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Moore machine with C#

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23 Apr 2009Public Domain 31.8K   558   22  
A simple Moore machine implemented in C#.

Introduction

Some time ago, I had to solve a synchronization problem using serial ports for communication with mobile phones. I solved this with an implementation of a Moore machine.

Background

What is a Moore machine and what is a finite state machine? A finite state machine can be visualized by a graph. Each node is a state . Only one state can be active at a time, whereas time is actually irrelevant. If the state machine's active state is , it receives the input character (words, symbols, messages, a.s.o.), there is a transition function defined, then the machine changes its active state to .

The Moore machine and other finite state machines (e.g., Mealy machines) are well documented on Wikipedia:

Using the code

Here is a very simple usage example:

C#
using System;
using System.Threading;
 
namespace visusNET.FiniteStateMachine
{
    public class Test
    {
        [STAThread]
        public static void Main()
        {
            string[] sigma = new string[] { "ABC", "XYZ", "123" };
 
            State state1 = new State(State1, "State 1");
            State state2 = new State(State2, "State 2");
            State state3 = new State(State3, "State 3");
            State[] S = { state1, state2, state3 };
 
            TransitionFunction delta = new TransitionFunction();
 
            delta.AddTransition(state1, sigma[0], state2); // state1 --ABC--> state2
            delta.AddTransition(state2, sigma[1], state3); // state2 --XYZ--> state3
            delta.AddTransition(state3, sigma[2], state1); // state3 --123--> state1
 
            MooreMachine machine = new MooreMachine(sigma, S, state1, delta);
            machine.Delay = 1000;
            machine.Interval = 5000;
 
            machine.Analyze();
 
            Thread machineThread = new Thread(new ThreadStart(machine.Run));
            machineThread.Start();
 
            while (true)
            {
                machine.SetInput("ABC");
                Thread.Sleep(1000);
                machine.SetInput("XYZ");
                Thread.Sleep(1000);
                machine.SetInput("123");
                Thread.Sleep(1000);
            }
        }
 
        public static void State1()
        {
            Console.WriteLine("State 1 is running...");
        }
 
        public static void State2()
        {
            Console.WriteLine("State 2 is running...");
        }
 
        public static void State3()
        {
            Console.WriteLine("State 3 is running...");
        }
    }
}

And this is the (verbose) output:

Checking State 1 with ABC... Found
Checking State 1 with XYZ... Not found
Checking State 1 with 123... Not found
Checking State 2 with ABC... Not found
Checking State 2 with XYZ... Found
Checking State 2 with 123... Not found
Checking State 3 with ABC... Not found
Checking State 3 with XYZ... Not found
Checking State 3 with 123... Found
This Moore-Machine is a partially-specified deterministic finite state machine.
Following transitions are missing:
(State 1, "XYZ") -> undefined
(State 1, "123") -> undefined
(State 2, "ABC") -> undefined
(State 2, "123") -> undefined
(State 3, "ABC") -> undefined
(State 3, "XYZ") -> undefined
State 1 is running...
Got input: XYZ
State 1 is running...
Got input: ABC
State 2 is running...
Got input: 123
State 2 is running...
Got input: XYZ
State 3 is running...
Got input: ABC
State 3 is running...
Got input: 123
State 1 is running...
Got input: XYZ

Points of interest

The funny thing about this code is that I wrote it in about an hour without testing it. It worked at first go.

History

  • Version 1.0 - 23/04/2009.

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under A Public Domain dedication


Written By
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