IIRC, in KGS, the players themselves mark the dead groups, and if they disagree
I suppose there
is a conflict-resolution procedure. ( haven't come across that in actual play )
When I started on KGS, I was unaware that it was the players' responsibility to
mark dead groups -
my opponent was marking the groups, but I didn't know this.
Once dead groups are marked, KGS then appears to be able to determine what is
territory
and what is dame. I'd have to check some sample games to say whether it can
determine that a
space should be filled in to prevent a capture when the dame are filled - can't
speak to that.
Terry McIntyre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
They mean to govern well; but they mean to govern. They promise to be kind
masters; but they mean to be masters. -- Daniel Webster
----- Original Message ----
From: Robert Jasiek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: computer-go <computer-go@computer-go.org>
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2007 12:17:07 PM
Subject: Re: [computer-go] Why are different rule sets?
David Fotland wrote:
> I'm curious... How does the rule sets affect how people play the game of go?
Different scoring requires my strategy to be adapted. Different counting
leads to different kinds of defensive methods against accidental or
cheating errors.
> I personally find territory scoring more interesting. 90% of my reason for
> that is because the game ends sooner...
So how do you ensure that in real games? Do you not use Japanese fill-in
counting because for that you would need to make the game longer again
by filling the dame?
> I don't have to go filling dame
You don't have to (I guess you use some verbal Japanese rules), but how
do you count?
--
robert
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