Kraft–McMillan inequality

In coding theory, the Kraft–McMillan inequality gives a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of a prefix code[1] (in Leon G. Kraft's version) or a uniquely decodable code (in Brockway McMillan's version) for a given set of codeword lengths. Its applications to prefix codes and trees often find use in computer science and information theory.

Kraft's inequality was published in Kraft (1949). However, Kraft's paper discusses only prefix codes, and attributes the analysis leading to the inequality to Raymond Redheffer. The result was independently discovered in McMillan (1956). McMillan proves the result for the general case of uniquely decodable codes, and attributes the version for prefix codes to a spoken observation in 1955 by Joseph Leo Doob.

Applications and intuitions

Kraft's inequality limits the lengths of codewords in a prefix code: if one takes an exponential of the length of each valid codeword, the resulting set of values must look like a probability mass function, that is, it must have total measure less than or equal to one. Kraft's inequality can be thought of in terms of a constrained budget to be spent on codewords, with shorter codewords being more expensive. Among the useful properties following from the inequality are the following statements:

  • If Kraft's inequality holds with strict inequality, the code has some redundancy.
  • If Kraft's inequality holds with equality, the code in question is a complete code.
  • If Kraft's inequality does not hold, the code is not uniquely decodable.
  • For every uniquely decodable code, there exists a prefix code with the same length distribution.

Formal statement

Let each source symbol from the alphabet

be encoded into a uniquely decodable code over an alphabet of size with codeword lengths

Then

Conversely, for a given set of natural numbers satisfying the above inequality, there exists a uniquely decodable code over an alphabet of size with those codeword lengths.

Example: binary trees

9, 14, 19, 67 and 76 are leaf nodes at depths of 3, 3, 3, 3 and 2, respectively.

Any binary tree can be viewed as defining a prefix code for the leaves of the tree. Kraft's inequality states that

Here the sum is taken over the leaves of the tree, i.e. the nodes without any children. The depth is the distance to the root node. In the tree to the right, this sum is

Proof

Proof for prefix codes

Example for binary tree. Red nodes represent a prefix tree. The method for calculating the number of descendant leaf nodes in the full tree is shown.

First, let us show that the Kraft inequality holds whenever is a prefix code.

Suppose that . Let be the full -ary tree of depth (thus, every node of at level has children, while the nodes at level are leaves). Every word of length over an -ary alphabet corresponds to a node in this tree at depth . The th word in the prefix code corresponds to a node ; let be the set of all leaf nodes (i.e. of nodes at depth ) in the subtree of rooted at . That subtree being of height , we have

Since the code is a prefix code, those subtrees cannot share any leaves, which means that

Thus, given that the total number of nodes at depth is , we have

from which the result follows.

Conversely, given any ordered sequence of natural numbers,

satisfying the Kraft inequality, one can construct a prefix code with codeword lengths equal to each by choosing a word of length arbitrarily, then ruling out all words of greater length that have it as a prefix. There again, we shall interpret this in terms of leaf nodes of an -ary tree of depth . First choose any node from the full tree at depth ; it corresponds to the first word of our new code. Since we are building a prefix code, all the descendants of this node (i.e., all words that have this first word as a prefix) become unsuitable for inclusion in the code. We consider the descendants at depth (i.e., the leaf nodes among the descendants); there are such descendant nodes that are removed from consideration. The next iteration picks a (surviving) node at depth and removes further leaf nodes, and so on. After iterations, we have removed a total of

nodes. The question is whether we need to remove more leaf nodes than we actually have available in all in the process of building the code. Since the Kraft inequality holds, we have indeed

and thus a prefix code can be built. Note that as the choice of nodes at each step is largely arbitrary, many different suitable prefix codes can be built, in general.

Proof of the general case

Now we will prove that the Kraft inequality holds whenever is a uniquely decodable code. (The converse needs not be proven, since we have already proven it for prefix codes, which is a stronger claim.)

Denote . The idea of the proof is to get an upper bound on for and show that it can only hold for all if . Rewrite as

Consider all m-powers , in the form of words , where are indices between 1 and . Note that, since S was assumed to uniquely decodable, implies . This means that each summand corresponds to exactly one word in . This allows us to rewrite the equation to

where is the number of codewords in of length and is the length of the longest codeword in . For an -letter alphabet there are only possible words of length , so . Using this, we upper bound :

Taking the -th root, we get

This bound holds for any . The right side is 1 asymptotically, so must hold (otherwise the inequality would be broken for a large enough ).

Alternative construction for the converse

Given a sequence of natural numbers,

satisfying the Kraft inequality, we can construct a prefix code as follows. Define the ith codeword, Ci, to be the first digits after the radix point (e.g. decimal point) in the base r representation of

Note that by Kraft's inequality, this sum is never more than 1. Hence the codewords capture the entire value of the sum. Therefore, for j > i, the first digits of Cj form a larger number than Ci, so the code is prefix free.

Notes

  1. Cover, Thomas M.; Thomas, Joy A. (2006), "Data Compression", Elements of Information Theory (2nd ed.), John Wiley & Sons, Inc, pp. 108–109, doi:10.1002/047174882X.ch5, ISBN 978-0-471-24195-9
gollark: Test.
gollark: Okay, it should have rate unlimited?
gollark: !help
gollark: Hello, beeoid.
gollark: You are in 1283 exanations/s.

References

  • McMillan, Brockway (1956), "Two inequalities implied by unique decipherability", IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory, 2 (4): 115–116, doi:10.1109/TIT.1956.1056818.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.