Quote Originally Posted by I<3Dreamsicles View Post
The way you had it with the huge squares i didnt really get confused by the lowercase s and p, but i sort of did when i saw all of the nnnnAn 's at first.
Use what suits you . In my case I get more confused by the lower case stuff than using the "nn".

Quote Originally Posted by I<3Dreamsicles View Post
For the first box, couldnt you only put PSn Pnn nSn nnn in the top row. and then just have nnA in the side row 4 times? Wouldnt that still come out with 25% each.
Well, yes and no. In that case the results would have work.

The table you see what done using an automated punnet square. (if you looked at the link I put there). When you build a punnet square, you have to do it the right way otherwise it can get confused and the results won't always be the same. In that case it would have work, but there is other time it won't.

To do the first line, you need to combine each possibility. The way to do it, is to take the first letter and combine it with the first of the second gene, and the third. Than take the second letter of the first gene and use the first of the second and third gene. And so on and so on. As you can see, it can get confusing at some points.

Because the Albino is nn nn AA. All the possible combination are all "n n A". But if you were using a spider albino, it would have been different.

At some point, you have to stop trying to get it simpler otherwise you just complicate it.

Quote Originally Posted by I<3Dreamsicles View Post
-- P - S
P|PP|PS
n|Pn|Sn
No it's wrong. You see, a Bumblebee to a Pastel will result in Killerbee, Bumblebee, SuperPastel, Pastel, Spider and Normal.
That's why you can't use only 1 letter to represent a gene, but both.

Code:
PnSn x Pnnn

        PS	Pn	nS	nn
Pn	PPSn	PPnn	PnSn	Pnnn
Pn	PPSn	PPnn	PnSn	Pnnn
nn	PnSn	Pnnn	nnSn	nnnn
nn	PnSn	Pnnn	nnSn	nnnn


Genotype Frequencies: 
PPSn:    2 ( 12.5% ) Killerbee (Super Pastel Spider)
PPnn:    2 ( 12.5% ) Super Pastel
PnSn:    4 ( 25% ) Bumblebee (Pastel Spider)
Pnnn:    4 ( 25% ) Pastel
nnSn:    2 ( 12.5% ) Spider
nnnn:    2 ( 12.5% ) Normal
or in your Caps Code
Code:
PpSs x Ppss

PS	Ps	pS	ps
Ps	PPSs	PPss	PpSs	Ppss
Ps	PPSs	PPss	PpSs	Ppss
ps	PpSs	Ppss	ppSs	ppss
ps	PpSs	Ppss	ppSs	ppss


Genotype Frequencies: 
PPSs:    2 ( 12.5% )
PPss:    2 ( 12.5% )
PpSs:    4 ( 25% )
Ppss:    4 ( 25% )
ppSs:    2 ( 12.5% )
ppss:    2 ( 12.5% )

Quote Originally Posted by I<3Dreamsicles View Post
I didnt know mojave x lesser made a bel. I didnt know you could mix them but I knew they both made BEL's... Whats a mojave lesser bel look like? because i know super mojave and super lessers are somewhat different.
The Mojave Lesser, is a bit like the Super Stripe and YB gene etc... May be you are more aware of this ???
The genetics out there is a bit more complicated. But actually, it's that there is different gene that reside on the same location on the genome (dna if you want). And since you can only have 2 chromosome at the same place, it's impossible to have a super mojave and super lesser together. It's either one or the other. That's why you will have BEL from crossing both.

The BEL from Mojave x Lesser is a clean white one. Couldn't say if it's cleaner or not than a Lesser x Lesser, but it's cleaner than a Super Mojave from what I know.