I know a little about what is a Turing Machine and a Turing complete language, but to understand better, could someone give examples of languages that are not Turing complete? (maybe machines that are not Turing, as well?)

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Regular expressions, in the formal definition, consisting only of:

  • concatenation ( ab )
  • unbounded repetition ( a* )
  • alternation ( a|b )
  • grouping ( (ab)|(cd) )

can only recognise regular languages. A Turing-complete programming language can recognise recursively-enumerable languages.

An example is that regular expressions cannot tell you if a string consists of matched pairs of parentheses: eg ()(()) is accepted while ()((())() is rejected, while Turing-complete programming languages can.

(Note that regexes in modern programming languages are more powerful than the formal academic definition of regular expressions. Some may even be Turing complete.)

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For example, the Perl regexp can be recursive: catonmat.net/blog/recursive-regular-expressions PHP regexp has the /e flag to evaluate PHP expressions in the subsitution. – SHiNKiROU Aug 31 '10 at 17:13
@SHi: thanks for that, very interesting! – Philip Potter Aug 31 '10 at 17:47
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Once saw a regular expression in Perl that matched strings with a length that was a prime number only. Used backtracking and took quite a while... – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen Sep 27 '10 at 15:57
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Regular languages - those that can be described as regular expressions - are not Turing complete.

Markup languages (used for describing data, not computation) like XML and JSON are not Turing complete.

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The difference between data and computation is tricky. LaTeX is Turing-complete, despite being a text-processing language. – Philip Potter Aug 30 '10 at 12:43
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@Phillip: Not entirely fair, since LaTeX has access to all of TeX which is intended (at least in part) to be a general-purpose language. See Knuth's page, where he answers the question "What is your favorite language?". – Charles Sep 1 '10 at 2:56
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