@ (called bottom symbol) is not in Γ and appears exactly at the root of t, and
p is an element of the domain of t (called stack pointer).
The set of all tree stacks over Γ is denoted by TS(Γ).
The set of predicates on TS(Γ), denoted by Pred(Γ), contains the following unarypredicates:
true which is true for any tree stack over Γ,
bottom which is true for tree stacks whose stack pointer points to the bottom symbol, and
equals(γ) which is true for some tree stack (t, p) if t(p) = γ,
for every γ ∈ Γ.
The set of instructions on TS(Γ), denoted by Instr(Γ), contains the following partial functions:
id: TS(Γ) → TS(Γ) which is the identity function on TS(Γ),
pushn,γ: TS(Γ) → TS(Γ) which adds for a given tree stack (t,p) a pair (pn ↦ γ) to the tree t and sets the stack pointer to pn (i.e. it pushes γ to the n-th child position) if pn is not yet in the domain of t,
upn: TS(Γ) → TS(Γ) which replaces the current stack pointer p by pn (i.e. it moves the stack pointer to the n-th child position) if pn is in the domain of t,
down: TS(Γ) → TS(Γ) which removes the last symbol from the stack pointer (i.e. it moves the stack pointer to the parent position), and
setγ: TS(Γ) → TS(Γ) which replaces the symbol currently under the stack pointer by γ,
for every positive integer n and every γ ∈ Γ.
Illustration of the instruction id on a tree stack
Illustration of the instruction push on a tree stack
Illustration of the instructions up and down on a tree stack
Illustration of the instruction set on a tree stack
Tree stack automata
A tree stack automaton is a 6-tuple A = (Q, Γ, Σ, qi, δ, Qf) where
Q, Γ, and Σ are finite sets (whose elements are called states, stack symbols, and input symbols, respectively),
qi ∈ Q (the initial state),
δ ⊆fin.Q × (Σ ∪ {ε}) × Pred(Γ) × Instr(Γ) × Q (whose elements are called transitions), and
Qf ⊆ TS(Γ) (whose elements are called final states).
A configuration of A is a tuple (q, c, w) where
q is a state (the current state),
c is a tree stack (the current tree stack), and
w is a word over Σ (the remaining word to be read).
A transition τ = (q1, u, p, f, q2) is applicable to a configuration (q, c, w) if
q1 = q,
p is true on c,
f is defined for c, and
u is a prefix of w.
The transition relation of A is the binary relation⊢ on configurations of A that is the union of all the relations ⊢τ for a transition τ = (q1, u, p, f, q2) where, whenever τ is applicable to (q, c, w), we have (q, c, w) ⊢τ (q2, f(c), v) and v is obtained from w by removing the prefix u.
The language of A is the set of all words w for which there is some state q ∈ Qf and some tree stack c such that (qi, ci, w) ⊢* (q, c, ε) where
A tree stack automaton is called k-restricted for some positive natural number k if, during any run of the automaton, any position of the tree stack is accessed at most k times from below.
^not to be confused with a device with the same name introduced in 1990 by Wolfgang Golubski and Wolfram-M. Lippe [1]
^A set of strings is prefix-closed if for every element w in the set, all prefixes of w are also in the set.
References
^Golubski, Wolfgang and Lippe, Wolfram-M. (1990). Tree-stack automata. Proceedings of the 15th Symposium on Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science (MFCS 1990). Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 452, pages 313–321, doi:10.1007/BFb0029624.
^Scott, Dana (1967). Some Definitional Suggestions for Automata Theory. Journal of Computer and System Sciences, Vol. 1(2), pages 187–212, doi:10.1016/s0022-0000(67)80014-x.
^ abDenkinger, Tobias (2016). An automata characterisation for multiple context-free languages. Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Developments in Language Theory (DLT 2016). Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 9840, pages 138–150, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-53132-7_12.
Each category of languages, except those marked by a *, is a proper subset of the category directly above it.Any language in each category is generated by a grammar and by an automaton in the category in the same line.