Log-space computable function

In computational complexity theory, a log-space computable function is a function that requires only memory to be computed (this restriction does not apply to the size of the output). The computation is generally done by means of a log-space transducer.

Log-space reductions

The main use for log-space computable functions is in log-space reductions. This is a means of transforming an instance of one problem into an instance of another problem, using only logarithmic space.

Examples of log-space computable functions

Notes

References

  • Sipser, Michael (2006), Introduction to the Theory of Computation, Cengage Learning,ISBN 978-0-619-21764-8.


Uses material from the Wikipedia article Log-space computable function, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.