1 | /*
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2 | Copyright 2006 by Sean Luke
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3 | Licensed under the Academic Free License version 3.0
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4 | See the file "LICENSE" for more information
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5 | */
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6 |
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7 |
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8 | package ec;
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9 | import ec.util.Parameter;
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10 | import java.io.*;
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11 | import ec.util.*;
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12 |
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13 | /*
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14 | * Individual.java
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15 | * Created: Tue Aug 10 19:58:13 1999
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16 | */
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17 |
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18 | /**
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19 | * An Individual is an item in the EC population stew which is evaluated
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20 | * and assigned a fitness which determines its likelihood of selection.
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21 | * Individuals are created most commonly by the newIndividual(...) method
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22 | * of the ec.Species class.
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23 | *
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24 | * <P>In general Individuals are immutable. That is, once they are created
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25 | * their genetic material should not be modified. This protocol helps insure that they are
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26 | * safe to read under multithreaded conditions. You can violate this protocol,
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27 | * but try to do so when you know you have only have a single thread.
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28 | *
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29 | * <p>In addition to serialization for checkpointing, Individuals may read and write themselves to streams in three ways.
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30 | *
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31 | * <ul>
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32 | * <li><b>writeIndividual(...,DataOutput)/readIndividual(...,DataInput)</b> This method
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33 | * transmits or receives an individual in binary. It is the most efficient approach to sending
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34 | * individuals over networks, etc. These methods write the evaluated flag and the fitness, then
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35 | * call <b>readGenotype/writeGenotype</b>, which you must implement to write those parts of your
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36 | * Individual special to your functions-- the default versions of readGenotype/writeGenotype throw errors.
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37 | * You don't need to implement them if you don't plan on using read/writeIndividual.
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38 | *
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39 | * <li><b>printIndividual(...,PrintWriter)/readIndividual(...,LineNumberReader)</b> This
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40 | * approach transmits or receives an indivdual in text encoded such that the individual is largely readable
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41 | * by humans but can be read back in 100% by ECJ as well. To do this, these methods will encode numbers
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42 | * using the <tt>ec.util.Code</tt> class. These methods are mostly used to write out populations to
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43 | * files for inspection, slight modification, then reading back in later on. <b>readIndividual</b>reads
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44 | * in the fitness and the evaluation flag, then calls <b>parseGenotype</b> to read in the remaining individual.
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45 | * You are responsible for implementing parseGenotype: the Code class is there to help you.
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46 | * <b>printIndividual</b> writes out the fitness and evaluation flag, then calls <b>genotypeToString<b>
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47 | * and printlns the resultant string. You are responsible for implementing the genotypeToString method in such
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48 | * a way that parseGenotype can read back in the individual println'd with genotypeToString. The default form
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49 | * of genotypeToString simply calls <b>toString</b>, which you may override instead if you like. The default
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50 | * form of <b>parseGenotype</b> throws an error. You are not required to implement these methods, but without
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51 | * them you will not be able to write individuals to files in a simultaneously computer- and human-readable fashion.
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52 | *
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53 | * <li><b>printIndividualForHumans(...,PrintWriter)</b> This
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54 | * approach prints an individual in a fashion intended for human consumption only.
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55 | * <b>printIndividualForHumans</b> writes out the fitness and evaluation flag, then calls <b>genotypeToStringForHumans<b>
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56 | * and printlns the resultant string. You are responsible for implementing the genotypeToStringForHumans method.
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57 | * The default form of genotypeToStringForHumans simply calls <b>toString</b>, which you may override instead if you like
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58 | * (though note that genotypeToString's default also calls toString). You should handle one of these methods properly
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59 | * to ensure individuals can be printed by ECJ.
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60 | * </ul>
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61 | *
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62 | * <p>Since individuals should be largely immutable, why is there a <b>readIndividual</b> method?
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63 | * after all this method doesn't create a <i>new</i> individual -- it just erases the existing one. This is
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64 | * largely historical; but the method is used underneath by the various <b>newIndividual</b> methods in Species,
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65 | * which <i>do</i> create new individuals read from files. If you're trying to create a brand new individual
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66 | * read from a file, look in Species.
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67 | *
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68 | * <p> Individuals are Comparable: if you sort Individuals, the FITTER individuals will appear EARLIER in a list or array.
