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[ Followup-To: set ]Emulating termination analyzer H is inherently an emulator.
In comp.theory olcott <polcott333@gmail.com> wrote:On 6/26/2024 8:40 AM, Alan Mackenzie wrote:olcott <polcott333@gmail.com> wrote:On 6/26/2024 3:10 AM, Mikko wrote:[ .... ]The relevant area of software engineering is testing. The usual
attitude of software engineers is that a program is accpted when it
has been sufficiently tested and passed all tests. Consequently, an
important part of sofware work is the design of tests.In the current context the program to be tested is a halting decider.*NO IT IS NOT. H0 IS ONLY AN X86 EMULATOR*
After you quit lying about the behavior of DDD correctly
emulated by H0 then we can move on to the next point.I think the problem is rather your calling every program or function you
talk about H, or H^, or HH, or HHH, or H0, or H1. Usually, in the past,
you have meant purported halting deciders by these names. Now you're
saying that you mean an X86 emulator. Where and when did this change
happen, and how is anybody else supposed to know what you mean by
particular uses of these names?When I ask people to consider the behavior of DDDI don't think so. People's eyes glaze over when they see yet another one
correctly emulated by H0 according to the semantics
of the x86 programming language it really does seem
to be the strawman deception when they try to get away
with saying that it must be the behavior of the directly
executed DDD().
of your posts, virtually the same as so many others, and cannot
reasonably be expected to read and understand every last word.
Maybe if you restricted yourself to using E... when you mean an emulator,
and H... when you mean a purported halting decider, there would be less
confusion.
Given how most people here are mathematically trained, perhaps if youOK that sounds like a reasonable way to avoid information overload.
started a typical post with "Suppose E is a code emulator ...", and other
prerequisites there would be less confusion still.
Of course I must mean jumping up and down yelling and screaming_DDD()
[00002172] 55 push ebp ; housekeeping
[00002173] 8bec mov ebp,esp ; housekeeping
[00002175] 6872210000 push 00002172 ; push DDD
[0000217a] e853f4ffff call 000015d2 ; call H0(DDD)
[0000217f] 83c404 add esp,+04
[00002182] 5d pop ebp
[00002183] c3 ret
Size in bytes:(0018) [00002183]It is clear that the semantics of the x86 language specifiesIt is not at all clear, given how murky the code at 15d2 is, and what you
that DDD correctly emulated by H0 at machine address 0000217a
will continue to repeat the first four instructions of DDD
until out-of-memory error.
mean by "correctly emulated".
We cannot prove differential calculus to anyone not knowingWhen we add that the outermost directly executed H0 can abortIt might do. Convincing argument that this is the case (i.e. a proof)
its simulation as soon as the behavior of its input matches
the the infinite recursion behavior pattern it remains true
that the call from the emulated DDD to the emulated H0(DDD)
cannot possibly return.
has not been forthcoming.
When they say that I am wrong knowing that they do not understand*That people consistently lie about this is quite annoying*I haven't seen other people here lying.
*yet not nearly so much when their lie is easily exposed*
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