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Subject: Re: Fritz 7(a) Bug

Author: José Antônio Fabiano Mendes

Date: 04:09:54 12/19/01

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On December 19, 2001 at 02:50:32, Ralf Elvsén wrote:

>On December 18, 2001 at 23:17:40, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>
>>On December 18, 2001 at 20:15:09, Mike S. wrote:
>>
>>>On December 18, 2001 at 18:54:09, Kurt Utzinger wrote:
>>>
>>>>In the position shown below Fritz 7a sees that 1...Rxb2 is a fault, but after
>>>>making this move, the program is unable to win a piece with 2.0-0-0 and so we
>>>>must assume that there is a castling bug in Fritz7:
>>>
>>>I notice the same on my system. OTOH, Fritz 7a can see long castlings at the
>>>root:
>>>
>>>[D]8/8/8/8/2p5/2pkp1N1/8/R3K3 w Q - 0 1
>>>
>>>Analysis by Fritz 7:
>>>
>>>1.0-0-0#
>>>  +-  (#1)   Tiefe: 2/2   00:00:00
>>>  +-  (#1)   Tiefe: 2/2   00:00:00
>>>
>>>The case must be more complicated...
>>>
>>>Are there games where Fritz 7a did castle to the queenside (except book moves)?
>>>
>>>Regards,
>>>M.Scheidl
>>
>>
>>The bug is probably this:
>>
>>For castling, the king can't pass over a square that is attacked.  On the
>>kingside, Rxg2 would render castling impossible since the king ends up on
>>g1 and is in check there.  On Rxb2, it is very likely that the programmer
>>simply tested one _extra_ square for being under attack (it is tempting to
>>test all squares between the king and rook, which is right for kingside,
>>wrong for queenside castling).
>>
>>I'd bet that is what he did.  This bug has appeared in several programs.  It
>>was actually in a _very_ early version of Crafty as well...
>
>I read that once Korchnoi asked the referee in a tournament whether
>the rook was allowed to pass an attacked square when castling. He
>actually didn't know :)
>
>Ralf
 Also GM Averbach against the first world CC champion Purdy,
 in an OTB game they played in Australia. [He complained with
 Purdy that the b8 square was attacked.] "Only the king,not the rook?!"



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