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		Thank you for your help, Bill. Not that you need to respond, but here was what I wrote out to help myself better understand the problem:
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  Algebraic laws:
  Commutative laws:
 x And y = y And x
  Associative laws:
 x And (y And z) = (x And y) And z
 x Or (y Or z) = (x Or y) Or z
  Distributive laws:
 x And (y Or z) = (x And y) Or (x And z)
 x Or (y And z) = (x Or y) And (x Or z)
  De Morgans laws:
 Not(x And y) = Not(x) Or Not(y)
 Not(x Or y) = Not(x) And Not(y)
  Idempotent laws:
 x And x = x
 x Or x = x
  Example in the appendices of the 2nd edition and in a Coursera video:
  "These algebraic laws can be used to simplify Boolean functions. For example, consider the function Not (Not (x) And Not (x Or y)).
  Not(Not(x) And Note(x Or y)) = // by De Morgans:
 Not(Not(x) And (Not(x) And Not(y))) = // by the associative law:
 Not((Not(x) And Not(x)) And Not(y)) = // by the idempotent law:
 Not(Not(x) And Not(y)) = // by De Morgans:
 Not(Not(x)) Or Not(Not(y)) = by double negation:
 x Or y"
  I want to use algebraic laws to reduce the Or function so that only Not and And operators are present:
  (DNF) of the Or function: (Not(a) And b) Or (a And (Not(b)) Or (a And b)
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  From the book:
  "Reducing a Boolean expression into a simpler one is an art requiring experience and insight. Various reduction tools and techniques are available, but the problem remains challenging. In general, reducing a Boolean expression into its simplest form is an NP-hard problem."
  So, maybe I just need to spend time playing around with various options.
  Thanks again for taking the time!
  
	
	
	
	 
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