jreed wrote:Second try with posting cloud file:
https://www.wolframcloud.com/obj/ka5qep/Published/optimizedVersion.nb
Seems to work now. If you examine this notebook, you'll see that I did one million trials. This took a few minutes. The results are identical to Fred's version of the notebook. What I did was carefully go through the steps, keeping and simplifying only the ones that actually do the work. They are very simple, two Do loops, one for Alice and one for Bob. Also note that changes in, for example, Alice's detector values are due to Bob's failed trials. Clearly a non-local operation. I won't do this for the quaternion version, since the logic is the same.
FrediFizzx wrote:jreed wrote:Second try with posting cloud file:
https://www.wolframcloud.com/obj/ka5qep/Published/optimizedVersion.nb
Seems to work now. If you examine this notebook, you'll see that I did one million trials. This took a few minutes. The results are identical to Fred's version of the notebook. What I did was carefully go through the steps, keeping and simplifying only the ones that actually do the work. They are very simple, two Do loops, one for Alice and one for Bob. Also note that changes in, for example, Alice's detector values are due to Bob's failed trials. Clearly a non-local operation. I won't do this for the quaternion version, since the logic is the same.
Thanks but sorry John, as we told you before, it is a non-local strawman. Where, by your standards, our simulation is 99.998 percent local. By our standards with the quaternion sign flips, our simulation is 100 percent local. I already have a better non-local strawman with 10 million trials. f1,g1,f2, and g2 are there for one purpose only. To separate into A1, A2 and B1, B2. A1 is all the events greater than the HV and A2 are all the events less than the HV. Same for Bob. Necessary so you can find the "orphans".
https://www.wolframcloud.com/env/fredif ... ps-non3.nb
I'm going to have to post the plot separately as it doesn't render very well on the cloud.
.
FrediFizzx wrote:Thanks but sorry John, as we told you before, it is a non-local strawman. Where, by your standards, our simulation is 99.998 percent local. By our standards with the quaternion sign flips, our simulation is 100 percent local. I already have a better non-local strawman with 10 million trials. f1,g1,f2, and g2 are there for one purpose only. To separate into A1, A2 and B1, B2. A1 is all the events greater than the HV and A2 are all the events less than the HV. Same for Bob. Necessary so you can find the "orphans".
https://www.wolframcloud.com/env/fredif ... ps-non3.nb
I'm going to have to post the plot separately as it doesn't render very well on the cloud.
.
jreed wrote:FrediFizzx wrote:Thanks but sorry John, as we told you before, it is a non-local strawman. Where, by your standards, our simulation is 99.998 percent local. By our standards with the quaternion sign flips, our simulation is 100 percent local. I already have a better non-local strawman with 10 million trials. f1,g1,f2, and g2 are there for one purpose only. To separate into A1, A2 and B1, B2. A1 is all the events greater than the HV and A2 are all the events less than the HV. Same for Bob. Necessary so you can find the "orphans".
https://www.wolframcloud.com/env/fredif ... ps-non3.nb
I'm going to have to post the plot separately as it doesn't render very well on the cloud.
.
What I did was remove all the extraneous code that isn't necessary to compute your final values. What I programmed was your code , it isn't my strawman. It is your non-local code.
FrediFizzx wrote:jreed wrote:FrediFizzx wrote:Thanks but sorry John, as we told you before, it is a non-local strawman. Where, by your standards, our simulation is 99.998 percent local. By our standards with the quaternion sign flips, our simulation is 100 percent local. I already have a better non-local strawman with 10 million trials. f1,g1,f2, and g2 are there for one purpose only. To separate into A1, A2 and B1, B2. A1 is all the events greater than the HV and A2 are all the events less than the HV. Same for Bob. Necessary so you can find the "orphans".
https://www.wolframcloud.com/env/fredif ... ps-non3.nb
I'm going to have to post the plot separately as it doesn't render very well on the cloud.
.
What I did was remove all the extraneous code that isn't necessary to compute your final values. What I programmed was your code , it isn't my strawman. It is your non-local code.
