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On 11/22/2024 6:20 AM, joes wrote:But that means your question doesn't HAVE an answer, as if you can't tell the answer from JUST the input DDD, then that input doesn't have an answer.Am Thu, 21 Nov 2024 15:19:43 -0600 schrieb olcott:Only HHH is required to be a pure function, DDD is expresslyOn 11/21/2024 3:11 PM, joes wrote:>Am Thu, 21 Nov 2024 09:19:03 -0600 schrieb olcott:In your case you may simply not even understand what infinite recursionOn 11/20/2024 10:00 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 11/20/24 9:57 PM, olcott wrote:On 11/20/2024 5:51 PM, Richard Damon wrote:On 11/20/24 5:03 PM, olcott wrote:On 11/20/2024 3:53 AM, Mikko wrote:On 2024-11-20 03:23:12 +0000, olcott said:On 11/19/2024 4:12 AM, Mikko wrote:On 2024-11-18 20:42:02 +0000, olcott said:On 11/18/2024 3:41 AM, Mikko wrote:The "the mapping" on the subject line is not correct. The
subject line does not specify which mapping and there is no
larger context that could specify that. Therefore it should
be "a mapping".
On 2024-11-17 18:36:17 +0000, olcott said:Like all of them, it is unable to simulate DDD to its undeniableMy code is one example of the infinite set of every possible HHH
that emulates DDD according to the semantics of the x86 language.
halting state.
is, thus cannot see the isomorphism.
>All instances of DDD behave the same (if it is a pure function andIT IS NOT THE SAME INSTANCE OF DDD.Whatever. DDD halts and HHH should return that.But it gets the wrong answer for the halting problem, as DDD dpesDDD emulated by HHH does not halt.
halt.
the HHH called from it doesn't switch behaviour by a static variable).
>
allowed to be any damn thing. The actual behavior of DDD
emulated by HHH is different than the actual behavior of DDD
emulated by HHH1.
*ONLY BECAUSE DDD CALLS HHH AND DDD DOES NOT CALL HHH1*But that is just part of the definition of DDD. If HHH is defined as to what it is, then DDD calling HHH is FULLY DEFINED and now an answer exists.
Even Mike does not seem to be able to understand this.
Note we have been on this one point about the behavior ofAnd, as has been pointed out to you for just as long, your question is just invalid, and to actually ask the question, you need to FULLY include the definiton of DDD, which means it includes the code for HHH, and omitting it just proves your stupidity.
DDD emulated by HHH for many months and have not yet even
begun to talk about how HHH would report this behavior.
The question does DDD halt?Right, and that is a SEMANTIC property of the input, which REQUIRES it to be an actual computation, which means ALL its code must be fully defined, which your DDD doesn't do, so the question is just invalid.
Is answered by Can DDD emulated by any HHH reach its ownNope, because "Not Halting" is only defined by the inability of an UNBOUNDED emulation of the input not reaching a final state.
"return" instruction final state?
The question: How could HHH determine whether or not DDDYes, but since yoiu
emulated by HHH can possibly reach its own final state?
is another entirely different question.
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