How to kill turtles that are over patches in Netlogo? - netlogo

to setup-lava
ask n-of lava patches [set pcolor orange]
ask men [die]
end
When I ask the men to die when they stand on a lava patch Netlogo gives me and error saying 'expected a number here, rather than a list or block'.

You haven't told us what lava is, but the error message suggests it is not a number. If you look in the NetLogo Dictionary, you will see that n-of must be followed by a number and then the agentset to tell NetLogo how many of the agentset to select.
Choice 1: assumes that lava-patches is a variable with a number in it (eg a slider on your interface)
to setup-lava
ask n-of lava-patches patches
[ set pcolor orange
ask men-here [die]
]
end
Choice 2: lava? is an attribute of patches that flags whether it is lava and that you have (somewhere else in your code) set that flag for lava patches
to setup-lava
ask patches with [lava?]
[ set pcolor orange
ask men-here [die]
]
end
Neither of these are tested

Related

Using the command move-to with max-one-of and the error appears: MOVE-TO expected input to be an agent but got NOBODY instead

I'm new to NetLogo and I have a question that I'm sure is pretty basic. But, I'm not getting over the difficulty.
If anyone can help me overcome this difficulty, I would be very grateful.
I would like from the patch where the turtle is found to consider the 8 neighboring cells in search of the highest pveg value. If it has equally high values, choose 1 of these randomly. Upon finding the highest pveg value of the neighbors, the turtle went there.
I am using the command: max-one-of. I think it serves my purpose. But, I'm making some syntax error that shows the following error: MOVE-TO expected input to be an agent but got NOBODY instead.
Thanks in advance
extensions [ gis ]
globals [ veg ]
patches-own [pveg]
to setup
clear-all
reset-ticks
setup-patches
crt 1 [
ask neighbors [ set pcolor blue ]
set color black
]
end
to setup-patches
end
to go
ask turtles [neighboring]
end
to neighboring
let my-neighWith-pveg [ neighbors with [pveg > 0.2] ]of patch-here
ifelse neighWith-pveg = 0
[ ]
[ move-to max-one-of patches [my-neighWith-pveg] set pcolor red ;;ERROR HERE
]
end
The NetLogo dictionary says, max-one-of needs an agentset and a reporter as input:
max-one-of agentset [reporter]
In your code, you use two agentsets: turtles and my-neighWith-pveg
Since you want to chose from the neighbors (and not all turtles) with the hightes pveg, you can write:
max-one-of my-neighWith-pveg [pveg]

How to ask turtles to stop if other turtles go over a certain patch-colour?

How can I tell a turtle to stop moving if there are other turtles going over a certain patch-color?
For example, I told 4 random patches to turn blue. I want a turtle only to be able to go over these blue patches if no other turtles are going over/are at these blue patches.
I already have this, but it does not seem to work:
if any? other turtles-on patches with [pcolor = blue]
[
set speed 0
]

