Author: Richard Pijl
Date: 02:54:56 07/01/03
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On July 01, 2003 at 05:41:31, Graham Laight wrote: >When a GM is contemplating a move, he doesn't say to himself, "Hmmmmm. I would >give the resulting position a score of 1.723". > >Such an evaluation is nonsense anyway. There should properly be only 3 >evaluations: > >1. Winning position > >2. Drawing position > >3. Losing position > >It would be nice if a program could work as follows: > >"nb5. This position contains a possible bishop trap". > >"nd5. This puts more pressure on the opponent's king" > >"Opponent classification: bishop trap success rate = 25%" > >"Opponent classification: king attack success rate = 15%" > >"Choice = nb5". > >-g Basically this is what chess programs do. Finding weakspots/strongpoints and the possibilities to make use of them. All of those are folded into one number to be able to compare two positions. Richard.
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