(2023-11-07, 09:25 PM)David001 Wrote: I seemed to remember that you set N different calculations going, and only one of those can return a result, and then you collapse the wavefunction and extract the answer - but I don't remember for sure. I never had access to a QC to motivate me to make the effort!!!
However, a quantum computer must do something in parallel otherwise what is the point of it - even theoretically?
A quantum computer can evalaute 2^n input combinations to unitary functions in parallel where n is the number of qubits. Already for n = 100 that's 10^30 function evaluations in parallel which is completely crazy compared to traditional computing. That's why there's such a hype around it. At the same time you shouldn't really compare it to how traditional computation works as the results can't directly be observed. Whether the calculations really happen or they only happen for the measurement you read out is a philosophical question.