Kleene star Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In
mathematical logic and
computer science, the
Kleene star (or
Kleene closure) is a
unary operation, either on
sets of
strings or on sets of symbols or characters.The application of the Kleene star to a set
V is written as
V*. It is widely used for
regular expressions, which is the context in which it was introduced by
Stephen Kleene (1909-1994) to characterise certain
automata.
- If V is a set of strings then V* is defined as the smallest superset of V that contains ε (the empty string) and is closed under the string concatenation operation. This set can also be described as the set of strings that can be made by concatenating zero or more strings from V.
- If V is a set of symbols or characters then V* is the set of all strings over symbols in V, including the empty string.
Example of Kleene star applied to set of strings:
- {"ab", "c"}* = {ε, "ab", "c", "abab", "abc", "cab", "cc", "ababab", "ababc", "abcab", "abcc", "cabab", "cabc", "ccab", "ccc", ...}
Example of Kleene star applied to set of characters:
- {'a', 'b', 'c'}* = {ε, "a", "b", "c", "aa", "ab", "ac", "ba", "bb", "bc", ...}
The Kleene star is often generalized for any
monoid (
M, .), that is, a set
M and binary operation '.' on
M such that
- (closure) for all a and b in M, a . b in M
- (associativity) for all a, b and c in M, (a . b) . c = a . (b . c)
- (identity) there is an e in M such that for all a, a . e = e . a = a
If
V is a
subset of
M, then
V* is defined as the smallest
superset of
V that contains ε (the empty string) and is closed under the operation.
V* is then itself a monoid, and is called the
monoid generated by V. This is a generalization of the Kleene star discussed above since the set of all strings over some set of symbols forms a monoid (with string concatenation as binary operation).
See also
This is an Article on Kleene star. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Kleene star