Recursive structure of MOS scales: Difference between revisions
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Note that the latter two words have at most k s's, and that W₂(L<sup>r+1</sup>s, L<sup>r</sup>s) has k chunks in total. | Note that the latter two words have at most k s's, and that W₂(L<sup>r+1</sup>s, L<sup>r</sup>s) has k chunks in total. | ||
It suffices to consider the case where the intersection w₂ ∩ w₃ contains at least k-1 complete chunks, since otherwise | It suffices to consider the case where the intersection w₂ ∩ w₃ contains at least k-1 complete chunks, since otherwise we would contradict either the length of W₂(λ, σ) or the mos property of w (Todo: bring back the cases and diagrams to prove this rigorously). If the intersection had exactly k-1 chunks, this implies that one substring is a proper subset of the other, a contradiction. Thus the intersection has to have exactly k chunks, implying w₂ = w₃, and that W₂(L<sup>r+1</sup>s, L<sup>r</sup>s) is exactly K+1 letters long, only one more than w₁(L, s). This contradicts the fact that W₂(λ, σ) has at least two more λ's than W₁(λ, σ). | ||
=== Preservation of generators === | === Preservation of generators === |