Abstract
This paper concerns the question to what extent it can be efficiently determined whether an arbitrary program correctly solves a given problem. This question is investigated with programs of a very simple form, namely instruction sequences, and a very simple problem, namely the non-zeroness test on natural numbers. The instruction sequences concerned are of a kind by which, for each n > 0, each function from {0,1}n to {0,1} can be computed. The established results include the time complexities of the problem of determining whether an arbitrary instruction sequence correctly implements the restriction to {0,1}n of the function from {0,1}* to {0,1} that models the non-zeroness test function, for n > 0, under several restrictions on the arbitrary instruction sequence.
Preprint available:
arXiv:1805.05845 [cs.LO]