Termination w.r.t. Q of the following Term Rewriting System could be disproven:
Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
h(X) → n__h(X)
activate(n__h(X)) → h(X)
activate(X) → X
Q is empty.
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
h(X) → n__h(X)
activate(n__h(X)) → h(X)
activate(X) → X
Q is empty.
The following Q TRS is given: Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
h(X) → n__h(X)
activate(n__h(X)) → h(X)
activate(X) → X
Q is empty.
The following rules can be removed by the rule removal processor [15] because they are oriented strictly by a polynomial ordering:
activate(n__h(X)) → h(X)
activate(X) → X
Used ordering:
Polynomial interpretation [25]:
POL(activate(x1)) = 1 + x1
POL(f(x1)) = 2·x1
POL(g(x1)) = x1
POL(h(x1)) = x1
POL(n__h(x1)) = x1
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
h(X) → n__h(X)
Q is empty.
The following Q TRS is given: Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
h(X) → n__h(X)
Q is empty.
The following rules can be removed by the rule removal processor [15] because they are oriented strictly by a polynomial ordering:
h(X) → n__h(X)
Used ordering:
Polynomial interpretation [25]:
POL(f(x1)) = x1
POL(g(x1)) = x1
POL(h(x1)) = 2 + x1
POL(n__h(x1)) = x1
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
Q is empty.
The TRS is overlay and locally confluent. By [19] we can switch to innermost.
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS
↳ DependencyPairsProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
The set Q consists of the following terms:
f(x0)
Using Dependency Pairs [1,15] we result in the following initial DP problem:
Q DP problem:
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
The set Q consists of the following terms:
f(x0)
We have to consider all minimal (P,Q,R)-chains.
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS
↳ DependencyPairsProof
↳ QDP
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q DP problem:
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
The set Q consists of the following terms:
f(x0)
We have to consider all minimal (P,Q,R)-chains.
As all Q-normal forms are R-normal forms we are in the innermost case. Hence, by the usable rules processor [15] we can delete all non-usable rules [17] from R.
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS
↳ DependencyPairsProof
↳ QDP
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QDP
↳ QReductionProof
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q DP problem:
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
R is empty.
The set Q consists of the following terms:
f(x0)
We have to consider all minimal (P,Q,R)-chains.
We deleted the following terms from Q as each root-symbol of these terms does neither occur in P nor in R.
f(x0)
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS
↳ DependencyPairsProof
↳ QDP
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QDP
↳ QReductionProof
↳ QDP
↳ NonTerminationProof
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q DP problem:
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
R is empty.
Q is empty.
We have to consider all minimal (P,Q,R)-chains.
We used the non-termination processor [17] to show that the DP problem is infinite.
Found a loop by semiunifying a rule from P directly.
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
The TRS R consists of the following rules:none
s = F(X) evaluates to t =F(X)
Thus s starts an infinite chain as s semiunifies with t with the following substitutions:
- Semiunifier: [ ]
- Matcher: [ ]
Rewriting sequence
The DP semiunifies directly so there is only one rewrite step from F(X) to F(X).
As all Q-normal forms are R-normal forms we are in the innermost case. Hence, by the usable rules processor [15] we can delete all non-usable rules [17] from R.
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS
↳ DependencyPairsProof
↳ QDP
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QDP
↳ QReductionProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q DP problem:
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
R is empty.
The set Q consists of the following terms:
f(x0)
We have to consider all minimal (P,Q,R)-chains.
We deleted the following terms from Q as each root-symbol of these terms does neither occur in P nor in R.
f(x0)
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS
↳ Overlay + Local Confluence
↳ QTRS
↳ DependencyPairsProof
↳ QDP
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ UsableRulesProof
↳ QDP
↳ QReductionProof
↳ QDP
↳ QTRS Reverse
Q DP problem:
The TRS P consists of the following rules:
F(X) → F(X)
R is empty.
Q is empty.
We have to consider all minimal (P,Q,R)-chains.
We have reversed the following QTRS:
The set of rules R is
f(X) → g(n__h(f(X)))
h(X) → n__h(X)
activate(n__h(X)) → h(X)
activate(X) → X
The set Q is empty.
We have obtained the following QTRS:
f(x) → f(n__h(g(x)))
h(x) → n__h(x)
n__h(activate(x)) → h(x)
activate(x) → x
The set Q is empty.
↳ QTRS
↳ RRRPoloQTRSProof
↳ QTRS Reverse
↳ QTRS
Q restricted rewrite system:
The TRS R consists of the following rules:
f(x) → f(n__h(g(x)))
h(x) → n__h(x)
n__h(activate(x)) → h(x)
activate(x) → x
Q is empty.