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Random Access to Grammar Compressed Strings

Grammar based compression, where one replaces a long string by a small context-free grammar that generates the string, is a simple and powerful paradigm that captures many popular compression schemes. In this paper, we present a novel grammar representation that allows efficient random access to any character or substring without decompressing the string. Let $S$ be a string of length $N$ compressed into a context-free grammar $\mathcal{S}$ of size $n$. We present two representations of $\mathcal{S}$ achieving $O(\log N)$ random access time, and either $O(n\cdot α_k(n))$ construction time and space on the pointer machine model, or $O(n)$ construction time and space on the RAM. Here, $α_k(n)$ is the inverse of the $k^{th}$ row of Ackermann's function. Our representations also efficiently support decompression of any substring in $S$: we can decompress any substring of length $m$ in the same complexity as a single random access query and additional $O(m)$ time. Combining these results with fast algorithms for uncompressed approximate string matching leads to several efficient algorithms for approximate string matching on grammar-compressed strings without decompression. For instance, we can find all approximate occurrences of a pattern $P$ with at most $k$ errors in time $O(n(\min\{|P|k, k^4 + |P|\} + \log N) + occ)$, where $occ$ is the number of occurrences of $P$ in $S$. Finally, we generalize our results to navigation and other operations on grammar-compressed ordered trees. All of the above bounds significantly improve the currently best known results. To achieve these bounds, we introduce several new techniques and data structures of independent interest, including a predecessor data structure, two "biased" weighted ancestor data structures, and a compact representation of heavy paths in grammars.

preprint2013arXivOpen access
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