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I disagree. I clearly equated both phrases, and both phrases can either exist in a longer sentence to establish the subject or as a complete phrase with the subject established in a previous sentence.
Examples: "I would have danced" is functionally the same as "I didn't dance." If someone asks you if you danced, you could answer "I would have" or "I didn't" and the same information is brought across.
Ok, now I understand what you meant, but I also disagree, like your other replier. "I would have" contains intent, whereas "I didn't" does not.
Imagine if your roommate asks "did you steal my laptop?" Answering "I didn't" answers the question succinctly, and there is no discussion of intent. Answering "I would have" suggests that there is (or was) some intent to steal.
Hard disagree there. "I would have" implies that dancing was something you desired, but circonstances didn't allow for whatever reason. There's an unsaid "but" in there, whereas "I didn't" simply means you were not involved in the dancing.
"I would have" carries a lot more meaning than a simple "I did not".