Dude you need to be quite dumb to ask that question! An automata is simply a hand-cranked machine usally made out of wood. Keep that in mind or else....
the greeks
automata is simply plural of automaton. shantanu sharma SCRIET 2008-2012
A deterministic Finite Automata)DFA will have a single possible output for a given input.The answer is deterministic because you can always feel what the output will be.A (Nondeterministic Finite Automata)NFA will have at least one input which will cause a "choice" to be made during a state transition,unlike a (deterministic Finite Automata)DFA one input can cause multiple outputs for a given (Nondeterministic Finite Automata)NFA.
i cant sorry
Automata, and the related concept of formal languages, is the core of theoretical computer science. They are where the notion of run-time complexity comes from, and are absolutely central to a complete understanding of algorithm design and optimization. While you can (and many people do) write programs without understanding automata and algorithm design, a solid understanding of them both will make you a much better programmer, and save you a lot of time and trouble when you try to work out how to make something run faster.
Yes they are.:)
Robert Addams has written: 'How to design and make, simple automata' -- subject(s): Mechanical toys, Wooden toy making
Automata was released on 12/31/2014.
Automata UK ended in 1985.
The Production Budget for Automata was $15,000,000.
Is the main purpose of using Automata?
Automata are like robots, but they are entirely mechanical (no elctrical circuits or logic). They were effectively the first type of robots, and were made by several ancient civilisations.
the greeks
automata is simply plural of automaton. shantanu sharma SCRIET 2008-2012
DFA - deterministic finite automata NFA - non-deterministic finite automata
A deterministic Finite Automata)DFA will have a single possible output for a given input.The answer is deterministic because you can always feel what the output will be.A (Nondeterministic Finite Automata)NFA will have at least one input which will cause a "choice" to be made during a state transition,unlike a (deterministic Finite Automata)DFA one input can cause multiple outputs for a given (Nondeterministic Finite Automata)NFA.
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