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On 6/23/2024 4:50 AM, Mikko wrote:Unless you point where in Intel's documentation emulation or correctnessOn 2024-06-22 19:03:13 +0000, olcott said:WRONG!
On 6/22/2024 1:55 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Semantics of the x86 programming language does not specifiy emulationOn 6/22/24 2:49 PM, olcott wrote:When we stipulate that the only measure of a correct emulationOn 6/22/2024 1:43 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Then where is it?On 6/22/24 1:29 PM, olcott wrote:LiarOn 6/22/2024 12:13 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Since your H0 has never demonstrated that is actually DOES the correct simulation per your stipulation,On 6/22/24 12:18 PM, olcott wrote:Apparently your ADD preventing you from paying close attentionvoid DDD()And thus, your emulation traces show that your "Simulating Halt Deciders" do not do a "Correct Simulation"
{
HHH0(DDD);
}
The input to HHH0(DDD) includes itself.
The input to HHH1(DDD) DOES NOT include itself.
It is stipulated that correct emulation is defined by the
semantics of the x86 programming language and nothing else.
to ALL of my words.
*Function names adapted to correspond to my updated paper*
void DDD()
{
H0(DDD);
}
*When we stipulate that the only measure of a correct*
*emulation is the semantics of the x86 programming language*
*When we stipulate that the only measure of a correct*
*emulation is the semantics of the x86 programming language*
*When we stipulate that the only measure of a correct*
*emulation is the semantics of the x86 programming language*
*When we stipulate that the only measure of a correct*
*emulation is the semantics of the x86 programming language*
*When we stipulate that the only measure of a correct*
*emulation is the semantics of the x86 programming language*
then we see that when DDD is correctly emulated by H0 that
its call to H0(DDD) cannot possibly return.
is the semantics of the x86 programming language then we see that
when DDD is correctly emulated by H0 that its call to H0(DDD)
cannot possibly return.
or correctness of emulation.
Otherwise we could say that for the decimal integersI can believe you couls but I would not.
2 + 3 = 17 and the semantics of arithmetic does not disagree.
The semantics of arithmetic agrees that for the decimalIntel's processors seem to agree, too. But I havn't checked every one.
integers 2 + 3 = 5.
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