Category talk:0 degree reflectors

From LifeWiki
Revision as of 19:25, 10 April 2023 by Confocal (talk | contribs) (reply)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

What of this mechanism? Gliders inputted (at a period of a multiple of 60) are shifted 2 cells downwards and 4 leftwards, and if the input period is 30, it is doubled.

x = 35, y = 39, rule = B3/S23 5b2o$5b2o2$5bo$4bobo$4bobo$5bo2$16b2o$2b2obob2o7b2o$2bo5bo$3bo3bo$4b3o3$16bo$15b3o$15b3o2$7bo5b2o3b2o$8bo4b2o3b2o$6b3o2$16bo$15bo$16bo5bo$b5o16b2o$ob3obo16b2o$bo3bo17b3o7b2o$2b3o13b2o3b2o8b2o$3bo18b2o$22bo3$3b2o$3b2o3b2o$7bobo6bo$7bo9bo$6b2o7b3o! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ GPS 8 THUMBSIZE 2 ZOOM 12 HEIGHT 640 AUTOSTART ]]
(click above to open LifeViewer)

Is it to be considered a member of this page or the list of filters? It seems that period multipliers are all periodic, which this one isn't, but it is also a shifter. And is it notable enough for its own page? DroneBetter (talk) 16:59, 10 April 2023 (UTC)

  • Maybe this edit does provide a summary of my thoughts. p30 technology seems like a missing article. Confocal (talk) 19:25, 10 April 2023 (UTC)
    x = 118, y = 95, rule = B3/S23 25b2o$25b2o4b3o$11bo10b2o6b5o$11bobo7b3o5bo3bobo$14b2o6b2o6bo3b2o$2o 12b2o9b2o$2o12b2o9b2o$11bobo$11bo11bo$21bobo$22b2o5$30bo$31bo$29b3o6$ 38bo$36bobo$37b2o4$25b2o$25b2o4b3o11bo$11bo10b2o6b5o11bo$11bobo7b3o5bo 3bobo8b3o$14b2o6b2o6bo3b2o$2o12b2o9b2o$2o12b2o9b2o$11bobo$11bo11bo$21b obo$22b2o2$35b2o$34bobo$36bo6$27b3o$29bo$28bo2$68bo$66bobo$67b2o$9b2o 9b2o$9bobo7bobo$2o2b2o6bo8bo5bo$2obo2bo2bo2bo13bobo$4b2o6bo13b2obo4b2o $9bobo14b2ob2o3b2o$9b2o15b2obo$26bobo$27bo71b2o$99b2o6$99bo$98b3o$98b 3o2$96b2o3b2o$96b2o3b2o3$99bo$98bo$99bo5bo$105b2o$106b2o$106b3o7b2o$ 101b2o3b2o8b2o$105b2o$105bo4$91b2o$90bobo6bo$90bo9bo$89b2o7b3o! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 HEIGHT 600 ZOOM 4 ]]
    It works at multiples of 30 ticks
    (click above to open LifeViewer)