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69 | *
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70 | *
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71 | * @author Sean Luke
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72 | * @version 1.0
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73 | */
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74 |
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75 | public abstract class Individual implements Prototype, Comparable
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76 | {
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77 | /** A reasonable parameter base element for individuals*/
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78 | public static final String P_INDIVIDUAL = "individual";
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79 |
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80 | /** A string appropriate to put in front of whether or not the individual has been printed. */
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81 | public static final String EVALUATED_PREAMBLE = "Evaluated: ";
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82 |
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83 | /** The fitness of the Individual. */
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84 | public Fitness fitness;
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85 |
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86 | /** The species of the Individual.*/
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87 | public Species species;
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88 |
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89 | public static int count = 0;
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90 | /** Has the individual been evaluated and its fitness determined yet? */
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91 | public boolean evaluated;
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92 |
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93 | public int birthday = (count++);
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94 |
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95 | public Object clone()
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96 | {
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97 | try
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98 | {
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99 | Individual myobj = (Individual) (super.clone());
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100 | if (myobj.fitness != null) myobj.fitness = (Fitness)(fitness.clone());
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101 | return myobj;
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102 | }
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103 | catch (CloneNotSupportedException e)
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104 | { throw new InternalError(); } // never happens
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105 | }
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106 |
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107 |
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108 | /** Returns the "size" of the individual. This is used for things like
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109 | parsimony pressure. The default form of this method returns 0 --
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110 | if you care about parsimony pressure, you'll need to override the
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111 | default to provide a more descriptive measure of size. */
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112 |
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113 | public long size() { return 0; }
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114 |
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115 | /** Returns true if I am genetically "equal" to ind. This should
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116 | mostly be interpreted as saying that we are of the same class
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117 | and that we hold the same data. It should NOT be a pointer comparison. */
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118 | public abstract boolean equals(Object ind);
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119 |
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120 | /** Returns a hashcode for the individual, such that individuals which
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121 | are equals(...) each other always return the same
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122 | hash code. */
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123 | public abstract int hashCode();
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124 |
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125 | /** This should be used to set up only those things which you share in common
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126 | with all other individuals in your species; individual-specific items
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127 | which make you <i>you</i> should be filled in by Species.newIndividual(...),
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128 | and modified by breeders.
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129 | @see Prototype#setup(EvolutionState,Parameter)
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130 | */
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131 |
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132 | /** Overridden here because hashCode() is not expected to return the pointer
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133 | to the object. toString() normally uses hashCode() to print a unique identifier,
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134 | and that's no longer the case. You're welcome to override this anyway you
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135 | like to make the individual print out in a more lucid fashion. */
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136 | public String toString()
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137 | {
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138 | return "" + this.getClass().getName() + "@" +
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139 | System.identityHashCode(this) + "{" + hashCode() + "}";
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140 | }
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141 |
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142 | /** Print to a string the genotype of the Individual in a fashion readable by humans, and not intended
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143 | to be parsed in again. The fitness and evaluated flag should not be included. The default form
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144 | simply calls toString(), but you'll probably want to override this to something else. */
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145 | public String genotypeToStringForHumans()
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146 | {
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147 | return toString();
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148 | }
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149 |
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150 | /** Print to a string the genotype of the Individual in a fashion intended
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151 | to be parsed in again via parseGenotype(...).
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152 | The fitness and evaluated flag should not be included. The default form
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153 | simply calls toString(), which is almost certainly wrong, and you'll probably want to override
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154 | this to something else. */
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155 | public String genotypeToString()
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156 | {
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157 | return toString();
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158 | }
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159 |
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160 | public void setup(final EvolutionState state, final Parameter base)
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161 | {
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162 | // does nothing by default.
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163 | // So where is the species set? The Species does so after it
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164 | // loads me but before it calls setup on me.
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165 | }
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166 |
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167 | /** Should print the individual out in a pleasing way for humans,
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168 | with a verbosity of Output.V_NO_GENERAL.
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169 | */
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170 |
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171 | public void printIndividualForHumans(final EvolutionState state,
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172 | final int log)
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173 | {
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174 | state.output.println(EVALUATED_PREAMBLE + Code.encode(evaluated), log);
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175 | fitness.printFitnessForHumans(state,log);
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176 | state.output.println( genotypeToStringForHumans(), log );
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177 | }
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178 |
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179 | /** Should print the individual out in a pleasing way for humans,
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180 | including its
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181 | fitness, using state.output.println(...,verbosity,log)
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182 | You can get fitness to print itself at the appropriate time by calling
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183 | fitness.printFitnessForHumans(state,log,verbosity);
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184 |
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185 | <p>The default form of this method simply prints out whether or not the
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186 | individual has been evaluated, its fitness, and then calls Individual.genotypeToStringForHumans().
