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Post by Hans Lemurson on Apr 13, 2005 0:23:54 GMT -5
What thinkest thou?
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Post by KillinKrillan on Apr 13, 2005 0:49:33 GMT -5
Before I answer this, what type of paradox do you mean? Because most Programmers run into this every day, in which case, the program enters an endless loop of commands, or it locks up the whole computer. Not really a devistating paradox, but still somewhat of a paradox... Yay for clairification!!!
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Post by Hans Lemurson on Apr 13, 2005 0:55:52 GMT -5
I was thinking of something along the lines of "This satatement is false."
"this statement" refers to "this statement is false", and thus can become "(this statement is false) is false" and so on.
So basicly a function where the F(G(x)) = G(x)
The function that modifies the input is contained within the input itself.
Yeah, I guess it would create a loop of some sort...that sounds fun...
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Post by Little Miss Odd on Apr 22, 2005 0:23:42 GMT -5
well if F and G were boolean statements, it'd probably just cause an error and wouldn't compile.
this at least from what I understand of Java
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Post by dietspam16 on Apr 23, 2005 16:24:03 GMT -5
i like coffee, preferably espresso, but i'm never made it do a loop-de-loop, it sounds dangerous- i mean, what if when it went upside down it all fell out?!?!
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