Author: Harald Faber
Date: 06:40:37 01/31/00
Go up one level in this thread
On January 31, 2000 at 08:10:44, Vincent Diepeveen wrote: >On January 31, 2000 at 07:28:59, Harald Faber wrote: > >>On January 31, 2000 at 07:25:06, Vincent Diepeveen wrote: >> >>>On January 31, 2000 at 05:06:38, Harald Faber wrote: >>> >>>> >>>>Does any programmer use fuzzy programming within his program? >>>>If not, would it be helpful and make it easier or better to evaluate positions? >>>>AFAIK fuzzy is an ideal tool for combining several different, even complementary >>>>evaluation parameters, and chess programming has a large number of evaluation >>>>functions... >>> >>>You can throw dices and play the move number the dices show, >>>that's about how fuzzy programming plays chess. >>> >> >>Did you try it or why do you have such a bad attitude towards fuzzy? > >I tried genetic learning, i tried neural networks, to optimize just >parameters of DIEP. > >I didn't try to optimize 10 parameters, but i tried to optimize a couple >of thousands of parameters, it outputted big crap. > >then if you start thinking about it, you're very quickly cured. > >You want with something that doesn't have domain specific knowledge, >to optimize for a domain which is very knowledge specific. > >So more or less it's only busy with throwing with a few >thousands of dices at the same time until it has thrown all at the same time >to a 6. > >Vincent I am not sure. My company does ordering of 2^700 possibilities and photo/image (tyres) recognition which also works by comparing patterns and so on. That works fine so far, so why shouldn't it be possible to use at least some of these techniques? It seems to me that you should talk to someone more intensively who has a much knowlegde of fuzzy programming and fuzzy programming techniques. (No, not me, I have no idea how to program such methods, there are others who can explain that to you much better than I can, and their explanations sound senseful to me.)
This page took 0 seconds to execute
Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700
Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.