NetLogo: Having a turtle remember its starting location

I want to have my turtles move back and forth between a central area and their starting location. I have set the central area (patch 0 0, and its neighbouring patches). I have set these turtles to begin from random locations on setup.
Now I need them to move to the central area and be able to remember and return to their respective starting positions. Here is my attempt, but one that is not working.
ask patches
[ set target-patch patch 0 0
ask target-patch
[ set pcolor green
ask neighbors [set pcolor green]
set hold-time 5
]
]
create-turtles 10
[ set shape "car"
set size 1
set color white
setxy random-xcor random-ycor
if (patches != patches with [pcolor = green])
[ set start-position (random-xcor random-ycor)] ;; line with error
]
to go
ask turtles
[ set heading target-patch move-to target-patch
set hold-time hold-time + 5
]
ask turtles
[ if hold-time >= 10
[ set heading start-position move-to start-position]
]
end
There are several problems with your code. I strongly suggest that you code in smaller pieces. That is, add some code and make sure it works before writing the next piece. Making sure it works is not just making it through without error messages, it needs to do what you expect it to do.
On your specific question. The line if (patches != patches with [pcolor = green]) is causing an error. First, patches is the set of all patches, not just a particular patch. So you are (sort of) asking whether the set of all patches is not equal to the set of patches that are green. Is that really what you intended? If so, it is easier to simply ask whether there is any patch that is not green:
if any? patches with [pcolor != green]
or to check whether they are all green and continue if not:
if not all? patches [pcolor = green]
However, since you are asking about moving back and forth to and from the central green patches, I think you really want to have the turtle check whether the patch they happen to be located on is green. This code looks at the patch where the turtle is located (patch-here) and checks whether the color (pcolor) is green:
if [pcolor] of patch-here = green [ ]
However, one of the tricks of NetLogo is that turtles can access the variables of the patch they are on directly. Note that a patch cannot access a turtle's variables because there may be multiple turtles on the patch so the patch doesn't know which turtle you want. But a turtle can only ever be on one patch at once. So you could write:
if pcolor = green [ ]
You also need to rethink this code:
ask patches
[ set target-patch patch 0 0
ask target-patch
[ set pcolor green
ask neighbors [set pcolor green]
set hold-time 5
]
]
This suggests to me that you have misunderstood something very fundamental to NetLogo programming. You need to think from the perspective of an individual agent. Looking at this code, you first do ask turtles, so that is going to run through all the turtles in random order. Let's call them A, then B, then C and so on.
What is each turtle going to do? Everything in the [ ]. So, A sets the value of the global variable named "target-patch" to patch 0 0. Then A asks that patch to turn green, have the 8 surrounding patches to turn green, and to set the variable "hold-time" to the value 5.
So far, so good. But then turtle B does exactly the same thing - it assigns "target-patch", turns it and its neighbors green etc. Then turtle C. If you have 100 turtles, this block of code will run 100 times and do exactly the same thing each time.

NetLogo - turtles to imprint 'who' on patches and only move-to patches which match their 'who'

I'm working on a land-use model featuring a forested World where turtles (smallholders and companies) have the ability to convert forest into crop-land. I would like to introduce a feature that turtles 'own' the patches they convert and are able to revisit them later to get these patches certified. The main issue is that when turtles move-to crop-land patches to get them certified, they do not only move to those they 'own' but also jump across the world to other turtles' crop-land patches and certify those. I've tried a few different workarounds, but I seem to run into the same two issues eventually:
#1 - error: can't use who in a patch context
I wanted to use the 'who' variable to mark crop-land patches as belonging to the turtle that converted the patch, e.g., turtle 0 goes to the forest, converts it to crop-land and that patch of cropland should be 'owned' by turtle 0, i.e., the patches owned-by variable should be equivalent to the turtle's 'who'. The issue here is that 'who' is a turtles-own variable. So, when I use it in a patch-context it produces an error. For example, ask smallholders [move-to one-of patches with [[owner = who]] --> error.
#2 - can't manage to set a global variable = 'who'
Two, I tried to work around this by using a proxy variable: a globals-variable called 'owner-ID'. I would use set owner-ID who to imprint the turtles individual number to the owner-ID. This seems to work to some extent, namely that the patches' 'owner' variable corresponds to the turtle that converted the patch. It also works when counting how many patches of certified and conventional crop-land turtles own (see set-land-ownership command below). However, when the smallholders-certify-crop-land commands are triggered, turtles don't stick to the patches they own, but 'jump' across the world. When prompting turtles through the command-center ask turtles [print owner-ID] they all return the same owner-ID value. I feel there might be a mistake in my move-to command-line but I just can't find it.
Summary & Question
I want crop-land patches to be 'owned by' the turtles that converted them, and want turtles to move only to the patches they 'own' when certifying crop-land patches, not to patches they don't own. I guess my questions revolve around whether it's possible to somehow use the 'who' variable in a patch-context. And, if not, what a good workaround for the problem could look like.
Relevant code is below (I hope)!
globals [owner-ID]
turtles-own [conventional-land-ownership certified-land-ownership]
patches-own [owned-by owner certified?]
to setup [
ask patches [
set pcolor green ;; green = forest
set certified? "no"
set owner "nobody"
]
]
to go
ask turtles [set-land-ownership]
ask smallholders [check-smallholder-status]
tick
end
to set-land-ownership
ask smallholders [
set owner-ID who
set conventional-land-ownership count patches with [owner = owner-ID and certified? = "no"]
set certified-land-ownership count patches with [owner = owner-ID and certified? = "yes"]
]
end
to check-smallholder-status
if wealth >= 0 and (conventional-land-ownership + certified-land-ownership) < SH_max-land-ownership [
smallholders-choose-activity
]
if wealth < 0 [
set color red
set shape "cow skull"
]
if (conventional-land-ownership + certified-land-ownership) >= SH_max-land-ownership [
set color orange + 2
]
end
;; smallholders-choose-activities is a reporter-based command where turtles choose the most economical option available. One of the outcomes is: smallholders-certify-crop-land
to smallholders-certify-crop-land
let available-patch max-one-of patches with [owner = owner-ID and certified? = "no"] [count neighbors with [certified? = "yes"]]
ifelse not any? turtles-on available-patch [
move-to available-patch
]
[]
set wealth wealth - smallholder-certification-cost
set pcolor brown + 1
set certified? "yes"
end
Your first approach is definitely the way to go and could be fixed with one small adjustment.
ask smallholders [move-to one-of patches with [owner = who]]
should be
ask smallholders [move-to one-of patches with [owner = [who] of myself]]
Within the block after with, variables are in the context of patches, but myself refers to the agent that asked the patches to check their owner, in this case, each smallholder. The global variable owner-ID is then unnecessary. If you carry this through the rest of the code, your second problem may solve itself.
BUT, in general it is best not to use who numbers at all, but rather refer to the agent directly. (You have actually taken that approach implicitly when you initialize owner to nobody, which is "no agent".) I don't see where you ask a patch to set its owner, but if a smallholder is on a patch, the smallholder would
ask patch-here [set owner myself]
and the line above would now read
ask smallholders [move-to one-of patches with [owner = myself]]
The NetLogo gurus suggest that we use who numbers only when there is no other approach.

