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Alex
> making a game for uni in ruby for the first time, called scissors
> papers
> stone and wanted to know if you can find out what method your
> oppenents
> are using before they use and and counter them.
This was a Ruby Quiz some time ago:
http://www.rubyquiz.com/quiz16.html
James Edward Gray II
Hmmm ... reminds me of the old Claude Shannon penny matching machine.
Isn't rock/paper/scissors the base-three equivalent of that? Anyhow, if
you can find the Shannon paper, it will give you some clues on how to do
rock/paper/scissors against a human opponent.
Oh but it is so much more than a number game.
It is about timing and has the x-factor of personality like in Poker.
Doesn't make a good computer game.
As "janken" in Japan it is frequently used to settle minor disputes
and make decisions by people of all ages.
Yet, I've never seen a video game version of it in Japan...
There is a discussion of this game in the book "The Compleat Strategyst",
by J.D. Williams, pp. 98 and following in my (Dover) edition.
From the "payoff matrix" of this game, one finds that there is no
dominant strategy and that players should play each strategy on a 1:1:1
basis, i.e. choose each of the three symbols with equal probability.
But things change if you give different payoffs for different encounters
(e.g.
three dollars to a player if she or he wins in a stone/scissors encounter,
two dollars to a player if she or he wins in a paper/stone encounter,
and one dollar to a player if she or he wins in a scissor/paper encounter,
( that situation is discussed in the book "The mathematics of games" by John D. Beasley, Oxford University Press.)
If you always chose the same object, your
opponent can adapt to that and win over you. So you must mix your
choices with some probabilities p_sci,p_sto,p_pap, so that
p_sci+p_sto+p_pap=1.
Your average gain will be
(3*p_sto-p_pap) whenever your opponent shows scissors,
(p_sci-2*p_sto) whenever your opponent shows paper,
(2*p_pap-3*p_sci) whenever your opponent shows stone.
Now, you can't make all these gains positive by choosing the values
for p_pap,p_sci,p_sto, as this requires (3*p_sto>p_pap), (p_sci>2*p_sto),
(2*p_pap>3p_sto), and thus 6p_sto>2p_pap>3p_sci>6p_sto, that's impossible.
But you can achieve that none of the gains is negative, by setting
p_sci=1/3,
p_pap=1/2,
p_sto=1/6.
If you vary this strategy, at least one of your gains is negative,
and your opponent wins. So it doesn't matter what your opponent does,
as long as you play your optimal strategy.
On the other hand, your opponent can play it the same way.
Thus, nobody wins (on average).
How to implement such a game for more general payoffs?
Maybe you just use some external
linear programming tool like glpk that has Ruby bindings
http://groups.google.de/group/ruby-talk-google/browse_thread/thread/11f0a2029ad2bfd3
Best regards,
Axel
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