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On 7/12/2025 3:22 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:Irrelevant, because HHH is not a pure simulator, but aborts and returns to DDD.Op 11.jul.2025 om 19:50 schreef olcott:void DDD()On 7/11/2025 9:31 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:>Op 11.jul.2025 om 16:27 schreef olcott:Strawman error.On 7/11/2025 3:55 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:>Op 11.jul.2025 om 04:33 schreef olcott:>On 7/10/2025 9:10 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 7/10/25 8:27 PM, olcott wrote:>*I just proved the fact that*>
(1) HHH(DDD) is executed
(2) HHH emulates DDD
(3) emulated DDD calls an emulated HHH(DDD)
(4) emulated HHH emulates another instance of DDD
(5) this DDD calls HHH(DDD) again
https://liarparadox.org/HHH(DDD)_Full_Trace.pdf
>
Its OK if you are no good with the x86 language
and can't understand the code. I began programming
way back when x86 programming was popular.
>
Alternatively the details of how multi-tasking
works are too difficult for you. They are probably
too difficult for most programmers.
>
And thus you have proven my point that either you definition of what the input is, or what HHH does is just a lie.
>
But, it seems you are too stupid to understand that problem.
>
Your claims are:
>
1) The input contains only the code shown, and thus does not contain the code of HHH.
>
2) That HHH is simulating the input given to it, and thus JUST that input.
>
3) That HHH simulates the code of HHH.
>
The test program HHH is not the program under test DDD.
The program under test and the test program will never
stop running unless HHH aborts its DDD.
>
Another vague claim without evidence.
It not vague at all. You just don't know what
the words mean.
>If DDD is under test, then also all function called by DDD are under test, including HHH.>
Since neither HHH nor DDD will ever stop running
unless HHH aborts its DDD, non-halting criteria
has been met.
Since HHH halts, DDD halts, too.
DDD simulated by HHH specifies non-halting behavior.
Counter-factual.
{
HHH(DDD);
return;
}
DDD simulated by pure simulator HHH keeps
repeating its first line of code endlessly.
If at any point HHH aborts this simulationIndeed, then it fails to reach the end of the simulation.
DDD still never reaches its final halt state.
This is not that hard, thus anyone that disagreesHa, Ha!
proves their own lack of sufficient technical competence.
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