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7:57 AM
How do you guys see this one? Is it OK, or is it just a different way of saying "this is my problem, check my answer"? Is it really any different from that?
 
 
5 hours later…
12:48 PM
@Juho I agree, but I don't see which policy to apply. Downvote question because dump, downvote answer because not authorative or even wrong? But then, we'd have to downvote questions that have been self-answered in the good way.
 
Yeah, sort of an annoying case.
 
 
4 hours later…
5:11 PM
@Raphael I edited the question cs.stackexchange.com/questions/32536/… and I also realized it is an old question brought back by the system. Tim has been off the site for more than a week. So he was not actually repeating misbehavior.
 
 
1 hour later…
6:40 PM
Hello!! I have a question about the Ackermann's function...

To show that the Ackermann's function is not primitive recursive we have to show that it grows faster than all the primitive recursive functions, right??

To do that do we have to show that
f(x1, ... , xn) <= A(u, max(x1, ... , xn))
or
f(x1, ..., xn) <= A(u, x1+ ... +xn)
where f(x1, ... , xn) is any primitive recursive function ??

I have seen both versions. Are both of them correct??
 
 
1 hour later…
7:43 PM
Do you maybe know which of them is the original proof??
 
8:13 PM
Hello @YuvalFilmus !! Do you maybe have an idea ?
 
8:30 PM
@MaryStar Probably both are true, and perhaps the second one is slightly easier to prove.
 
 
1 hour later…
vzn
9:47 PM
@YuvalFilmus !!! hi, welcome to chat :) wondering, what is the IAS like? halls of eg godel/ einstein... read a cool book on it once, liked it...
 
10:08 PM
@vzn You can come to visit and see for yourself...
 
10:33 PM
Ok... I have also an other question?? Are familiar with induction?? Could you take a look at my question:
0
Q: How can we prove by induction the relation $P(x,y)$?

Mary StarHow can we prove by induction the relation $A(x,y)>y, \forall x,y$?? When we have to prove a relation $P(n), n\geq 0$, we do the following steps: we show that it stands for $n=0$ we assume that it stands for n=k (Induction hypothesis) we want to shw that it stands for $n=k+1$ using the In...

?
@YuvalFilmus
 
10:50 PM
@MaryStar I'm sure you'll get many answers on math.se.
 

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