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Thread title | Replies | Last modified |
---|---|---|
AgentSmith 0.2 's kd-tree | 3 | 19:01, 30 July 2015 |
DangerPrediction | 29 | 16:11, 3 December 2013 |
Targeting Challenge | 1 | 13:28, 18 March 2013 |
Why does AgentSmith 0.2 use Skilgannon's kd-tree in it. It's license says You must give appropriate credit.
Oversight, thanks for pointing this out. Credit has now been given on my robots page! :)
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From the sounds of it his "DangerPrediction" is very similar to MinimumRiskMovement, except he evaluates the danger along every point in a route. Which is very similar to WaveSurfing except without waves. He would have to have some other method for calculating the risk however.
Also, not sure how those images prove that the robot is open source. The source being in the Jar and a FLOSS License is usually sufficient.
Please stop posting images, they are of no help. Also Robocode cannot `decompile` anything.
Open Source does not refer to the availability of the source code, but the rights given by the author on how that code can be used. In short, it doesn't matter if the source is included in the JAR or not. Since Wolfman has not designated a license (that I can find), this source is copyrighted (closed source) by default.
Yup its closed source, I didn't realise that Robocode packed source with the robot by default - how do people stop this?
I'm not too bothered with people looking at the code, I did say I would write some more details on how I did the movement once I had it working better against more complicated guns, but I don't want people just copying my hard work directly line for line!
Once I've written it up people can re-implement it if they choose but Chase has it pretty much working correctly. I do use gun-waves to keep track of enemy bullet positions, not guess-factors. I'm not sure if it will ever be as effective as true wave surfing but it should work in melee without any alteration as long as I generate waves and bullet positions for all bots not just one target!
There should be a checkbox for including the source when you go to package the robot. Gun-waves usually refer to the waves your gun creates for targeting purposes. I think the other is usually just referred to as enemy waves.
But it is possible to use waves without guess factors, but it makes the process more complicated.
I also use waves to keep track of enemy bullet positions, but I use guess factors to guess bullet's headings. The wave works as a collection of incoming virtual bullets. They all share the same center, fire time and bullet power, but each virtual bullet has a different heading.
Yup thats pretty much how I am using waves. Each wave has a payload that currently is virtual gun data, but I can add Guess Factors in the future. What Agent Smith doesn't do is surf the waves in a traditional sense for movement. It uses predicted x,y positions of enemy bullets over the next 50 ticks to work out a safe path over the those 50 ticks.
It will eventually use guess factors to work out where the most likely enemy bullet positions are but that is something I will work on next. At the moment it simply predicts head on, linear and circular bullet positions simultaneously without knowing which one is being used.
Heya. Not sure if you know, but the newest targeting challenges are TCRM and TCAS. If you do, great, ignore this. Otherwise if you run them, I would suggest RoboJogger or alternatively RoboResearch. While I am more used to RoboResearch myself (and I think its UI is still a bit better), RoboJogger has been tested to be quicker at running battles.