More on signatures

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Théophile Bastian 2017-08-20 16:55:13 +02:00
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@ -350,6 +350,27 @@ The ``IO adjacency'' term is an additional term in the signatures of order
above $0$, indicating what input and output pins of the circuit group
containing the current gate are adjacent to it.
\paragraph{Efficiency.} Every circuit memoizes all it can concerning its
signature: the inner signature, the IO adjacency, the signatures of order $n$
already computed, etc.
This memoization, alongside with the exclusive use of elementary operations,
makes the computation of a signature very fast. The computation is linear in
the number of gates in a circuit, times the order computed; the computation is
lazy.
To keep those memoized values up to date whenever the structure of the circuit
is changed (since this is meant to be integrated in a programming language, fl,
meaning the structure of the circuit will possibly be created, checked for
signature, altered, then checked again), each circuit keeps track of a
``timestamp'' of last modification, which is incremented whenever the circuit
or its children are modified. A memoized data is always stored alongside with a
timestamp of computation, which invalidates a previous result when needed.
One possible path of investigation for future work, if the computation turns
out to be still too slow in real-world cases --- which looks unlikely ---,
would be to try to multithread this computation.
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\section{Group equality}
\todo{}