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187 | Feel free to override this to produce more sophisticated behavior,
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188 | though it is rare to need to -- instead you could just override genotypeToStringForHumans().
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189 | @deprecated Verbosity no longer used.
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190 | */
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191 |
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192 | public final void printIndividualForHumans(final EvolutionState state,
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193 | final int log,
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194 | final int verbosity)
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195 | {
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196 | printIndividualForHumans(state, log);
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197 | }
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198 |
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199 | /** Should print the individual in a way that can be read by computer,
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200 | including its fitness, with a verbosity of Output.V_NO_GENERAL.
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201 | */
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202 |
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203 | public void printIndividual(final EvolutionState state,
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204 | final int log)
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205 | {
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206 | state.output.println(EVALUATED_PREAMBLE + Code.encode(evaluated), log);
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207 | fitness.printFitness(state,log);
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208 | state.output.println( genotypeToString(), log );
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209 | }
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210 |
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211 |
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212 | /** Should print the individual in a way that can be read by computer,
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213 | including its fitness, using state.output.println(...,verbosity,log)
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214 | You can get fitness to print itself at the appropriate time by calling
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215 | fitness.printFitness(state,log,verbosity);
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216 |
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217 | <p>The default form of this method simply prints out whether or not the
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218 | individual has been evaluated, its fitness, and then calls Individual.genotypeToString().
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219 | Feel free to override this to produce more sophisticated behavior,
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220 | though it is rare to need to -- instead you could just override genotypeToString().
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221 | @deprecated Verbosity no longer used.
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222 | */
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223 |
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224 | public final void printIndividual(final EvolutionState state,
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225 | final int log,
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226 | final int verbosity)
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227 | {
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228 | printIndividual( state, log, Output.V_NO_GENERAL);
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229 | }
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230 |
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231 | /** Should print the individual in a way that can be read by computer,
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232 | including its fitness. You can get fitness to print itself at the
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233 | appropriate time by calling fitness.printFitness(state,log,writer);
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234 | Usually you should try to use printIndividual(state,log,verbosity)
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235 | instead -- use this method only if you can't print through the
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236 | Output facility for some reason.
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237 |
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238 | <p>The default form of this method simply prints out whether or not the
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239 | individual has been evaluated, its fitness, and then calls Individual.genotypeToString().
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240 | Feel free to override this to produce more sophisticated behavior,
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241 | though it is rare to need to -- instead you could just override genotypeToString().
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242 | */
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243 |
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244 | public void printIndividual(final EvolutionState state,
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245 | final PrintWriter writer)
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246 | {
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247 | writer.println(EVALUATED_PREAMBLE + Code.encode(evaluated));
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248 | fitness.printFitness(state,writer);
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249 | writer.println( genotypeToString() );
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250 | }
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251 |
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252 | /** Reads in the individual from a form printed by printIndividual(), erasing the previous
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253 | information stored in this Individual. If you are trying to <i>create</i> an Individual
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254 | from information read in from a stream or DataInput,
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255 | see the various newIndividual() methods in Species. The default form of this method
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256 | simply reads in evaluation information, then fitness information, and then
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257 | calls parseGenotype() (which you should implement). The Species is not changed or
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258 | attached, so you may need to do that elsewhere. Feel free to override
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259 | this method to produce more sophisticated behavior,
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260 | though it is rare to need to -- instead you could just override parseGenotype(). */
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261 |
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262 | public void readIndividual(final EvolutionState state,
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263 | final LineNumberReader reader)
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264 | throws IOException
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265 | {
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266 | evaluated = Code.readBooleanWithPreamble(EVALUATED_PREAMBLE, state, reader);
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267 |
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268 | // Next, what's my fitness?
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269 | fitness.readFitness(state,reader);
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270 |
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271 | // next, read me in
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272 | parseGenotype(state, reader);
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273 | }
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274 |
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275 | /** This method is used only by the default version of readIndividual(state,reader),
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276 | and it is intended to be overridden to parse in that part of the individual that
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277 | was outputted in the genotypeToString() method. The default version of this method
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278 | exits the program with an "unimplemented" error. You'll want to override this method,
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279 | or to override readIndividual(...) to not use this method. */
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280 | protected void parseGenotype(final EvolutionState state,
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281 | final LineNumberReader reader) throws IOException
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282 | {
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283 | state.output.fatal("parseGenotype(EvolutionState, LineNumberReader) not implemented in " + this.getClass());
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284 | }
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285 |
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286 | /** Writes the binary form of an individual out to a DataOutput. This is not for serialization:
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287 | the object should only write out the data relevant to the object sufficient to rebuild it from a DataInput.
