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Subject: Re: Great character representation of a chess board!

Author: Richard A. Fowell (fowell@netcom.com)

Date: 16:30:36 10/23/98

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On October 23, 1998 at 03:39:50, Andrew Williams wrote:

<snip>

>
>I have always used "o" for black pawns and "P" for white pawns.
>My text board looks like this:
>
>8  . . . . . . . .
>7  . . . . . B o .
>6  . . . . P . . .
>5  . . . . . . o P
>4  . b . k . P . .
>3  . . . . . K . .
>2  . . . . . . . .
>1  . . . . . . . .
>
>   a b c d e f g h
>
>
>This seems clear to me, but I can't tell if that is because I am used to it
>now.
>
>
>Andrew Williams

I like it - daringly minimalist.

I'd have to try playing a game against it to see if the absence of
the traditional "checkerboard" makes diagonal moves difficult to see,
but it looks good. The only hurdle would be acquainting the viewer with
the convention.

While "text boards" may seem archaic in this GUI world, they still come
in handy for email (though I'd always add an .EPD version, like Bruce did)
and for use in the "ALT" field of HTML "IMG" tags, so that people with
non-graphical browsers can view chess diagrams on the Web (although, again,
I'd encourage including an .EPD version, too).

Richard A. Fowell (fowell@netcom.com)



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