On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 9:52 PM, terry mcintyre <[email protected]> wrote:
> From: Erik van der Werf <[email protected]>
>
>>On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 5:03 PM, terry mcintyre <[email protected]> 
>>wrote:
>>> Am I misreading this?
>
>>yes, neither side can approach. Capturing in the big eyes give too
>>many liberties.
>
>
> Let's start with w e9 - b is in atari, but w has liberties at c7, g9, and e5 
> - if b plays any of these, a b group is captured.
>
> b d11 captures the w rabbity six; w throws in at c12. b cannot make two eyes.

correct so far...


> Nor can b play the other 3 liberties.

wrong, White just has to make an approach move for each remaining
shared liberty (i.e. capture a nakade)


> whether b plays inside the upper right corner or passes, w kills the upper 
> right corner.


No, White cannot kill any of the Black's groups. Trust me, even my
program can solve this :-)

White's liberty count after your first 3 moves is :

2 shared liberties +2 approach moves + 6-point eye filled with 5
stones = 11 liberties

Black's weakest group has the same number of liberties, but Black has
sente so he wins.

Erik
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