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On 10/15/2024 9:11 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Strange, since any function that meets the requireemntOn 10/15/24 8:39 AM, olcott wrote:Not at all.On 10/15/2024 4:58 AM, joes wrote:>Am Mon, 14 Oct 2024 20:12:37 -0500 schrieb olcott:>On 10/14/2024 6:50 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 10/14/24 12:05 PM, olcott wrote:On 10/14/2024 6:21 AM, Richard Damon wrote:On 10/14/24 5:53 AM, olcott wrote:On 10/14/2024 3:21 AM, Mikko wrote:On 2024-10-13 12:49:01 +0000, Richard Damon said:On 10/12/24 8:11 PM, olcott wrote:Can you please give the date and time? Did you also explicitly disclaimI quit claiming this many messages ago and you didn't bother to notice.Trying to change to a different analytical framework than the one thatBut, you claim to be working on that Halting Problem,
I am stipulating is the strawman deception. *Essentially an
intentional fallacy of equivocation error*
it or just silently leave it out?
>
Even people of low intelligence that are not trying to
be as disagreeable as possible would be able to notice
that a specified C function is not a Turing machine.
But it needs to be computationally equivalent to one to ask about Termination.
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pure_function
A termination analyzer need not be a Turing computable function.
*According to the industry standard definitions that I stipulated*You can't stipulate that something is a standard.
void DDD()Nope, explnied previopusly and you can't refute it, so you are just making your lying assertion again.
{
HHH(DDD);
return;
}
When HHH is an x86 emulation based termination analyzer then
each DDD *correctly_emulated_by* any HHH that it calls never returns.
Each of the directly executed HHH emulator/analyzers that returnsNope.
0 correctly reports the above *non_terminating _behavior* of its input.
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