Sujet : Re: Unpartial Halt Deciders
De : acm (at) *nospam* muc.de (Alan Mackenzie)
Groupes : comp.theoryDate : 18. Apr 2025, 23:56:29
Autres entêtes
Organisation : muc.de e.V.
Message-ID : <vtulat$2fvv$1@news.muc.de>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : tin/2.6.4-20241224 ("Helmsdale") (FreeBSD/14.2-RELEASE-p1 (amd64))
Keith Thompson <Keith.S.Thompson+
u@gmail.com> wrote:
[ .... ]
Another point: The well known proof that the Halting Problem is
not solvable works by assuming that a halt decider exists and then
creating *one* input, based on the code of the decider, on which
the decider cannot give a correct answer. You can call that input
"self-referential to the decider".
A small point: I think it is less confusing to say that an example input
program which the purported halt decider fails on is *selected* from the
countably infinite set of programs, rather than created.
[ .... ]
--
Keith Thompson (The_Other_Keith) Keith.S.Thompson+u@gmail.com
void Void(void) { Void(); } /* The recursive call of the void */
-- Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).