Trans-mirrored R-bee

Trans-mirrored R-bee (or down bun on bun) consists of two buns, reversed and facing each other with one row of dead cells between them so as to stabilize each other. It is one of the five possible ways to combine two buns into a still life. Its name comes from the fact that buns are also known as R-bees.

Trans-mirrored R-bee
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Pattern type Strict still life
Number of cells 14
Bounding box 7×5
Frequency class 19.4
Discovered by Unknown
Year of discovery Unknown

Commonness

Trans-mirrored R-bee is the forty-fourth most common still life in Achim Flammenkamp's census, being less common than long snake but more common than JC.[1] It is also the sixty-first most common object on Adam P. Goucher's Catagolue.[2]

gollark: What environment details do I need? `uname -a`, the entire content of `/proc/cpuinfo`, `/etc/os-release`, etc?
gollark: I should come up with the "steal environment details" code in advance to distribute to all other competitors to inevitably include.
gollark: ```pythondef test(my_cool_submission): return True # gollark is never wrong```
gollark: And require solutions to use stdio.
gollark: Just steal the TIO API code from AutoBotRobot.

See also

References

  1. Achim Flammenkamp (September 7, 2004). "Most seen natural occurring ash objects in Game of Life". Retrieved on January 15, 2009.
  2. Adam P. Goucher. "Statistics". Catagolue. Retrieved on June 24, 2016.
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