Very interesting. Thanks for the insight.
Tim Washington
Interruptsoftware.ca
416.843.9060
On Sat, Jul 28, 2012 at 6:40 AM, nicolas.o...@gmail.com <
nicolas.o...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > There is indeed an infinite number of functions, or relationships between
> > natural numbers. I don't think
> There is indeed an infinite number of functions, or relationships between
> natural numbers. I don't think that means that that any one of those
> relationships is not computable because it is within the range of infinite
> functions. The countable parts of a program can still accept an infinite
Hey Nicolas,
Thanks for the feedback and corrections. I was trying to hone in on OO and
Lisp's model of what it means to compute. While this just served as a
backdrop for the conceptual and code differences between Bkeeping's Java
and Clojure versions, I can see a much deeper analysis happening he
Hi,
Great notes. I like a lot.
A few (mostly technical) comments:
> Concept of Computation
>
> What does it mean to compute? Turns out this is a complicated question. From
> what I can tell, to compute is an actualization (or concrete version) of a
> mathematical function. We are swimming in a