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I'm having a very hard time understanding what's what.

$$L_{1}\leq_{p}L_{2}$$

If $L_2$ is stated to be in $\textbf{NP}$, is it necessarily true that $L_1$ is $\textbf{NP}$-Complete? I need to show the following for an assignment, but I'm having a dispute with a fellow student because he claims that I can't claim that $L_1$ is $\textbf{NP}$-Complete...

Suppose that $L_1\leq_p L_2\leq_p L_3$. Also suppose that $L_3$ is in $\textbf{NP}$. Explain how to solve $L_1$ deterministically in exponential time.

I say (and I could be wrong - and that's a strong possiblity since I have very little understanding of this material) that since $L_3$ is in $\textbf{NP}$, $L_2$ also has to be in $\textbf{NP}$, and so therefore $L_1$ has to be in $\textbf{NP}$. And if that's the case, then $L_1$ can easily be converted to a deterministic algorithm through a breadth first search through the non-deterministic computation tree. Is there something I'm missing?

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You asked two questions. What you are missing is that those two questions are unrelated.

Question 1:

$$L_{1}\leq_{p}L_{2}$$

If $L_2$ is stated to be in $\textbf{NP}$, is it necessarily true that $L_1$ is $\textbf{NP}$-Complete?

No. Consider the case where L1 and L2 are the same easy problem.

Question 2:

I need to show the following for an assignment, but I'm having a dispute with a fellow student because he claims that I can't claim that $L_1$ is $\textbf{NP}$-Complete...

Suppose that $L_1\leq_p L_2\leq_p L_3$. Also suppose that $L_3$ is in $\textbf{NP}$. Explain how to solve $L_1$ deterministically in exponential time.

I say […] that since $L_3$ is in $\textbf{NP}$, $L_2$ also has to be in $\textbf{NP}$, and so therefore $L_1$ has to be in $\textbf{NP}$. And if that's the case, then $L_1$ can easily be converted to a deterministic algorithm through a breadth first search through the non-deterministic computation tree. Is there something I'm missing?

There is nothing wrong with your proof. (Okay, I would not call the exponential-time simulation of a nondeterministic polynomial-time Turing machine “breadth-first search,” but that is a separate issue.) As your fellow student said, it is true that you cannot claim that L1 is NP-complete, and indeed you have never claimed that L1 is NP-complete, so your proof for Question 2 does not contradict the answer to Question 1.

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  • $\begingroup$ How would you describe the algorithm then, without using the term breadth-first-search? I've read that in my textbook by Sipser and my class notes from the prof. I guess you could call it a level-order traversal of the computation tree, but that's just semantics. $\endgroup$
    – Mirrana
    Commented Feb 20, 2013 at 20:42

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