Repeated Word List

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RepWL graph for non-halting TM 0RB0LC_1LA1RB_1RD0RE_1LC1LA_---0LD (bbch) showing a closed graph.[1]

Repeated Word List (short RepWL, also called RepWL_ES where ES means ExecState) is a decider first introduced as part of Coq-BB5. It is a subset of the general CTL method and works by generating a graph of TM configurations, if the graph is shown to be closed, the TM is proven non-halting.

Method

It works by splitting the tape contents into blocks ("words") of a given length l. Consecutive blocks grouped into powers by multiplicity. If there are more consecutive repeating blocks than a predefined repeat threshhold T, the exponent is given as T+. Consecutive blocks with no + in their exponent are called constant blocks. The simulation begins on the blank tape. When the TM head is facing a constant block, the TM is simulated until it either leaves the constant block, halts, or exceeds a predefined step limit B. This simulation inside a constant block is called block simulation. Once the TM has left the constant block, identical contiguous blocks are regrouped into powers. If the TM head is facing a group of blocks with a + in its exponent, the block directly faced by the TM head is separated from the group and the simulation splits into two branches: One where the original group's multiplicity is reduced to T1 and one where it stays at T+. This splitting is called regex branching. The decider constructs a graph of all instances of block simulation (called macro steps) and regex branching up to a predefined limit on the amount of nodes which are allowed to be visited, N. If the graph of a TM contains less than N nodes, the graph is closed. If the graph of a TM is closed and contains no halting configurations, the TM is proven non-halting.[2]

Variants

RWLAcc

RWLAcc is a block-based accelerated simulator similar to Quick_Sim capable of supporting L0 and L1 inductive rules.[3] It is part of mxdys's BB(6) Rocq decider set: https://github.com/ccz181078/busycoq/blob/BB6/verify/RWLAcc.v

History

  • In April 2024, RepWL is first introduced by mxdys as part of Coq-BB5.[4]
  • In May 2024, Repeated Word List is reproduced by savask.[5]
  • In October 2024, Tristan Stérin reproduces Repeated Word List again.[6]

See also

References