On 08/02/2013 20:34, Rémi wrote:
Hy,
There are a lot of interesting papers on UCT and selection strategies
... But it's harder to find information about the more 'pragmatic' side
of computer-go.
How do you score a go board?
What do you mean by "score a go board"? I can think of three reasonable
possibilities.
(1.) Count the score in a game that is over.
(2.) Count the score in a game that is not over, but both players have
passed because they think it is.
(3.) Count the score in a game that is still being played.
(1) is difficult but practicable. (2) is similar to (1), so long as you
are not bothered about the result being meaningful, but just want to
calculate the score as a referee might if asked to score a game in which
both players have passed prematurely. (3) is as difficult as playing Go
perfectly.
Nick
What would be a faster algorithm to score a go-board?
Could you pre-calculate and accumulate some information early in the
game (on every move), knowing you're going to evaluate the board many times?
When do you decide to finish/score the game?
Also, what are some of the languages used besides C(++)? Does anyone
work in something like java or a functional language?
Rémi de Zoeten.
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Nick Wedd
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