From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 X-Msuck: nntp://news.gmane.io/gmane.science.mathematics.categories/2292 Path: news.gmane.org!not-for-mail From: Steve Stevenson Newsgroups: gmane.science.mathematics.categories Subject: Automata as Categories Date: Tue, 20 May 2003 11:15:23 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <16074.18059.966602.668242@merlin.cs.clemson.edu> NNTP-Posting-Host: main.gmane.org Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Trace: ger.gmane.org 1241018554 3419 80.91.229.2 (29 Apr 2009 15:22:34 GMT) X-Complaints-To: usenet@ger.gmane.org NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2009 15:22:34 +0000 (UTC) To: categories@mta.ca Original-X-From: rrosebru@mta.ca Tue May 20 16:09:07 2003 -0300 Return-path: Envelope-to: categories-list@mta.ca Delivery-date: Tue, 20 May 2003 16:09:07 -0300 Original-Received: from Majordom by mailserv.mta.ca with local (Exim 4.10) id 19ICSL-0005mO-00 for categories-list@mta.ca; Tue, 20 May 2003 16:07:25 -0300 Original-Sender: cat-dist@mta.ca Precedence: bulk X-Keywords: X-UID: 28 Original-Lines: 15 Xref: news.gmane.org gmane.science.mathematics.categories:2292 Archived-At: I am interested to find an article or book that is a category- theoretic redevelopment of "classical" automata. I'd like to find something that graduate students could use if they had already had an automata course and now would retrace that same development using category-theoretic vocabulary and means. Thanks in advance... steve