ChatterBank0 min ago
Parametrization - S-M-N Theorem
5 Answers
if you have a partial computable function
f(x,y) = y if x is even
and is undefined otherwise
that is f is a partial computable function
then the s-m-n theorem guarantees there is always a totally computable one placed function
gx of (y) which is total - - x is an computable index
what happens to the undefined cases ? in f where do they go to in g ?
suppose f is undefined everywhere - what does g look like ?
( yeah reading Cutland ) thanks
yeah a serious science q for a change
f(x,y) = y if x is even
and is undefined otherwise
that is f is a partial computable function
then the s-m-n theorem guarantees there is always a totally computable one placed function
gx of (y) which is total - - x is an computable index
what happens to the undefined cases ? in f where do they go to in g ?
suppose f is undefined everywhere - what does g look like ?
( yeah reading Cutland ) thanks
yeah a serious science q for a change
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Peter Pedant. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Echoing Jim here, as I never studied this part of number theory, but in the first line you define the function,
f(x,y) = y if x is even and is undefined otherwise
You then ask a question that appears to contradict the original definition:
"suppose f is undefined everywhere - what does g look like ? "
So the question is (in mathematical terms) meaningless. Something like "How many volts does an apple weigh?"
Which, is, I think what Jim said, but expressed in different terms.
Not sure this is really one for Answerbank - maybe for a specialist number theory community, like this one:
https:/ /math.s tackexc hange.c om/ques tions/1 679179/ problem s-under standin g-proof -of-s-m -n-theo rem-usi ng-chur ch-turi ng-thes is
f(x,y) = y if x is even and is undefined otherwise
You then ask a question that appears to contradict the original definition:
"suppose f is undefined everywhere - what does g look like ? "
So the question is (in mathematical terms) meaningless. Something like "How many volts does an apple weigh?"
Which, is, I think what Jim said, but expressed in different terms.
Not sure this is really one for Answerbank - maybe for a specialist number theory community, like this one:
https:/
oh yes no
thanks for the cont
one f but two functions
f being even and otherwise undefined
and then suppose - another f ( I should have said h ) where it is undefined everywhere
The stack exchange question is good
thanks - the problem ( remember there could be more than one problem in this question ) being that I understood the stacker didnt.
f( x,y) goes to Φg(x)(y) ( smn theorem )
by writing a program where you whack fixed x into register no 1 of a tm doing f and move all the other registers forward one.
The godel no of this program is g(x) and so it is effectively computable
IN fact on thinking about it ( what happens to the undefined cases of f(x,y) so with x =3 - suppose it is print y if y=3n for some n and otherwise undefined
then Φg(x)(y) the domain is 1,2,3,4 and the range is 3,6,9,12
and hey presto Φg(x)(y) is a total computable function
[ compatible with a later result - an r.e. set is the range of a total computable unary increasing function]
thanks for the cont
one f but two functions
f being even and otherwise undefined
and then suppose - another f ( I should have said h ) where it is undefined everywhere
The stack exchange question is good
thanks - the problem ( remember there could be more than one problem in this question ) being that I understood the stacker didnt.
f( x,y) goes to Φg(x)(y) ( smn theorem )
by writing a program where you whack fixed x into register no 1 of a tm doing f and move all the other registers forward one.
The godel no of this program is g(x) and so it is effectively computable
IN fact on thinking about it ( what happens to the undefined cases of f(x,y) so with x =3 - suppose it is print y if y=3n for some n and otherwise undefined
then Φg(x)(y) the domain is 1,2,3,4 and the range is 3,6,9,12
and hey presto Φg(x)(y) is a total computable function
[ compatible with a later result - an r.e. set is the range of a total computable unary increasing function]
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