Abstract

P. Chase and F. Ruskey each published a Gray code for length n binary strings with m occurrences of 1, coding m-combinations of n objects, which is two-close—that is, in passing from one binary string to its successor a single 1 exchanges positions with a 0 which is either adjacent to the 1 or separated from it by a single 0. If we impose the restriction that any suffix of a string contains at least k − 1 times as many 0's as 1's, we obtain k-suffixes: suffixes of k-ary Dyck words. Combinations are retrieved as special case by setting k = 1 and k-ary Dyck words are retrieved as a special case by imposing the additional condition that the entire string has exactly k − 1 times as many 0's as 1's. We generalize Ruskey's Gray code to the first two-close Gray code for k-suffixes and we provide a loop-free implementation for k ⩾ 2 . For k = 1 we use a simplified version of Chase's loop-free algorithm for generating his two-close Gray code for combinations. These results are optimal in the sense that there does not always exist a Gray code, either for combinations or Dyck words, in which the 1 and the 0 that exchange positions are adjacent.

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