A Connection Between Unbordered Partial Words and Sparse Rulers




Saarela, Aleksi; Vanhatalo, Aleksi

PublisherThe Electronic Journal of Combinatorics

2026

 The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics

P1.40

33

1

1097-1440

1077-8926

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.37236/13806

https://doi.org/10.37236/13806

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/515762303



Partial words are words that contain, in addition to letters, special symbols ♢ called holes. Two partial words a=a0…an and b=b0…bn are compatible if, for all i, ai=bi or at least one of ai,bi is a hole. A partial word is unbordered if it does not have a proper nonempty prefix and a suffix that are compatible. Otherwise, the partial word is bordered.

A set R⊆{0,…,n} is called a complete sparse ruler of length n if, for all k∈{0,…,n}, there exists r,s∈R such that k=r−s. These are also known as restricted difference bases.

From the definitions it follows that the more holes a partial word has, the more likely it is to be bordered. By introducing a connection between unbordered partial words and sparse rulers, we improve the bounds on the maximum number of holes an unbordered partial word can have over alphabets of sizes 4 or greater. We also provide a counterexample for a previously reported theorem, depending on the reported values of the minimal number of marks in a length-135 ruler. We have not verified this value.

We then study a two-dimensional generalization of these results. We adapt methods from the one-dimensional case to solve the correct asymptotic for the number of holes that an unbordered two-dimensional binary partial word can have.


Authors were supported by the Academy of Finland under grants 339311 and 346566.


Last updated on 11/03/2026 01:23:36 PM