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On 5/16/2025 8:20 PM, Richard Heathfield wrote:Snipping material to which one is not replying is basic good manners. I do not expect you to understand the concept.On 17/05/2025 00:59, olcott wrote:Only damned liars would remove this key context.On 5/16/2025 10:48 AM, Richard Heathfield wrote:>On 16/05/2025 16:10, olcott wrote:
<snip>
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The context you claim was 'dishonestly' removed is:When you dishonestly remove the context that you are>>Anyone that knows C can tell that when HHH does simulate>
DDD correctly that it keeps getting deeper in recursive
simulation until aborted or OOM error.
Anyone who knows C knows that there isn't much HHH can do with the pointer value it's given. It can call DDD:
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(*p)();
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Sure when you make sure to totally ignore crucial
words
The crucial words - *so* crucial that you keep on repeating them - are 'Anyone who knows C'.
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You don't.
>then by using the strawman error on these dishonestly>
changed words they are easy to rebut.
I didn't change your words; I just rebutted them.
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_man>
"A straw man fallacy (sometimes written as strawman) is the informal fallacy of refuting an argument different from the one actually under discussion."
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When you said "Anyone who knows C" (as you have said very often), you yourself opened the discussion.
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If you don't want people to attack your woeful understanding if the language, don't make the claim that you know the language.
>On the other hand when honest C programmers see>
those words they will think of something like a C
interpreter written in C is doing the simulation.
If you are claiming to have written a C interpreter, that's a huge claim without any evidence whatsoever to support it.
>
replying to fools might think that your rebuttal has merit.
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