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Based on mathworld, "The determination of whether a Turing machine will come to a halt
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according to wikipedia, the halting problem is a decision problem about properties of computer programs on a fixed Turing-complete model of computation. The problem is to determine, given a program and an input to the program, whether the program will eventually halt when run with that input. In this abstract framework, there are no resource limitations of memory or time on the program's execution; it can take arbitrarily long, and use arbitrarily much storage space, before halting. The question is simply whether the given program will ever halt on a particular input.
given a particular input program.<br> The halting problem is solvable for machines
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with less than four states". <br>
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This issue is also one of the most interesting non-programming parts of computer science study of
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what can be computed or not.
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--[[User:lee462|lee462]] 03:48, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
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--[[User:kim297|kim297]]

Revision as of 23:00, 21 November 2008

according to wikipedia, the halting problem is a decision problem about properties of computer programs on a fixed Turing-complete model of computation. The problem is to determine, given a program and an input to the program, whether the program will eventually halt when run with that input. In this abstract framework, there are no resource limitations of memory or time on the program's execution; it can take arbitrarily long, and use arbitrarily much storage space, before halting. The question is simply whether the given program will ever halt on a particular input.


--kim297

Alumni Liaison

Recent Math PhD now doing a post-doctorate at UC Riverside.

Kuei-Nuan Lin