All of the strategies are accessible from the main name space of the library. For example:
>>> import axelrod as axl >>> axl.TitForTat() Tit For Tat >>> axl.Cooperator() Cooperator
The main strategies which obey the rules of Axelrod's original tournament can be found in a list: axelrod.strategies:
>>> axl.strategies [...
This makes creating a full tournament very straightforward:
>>> players = [s() for s in axl.strategies] >>> tournament = axl.Tournament(players)
There are a list of various other strategies in the library to make it easier to create a variety of tournaments:
>>> axl.demo_strategies # 5 simple strategies useful for demonstration. [... >>> axl.basic_strategies # A set of basic strategies. [... >>> axl.long_run_time_strategies # These have a high computational cost [...
Furthermore there are some strategies that 'cheat' (for example by modifying
their opponents source code). These can be found in
axelrod.cheating_strategies
:
>>> axl.cheating_strategies [...
All of the strategies in the library are contained in:
axelrod.all_strategies
:
>>> axl.all_strategies [...
All strategies are also classified, you can read more about that in :ref:`classification-of-strategies`.