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On 8/15/2024 1:35 PM, Mike Terry wrote:It is clear that olcott does not really read what I write. (Or is very short of memory.)On 15/08/2024 17:30, olcott wrote:*Fred has the same incorrect views as joes*On 8/15/2024 10:40 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:>Op 15.aug.2024 om 14:12 schreef olcott:>On 8/15/2024 2:00 AM, joes wrote:Exactly. And when it aborts, it aborts too soon, one cycle before the simulated HHH would abort and halt.Am Wed, 14 Aug 2024 16:07:43 +0100 schrieb Mike Terry:>On 14/08/2024 08:43, joes wrote:>Am Tue, 13 Aug 2024 21:38:07 -0500 schrieb olcott:On 8/13/2024 9:29 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 8/13/24 8:52 PM, olcott wrote:You were trying to label an incomplete/partial/aborted simulation asThat is what I said dufuss.A simulation of N instructions of DDD by HHH according to theNope, it is just the correct PARTIAL emulation of the first N
semantics of the x86 language is necessarily correct.
instructions of DDD, and not of all of DDD,
correct.
>how *HHH* returns*Try to show exactly how DDD emulated by HHH returns to its caller*A correct simulation of N instructions of DDD by HHH is sufficientNope, if a HHH returns to its caller,
to correctly predict the behavior of an unlimited simulation.DDDHHH simulates DDD enter the matrix
DDD calls HHH(DDD) Fred: could be eliminated HHH simulatesvoilasecond level
DDD calls HHH(DDD) recursion detected
HHH aborts, returns outside interference DDD haltsHHH halts>
You're misunderstanding the scenario? If your simulated HHH aborts its
simulation [line 5 above],
then the outer level H would have aborted its identical simulation
earlier. You know that, right?Of course. I made it only to illustrate one step in the paradoxical>
reasoning, as long as we're calling programs that do or don't abort
the same.
>
It is like I always pointed out. The outer HHH cannot
wait for the inner ones to abort because it would be
waiting forever.
Mike corrected you on this. You are wrong.
For the record, I did no such thing and Fred is correct.
>
*Here is where you agreed that Fred is wrong*
*when replying to joes*
On 8/14/2024 10:07 AM, Mike Terry wrote:
> On 14/08/2024 08:43, joes wrote:
>> Am Tue, 13 Aug 2024 21:38:07 -0500 schrieb olcott:
>>> *Try to show exactly how DDD emulated by HHH
>>> returns to its caller*>>
>>> (the first one doesn't even have a caller)
>>> Use the above machine language instructions to show this.
>> HHH simulates DDD enter the matrix
>> DDD calls HHH(DDD) Fred: could be eliminated
>> HHH simulates DDD second level
>> DDD calls HHH(DDD) recursion detected
>> HHH aborts, returns outside interference
>> DDD halts voila
>> HHH halts
>
> You're misunderstanding the scenario? If your
> simulated HHH aborts its simulation [line 5 above],
> then the outer level H would have aborted its
> identical simulation earlier. You know that, right?
> [It's what people have been discussing here endlessly
> for the last few months! :) ]
>
> So your trace is impossible...
>
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