Could this have any practical application to software testing?
If there is any analogy here, perhaps one could transmute a program into something that crashed or failed more immediately if it was buggy. Of course even if that worked, one might not be able to trace the failure back to an actual line of code; it's not clear that this "smearing" process preserves information like that.
If there is any analogy here, perhaps one could transmute a program into something that crashed or failed more immediately if it was buggy. Of course even if that worked, one might not be able to trace the failure back to an actual line of code; it's not clear that this "smearing" process preserves information like that.