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Related papers: Matching in the Pi-Calculus (Technical Report)

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We study whether, in the pi-calculus, the match prefix-a conditional operator testing two names for (syntactic) equality-is expressible via the other operators. Previously, Carbone and Maffeis proved that matching is not expressible this…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2014-08-08 Kirstin Peters , Tsvetelina Yonova-Karbe , Uwe Nestmann

Process calculi may be compared in their expressive power by means of encodings between them. A widely accepted definition of what constitutes a valid encoding for (dis)proving relative expressiveness results between process calculi was…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2018-04-27 Rob van Glabbeek

We introduce a new criterion, replacement freeness, to discern the relative expressiveness of process calculi. Intuitively, a calculus is strongly replacement free if replacing, within an enclosing context, a process that cannot perform any…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2010-12-01 Federico Banti , Rosario Pugliese , Francesco Tiezzi

This paper shows that the $\pi$-calculus with implicit matching is no more expressive than CCS$\gamma$, a variant of CCS in which the result of a synchronisation of two actions is itself an action subject to relabelling or restriction,…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2022-03-23 Rob van Glabbeek

We study the relation between process calculi that differ in their either synchronous or asynchronous interaction mechanism. Concretely, we are interested in the conditions under which synchronous interaction can be implemented using just…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2011-08-24 Kirstin Peters , Jens-Wolfhard Schicke , Uwe Nestmann

The $\rho$-calculus (Reflective Higher-Order Calculus) of Meredith and Radestock is a $\pi$-calculus-like language with some unusual features, notably, structured names, runtime generation of free names, and the lack of an operator for…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2022-09-07 Stian Lybech

The Asynchronous pi-calculus, as recently proposed by Boudol and, independently, by Honda and Tokoro, is a subset of the pi-calculus which contains no explicit operators for choice and output-prefixing. The communication mechanism of this…

Programming Languages · Computer Science 2020-11-17 Catuscia Palamidessi

In this paper we investigate fair computations in the pi-calculus. Following Costa and Stirling's approach for CCS-like languages, we consider a method to label process actions in order to filter out unfair computations. We contrast the…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2015-07-01 D. Cacciagrano , F. Corradini , C. Palamidessi

Encodings or the proof of their absence are the main way to compare process calculi. To analyse the quality of encodings and to rule out trivial or meaningless encodings, they are augmented with encodability criteria. There exists a bunch…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2019-08-26 Kirstin Peters

Encodings or the proof of their absence are the main way to compare process calculi. To analyse the quality of encodings and to rule out trivial or meaningless encodings, they are augmented with quality criteria. There exists a bunch of…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2015-08-28 Kirstin Peters , Rob van Glabbeek

The Asynchronous pi-calculus, proposed by Honda and Tokoro (1991) and, independently, by Boudol (1992), is a subset of the pi-calculus (Milner, 1992) which contains no explicit operators for choice and output-prefixing. The communication…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2013-07-09 Catuscia Palamidessi

The higher-order pi-calculus is an extension of the pi-calculus to allow communication of abstractions of processes rather than names alone. It has been studied intensively by Sangiorgi in his thesis where a characterisation of a contextual…

Programming Languages · Computer Science 2017-01-11 Alan Jeffrey , Julian Rathke

We specify the operational semantics and bisimulation relations for the finite pi-calculus within a logic that contains the nabla quantifier for encoding generic judgments and definitions for encoding fixed points. Since we restrict to the…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2009-02-16 Alwen Tiu , Dale Miller

This paper presents a new, significantly simpler proof of one of the main results of applied pi-calculus: the theorem that the concepts of observational and labeled equivalence of extended processes in applied pi-calculus coincide.

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2026-04-09 Andrew M. Mironov

We consider two characterisations of the may and must testing preorders for a probabilistic extension of the finite pi-calculus: one based on notions of probabilistic weak simulations, and the other on a probabilistic extension of a…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2012-01-12 Yuxing Deng , Alwen Tiu

We use forcing over admissible sets to show that, for every ordinal $\alpha$ in a club $C\subset\omega_1$, there are copies of $\alpha$ such that the isomorphism between them is not computable in the join of the complete $\Pi^1_1$ set…

Logic · Mathematics 2024-08-21 Noah Schweber

A well-known result by Palamidessi tells us that \pimix (the \pi-calculus with mixed choice) is more expressive than \pisep (its subset with only separate choice). The proof of this result argues with their different expressive power…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2010-12-01 Kirstin Peters , Uwe Nestmann

We address the problem of complementing higher-order patterns without repetitions of existential variables. Differently from the first-order case, the complement of a pattern cannot, in general, be described by a pattern, or even by a…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2008-10-22 Alberto Momigliano , Frank Pfenning

We analyse two translations from the synchronous into the asynchronous $\pi$-calculus, both without choice, that are often quoted as standard examples of valid encodings, showing that the asynchronous $\pi$-calculus is just as expressive as…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2025-02-14 Rob van Glabbeek , Ursula Goltz , Christopher Lippert , Stephan Mennicke

The expressiveness of communication primitives has been explored in a common framework based on the pi-calculus by considering four features: synchronism (asynchronous vs synchronous), arity (monadic vs polyadic data), communication medium…

Logic in Computer Science · Computer Science 2015-08-21 Thomas Given-Wilson , Axel Legay
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