In computability theory, a set of natural numbers is computable (or decidable or recursive) if there is an algorithm that computes the membership of every natural number in a finite number of steps. A set is noncomputable (or undecidable) if it is not computable.
Definition
A subset of the natural numbers is computable if there exists a total computable function such that:
if
if .
In other words, the set is computable if and only if the indicator function is computable.
Examples
- Every recursive language is computable.
- Every finite or cofinite subset of the natural numbers is computable.
- The empty set is computable.
- The entire set of natural numbers is computable.
- Every natural number is computable.
- The subset of prime numbers is computable.
- The set of Gödel numbers is computable.
Non-examples
Properties
Both A, B are sets in this section.
- If A is computable then the complement of A is computable.
- If A and B are computable then:
- A â© B is computable.
- A ⪠B is computable.
- The image of A ÃÂ B under the Cantor pairing function is computable.
In general, the image of a computable set under a computable function is computably enumerable, but possibly not computable.
A is computable if and only if it is at level of the arithmetical hierarchy.
A is computable if and only if it is either the image (or range) of a nondecreasing total computable function, or the empty set.
See also
Notes
References
Bibliography
- Cutland, N. Computability. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge-New York, 1980. ;
- Rogers, H. The Theory of Recursive Functions and Effective Computability, MIT Press. ;
- Soare, R. Recursively enumerable sets and degrees. Perspectives in Mathematical Logic. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1987.
External links