On 6/9/2025 12:39 PM, olcott wrote:
On 6/9/2025 11:33 AM, dbush wrote:
On 6/9/2025 12:24 PM, olcott wrote:
On 6/9/2025 11:12 AM, dbush wrote:
And since your reasoning is that the input to HHH(DDD) only includes the code of the function DDD as you've stated below,
*In other words you are too stupid to understand this*
void DDD()
{
HHH(DDD);
return;
}
The *input* to simulating termination analyzer HHH(DDD)
Only includes the code of the function DDD, as you have admitted on the record, meaning your HHH isn't working with algorithms (or their description/specification) and therefore has nothing to do with the halting problem.
If you would just be honest about that you might actually be taken seriously.
On 5/13/2025 9:54 PM, dbush wrote:
> On 5/13/2025 9:48 PM, olcott wrote:
>> On 5/13/2025 8:31 PM, dbush wrote:
>>> On 5/13/2025 9:27 PM, olcott wrote:
>>>> On 5/13/2025 8:07 PM, dbush wrote:
>>>>> On 5/13/2025 5:30 PM, olcott wrote:
>>>>>> On 5/13/2025 6:43 AM, Richard Damon wrote:
>>>>>>> On 5/13/25 12:52 AM, olcott wrote:
>>>>>>>> *simulated D would never stop running unless aborted*
>>>>>>>> or they themselves could become non-terminating.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> But you aren't simulating the same PROGRAM D that the original
>>>>>>> was given.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> It is not supposed to be the same program.
>>>>>
>>>>> So you *explicitly* admit to changing the input.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> The finite string of DD is specific sequence bytes.
>>>
>>> Which includes the specific sequence of bytes that is the finite
>>> string HHH
>>>
>>
>> No it does not. A function calls is not macro inclusion.
>>
>
> Then you admit that your HHH not deciding about algorithms and therefore
> has nothing to do with the halting problem.
>
On 6/7/2025 10:56 AM, dbush wrote:
> On 6/7/2025 10:54 AM, olcott wrote:
>> On 6/7/2025 9:51 AM, dbush wrote:
>>> On 6/7/2025 10:32 AM, olcott wrote:
>>>> The next instruction of DDD that HHH emulates is at
>>>> the machine address of 00002183.
>>>>
>>>> The next instruction of DDD that HHH1 emulates is at
>>>> the machine address of 00002190.
>>>
>>> False.
>>>
>>> The next instruction of DDD that both HHH and HHH1 emulates is at the
>>> machine address of 000015c3,
>>
>> *That is not an instruction of DDD*
>> *That is not an instruction of DDD*
>> *That is not an instruction of DDD*
>> *That is not an instruction of DDD*
>
> In other words, you're not operating on algorithms. And since the
> halting problem is about algorithms, what you're working on has nothing
> to do with the halting problem.
>
> If you would just be honest about the fact that you're not working on
> the halting problem, people would stop bothering you.