Revisiting Matrix Interpretations for Proving Termination of Term Rewriting
Friedrich Neurauter and Aart Middeldorp
Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Rewriting Techniques
and Applications (RTA 2011), Leibniz International Proceedings in
Informatics 10, pp. 251 – 266, 2011.
Abstract
Matrix interpretations are a powerful technique for proving termination of term rewrite systems, which is based on the well-known paradigm of interpreting terms into a domain equipped with a suitable well-founded order, such that every rewrite step causes a strict decrease. Traditionally, one uses vectors of non-negative numbers as domain, where two vectors are in the order relation if there is a strict decrease in the respective first components and a weak decrease in all other components. In this paper, we study various alternative well-founded orders on vectors of non-negative numbers based on vector norms and compare the resulting variants of matrix interpretations to each other and to the traditional approach. These comparisons are mainly theoretical in nature. We do, however, also identify one of these variants as a proper generalization of traditional matrix interpretations as a stand-alone termination method, which has the additional advantage that it gives rise to a more powerful implementation.BibTeX Entry
@inproceedings{NM-RTA11, author = "Friedrich Neurauter and Aart Middeldorp", title = "Revisiting Matrix Interpretations for Proving Termination of Term Rewriting", booktitle = "Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Rewriting Techniques and Applications", series = "Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics", volume = 10, pages = "251--266", year = 2011, doi = "10.4230/LIPIcs.RTA.2011.251" }