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In his book "Foundations of Computing", professor Allison shows an example of "language of equal numbers of as, bs, and cs, but in any order", formally: $L = \{ w \in \{a,b,c\}^*\ |\ |w|_a=|w|_b=|w|_c \}$, where $|w|_a$ denotes the number of $a$s in a word $w$. This language is a variant of the language $L_1 = \{ a^nb^nc^n |\ n>0 \}$ which is context-sensitive.

Later, he says that this language is not context-sensitive because "the working strings grow beyond a constant times the size of the initial input before shrinking down to the final output."

However, I can think of a Turing machine that first sorts the input (in a linear space n + c, where n is the input size and c is a constant such as 1) and then accepts/rejects in the very same manner as the machine accepting the language $L_1$. Both subroutines are also linear bounded and thus the machine itself is a linear bounded automaton (LBA). Context-sensitive languages are accepted by LBAs, therefore the language $L$ is context-sensitive.

Where am I mistaken?

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  • $\begingroup$ What's $c$ in your $n+c$? $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 21, 2023 at 0:10
  • $\begingroup$ It's a constant, potentially needed for the "working" tape, c=1 or c=2 for some sorting algorithms $\endgroup$
    – Barney
    Commented Aug 21, 2023 at 5:02

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It seems the author of the book is a little careless at this point. His definition of context-sensitive is that "the right-hand side of a rule must never be shorter than the left-hand side" together with a specific assumption that enables us to generate the empty string.

He states "The grammars in Examples 9–1 and 9–2 are not context-sensitive. In both cases, the working strings grow beyond a constant times the size of the initial input before shrinking down to the final output."

This is confusing. In his Example 9-1 for equal numbers of $a$, $b$ and $c$'s the only contracting rule is $S\to \lambda$ which can be easily transformed into a grammar where $S$ does not appear to the right of a rule by introducing a new copy of $S$. Then you will have a proper non-contracting grammar for the language you are interested in.

The other Example 9-2 for $\{ a^{2^n}\mid n\ge 0\}$ has several rules that are contracting, like $GR\to R$ and $XA\to X$. In this case there seems no fast solution, but with proper care also here one can design a noncontracting grammar for the language.

Then, I quote, "The languages generated by those grammars are not context-sensitive". This is not true as you suspected. Both languages can be recognized by a linear space Turing machine, or generated by noncontracting grammar.

(I prefer noncontracting here, as context-sensitive is usually a more restrictive type of grammar, which nevertheless is equally powerful.)

PS. For the second example several solutions can be found at Context sensitive grammar for $\{a^{2^n}\mid n\ge 0\}$.

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