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On 12/03/2025 02:06, olcott wrote:DDD correctly simulated by HHH cannotOn 3/11/2025 9:02 PM, dbush wrote:"THESE ARE THE WORDS ANYONE THAT DODGES THESE WORDS WILL BE TAKEN FOR A LIAR"?On 3/11/2025 9:41 PM, Richard Heathfield wrote:>On 12/03/2025 01:22, olcott wrote:>DDD correctly simulated by HHH never reaches its>
own "return" instruction and terminates normally
in any finite or infinite number of correctly
simulated steps.
If it correctly simulates infinitely many steps, it doesn't terminate. Look up "infinite".
>
But your task is to decide for /any/ program, not just DDD. That, as you are so fond of saying, is 'stipulated', and you can't get out of it. The whole point of the Entscheidungsproblem is its universality. Ignore that, and you have nothing.
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>
Given that his code has HHH(DD) returning 0,
THESE ARE THE WORDS ANYONE THAT DODGES THESE
WORDS WILL BE TAKEN FOR A LIAR
Is that all you've got? Nothing on your function's inability to correctly decide on whether arbitrary input programs terminate, which is a ***stipulated*** requirement for the problem.
Without that, all you have is loud.
void DDD()Look up "infinite". You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
{
HHH(DDD);
return;
}
>
DDD correctly simulated by HHH never reaches its
own "return" instruction and terminates normally
in any finite or infinite number of correctly
simulated steps.
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