On Tuesday, 18 May 2021 at 07:17:50 UTC, Dukc wrote:
> On Monday, 17 May 2021 at 08:24:22 UTC, user1234 wrote:
> intersting but dmd -O does not disprove.
Alos it's not about D, it's about backend optimizations, as expalined in the article.
To be more accurate, dmd-compiled code enters infinite loop, just as it should. Printing "fermat's theorem has not been disproven" would be just as wrong as LDC behaviour.
It's surprising how so many backends can have the same optimizing bug even in 2021. Kudos for DMD doing the right thing.
Believe it or not, it is not a bug, at least not in C++. Consider the transforms as follow.
1/ What's after the loop is unreachable, therefore it can be removed.
2/ An analysis of the function shows that it has no side effects.
3/ Now the function must return true, granted that it returns at all.
4/ At the call site, we got a function with no side effect that can only return true, therefore we can constant fold the call to true.
You will note that all the transformation are trivially correct, except 3, because we don't know if the function will return or not. This is where precise legalese of the language definition comes into play, as it turns out, in C++ - and C++ is by far the language people working on optimizer have focused the most - it is not mandatory to prove that the function will terminate.
In a way, it does make sense, because providing that the function will terminate is equivalent to proving the halting problem, or, in this specific case, Fermat's last theorem, which is not something reasonable to expect from the optimizer.
If the language asks you to prove this terminates, then the cost you pay is that many function that will terminate will not be optimized, because it is too difficult to prove it.