We recently derived analytical expressions for the pairwise (auto)correlation
functions (CFs) between modular layers (MLs) in close-packed structures (CPSs) for the wide
class of stacking processes describable as hidden Markov models (HMMs) [Riechers \etal,
(2014), Acta Crystallogr.~A, XX 000-000]. We now use these results to calculate diffraction
patterns (DPs) directly from HMMs, discovering that the relationship between the HMMs and
DPs is both simple and fundamental in nature. We show that in the limit of large crystals,
the DP is a function of parameters that specify the HMM. We give three elementary but
important examples that demonstrate this result, deriving expressions for the DP of CPSs
stacked (i) independently, (ii) as infinite-Markov-order randomly faulted 2H and 3C
stacking structures over the entire range of growth and deformation faulting probabilities,
and (iii) as a HMM that models Shockley-Frank stacking faults in 6H-SiC. While applied here
to planar faulting in CPSs, extending the methods and results to planar disorder in other
layered materials is straightforward. In this way, we effectively solve the broad problem
of calculating a DP---either analytically or numerically---for any stacking
structure---ordered or disordered---where the stacking process can be expressed as a HMM.