I've been reading this paper, in which authors prove that not all ITTM-computable functions $\Bbb R\rightarrow\Bbb R$ are 1-tape-computable, but if we put some restriction on the output of the function (e.g. restrict it to be $\Bbb N$), then they all are. I asked myself, "how about restricting the input of the function?".
My first question was, is every ITTM-computable function $\Bbb N\rightarrow\Bbb R$ 1-tape-computable? After a minute, I have realized I don't know the answer to a simpler question: Is every function ITTM-computable function $\{0\}\rightarrow\Bbb R$ 1-tape-computable? Or, to put another way, is every writable real 1-tape-writable?
I believe I've shown the answer to the last question is "yes", and the idea is to use the theorem 1.5 from the paper linked: given a writable real $r$, a real $r'$ which we get by deleting the first bit of $r$ is writable as well. Then the function $0\mapsto r'$ is computable, hence the functions $1r'$ and $0r'$ are 1-tape-computable (first by theorem 1.5, second by making the machine change $1$ to $0$ upon halting), and one of these is $r$.
Later I have found that proof of theorem 2.1 actually provides a function $\Bbb N\rightarrow\Bbb R$ which is not 1-tape-computable but is ITTM-computable. This however still leaves open the intermediate case, and this is where I ask my question:
Is there an ITTM-computable function $f:\{0,1\}\rightarrow\mathbb R$ which is not 1-tape-computable?
I will quickly mention that my argument for writable reals doesn't prove this negative, since that method only allows us to change the first bit to something fixed, so if first bits of $f(0),f(1)$ are distinct, we are in dead end.
I suspect the answer to this question is yes. The reason is the following: function defined in theorem 2.1, witnessing that ITTM-computable functions need not be 1-tape-computable, has as $f(n),n>0$ finite strings [EDIT: reading more carefully, I have realized this might not be true, so the argument below isn't correct], so we could concatenate these (and put markers inbetween) to get a real $r$. Then if function $0\mapsto f(0),1\mapsto r$ were 1-tape-computable, we maybe could reconstruct $f(n)$ given $r$ and $n$ with just one tape, making $f$ 1-tape-computable. However, I didn't manage to fill in all the details, and I'm not sure if all these steps are executable on a 1-tape machine. Another detail would be removing the remainder of $r$ from the tape, but I think leaving it will keep the function non-1-tape-computable by precisely the same argument.
Thanks in advance for any help.