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On 5/11/2024 4:39 AM, Mikko wrote:No more wrong than your H that answers about a D that it wasn't given.On 2024-05-11 00:30:40 +0000, olcott said:You are doing a great job performing an honest review!
>A termination analyzer is different than a halt decider in that it need>
not correctly determine the halt status of every input. For the purposes
of this paper a termination analyzer only needs to correctly determine
the halt status of one terminating input and one non-terminating input.
The computer science equivalent would be a halt decider with a limited
domain that includes at least one halting and one non-halting input.
From https://www.google.fi/search?q=termination+analysis and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Termination_analysis :
>
"In computer science, termination analysis is program analysis which attempts to determine whether the evaluation of a given program halts for each input. This means to determine whether the input program computes a total function."
>
So the term "termination analysis" is already defined. The derived term
"termination analyzer" means a performer of termination analysis. That
does not agree with the propsed defintion above so a differnt term
should be used.
>
That "termination analysis" is a know term that need not be defined
is demostrated e.g. by
>
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2101.09783
>
which simply assumes that readers know (at least approximately) what
the term means.
>
So every time that Richard referred to a {termination analyzer} that
ignores its inputs *Richard was WRONG*
The context of all of my discussions since 2023/06/19 hasWhich you just proved you don't understand.
always been the common term-of-the-art of {Termination Analyzer}
I have used the conventional term-of-the-art {Termination Analyzer}Which just shows you don't know what you are talking about.
in the title of my paper since 2023/06/19
*Termination Analyzer H is Not Fooled by Pathological Input D*
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