Mildly Context-sensitive Language

Mildly Context-sensitive Language

In formal grammar theory, mildly context-sensitive languages are a class of formal languages which can be efficiently parsed, but still possess enough context sensitivity to allow the parsing of natural languages. The concept was first introduced by Aravind Joshi in 1985.

Read more about Mildly Context-sensitive Language:  Definition, Formalisms, Control Language Hierarchy

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