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On 4/24/2025 6:10 PM, Richard Damon wrote:On 4/24/25 5:01 PM, olcott wrote:On 4/24/2025 2:59 PM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:Op 24.apr.2025 om 21:41 schreef olcott:On 4/24/2025 2:12 PM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:Again a lot of text, but no rebuttal.Op 24.apr.2025 om 19:13 schreef olcott:>>
HHH correctly determines through mathematical induction that DD
emulated by HHH (according to the finite string transformations
specified by the x86 language) cannot possibly reach its final
halt state in an infinite number of steps.No, HHH has a bug which makes that it fails to see that there is>
only a finite recursion,
When the finite string transformation rules of the x86 language are
applied to the input to HHH(DD)
THIS DD CANNOT POSSIBLY REACH ITS FINAL HALT STATE not even after an
infinite number of emulated steps.
>
Like Fred wrote months ago, that has nothing to do with the contradictoryWhen the finite string transformation rules of the x86 language areNo, HHH just stops performing those before it get to the end.
applied to the input to HHH(DD)
THIS DD CANNOT POSSIBLY REACH ITS FINAL HALT STATE not even after an
infinite number of emulated steps.
>
The transformation, which by definition of the x86 language, don't just
stop in the middle, continue to the point where the emulated HHH aborts
its emulation and returns 0 to the emulated DD which the halts.
Mathematical induction proves that DD emulated by HHH cannot possibly
reach its own final state in an infinite number of steps and it does
this with one recursive emulation.
There is a repeating pattern that every C programmer can see.
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