nissy-fmc

A Rubik's cube FMC assistant
git clone https://git.tronto.net/nissy-fmc
Download | Log | Files | Refs | README | LICENSE

commit 5a6eccd1596bb05f2a638e8ccb0b56e47ff950fc
parent 0ced0b0e860eaad687049fbc2d7c3a3f5f79313d
Author: Sebastiano Tronto <sebastiano.tronto@gmail.com>
Date:   Sat, 29 Jan 2022 21:20:19 +0100

Fixed lists in README.md

Diffstat:
MREADME.md | 2++
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)

diff --git a/README.md b/README.md @@ -14,6 +14,7 @@ It can be useful to analyze your DR solves (and more, once I implement more feat ## Why should I use Nissy? You should use Nissy if you: + * Want to analyze your DR solutions or check for multiple optimal (or sub-optimal) solutions for EO/DR/HTR or similar substeps. * You just want a Rubik's cube solver and you like command line interfaces. @@ -89,6 +90,7 @@ I'll try to explain here the main parts of the program. ### Cube, moves and transformations There are many ways to represent a cube. In Nissy I use two: + * An array representation `CubeArray`: 3 arrays representing the permutation of corners, edges and centers and 2 arrays for the orientation of corners and edges. * An 11-integers representation `Cube`: 3 integers for edge orientation (with respect