Complete numbering

In computability theory complete numberings are generalizations of Gödel numbering first introduced by A.I. Mal'tsev in 1963. They are studied because several important results like the Kleene's recursion theorem and Rice's theorem, which were originally proven for the Gödel-numbered set of computable functions, still hold for arbitrary sets with complete numberings.

Definition

A numbering \nu of a set A is called complete (with respect to an element a \in A) if for every partial computable function f there exists a total computable function h so that

 \nu \circ h(i) = 
\left\{
\begin{matrix} 
\nu \circ f(i) &\mbox{if}\ i \in \mathrm{dom}(f), \\
a &\mbox{otherwise}.
\end{matrix}
\right.

The numbering \nu is called precomplete if

 \nu \circ f(i) = \nu \circ h(i) \qquad i \in \mathrm{dom}(f).\,

Examples

References