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On 5/10/2024 9:39 PM, Richard Damon wrote:So, you are admitting that you LIED that your "definition" was the "term-of-art" definition?On 5/10/24 10:27 PM, olcott wrote:Now that I know that when people say that a term is undefinedOn 5/10/2024 9:17 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 5/10/24 8:30 PM, olcott wrote:>A termination analyzer is different than a halt decider in that it need>
not correctly determine the halt status of every input. For the purposes
of this paper a termination analyzer only needs to correctly determine
the halt status of one terminating input and one non-terminating input.
The computer science equivalent would be a halt decider with a limited
domain that includes at least one halting and one non-halting input.
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So, a Termination Analyzer that simulates 1 step and returns non-halting if it doesn't halt at that point is a correct termination analyzer?
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The term *termination analyzer* is well defined in the art.
Honest people would understand that a *simulating termination analyzer*
must have ALL of the properties of a *termination analyzer*.
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Then you can point to published definitons that match yours?
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they never meant that it is actually undefined I can fix this.
Since you deflected that request, my guess is you can't.
>>>There is at least one halting program it gets correct, and a lot of non-halting program it gets correct.>
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Doesn't sound like a very useful sort of machine.
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