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  2. Conway's Game of Life

    conwaylife.com

    Conway's Game of Life is a cellular automaton that is played on a 2D square grid. Each square (or "cell") on the grid can be either alive or dead, and they evolve according to the following rules: Any live cell with fewer than two live neighbours dies (referred to as underpopulation). Any live cell with more than three live neighbours dies ...

  3. Conway's Game of Life - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/Conway's_Game_of_Life

    B0123478/S01234678. Conway's Game of Life, also known as the Game of Life or simply Life, is a cellular automaton devised by the British mathematician John Horton Conway in 1970. It is the best-known example of a cellular automaton. The "game" is actually a zero-player game, meaning that its evolution is determined by its initial state, needing ...

  4. LifeWiki - conwaylife.com

    conwaylife.com/wiki

    Welcome to. LifeWiki. , the wiki for Conway's Game of Life. Currently contains 2,635 articles. Eater 1 (or fishhook or simply eater) was the first discovered eater. Its ability to eat various objects was discovered by Bill Gosper in 1971.

  5. Glider - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/G

    For many years Conway consistently "rounded up" his discovery of the Game of Life to 1970. Occurrence Main article: List of natural spaceships. The glider is often produced by randomly-generated starting patterns; it is the fourth most common object on Adam P. Goucher's Catagolue. Glider synthesis Main article: Glider synthesis

  6. Gun - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/Gun

    Gun. A gun is a stationary pattern that repeatedly emits spaceships (or rakes) forever. By far the most common type of guns are glider guns, which emit gliders (the most well-known of which is the Gosper glider gun); however, guns that emit spaceships of many other speeds, including c/2 orthogonal, 2c/5 orthogonal, and c/12 diagonal, have also ...

  7. Publication year: 2022. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.6097284. ISBN: 978-1-794-81696-1. Pages: 492. Dimensions: US letter (8.5 × 11 in) Physical book: Hardcover, color printing, roughly the size and weight of a ream of US letter paper. A textbook for mathematical aspects of Conway's Game of Life and methods of pattern construction.

  8. Run Length Encoded - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/Run_Length_Encoded

    The Run Length Encoded (or RLE for short) file format is commonly-used for storing patterns. It is more cryptic than some other file formats such as plaintext and Life 1.06, but is still quite readable. Many features of the RLE file format are incorporated in the MCell file format. RLE files are saved with a .rle file extension.

  9. Eater - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/Eat

    Conway's Game of Life: Mathematics and Construction (2022), 7.1. ↑ Nathaniel Johnston, Dave Greene. Conway's Game of Life: Mathematics and Construction (2022), 2.3. ↑ Macbi (March 14, 2021). Re: Unproven conjectures (discussion thread) at the ConwayLife.com forums; ↑ Dean Hickerson. "Glider eaters". Dean Hickerson's Game of Life page ...

  10. Turing machine - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/Turing_machine

    Turing machine at the Life Lexicon; A Turing Machine in Conway's Game of Life - Official site by Paul Rendell "Collision-Based Computing edited by Andrew Adamatzky". Springer Verlag; ISBN: 1852335408. Chapter 13-Turing Universality of the Game of Life by Paul Randell

  11. Puffer - LifeWiki

    conwaylife.com/wiki/Puffer

    Puffer. A puffer (or puffer train) is a pattern that moves like a spaceship, except that it leaves debris behind. Puffers can either leave only stationary debris, or a combination of stationary and moving debris; the latter class of patterns are sometimes referred to as puffrakes or dirty rakes. Puffers may be referred to by the type of debris.