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Let 
 be a sequence over a finite Alphabet 
 (all the entries are elements of 
).  Define
the block growth function 
 of a sequence to be the number of Admissible words of length 
.  For example, in
the sequence 
..., the following words are Admissible
| Length | Admissible Words | 
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | 
 | 
so 
, 
, 
, 
, and so on. Notice that 
, so the block growth function is
always nondecreasing.  This is because any Admissible word of length 
 can be extended rightwards to produce an
Admissible word of length 
. Moreover, suppose 
 for some 
.  Then each admissible word of
length 
 extends to a unique Admissible word of length 
.
For a Sequence in which each substring of length 
 uniquely determines the next symbol in the
Sequence, there are only finitely many strings of length 
, so the process must eventually cycle and the
Sequence must be eventually periodic. This gives us the following theorems:
The block growth is also called the Growth Function or the Complexity of a Sequence.
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© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein