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A subsequence, substring, prefix or suffix of a string is a subset of the symbols in a string, where the order of the elements is preserved. In this context, the terms string and sequence have the same meaning.
Subsequence
- Main article subsequence
A subsequence of a string is a string such that , where . Subsequence is a generalisation of substring, suffix and prefix. Finding the longest string which is equal to a subsequence of two or more strings is known as the longest common subsequence problem.
Example: The string anna is equal to a subsequence of the string banana:
banana
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an na
Substring
A substring (or factor) of a string is a string , where and . A substring of a string is a prefix of a suffix of the string, and equivalently a suffix of a prefix. If is a substring of T, it is also a subsequence, which is a more general concept. Given a pattern P, you can find its occurrences in a string T with a string searching algorithm. Finding the longest string which is equal to a substring of two or more strings is known as the longest common substring problem.
Example: The string ana is equal to substrings (and subsequences) of banana at two different offsets:
banana
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ana||
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ana
In the mathematical literature, substrings are also called subwords (in America) or factors (in Europe).
Prefix
A prefix of a string is a string , where . A proper prefix of a string is not equal to the string itself and not empty[1] (0 < m < n). A prefix can be seen as a special case of a substring.
Example: The string ban is equal to a prefix (and substring and subsequence) of the string banana:
banana
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ban
The square subset symbol is sometimes used to indicate a prefix, so that denotes that is a prefix of T. This defines a binary relation on strings, called the prefix relation.
In formal language theory, the term prefix of a string is also commonly understood to be the set of all prefixes of a string, with respect to that language. See the article on string functions (mathematics) for more details.
Suffix
A suffix of a string is a string , where . A proper suffix of a string is not equal to the string itself and not empty[2] (0 < m < n). A suffix can be seen as a special case of a substring.
Example: The string nana is equal to a suffix (and substring and subsequence) of the string banana:
banana
||||
nana
Superstring
Given a set of k strings , a superstring of the set P is single string that contains every string in P as a substring. For example, a concatenation of the strings of P in any order gives a trivial superstring of P. For a more interesting example, let P = {abcc, efab, bccla}. Then bcclabccefab is a superstring of P, and efabccla is another, shorter superstring of P. Generally, we are interested in finding superstrings whose length is small.
References
- ^ Gusfield, Dan [1997] (1999). Algorithms on Strings, Trees and Sequences: Computer Science and Computational Biology. USA: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58519-8.
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