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On 5/10/2025 1:19 AM, wij wrote:But it violates the x86 semantics by halting the simulation before it reached the reachable halt of the program specified in the input.On Sat, 2025-05-10 at 01:06 -0500, olcott wrote:HHH and DDD and DD are the most recent functions.On 5/10/2025 1:00 AM, wij wrote:>On Sat, 2025-05-10 at 00:41 -0500, olcott wrote:>On 5/10/2025 12:27 AM, wij wrote:>On Sat, 2025-05-10 at 00:19 -0500, olcott wrote:>On 5/10/2025 12:13 AM, wij wrote:>On Sat, 2025-05-10 at 00:06 -0500, olcott wrote:>>>When mathematical mapping is properly understood>
it will be known that functions computed by models
of computation must transform their input into
outputs according to the specific steps of an
algorithm.
>
_DDD()
[00002172] 55 push ebp ; housekeeping
[00002173] 8bec mov ebp,esp ; housekeeping
[00002175] 6872210000 push 00002172 ; push DDD
[0000217a] e853f4ffff call 000015d2 ; call HHH(DDD)
[0000217f] 83c404 add esp,+04
[00002182] 5d pop ebp
[00002183] c3 ret
Size in bytes:(0018) [00002183]
>
For example HHH(DDD) only correctly map to the
behavior that its input actually specifies by correctly
emulating DDD according to the rules of the x86 language.
>
This causes the first four instructions of DDD
to be emulated followed by HHH emulating itself
emulating the first three instructions of DDD.
>
It is right at this recursive simulation just
before HHH(DDD) is called again that HHH recognizes
the repeating pattern and rejects DDD.
Yes, but you still did not answer the question: Is POOH exactly about HP?
>
>>>>> H(D)=1 if D() halt.
>>>>> H(D)=0 if D() not halt.
>
Right now it is mostly about proving the
above requirements are is mistaken.
>
Why is the requirement invalid?
>
H(D)=1 if D() halt.
H(D)=0 if D() not halt.
>The notion that the behavior specified by the finite>
string input to a simulating termination analyzer
POOH reads(takes) its input as a function, not 'finite string'.
Are you talking about POOH now? There is no POOH that takes
'finite string'.
>
It <is> a finite string of x86 bytes.
Disagree.
The D in Halt7.c (I just saw once) does not treat H as 'finite string',
D calls H. H also does not treat D as 'finite string'.
>
HHH does emulate its finite strings of x86 machine code
according to the rules of the x86 language.
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