Orego contains programs (in the orego.experiment package) for running
a bunch of test programs against a standard opponent such as GNU Go.
There's no reason that standard opponent couldn't be another version
of Orego.
The experiment scripts used to be in Python, but I changed them to
Java in this version so that new researchers wouldn't have to learn
another language.
Peter Drake
http://www.lclark.edu/~drake/
On Jan 11, 2011, at 9:41 AM, Joona Kiiski wrote:
Hi everyone,
During the last week I've been examining sources of different open
source go-engines (fuego, pachi, orego).
Now I'd like to start making some simple modifications to some of
them (not yet decided which one) and
see how it goes (likely my 50 first tries will fail miserably, but
it's okay).
In computer chess programming, it's nowadays a widely accepted fact
that only reasonable way to test changes is to run a huge number of
test games between original and modified version. I assume that same
applies also for go-programming.
So, let us have open-source program X and slightly modified version
it X'. What is the easiest way to run say 1000 super-fast games
between them? I hope there already exists some scripts or programs
to do this.
My OS is Linux if it matters.
Thanks for your help!
_______________________________________________
Computer-go mailing list
[email protected]
http://dvandva.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/computer-go
_______________________________________________
Computer-go mailing list
[email protected]
http://dvandva.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/computer-go