Jump to content

Left corner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2a02:1812:110c:dc00:4511:1a03:4da6:9852 (talk) at 11:31, 6 August 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In formal language theory, the left corner of a production rule in a context-free grammar is the left-most symbol on the right side of the rule.[1]

For example, in the rule A→Xα, X is the left corner.

The left corner table associates to a symbol all possible left corners for that symbol, and the left corners of those symbols, etc.

Given the grammar

S → VP
S → NP VP
VP → V NP
NP → DET N

the left corner table is as follows.

Symbol Left corner(s)
S VP, NP, V, DET
NP DET
VP V

Left corners are used to add bottom-up filtering to a top-down parser, or top-down filtering to a bottom-up parser.

References

  1. ^ 9.3 Using Left-corner Tables, Patrick Blackburn and Kristina Striegnitz, Natural Language Processing Techniques in Prolog