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  2. Template:Conway's Game of Life gadget - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Conway's_Game_of...

    Whether to start the game automatically. |width= 300: The width of the canvas, in pixels. |height= 150: The height of the canvas, in pixels (excluding the control buttons). |zoom= 4: The initial zoom level, which is the amount of pixels per cell. |grid= off: Whether the grid is turned on. Only visible at zoom levels 4 or more. |cells= 0,0; 0,1 ...

  3. Conway's Game of Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway's_Game_of_Life

    The Game of Life, also known as Conway's Game of Life or simply Life, is a cellular automaton devised by the British mathematician John Horton Conway in 1970. [1] It is a zero-player game, [2] [3] meaning that its evolution is determined by its initial state, requiring no further input. One interacts with the Game of Life by creating an initial ...

  4. Mathematical puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_puzzle

    Mathematical puzzles require mathematics to solve them. Logic puzzles are a common type of mathematical puzzle. Conway's Game of Life and fractals, as two examples, may also be considered mathematical puzzles even though the solver interacts with them only at the beginning by providing a set of initial conditions. After these conditions are set ...

  5. Winning Ways for Your Mathematical Plays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winning_Ways_for_Your...

    The second volume applies the theorems of the first volume to many games, including nim, sprouts, dots and boxes, Sylver coinage, philosopher's phutball, fox and geese. A final section on puzzles analyzes the Soma cube, Rubik's Cube, peg solitaire, and Conway's Game of Life.

  6. Wheels, Life and Other Mathematical Amusements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheels,_Life_and_Other...

    It is Gardner's 10th collection of columns, and includes material on Conway's Game of Life, supertasks, intransitive dice, braided polyhedra, combinatorial game theory, the Collatz conjecture, mathematical card tricks, and Diophantine equations such as Fermat's Last Theorem. [3]

  7. LifeWiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LifeWiki

    LifeWiki's homepage. LifeWiki is a wiki dedicated to Conway's Game of Life. [1] [2] It hosts over 2000 articles on the subject [3] and a large collection of Life patterns stored in a format based on run-length encoding [4] that it uses to interoperate with other Life software such as Golly.

  8. Still life (cellular automaton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Still_life_(cellular...

    In Conway's Game of Life and other cellular automata, a still life is a pattern that does not change from one generation to the next. The term comes from the art world where a still life painting or photograph depicts an inanimate scene. In cellular automata, a still life can be thought of as an oscillator with unit period. [1]

  9. Speed of light (cellular automaton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light_(cellular...

    In Conway's Game of Life (and related cellular automata), the speed of light is a propagation rate across the grid of exactly one step (either horizontally, vertically or diagonally) per generation. In a single generation, a cell can only influence its nearest neighbours , and so the speed of light (by analogy with the speed of light in physics ...