Suppose there is a language L∈NP, that is not NP-Complete and L≠∅ and L≠Σ∗. Which of the following statements can we infer from this?
P = NP
P ⊊ NP
P ≠ NP
NP ⊆ P
Suppose there is a language L∈NP, that is not NP-Complete and L≠∅ and L≠Σ∗. Which of the following statements can we infer from this?
P = NP
P ⊊ NP
P ≠ NP
NP ⊆ P
What would happen if $P=NP$? Clearly $P$-complete $=P$, and hence also $NP$-complete = $NP$. This means that every language in $NP$ would also be in $NP$-complete. So finding a language that isn't $NP$-complete, means that we must have $P\neq NP$