MonoLife Life is a game invented by the mathematician J.H. Conway. The rules are simple, but the consequences of the rules are remarkable. The game board is a two-dimensional grid. Initially some cells are placed on some squares of the grid. Cells live and die subject to the following rules: 1. If a cell has exactly two or three neighbors, it survives. Otherwise it dies. 2. If exactly three cells are neighbors to an empty square, a new cell will be born on that square. A cell's neighbors are all cells on adjacent squares. For example, a cell (C) can have at most 8 neighbors: ------- |1|2|3| ------- |4|C|5| ------- |6|7|8| ------- Running the Program This program works only on Atari ST monochrome systems. Double- click the program icon, and the program will randomly place cells on the grid. Then the grid will change subject to the above rules. To make the program randomly place new cells on the board, press and hold down the right mouse button. To quit the program, press and hold down the left mouse button. As the program runs, you will see order and symmetry evolving out of randomness and chaos. The complex and synergistic behavoir of the cells on the grid is amazing considering the simplicity of the rules determining this behavoir! More About Life See Martin Gardner's "Wheels, Life, and other Mathematical Amusements." Also Gardner wrote an article about Life in his Mathematical Games column in Scientific American in 1973. Life has been discussed in A.K. Dewdney's Computer Recreations column in Scientific American. More About the Program This program is public domain. Copies can be made and distributed freely. The program was written by: Eric Bergman-Terrell Cadenza Software, Ltd. 1704 Imperial Ridge Las Cruces, NM 88001 The program was written in 68000 assembly language, assembled by the AssemPro assembler sold by Abacus Software. Enjoy the program!