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| A '''Collatz-like function''' is a partial function defined piecewise depending on the remainder of an input modulo some number. The canonical example is the original Collatz function:<math display="block">\begin{array}{l} | | A '''Collatz-like function''' is a partial function defined piecewise depending on the remainder of an input modulo some number. The canonical example is the original Collatz function:<math display="block">\begin{array}{l} |
| c(2k) & = & k \\ | | c(2k) & = & k \\ |
| c(2k+1) & = & {3k+1} \\ | | c(2k+1) & = & 3k+2 \\ |
| \end{array}</math> | | \end{array}</math> |
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Latest revision as of 13:33, 20 September 2025
A Collatz-like function is a partial function defined piecewise depending on the remainder of an input modulo some number. The canonical example is the original Collatz function:

A Collatz-like problem is a question about the behavior of iterating a Collatz-like function. Collatz-like problems are famously difficult.
Many Busy Beaver Champions have Collatz-like behavior, meaning that their behavior can be concisely described via the iterated values of a Collatz-like function.
Examples
5-state busy beaver winner
Consider the 5-state busy beaver winner and the generalized configuration:

Pascal Michel showed that:

Starting on a blank tape
, these rules iterate 15 times before reaching the halt config.[1]
Hydra
Consider Hydra (a Cryptid) and the generalized configuration:

Daniel Yuan showed that:

Where
is a halting configuration with
non-zero symbols on the tape.
Starting from
, this simulates a pseudo-random walk along the
parameter, increasing it by 2 every time
is odd, decreasing by 1 every time it's even. Deciding whether or not Hydra halts requires determining whether through the process of applying the Collatz-like function

to 3 recursively, there eventually comes a point where the amount of even transitions applied is more than twice the amount of odd transitions applied.
[2] The first few transitions are displayed below:

Exponential Collatz
Consider the machine 1RB0LD_1RC0RF_1LC1LA_0LE1RZ_1LF0RB_0RC0RE
(bbch), discovered by Pavel Kropitz in May 2022, and the general configuration:

Shawn Ligocki showed that:

Demonstrating Collatz-like behavior with exponential piecewise component functions.
Starting from config
, these rules iterate 15 times before reaching the halt config leaving over
non-zero symbols on the tape.[3]
References