Talk:Genetic Code Template/@comment-203.221.157.59-20160903034524/@comment-67.43.247.201-20161017234212

If these traits truly do function as simple dominant-recessive genes, position of template should not matter in the slightest.

Actually, the only way to ENSURE that a recessive trait is passed on to the baby is to use two templates that have exact same body part or color with the exact same genetic trait (if that is what you were looking for).

The trick is knowing which genes are recessive and which are dominant... I'm not sure such a list exists. It is going to take a very large number of imprint-using incubations to infer this information.

This is also assuming that that the programmers have not injected some amount of artificial randomness into the process, have not otherwise bent the rules of inheritance, and that it is a simple recessive-dominant scheme.

It is possible to get expressed recessive traits from carriers of the recessive gene (they possess one dominant allele), but it takes so long to farm codes and incubate--godspeed.

See image

I am not sure if Bb (for example) would create an animal expressing the dominant trait while carrying the recessive allele, or if Bb would account for a third, different color (for example)