LOL! You did successfully destroy what is needed to make it local. Gill tried to prove it was non-local but got bit real bad by the quaternion flips.Even then without the flips it is 99.998 percent local.
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gill1109 wrote:FrediFizzx wrote:jreed wrote:FrediFizzx wrote:Thanks but sorry John, as we told you before, it is a non-local strawman. Where, by your standards, our simulation is 99.998 percent local. By our standards with the quaternion sign flips, our simulation is 100 percent local. I already have a better non-local strawman with 10 million trials. f1,g1,f2, and g2 are there for one purpose only. To separate into A1, A2 and B1, B2. A1 is all the events greater than the HV and A2 are all the events less than the HV. Same for Bob. Necessary so you can find the "orphans".
https://www.wolframcloud.com/env/fredif ... ps-non3.nb
I'm going to have to post the plot separately as it doesn't render very well on the cloud.
.
What I did was remove all the extraneous code that isn't necessary to compute your final values. What I programmed was your code , it isn't my strawman. It is your non-local code.
LOL! You did successfully destroy what is needed to make it local. Gill tried to prove it was non-local but got bit real bad by the quaternion flips.Even then without the flips it is 99.998 percent local.
.
Fred, you are the one who bit themself. But anyway: John’s code gives identical output to yours. So if your code defines a mathematical function by giving an algorithm to evaluate the function, then John’s code defines the same function, but clearly in a more transparent way. This isn’t about local vs. non-local, it’s not about explicitly with versus without quaternions, it’s about moving towards an analytical formula for what your code does. Joy will find that useful. We already know, with regards to the first versions of the pre-publication of Fred and Joy, that code and formulas do not match. You guys are going to have to fix that.
gill1109 wrote:Another try: suppose we have two Mathematica notebooks which, given the same inputs, always give identical outputs. Then we have two algorithms which compute the same function.
Could be useful, if you want to give an analytical definition of the function. Especially if one of the algorithms seems much simpler than the other.
FrediFizzx wrote:Here is a link to the paper again.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.28311.91047/2
Now, tell me if the analytical definitions in that paper follow my code or John's. No nonsense please.
FrediFizzx wrote:gill1109 wrote:Another try: suppose we have two Mathematica notebooks which, given the same inputs, always give identical outputs. Then we have two algorithms which compute the same function.
Could be useful, if you want to give an analytical definition of the function. Especially if one of the algorithms seems much simpler than the other.
Nope! Completely wrong. You just can't help yourself from spewing nonsense. You have the analytical definitions in the paper. Does John's code look anything like that? Hell no! Time to get real, get over it and move on.
gill1109 wrote:All I most recently have said was that John's code *does exactly the same* as your code, as anyone can check for themselves.
FrediFizzx wrote:Here is a link to the paper again.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.28311.91047/2
Now, tell me if the analytical definitions in that paper follow my code or John's. No nonsense please.
gill1109 wrote: ... BTW, I notice in your Mathematica code that you create vectors and matrices in advance and fill them in advance with 0's. Maybe you are incorporating this coding convention into your maths formulas. See the recent discussion with Michel about what you should do when a function is not defined in some circumstances. Many different ways to take account of that issue... He suggests that you redefine the domain. I suggest you redefine the range. Whatever you do, you should make clear what you are doing and make sure it makes sense in your problem, whether that is a computer simulation, some pure maths, or some mathematical physics.
FrediFizzx wrote:gill1109 wrote:All I most recently have said was that John's code *does exactly the same* as your code, as anyone can check for themselves.
Still spewing nonsense I see which I snipped out except for this nonsense gem. John's code DOES NOT do exactly the same as my code! He destroyed all the code that makes it local! Time to get real, get over it, and move on!![]()
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jreed wrote:FrediFizzx wrote:gill1109 wrote:All I most recently have said was that John's code *does exactly the same* as your code, as anyone can check for themselves.
Still spewing nonsense I see which I snipped out except for this nonsense gem. John's code DOES NOT do exactly the same as my code! He destroyed all the code that makes it local! Time to get real, get over it, and move on!![]()
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By adding this extra magic spaghetti code to the calculation we can change it from non-local to local. SHAZAM . Now we're in Fred World.
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