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(1) Posted by Hauke Reddmann [Wednesday, Dec 21, 2011 17:43] |
Tablebases with other board sizes I know that 4*4 chess (with orthodox figures :-) is *completely* solved.
But why stop? I knew quite a few interesting 4 men,m*n-board problems
that could be solved fastest with a tablebase.
- Can R draw Q if n>8? This might as well be possible.
- Can R beat B if n<8 even with B in the "right" corner? Oh yes, in some cases.
(Did some hand analysis supporting this.)
- Possibly you can show an Excelsior on 9*9 or 10*10 with *just 2wP*!
- Even as small as 4-men fairy tablebases surely will contain some
gold nuggets.
Now, if I were half as old, I would program this myself in a day, but I
am too weary and idle to annoy myself with stalemate branch-off conditions
and other intricacies. :-) Is there somewhere a free adjustable proggie where
you just fix board sizes or piece movement or whatsnot and then you can
DYI tablebase? Hey, even a covers-it-all tablebase pseudocode would save
work tremendously.
Hauke |
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(2) Posted by Sarah Hornecker [Wednesday, Dec 21, 2011 18:48]; edited by Sarah Hornecker [11-12-21] |
Marc Bourschutzky has already shown that Queen versus Rook is a theoretical draw on boards with sizes of n*n where n is at least 16. And it is won on smaller boards. See EG 175 special issue. |
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(3) Posted by Dejan Glisić [Wednesday, Dec 21, 2011 22:50] |
Is this the end of composition? ;-)
Does the tablebases obey the authors' rights? I didn't look at tablebases but I'm interested in that stuf. Could you help me? :D |
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(4) Posted by Kirill Kryukov [Monday, Jun 4, 2012 04:00] |
QUOTE I know that 4*4 chess (with orthodox figures :-) is *completely* solved.
Can you share more details about the complete solution of 4x4 chess? My solution is only up to 9 pieces, which is far from complete.
I am curious to explore other board sizes, if I'll have enough energy. Won't be soon though.
BTW, I doubt I could have programmed it in a day, even if I was half as old. |
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(5) Posted by Hauke Reddmann [Monday, Jun 4, 2012 19:39]; edited by Hauke Reddmann [12-06-04] |
Sorry, Kirill. Of course I screwed up as usual and made a typo
when referring to 3x4 chess.
Hauke
EDIT: The "could have programmed" is mostly rhetoric - but case in
point, I programmed "8 queens problem" on a TI-58 which had a
memory of 239 *steps*. That was around 1977 (I was 16, so you can't
truly call me a computer kid :-) |
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(6) Posted by Olaf Jenkner [Thursday, Jun 7, 2012 22:21] |
I computed the 8 queens on an hungarian table-computer EMG 666 with 800 Byte RAM in 1981. Later the RAM was extented to 2 kB, so the predecessor of Gustav solved twomovers. Some months ago I wrote one SQL statement to receive the number of solutions of the N-queens problem. |
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