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288 | The Species will be reattached later, and you should not write it. The default version of this
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289 | method writes the evaluated and fitness information, then calls writeGenotype() to write the genotype
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290 | information. Feel free to override this method to produce more sophisticated behavior,
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291 | though it is rare to need to -- instead you could just override writeGenotype().
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292 | */
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293 | public void writeIndividual(final EvolutionState state,
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294 | final DataOutput dataOutput) throws IOException
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295 | {
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296 | dataOutput.writeBoolean(evaluated);
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297 | fitness.writeFitness(state,dataOutput);
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298 | writeGenotype(state,dataOutput);
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299 | }
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300 |
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301 |
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302 | /** Writes the genotypic information to a DataOutput. Largely called by writeIndividual(), and
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303 | nothing else. The default simply throws an error. Various subclasses of Individual override this as
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304 | appropriate. For example, if your custom individual's genotype consists of an array of
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305 | integers, you might do this:
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306 |
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307 | * <pre><tt>
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308 | * dataOutput.writeInt(integers.length);
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309 | * for(int x=0;x<integers.length;x++)
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310 | * dataOutput.writeInt(integers[x]);
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311 | * </tt></pre>
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312 | */
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313 | public void writeGenotype(final EvolutionState state,
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314 | final DataOutput dataOutput) throws IOException
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315 | {
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316 | state.output.fatal("writeGenotype(EvolutionState, DataOutput) not implemented in " + this.getClass());
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317 | }
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318 |
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319 | /** Reads in the genotypic information from a DataInput, erasing the previous genotype
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320 | of this Individual. Largely called by readIndividual(), and nothing else.
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321 | If you are trying to <i>create</i> an Individual
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322 | from information read in from a stream or DataInput,
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323 | see the various newIndividual() methods in Species.
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324 | The default simply throws an error. Various subclasses of Individual override this as
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325 | appropriate. For example, if your custom individual's genotype consists of an array of
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326 | integers, you might do this:
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327 |
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328 | * <pre><tt>
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329 | * integers = new int[dataInput.readInt()];
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330 | * for(int x=0;x<integers.length;x++)
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331 | * integers[x] = dataInput.readInt();
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332 | * </tt></pre>
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333 | */
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334 |
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335 | public void readGenotype(final EvolutionState state,
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336 | final DataInput dataInput) throws IOException
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337 | {
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338 | state.output.fatal("readGenotype(EvolutionState, DataOutput) not implemented in " + this.getClass());
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339 | }
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340 |
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341 | /** Reads the binary form of an individual from a DataInput, erasing the previous
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342 | information stored in this Individual. This is not for serialization:
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343 | the object should only read in the data written out via printIndividual(state,dataInput).
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344 | If you are trying to <i>create</i> an Individual
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345 | from information read in from a stream or DataInput,
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346 | see the various newIndividual() methods in Species. The default form of this method
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347 | simply reads in evaluation information, then fitness information, and then
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348 | calls readGenotype() (which you will need to override -- its default form simply throws an error).
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349 | The Species is not changed or attached, so you may need to do that elsewhere. Feel free to override
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350 | this method to produce more sophisticated behavior, though it is rare to need to -- instead you could
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351 | just override readGenotype().
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352 | */
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353 | public void readIndividual(final EvolutionState state,
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354 | final DataInput dataInput) throws IOException
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355 | {
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356 | evaluated = dataInput.readBoolean();
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357 | fitness.readFitness(state,dataInput);
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358 | readGenotype(state,dataInput);
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359 | }
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360 |
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361 | /** Returns the metric distance to another individual, if such a thing can be measured.
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362 | Subclassess of Individual should implement this if it exists for their representation.
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363 | The default implementation here, which isn't very helpful, returns 0 if the individuals are equal
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364 | and infinity if they are not.
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365 | */
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366 |
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367 | public double distanceTo(Individual otherInd)
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368 | {
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369 | return (equals(otherInd) ? 0 : Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY);
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370 | }
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371 |
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372 | /**
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373 | Returns -1 if I am BETTER in some way than the other Individual, 1 if the other Individual is BETTER than me,
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374 | and 0 if we are equivalent. The default implementation assumes BETTER means FITTER, by simply calling
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375 | compareTo on the fitnesses themse.ves
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376 | */
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377 | public int compareTo(Object o)
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378 | {
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379 | Individual other = (Individual) o;
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380 | return fitness.compareTo(other.fitness);
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381 | }
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382 | }
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383 |
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