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lfe:((2×+⌿⊃¯1 0 1⊖¨+⌿¯1 0 1⌽¨⊂⍵)-⍵)∊5 6 7 | lfe:((2×+⌿⊃¯1 0 1⊖¨+⌿¯1 0 1⌽¨⊂⍵)-⍵)∊5 6 7 | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
McDonnell also described how future language features, such as the [[Commute]] operator and a tesselation operator related to [[ | McDonnell also described how future language features, such as the [[Commute]] operator and a tesselation operator related to [[Cut]] and the much later [[Stencil]], might reduce this to as few as 11 tokens (one of which is a long list of integers), or to 9 tokens when using a pre-defined vector of matrices. | ||
Cliff Reiter's 2005 article "Time(r) for the Game of Life"<ref>Cliff Reiter. [http://archive.vector.org.uk/art10007290 "Time(r) for the Game of Life"]. [[Vector journal]] Volume 21 Number 3. 2005-05.</ref> studies the performance of several [[J]] implementations, including both methods based on [[ | Cliff Reiter's 2005 article "Time(r) for the Game of Life"<ref>Cliff Reiter. [http://archive.vector.org.uk/art10007290 "Time(r) for the Game of Life"]. [[Vector journal]] Volume 21 Number 3. 2005-05.</ref> studies the performance of several [[J]] implementations, including both methods based on [[Cut]] and one by Ewart Shaw more similar to McDonnell's Rotate-based strategies, finding the latter to be much faster. He also includes a survey of APL-family Life implementations since "Life: Nasty, Brutish, and Short". | ||
[[John Scholes]] published a video in which he explains his own implementation of Life, the same as the function <syntaxhighlight lang=apl inline>Life</syntaxhighlight> above, in 2009.<ref name="scholes"/> Scholes' function resembles McDonnell's APL2 implementation in its use of three-element vertical and horizontal rotation vectors, but uses [[Inner Product]] and [[Outer Product]] rather than [[Each]] as well as a different arithmetic scheme. | [[John Scholes]] published a video in which he explains his own implementation of Life, the same as the function <syntaxhighlight lang=apl inline>Life</syntaxhighlight> above, in 2009.<ref name="scholes"/> Scholes' function resembles McDonnell's APL2 implementation in its use of three-element vertical and horizontal rotation vectors, but uses [[Inner Product]] and [[Outer Product]] rather than [[Each]] as well as a different arithmetic scheme. |