Author: Ricardo Gibert
Date: 16:27:51 05/09/01
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On May 09, 2001 at 17:40:16, Dann Corbit wrote: >On May 09, 2001 at 17:32:27, Ricardo Gibert wrote: >[snip] >References: A. S. Fraenkel and D. Lichtenstein, Computing a perfect strategy for >n*n chess requires time exponential in n, Proc. 8th Int. Coll. Automata, >Languages, and Programming, Springer LNCS 115 (1981) 278-293 and J. Comb. Th. A >31 (1981) 199-214. > >FCOL n is clearly finite, but unbounded in the above, so the time required is exponential. All quite correct. This is a perfect example that makes *my* case. The authors clearly understand about big-O perfectly. They took the pains to generalize the problem to n*n chess. They didn't just say chess, because they understood perfectly that that would not be correct, which is all that I've been saying. It's clear people cannot tell when a variable is bounded or unbounded and what is meant by finite and infinite and when a variable has been instantiated and when it has not and what the difference between an instantiated variable and a constant, etc.
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