ARAY RAM

  • meep2000
    28th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    Could someone tell me how an ARAY ram is supposed to work? I know it has to do with crossing BRAY in specific patterns but I cannot figure out how you're supposed to read any information out of the long life BRAY created. Is there some sort of interaction that I don't know of that someone would be kind enough to explain?
  • watereye
    28th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    Okay, Just create Points.

    Metal: M  Aray: A Bray: B

    MA            B


                     A
                     M
    Or you could put 2 aray on top of metal

    MAA

    Also if you replace metal with pscn it has a more shorter life.

    Pscn bray shall remove white bray.




  • cip
    28th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    In "nothing" display; run frame by frame to get an idea:


    Also, this is awesome:

  • meep2000
    28th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    Okay by paying very close attention I was able to figure out how it works :D
    I already understood the creating points mechanism.
    What I did not understand was how it could know if it had already created a BRAY there or not.
    It has to do with the interaction when the BRAY shooting code detects another BRAY particle!
    It always produces a long life BRAY.
    If the BRAY is a long life BRAY it keeps moving.
    If the BRAY is recently created (don't know limit) normal BRAY then it keeps moving.
    If the BRAY is normal and it is too old but still there, then it STOPS.
    This is applied in the 1Kbit ram because if they "shot" stops then it knows that the addressing BRAY
    did not run over a long life BRAY there so that was a 0! Otherwise it was a 1! Thanks!
  • watereye
    28th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    @meep2000 (View Post)
    Metal+Aray= Normal white Bray. Creates points when collided.
    Pscn+Aray= Fast different Bray. Has 1 frame of life. One spark to pscn makes 2 frames. Removes points. Remove normal bray.
    All other metals are the same as Metal.
    Collide bray together makes a point. Which is longer life Bray.
  • meep2000
    28th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    @watereye
    Thanks for trying to help me but I already solved my problem.
    and you're just telling me things I already know.
    Thank you anyways!

    Thank you too!