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Conway's Game of Life
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:
LifeWiki
2024年10月25日 · Download pattern collection. 6MB .zip archive containing the 5200+ Game of Life RLE pattern files used on the wiki
Conway's Game of Life - LifeWiki
2024年12月2日 · Rules. The universe of the Game of Life is an infinite two-dimensional orthogonal grid of square cells, each of which (at any given time) is in one of two possible states, "live" (alternatively "on") or "dead" (alternatively "off").
Gosper glider gun - LifeWiki
2020年3月14日 · The Gosper glider gun is the first known gun, and indeed the first known finite pattern with unbounded growth, found by Bill Gosper in November 1970.
Copperhead - LifeWiki
2024年8月10日 · Copperhead is a c/10 orthogonal spaceship discovered by zdr on March 5, 2016 using a modified version of gfind known as zfind.
Run Length Encoded - LifeWiki
2023年3月12日 · 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.
Golly - LifeWiki
2023年10月21日 · Golly, first released July, 2005, is a free, open-source, cross-platform tool for simulating Conway's Game of Life that was written by Andrew Trevorrow and Tomas Rokicki, with contributions by Dave Greene, Jason Summers, Tim Hutton, Maks Verver, Robert Munafo, Chris Rowett and Dongook Lee, collectively known as the Golly Gang.
204P41 - LifeWiki
2024年9月21日 · This page was last edited on 21 September 2024, at 04:33. Content is available under GNU Free Documentation License 1.2 unless otherwise noted.
Breeder 1 - LifeWiki
2023年8月3日 · Breeder 1 evolving for four thousand generations, creating approximately 4,500 gliders
HashLife - LifeWiki
2022年6月3日 · HashLife is an algorithm created by Bill Gosper in 1984 for simulating the Game of Life.It is designed to take advantage of the considerable amount of repetitive behaviour in many large patterns of interest.