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I am just curious is there any non regular language whose subset is regular?

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    @piperchester This comment is very old and it seems I deleted the file from my Dropbox - luckily I have an updated version. You will find the mentioned overview of languages on the last page of my [cheatsheet](http://www.christian-ivicevic.com/Files/Theo15/Cheatsheet.pdf).2015-09-23

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The empty language is a regular subset of any language at all.

More generally, every finite subset of any language is regular.

For example, let $L$ be the language $\{ a^n | n\text{ is prime} \} = \{ aa, aaa, aaaaa, a^7, \ldots\}$. Let $R$ be the subset of $L$ consisting just of $\{ aa, aaaaa, a^{11}, a^{109} \}$. Then $L$ is not regular, but $R$ is.

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    Every finite set is regular. http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/216047/formally-prove-that-every-finite-language-is-regular/216075#2160752012-11-13
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You are looking for regular "within" non-regular. Not an answer, but related, and more amusing is the following.

There operations on languages that (however complex the language) yield a regular language. As an example there is the operator "all subsequences" (sometimes called "sparse subwords"). Starting with $\{ a^n b^{n^2}\mid n\ge 1\}$ we get $a^* b^*$.

Shallit (in his book second course in formal language theory) starts with the languages of primes in ternary notation $\{ 2,10,12,21,102,111,122,201,212,1002,\dots\}$, and shows this gives the subsequence language $\Sigma^*2\Sigma^* \cup \Sigma^*1\Sigma^*0\Sigma^* \cup \Sigma^*1\Sigma^*1\Sigma^*1\Sigma^*$, $\Sigma = \{0,1,2\}$.

Nice, huh?

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For example {a^n b^n| n>=0} is a non-regular language, but it has infinite number of subsets that are regular languages: 1) the empty set, 2) {lambda} 3) {ab} 4) {a^2 b^2} . . . and any finite combinations of these languages.