Author: William Bryant
Date: 13:02:27 12/16/01
Go up one level in this thread
On December 15, 2001 at 23:37:38, Will Singleton wrote: >On December 15, 2001 at 15:39:19, Gian-Carlo Pascutto wrote: > >>On December 15, 2001 at 12:47:50, Gian-Carlo Pascutto wrote: >> >>>On December 15, 2001 at 12:16:00, Will Singleton wrote: >>> >>>>What would you characterize as the biggest improvement you made? >>> >>>I realized there was no single big improvement waiting >>>to be made. >> >>Hmm, I realize that wasn't very helpfull in itself, so I'll clarify: >> >>There is no single thing you can fiddle with and make >>your program suddenly a lot stronger. >> >>It's a process of making steps. Big steps. Small steps. >>Sometimes you need to make small steps before you can >>make a big step. >> >>Prioritizing may be the issue. A good method is to try >>to determine why you are losing games. Are you constantly >>missing tactics other people see? Are you getting attacked >>and crushed? Are you blowing endgames? >> >>Fix the weakest link. >> >>When you are not progressing as good or as fast as you'd >>like to, it helps to take a step back and consider not just >>your engine, but the whole process of working on it and see >>where improvements can be made. >> >>-- >>GCP > >Ah, a serious chess programmer. I, on the other hand, would like my prog to be >good, but don't want to spend the time to fix it. > >But that's what's good about these CCT tournaments, they get me to put some time >in. I know my prog is full of bugs, I even fixed one the other day. I fully >intend to rewrite my search using ab fail-soft, and fix the hash table, which >now returns haphazard results. Then, if Apple actually releases a faster >machine at the Steve show in January, and I can order it in time for CCT4, then >I may be able to compete. > >Or, if someone wanted to help me port to Windows, then I could run a bit faster. > Any poor volunteers email me. > >Will Will, There has been a lot of discussion about running XBoard either under the OS X Darwin core, or through Tenon's XWindows port. If it becomes a "XBoard engine" then there would be very little to porting, just cross compiling. BTW, I'm willing to let you be the pioneer here. I'm waiting for the G5 chips which are supposed to be 64 bits wide. (That and some free time to work on things.) William
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