Self-synchronizing code
In coding theory, especially in telecommunications, a self-synchronizing code is a uniquely decodable code in which the symbol stream formed by a portion of one code word, or by the overlapped portion of any two adjacent code words, is not a valid code word.[1] Put another way, a set of strings (called "code words") over an alphabet is called a self-synchronizing code if for each string obtained by concatenating two code words, the substring starting at the second symbol and ending at the second-last symbol does not contain any code word as substring. Every self-synchronizing code is a prefix code, but not all prefix codes are self-synchronizing.
Other terms for self-synchronizing code are synchronized code[2] or, ambiguously, comma-free code.[3] A self-synchronizing code permits the proper framing of transmitted code words provided that no uncorrected errors occur in the symbol stream; external synchronization is not required. Self-synchronizing codes also allow recovery from uncorrected errors in the stream; with most prefix codes, an uncorrected error in a single bit may propagate errors further in the stream and make the subsequent data corrupted.
Importance of self-synchronizing codes is not limited to data transmission. Self-synchronization also facilitates some cases of data recovery, for example of a digitally encoded text.
Examples
- The prefix code {00, 11} is self-synchronizing because 0, 1, 01 and 10 are not codes.
- UTF-8 is self-synchronizing because its leading (
11xxxxxx
) and trailing (10xxxxxx
) bytes have different bit patterns. - High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC)
- Advanced Data Communication Control Procedures (ADCCP)
- Fibonacci coding
Counterexamples:
- The prefix code {ab,ba} is not self-synchronizing because abab contains ba.
- The prefix code b∗a (using the Kleene star) is not self-synchronizing (even though any new code word simply starts after een a) because code word ba contains code word a.
See also
References
- https://glossary.atis.org/glossary/self-synchronizing-code/?char=S&page_number=22&sort=ASC
- Berstel et al (2010) p. 137
- Berstel & Perrin (1985) p. 377
- Berstel, Jean; Perrin, Dominique (1985), Theory of Codes, Pure and Applied Mathematics, 117, Academic Press, Zbl 0587.68066
- Berstel, Jean; Perrin, Dominique; Reutenauer, Christophe (2010). Codes and automata. Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications. 129. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88831-8. Zbl 1187.94001.
- This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document: "Federal Standard 1037C". (in support of MIL-STD-188)