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On 2025-05-15 16:47:49 +0000, olcott said:Until I made this concrete people kept assuming that
On 5/15/2025 11:08 AM, Mike Terry wrote:Investigations do not need a standard language. For an investigation anOn 14/05/2025 18:53, wij wrote:>On Wed, 2025-05-14 at 12:24 -0500, olcott wrote:>On 5/14/2025 11:43 AM, wij wrote:>On Wed, 2025-05-14 at 09:51 -0500, olcott wrote:>On 5/14/2025 12:13 AM, wij wrote:>Q: Write a turing machine that performs D function (which calls itself):>
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void D() {
D();
}
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Easy?
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That is not a TM.
It is a C program that exists. Therefore, there must be a equivalent TM.
>To make a TM that references itself the closest>
thing is a UTM that simulates its own TM source-code.
How does a UTM simulate its own TM source-code?
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You run a UTM that has its own source-code on its tape.
What is exactly the source-code on its tape?
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Every UTM has some scheme which can be applied to a (TM & input tape) that is to be simulated. The scheme says how to turn the (TM + input tape) into a string of symbols that represent that computation.
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So to answer your question, the "source-code on its tape" is the result of applying the UTM's particular scheme to the combination (UTM, input tape) that is to be simulated.
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If you're looking for the exact string symbols, obviously you would need to specify the exact UTM being used, because every UTM will have a different answer to your question.
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Mike.
These things cannot be investigated in great
depth because there is no fully encoded UTM in
any standard language.
ad hoc language is good enough and usually better.
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