7 comments

  • Kaliboy 1 hour ago

    This is amazing. I'm at loss for words.

    During my CS years I remember being fascinated by NFA's, as opposed to boring single universe DFA's.

    For some reason I internalized that I would never see something like an NFA implemented beyond text books.

    Then came Carlini.

    • bigdict 54 minutes ago

      But... they are equivalent?

      • xpon 4 minutes ago

        Modulo an exponential blowup! That’s like saying P is equivalent to NP.

    • userbinator 36 minutes ago

      Upon reading the title, this is one of those "I know that's possible, but I'd never bother to implement it" things, although this particular implementation isn't exactly what I had in mind.

      • evilsnoopi3 1 hour ago

        The technical write up is worth perusing but I played a game before reading and accidentally found a winning strategy immediately. I'm not sure if this is a result of the 2-ply nature of the engine or if the mentioned deficiencies account for this but the computer did not act to prevent checkmate in 1 (without any intervening check); the game I played was (in algebraic notation): 1. e4 e5 2. kf3 kf6 3. kxe5 kxe4 4. d4 kxf2 5. Kxf2 a5 6. Qf3 b5?? 7. Qxf7 1-0

        • esikich 23 minutes ago

          I get "illegal move, game over" like 50% of the time, chrome on android.

          • devanshp 17 minutes ago

            This is absurd. I did not realize you could do nearly this much computation in regex.

            • karlgkk 16 minutes ago

              It’s turing complete so you could compile almost any language to regex. You might have to build a vm for some languages, also in regex. The point is, it’s regex all the way down.

            • explodes 2 hours ago

              2025

              • VladVladikoff 2 hours ago

                This is like a fever dream.