), et le Centre Turing des Systèmes

From playlist Interviews en français - French interviews

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Live CEOing Ep 464: Language Design in Wolfram Language [DateObjects & More WFR Suggestions]

In this episode of Live CEOing, Stephen Wolfram discusses upcoming improvements and functionality to the Wolfram Language. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or through the official Twitch channel of Stephen Wo

From playlist Behind the Scenes in Real-Life Software Design

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What We've Learned from NKS Chapter 11: The Notion of Computation

In this episode of "What We've Learned from NKS", Stephen Wolfram is counting down to the 20th anniversary of A New Kind of Science with [another] chapter retrospective. If you'd like to contribute to the discussion in future episodes, you can participate through this YouTube channel or th

From playlist Science and Research Livestreams

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Numeric Types in Python - Socratica #Shorts

Find our programming playlists here: Python: http://bit.ly/PythonSocratica SQL: http://bit.ly/SQL_Socratica Python instructor: Ulka Simone Mohanty (@ulkam on Twitter) Written & Produced by Michael Harrison #Python #Coding #Shorts

From playlist Python Programming Tutorials (Computer Science)

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Lie Groups and Lie Algebras: Lesson 44 Group Theory Review #3 (corrected!)

Lie Groups and Lie Algebras: Lesson 44 Group Theory Review #3 This is a corrected version of a previous upload. In the earlier version I ridiculously stated that cyclic subgroups were normal. I don't know what came over me, that is certainly NOT true. What is true is that if a group is a

From playlist Lie Groups and Lie Algebras

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Clojure - the Reader and Evaluator (2/4)

Part of a series teaching the Clojure language. For other programming topics, visit http://codeschool.org

From playlist the Clojure language

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Live CEOing Ep 237: Language Design in Wolfram Language

Watch Stephen Wolfram and teams of developers in a live, working, language design meeting. This episode is about Language Design in the Wolfram Language.

From playlist Behind the Scenes in Real-Life Software Design

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Multiple Assignments in Python

Chain those equals signs! Python allows multiple assignments, or chained assignments, to assign multiple variables or expressions at once. This can be a useful tool but it is also a source of confusion when the multiple assignments involve the same name multiple times or when the assignme

From playlist How Python Works

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Adam Piggott & Murray Elder Double Header: Geodesics in Groups

Double header seminar by two SMRI domestic visitors: Adam Piggott (Australian National University) ‘Stubborn conjectures concerning rewriting systems, geodesic normal forms and geodetic graphs’ & Murray Elder (University of Technology Sydney) ‘Which groups have polynomial geodesic growth

From playlist SMRI Seminars

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Summary of Exponential, Logarithmic & Trigonometric Derivatives

More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Differential Calculus

Related pages

Kleene star | Regular language | Circular shift | Alphabet (formal languages) | Context-free language | Formal language | Concatenation