Brzozowski, JanuszSinnamon, Corwin2017-10-052017-10-052017http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/actacyb.23.1.2017.3http://hdl.handle.net/10012/12530A language L over an alphabet E is prefix-convex if, for any words x, y, z is an element of Sigma*, whenever x and xyz are in L, then so is xy. Prefix-convex languages include right-ideal, prefix-closed, and prefix-free languages as special cases. We examine complexity properties of these special prefix-convex languages. In particular, we study the quotient/state complexity of boolean operations, product (concatenation), star, and reversal, the size of the syntactic semi group, and the quotient complexity of atoms. For binary operations we use arguments with different alphabets when appropriate; this leads to higher tight upper bounds than those obtained with equal alphabets. We exhibit right-ideal, prefix-closed, and prefix-free languages that meet the complexity bounds for all the measures listed above.enatomscomplexity of operationsprefix-closedprefix-convexprefix-freequotient complexityregular languagesright idealsstate complexitysyntactic semigroupunrestricted alphabetsComplexity of Right-Ideal, Prefix-Closed, and Prefix-Free Regular LanguagesArticle