Author: Robert Hyatt
Date: 20:53:19 11/10/02
Go up one level in this thread
On November 10, 2002 at 22:38:03, Jeremiah Penery wrote: >On November 10, 2002 at 21:29:43, Robert Hyatt wrote: > >>On November 10, 2002 at 21:15:07, Jim Bumgardner wrote: >> >>>Which of these strategies for "think on opponent's time" makes more sense? >>> >>>A) To only search the top-move from the principle variation. If >>>the opponent makes that move, continue searching, otherwise reset and >>>search again. >> >>This is the _only_ way to do it. I've explained this many times, but it >>is probably time to go it again... > >For the general case. But it shouldn't be hard to find situations where it's >very easy to tell the ponder move is probably wrong. In those cases, it's >obvious, IMO, that switching to a different ponder move would help. > >One possible scenario is when the ponder move keeps failing high - either the >ponder move is wrong, or you ponder some other move and you'll find the >fail-highs again anyway if they play the original ponder move. Otherwise, >you'll have a better chance of pondering on a better move. You could always >save the result of the first ponder search just in case. That is a good point of course. If you get the fail high _before_ using the "target time" then you can safely switch to pondering something else, knowing you will have time to find the "fail high" again, if the opponent makes the expected move. The bad side might be that you don't fail high until you are beyond your target time, so that if you start pondering something else, you might not be able to find the fail high for real if the opponent actually makes that move...
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