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On 6/21/2024 2:02 AM, Mikko wrote:Noboyd asked any question in any of the above quoteed text.On 2024-06-20 14:45:17 +0000, olcott said:Bypassing my question.
On 6/20/2024 12:43 AM, Mikko wrote:That I can make a reasonable comment about one point does not mean thatOn 2024-06-19 13:11:10 +0000, olcott said:void Infinite_Loop()
On 6/19/2024 3:18 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:No, it is not. It is correct to say that the input was not simulated to itsOp 18.jun.2024 om 19:25 schreef olcott:It is correct do say that the simulated input did not terminateOn 6/18/2024 12:06 PM, joes wrote:If the code specifies 5 iterations and the simulator simulates only 3 iterations, it is incorrect to conclude that the repetition show non-halting behaviour.
void DDD()
{
H0(DDD);
}
DDD correctly simulated by any H0 cannot possibly halt.
DDD halts iff H0 halts.Halting is a technical term-of-the-art that corresponds
to terminates normally. Because Turing machines are
abstract mathematical objects there has been no notion
of abnormal termination for a Turing machine.
We can derive a notion of abnormal termination for Turing
machines from the standard terms-of-the-art.
Some TM's loop and thus never stop running, this is classical
non-halting behavior. UTM's simulate Turing machine descriptions.
This is the same thing as an interpreter interpreting the
source-code of a program.
A UTM can be adapted so that it only simulates a fixed number
of iterations of an input that loops. When this UTM stops
simulating this Turing machine description we cannot correctly
say that this looping input halted.
normally, thus defining the notion of abnormal termination
within Turing machines.
normal termination.
{
HERE: goto HERE;
}
So infinite loops are beyond your comprehension.
other points are beyond my comprehension. You should not assume that
other people's mental abilities are as limited as yours.
I will assume that you do not understand that infinite loopsIt is not a good idea to assume too macuh. However, that particular
never terminate until you prove otherwise.
Not all, only what it already has looked.The executed H see all.If it can. If the simulated Turing machine never returns to a previousThe input to the simulator is not a simulated input, itA finite number of state transitions of a Turing Machine
is a real input.
description that loops are correctly simulated by an adapted UTM.
This adapted UTM stops simulating this input when it correctly
determines in a finite number of steps that this input loops
thus never halts.
configuration it is hard to determine whether it will ever stop.
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