SmoothLife | Continuous Domain Game of Life in Python with Numpy | Data Manipulation library
kandi X-RAY | SmoothLife Summary
kandi X-RAY | SmoothLife Summary
There is a bunch of information on the internet about Conway's Game of Life (GoL), and if you haven't heard of it before, I suggest you learn about it because it'll make the rest of this make a lot more sense. I'll start with a quick recap. GoL is a specific cellular automata. Imagine a 2D grid of cells (think graph paper). Each cell is either alive or dead at any moment in time. At each next moment in time, a cell can change state or stay the same. Because this is a 2D square grid. Each cell has a total of 8 neighbor cells. If a cell is alive and it has 2 or 3 live neighbors, it will stay alive. If it has fewer than 2 live neighbors, it'll die off of loneliness. If it has more than 3 live neighbors, it'll die off from being overcrowded. If a dead cell has exactly 3 live neighbors, it will come alive. There is quite a lot of interesting behavior that can come of this very simple rule set. Another of my GoL projects can be found here - GoL in 9 lines of horribly obfuscated C.
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SmoothLife Key Features
SmoothLife Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Data Manipulation
QUESTION
I am working with the R programming language.
I have the following dataset:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Apr-10 at 05:36Up front, "1,3,4" != 1
. It seems you should look to split the strings using strsplit(., ",")
.
QUESTION
I've the following table
Owner Pet Housing_Type A Cats;Dog;Rabbit 3 B Dog;Rabbit 2 C Cats 2 D Cats;Rabbit 3 E Cats;Fish 1The code is as follows:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-15 at 08:48One approach is to define a helper function that matches for a specific animal, then bind the columns to the original frame.
Note that some wrangling is done to get rid of whitespace to identify the unique animals to query.
QUESTION
I have this data frame:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-10 at 04:12We can use stri_replace_all_regex
to replace your color_1
into integers together with the arithmetic operator.
Here I've stored your values into a vector color_1_convert
. We can use this as the input in stri_replace_all_regex
for better management of the values.
QUESTION
I have a database with columns M1
, M2
and M3
. These M values correspond to the values obtained by each method. My idea is now to make a rank column for each of them. For M1
and M2
, the rank will be from the highest value to the lowest value and M3
in reverse. I made the output table for you to see.
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-07 at 14:15Using rank
and relocate
:
QUESTION
I working on a Python project that has a DataFrame like this:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-24 at 20:48You could use the idxmax
method on axis:
QUESTION
I would like to know of a fast/efficient way in any program (awk/perl/python) to split a csv file (say 10k columns) into multiple small files each containing 2 columns. I would be doing this on a unix machine.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-12 at 05:22With your show samples, attempts; please try following awk
code. Since you are opening files all together it may fail with infamous "too many files opened error" So to avoid that have all values into an array and in END
block of this awk
code print them one by one and I am closing them ASAP all contents are getting printed to output file.
QUESTION
Good afternoon, friends!
I'm currently performing some calculations in R (df is displayed below). My goal is to display in a new column the first non-null value from selected cells for each row.
My df is:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-03 at 11:16One option with dplyr
could be:
QUESTION
I am again struggling with transforming a wide df into a long one using pivot_longer
The data frame is a result of power analysis for different effect sizes and sample sizes, this is how the original df looks like:
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-03 at 10:59library(tidyverse)
example %>%
pivot_longer(cols = starts_with("es"), names_to = "type", names_prefix = "es_", values_to = "es") %>%
pivot_longer(cols = starts_with("pwr"), names_to = "pwr", names_prefix = "pwr_") %>%
filter(substr(type, 1, 3) == substr(pwr, 1, 3)) %>%
mutate(pwr = parse_number(pwr)) %>%
arrange(pwr, es, type)
QUESTION
Suppose I have the following 10 variables (num_var_1, num_var_2, num_var_3, num_var_4, num_var_5, factor_var_1, factor_var_2, factor_var_3, factor_var_4, factor_var_5):
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-26 at 10:11You may define a function FUN(n)
that creates a data set as shown in OP.
QUESTION
I am trying to tidy up some data that is all contained in 1 column called "game_info" as a string. This data contains college basketball upcoming game data, with the Date, Time, Team IDs, Team Names, etc. Ideally each one of those would be their own column. I have tried separating with a space delimiter, but that has not worked well since there are teams such as "Duke" with 1 part to their name, and teams with 2 to 3 parts to their name (Michigan State, South Dakota State, etc). There also teams with "-" dashes in their name.
Here is my data:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-16 at 15:25Here's one with regex. See regex101 link for the regex explanations
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Install SmoothLife
You can use SmoothLife like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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