How would I "target" patches within a certain area?

I have set up agents and nodes to represent people and stores and it is my intention that the agents will "target" the store in their "awareness" space with the highest value ("vulnerability"). I've largely coded what I have so far through trial and error however setting the turtle's target to the patch with the highest value within a 10 unit radius is a hurdle I can't get over. Currently they target the patch with the highest value regardless of its position in the world. Could somebody suggest what I might consider to achieve this please? I have pasted what I have written so far for reference.
Thanks.
breed [shoplifters a-shoplifter]
patches-own [vulnerability]
shoplifters-own [target
awareness]
to setup
clear-all
setup-patches
setup-turtles
reset-ticks
end
to setup-patches
setup-stores
end
to setup-stores
ask n-of num-stores patches [ set pcolor lime ] ;; create 'num-stores' randomly
ask patches [
if pcolor = lime
[ set vulnerability random 100
]
]
end
to setup-turtles
setup-shoplifters
setup-target
end
to setup-shoplifters
create-shoplifters num-shoplifters [ ;; create 'num-turtles' shoplifters randomly
set xcor random-xcor
set ycor random-ycor
set shape "person"
set color red
]
end
to setup-awareness
ask turtles [
set awareness
patches in-radius 10
]
end
to setup-target
ask turtles [
set target
max-one-of patches [vulnerability]
]
end
You are on the right track using max-one-of. At the moment, however, you are sending patches as the space to search through to look for the one with maximum vulnerability value, when you really want patches in-radius 10. So you could simply do this:
to setup-target
ask turtles [
set target max-one-of patches in-radius 10 [vulnerability]
]
end
However, this is going to be inefficient because NetLogo will have to first work out which are the patches within the radius. You have already asked the turtles to work this out and assign it to their variable 'awareness'. What you really want to do is therefore:
to setup-target
ask shoplifters [
set target max-one-of patches awareness [vulnerability]
]
end
Note that I also changed ask turtles to ask shoplifters. It is only shoplifters who have the attribute 'target' so you should only be asking them to calculate it. Same thing goes for 'awareness'. At the moment you don't have any other breeds so it's not causing an error, but it is good practice to use the breed, otherwise there is no point in creating it.