On the computability of Walsh functions. (Q1607297)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On the computability of Walsh functions.
scientific article

    Statements

    On the computability of Walsh functions. (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    31 July 2002
    0 references
    The Haar and the Walsh functions are proved to be computable with respect to the Fine-metric \(d_{F}\) which is induced from the infinite product \(\Omega = {0,1}{^{1,2,\ldots}}\) with the weighted product metric \(d_{C}\) of the discrete metric on \({0,1}.\) Although they are discontinuous functions on \([0,1]\) with respect to the Euclidean metric, they are continuous functions on \((\Omega,d_{C})\) and on \(([0,1],d_{F}).\) On \((\Omega,d_{C})\), computable real-valued cylinder functions, which include the Walsh functions, become computable and every computable function can be approximated effectively by a computable sequence of cylinder functions. The metric space \(([0,1],d_{F})\) is separable but not complete nor effectively complete. We say that a function on \([0,1]\) is uniformly Fine-computable if it is sequentially computable and effectively uniformly continuous with respect to the metric \(d_{F}.\) It is proved that a uniformly Fine-computable function is essentially a computable function on \(\Omega\). It is also proved that Walsh--Fourier coefficients of a uniformly Fine-computable function \(f\) form a computable sequence of reals and there exists a subsequence of the Walsh--Fourier series which Fine-converges effectively uniformly to \(f.\).
    0 references
    0 references
    Metric space with computability structure
    0 references
    Computable function
    0 references
    Dyadic group
    0 references
    Walsh function
    0 references
    Walsh-Fourier series
    0 references