The virtues of laziness: Complexity of the tangent cone algorithm (Q1311617): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 11:19, 22 May 2024

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The virtues of laziness: Complexity of the tangent cone algorithm
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    The virtues of laziness: Complexity of the tangent cone algorithm (English)
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    25 September 1995
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    The study of computational problems in the ideal theory of local rings led to the notion of standard bases. These are a version of Gröbner bases for orderings which are not well orderings. In most cases appearing in applications, the tangent cone algorithm computes a standard basis of a given ideal [\textit{T. Mora}, \textit{G. Pfister} and \textit{C. Traverso}, ``An introduction to the tangent cone algorithm'', In: C. M. Hoffman (ed.), Issues in robotics and nonlinear geometry, JAI Press (1992)]. Roughly speaking, this is a variant of the Buchberger algorithm with suitable modifications to avoid infinitely long reductions. The complexity of the tangent cone algorithm is unknown. In the present paper the authors introduce a ``very lazy'' version of the algorithm which allows early interruptions based on a priori knowledge, for example, of the upper bound of the degrees of elements in a standard basis. In this case the algorithm is shown to have the same complexity as the Buchberger one.
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    ideal theory of local rings
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    Gröbner bases
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    standard basis
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    complexity of the tangent cone algorithm
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