Ah, I see. You mean (X)HTML, and 'a' is
P, 'b' is
SPAN, 'c' is
CODE, 'd' is
SMALL, 'e' is
EM and 'f' is
STRONG. So, now you encounter:
<P>foo <SPAN> bar baz <EM> qux </EM> <EM> quux </EM> </P>
Now, assuming tags aren't to be inserted inside words, I still can find five places to put in
</SPAN>: before 'bar', between 'bar' and 'baz', after 'baz', between the two
EM elements, and before the
</P> tag.
Now, if you have a DTD that says that the only possible content of a 'b' is exactly two 'e's, you know where the missing closing tag should have been.
Note also that if you have a DTD where you can always unambigiously deduce where a missing closing tag should have gone, the closing tag is redundant - and if it were an SGML DTD instead of an XML DTD, the closing tag would have been optional. (And that would have solved the problem instantly - the document would be conforming).
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