Search Results

Results for: 'Sight Reading'

6:53

CS125 - DFA to GNFA to Regular Expression

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook.

9:54

CS125 - Introduction to Regular Expressions

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook.

3:47

CS125 - Non Regular Languages

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook

10:59

CS125 - Pumping Lemma

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook

5:51

CS125 - Pumping Lemma Revisited

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook

4:26

CS125 - Context Free Languages

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook

2:56

CS125 - Formal Definition of CFG

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook

6:58

CS125 - Pushdown Automata

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook

6:08

CS125 - Decidability

By: rdasari

This video is a supplement for students who are reading "Introduction To The Theory Of Computation" by Michael Sipser. I took the liberty of using the terminology from the textbook