Attributed graph grammar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In computer science, an attributed graph grammar is a class of graph grammar that associates vertices with a set of attributes and rewrites with functions on attributes. In the algebraic approach to graph grammars, they are usually formulated using the double-pushout approach or the single-pushout approach.

Implementation[]

AGG, a rule-based visual language that directly expresses attributed graph grammars using the single-pushout approach has been developed at TU Berlin for many years.[1]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Runge, Olga. "AGG Documentation". Retrieved 2017-11-06.

References[]

  • Rozenberg, Grzegorz (1997), Handbook of Graph Grammars and Computing by Graph Transformations, World Scientific Publishing, volumes 1–3, ISBN 9810228848.
  • Ehrig, Heckel, Korff, Lowe, Ribeiro, Wagner and Corradini, 1997. Algebraic Approaches to Graph Transformation - Part II: Single Pushout Approach and Comparison with Double Pushout Approach. Pp. 247-312 of (Rozenberg, 1997).
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