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On 10/18/2024 12:00 PM, joes wrote:The existence of the check has an effect right from the start;Am Fri, 18 Oct 2024 11:39:52 -0500 schrieb olcott:Until if (root) is true it has no effect on DDD emulated by HHH.On 10/18/2024 9:41 AM, joes wrote:What? That is part of HHH, not DDD.Am Fri, 18 Oct 2024 09:10:04 -0500 schrieb olcott:That has nothing to do with any aspect of the emulation until HHH hasOn 10/18/2024 6:17 AM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 10/17/24 11:47 PM, olcott wrote:On 10/17/2024 10:27 PM, Richard Damon wrote:On 10/17/24 9:47 PM, olcott wrote:On 10/17/2024 8:13 PM, Richard Damon wrote:On 10/17/24 7:31 PM, olcott wrote:>When DDD is correctly emulated by HHH according to the
semantics of the x86 language DDD cannot possibly reach its
own machine address [00002183] no matter what HHH does.
+-->[00002172]-->[00002173]-->[00002175]-->[0000217a]--+>Except that 0000217a doesn't go to 00002172, but to 000015d2The more interesting part is HHH simulating itself, specifically theThe Emulating HHH sees those addresses at its begining and thenOK great this is finally good progress.
never again.
Then the HHH that it is emulating will see those addresses, but not
the outer one that is doing that emulation of HHH.
And so on.
Which HHH do you think EVER gets back to 00002172?
What instruction do you think that it emulates that would tell it
to do so?
At best the trace is:
00002172 00002173 00002175 0000217a conditional emulation of
00002172 conditional emulation of 00002173 conditional emulation of
00002175 conditional emulation of 0000217a CE of CE of 00002172 ...
if(Root) check on line 502.
correctly emulated itself emulating DDD.
But it would.From the concrete execution trace of DDD emulated by HHHMessage-ID: <rLmcnQQ3-N_tvH_4nZ2dnZfqnPGdnZ2d@brightview.co.uk>Of course. It needs to, in order to simulate it. Strictly speaking it
On 3/1/2024 12:41 PM, Mike Terry wrote:
> Obviously a simulator has access to the internal state (tape
> contents etc.) of the simulated machine. No problem there.
This seems to indicate that the Turing machine UTM version of HHH
can somehow see each of the state transitions of the DDD resulting
from emulating its own Turing machine description emulating DDD.
has no idea of its simulation of a simulation two levels down, only
of the immediate simulation; the rest is just part of whatever
program the simulated simulator is simulating, which happens to be
itself.
according to the semantics of the x86 language people with sufficient
technical competence can see that the halt status criteria that
professor Sipser agreed to has been met.
If emulating termination analyzer HHH emulates its input DDD
until HHH determines that its emulated DDD would never stop
running unless aborted ...
Same as the outer HHH returning that the inner ones wouldn't.Yet that is based on the factually incorrect assumption that every*Joes can't seem to understand this*This is very simple to understand. Almost as simple as: even if only
Only the outer-most HHH meets its abort criteria first, thus unless
it aborts as soon as it meets this criteria none of them will ever
abort.
the outermost HHH didn't abort, it would still halt,
instance of HHH does not use the exact same machine code.
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