Generalized trapezoidal words
The factor complexity function $C_w(n)$ of a finite or infinite word $w$ counts the number of distinct factors of $w$ of length $n$ for each $n \ge 0$. A finite word $w$ of length $|w|$ is said to be trapezoidal if the graph of its factor complexity $C_w(n)$ as a function of $n$ (for $0 \leq n \leq...
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Zusammenfassung: | The factor complexity function $C_w(n)$ of a finite or infinite word $w$
counts the number of distinct factors of $w$ of length $n$ for each $n \ge 0$.
A finite word $w$ of length $|w|$ is said to be trapezoidal if the graph of its
factor complexity $C_w(n)$ as a function of $n$ (for $0 \leq n \leq |w|$) is
that of a regular trapezoid (or possibly an isosceles triangle); that is,
$C_w(n)$ increases by 1 with each $n$ on some interval of length $r$, then
$C_w(n)$ is constant on some interval of length $s$, and finally $C_w(n)$
decreases by 1 with each $n$ on an interval of the same length $r$. Necessarily
$C_w(1)=2$ (since there is one factor of length $0$, namely the empty word), so
any trapezoidal word is on a binary alphabet. Trapezoidal words were first
introduced by de Luca (1999) when studying the behaviour of the factor
complexity of finite Sturmian words, i.e., factors of infinite "cutting
sequences", obtained by coding the sequence of cuts in an integer lattice over
the positive quadrant of $\mathbb{R}^2$ made by a line of irrational slope.
Every finite Sturmian word is trapezoidal, but not conversely. However, both
families of words (trapezoidal and Sturmian) are special classes of so-called
"rich words" (also known as "full words") - a wider family of finite and
infinite words characterized by containing the maximal number of palindromes -
studied in depth by the first author and others in 2009.
In this paper, we introduce a natural generalization of trapezoidal words
over an arbitrary finite alphabet $\mathcal{A}$, called generalized trapezoidal
words (or GT-words for short). In particular, we study combinatorial and
structural properties of this new class of words, and we show that, unlike the
binary case, not all GT-words are rich in palindromes when $|\mathcal{A}| \geq
3$, but we can describe all those that are rich. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1408.0451 |