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On 12/2/2024 9:18 PM, Richard Damon wrote:So, you are just proving that you are i9n your basic nature a LIAR.On 12/2/24 10:13 PM, olcott wrote:I never said anything like that Dumbledore. If I everOn 12/2/2024 9:00 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 12/2/24 9:46 PM, olcott wrote:>On 11/28/2024 1:48 PM, joes wrote:>Am Thu, 28 Nov 2024 11:57:23 -0600 schrieb olcott:>On 11/28/2024 11:06 AM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 11/28/24 11:43 AM, olcott wrote:On 11/28/2024 9:47 AM, Richard Damon wrote:On 11/28/24 10:01 AM, olcott wrote:Strawman. We are talking about HHH.You just aren't paying any attention at all or are woefully inaccurateDDD emulated by any HHH cannot possibly reach its "ret" instruction>
final halt state.
But that DDD CAN'T be emulated more than 4 instructions by ANY pure
function, as you can't emulate past the call HHH instruction.
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in your word choice. HHH1 does emulate all of DDD.
HHH1 <is> a pure function.
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HHH1 has identical source-code to HHH the only difference
is that DDD does not call HHH at all, thus does not call
HHH in recursive emulation.
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*You said*
DDD CAN'T be emulated more than 4 instructions by
ANY pure function...
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Sure it can! It can be emulated by pure function HHH1
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It HHH1 an element of the set of pure functions?
YES IT IS THUS YOU ARE WRONG !!!
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Nope, becuase if HHH1 looks at the machine code of HHH, which wasn't part of its input, it isn.t a pure function, BY DEFINITION.
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How the Hell do you think that you can get away with
saying that HHH is not part of the input to HHH1?
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Because you have defined that the input is JUST the x86 machine code of DDD.
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said anything like that then I would have never said
that HHH emulates itself emulating DDD.
*DDD emulated by HHH NEVER HALTS* (wit of a nit).Better signature for you, you NITWIT.
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