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On 6/19/2024 4:08 AM, joes wrote:Am Tue, 18 Jun 2024 21:51:56 -0500 schrieb olcott:On 6/18/2024 9:41 PM, Richard Damon wrote:On 6/18/24 10:30 PM, olcott wrote:On 6/18/2024 9:16 PM, Richard Damon wrote:On 6/18/24 1:25 PM, olcott wrote:On 6/18/2024 12:06 PM, joes wrote:
Still true.Terminating is a property of the actual machine, and not a simulation
of it.
Your nonsimulator halts even when given nonterminating input.My partial decider makes everything stop running this is not at all theThus according to your faulty reasoning when the source-code of a CYOUR partial decider makes everything halt, even that which doesn't.
program is simulated by interpreter this is mere nonsense gibberish
having nothing to do what the behavior that this source-code
specifies.
So yes, it can't simulate infinite loops.
same as halting. Novices get very confused about this.
[deflection snipped]When I write an infinite loop, I want it to be interpreted as anYou could say the SIMULATION didn't terminate normally, but you can'tSure you can otherwise interpreters of source-code would be a bogus
say the machine didn't or even the Turing Machine Description, as you
could give that exact same TMD to a real UTM and find out the actual
behaviof or the input.
concept.
infinite loop. Your H0 is bogus.
Your H0 is not an interpreter. It aborts infinite loops.(a) If the simulation of the x86 machine language of theYou just have lost track of the defintions of what is REALITY (the
actual behavior of the machine) and what is just imagination.
function does not prove the actual behavior that this finite string
specifies then source-code interpreters are a bogus concept.
(b) source-code interpreters are NOT a bogus concept.
I was talking about DDD. It calls H0, which shall halt. Then DDD returns,My partial decider makes everything stop running this is not at all the[The verification that it ... ?]The verified that that it does need to be aborted contradicts yourEvery C programmer that knows what an x86 emulator is knows thatWhich doesn't mean the program DDD needs to be abort to have it halt.
when H0 emulates the machine language of Infinite_Loop,
Infinite_Recursion,
and DDD that it must abort these emulations so that itself can
terminate normally.
nonsense to the contrary.
If H0 halts, so does DDD (which only calls it).
same as halting. Novices get very confused about this.
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