Calling Go a Google product makes as much sense as calling C a Nokia 
product. 

On Friday, November 24, 2017 at 7:23:06 PM UTC-8, Hugh Aguilar wrote:
>
> I invented a chess variation called: Elphaba Chess
> This is just like International Chess except that the queen can't capture 
> the opponent's pieces and it can't be captured --- it is just used for 
> blocking.
>
> I would like to write a program to play this game, but writing that from 
> scratch is beyond me. 
> Perhaps I could find a public-domain open-source chess program and modify 
> it to use my rules. I would have to change the legal-move code to eliminate 
> captures by the queen or captures of the queen.
> Other than that, the program should work fine. Check-mate is still the 
> goal. The queen is still worth 9 points, but that is irrelevant, so you 
> might as well say that it is worth 0 points.
> I would not expect the point values for the other pieces to change --- 
> they might though --- this would have to be determined by experimentation 
> (by stronger players than myself).
>
> I would prefer to do this in Go as I'm learning Go and this would be a 
> good learning exercise.
> If there are no such programs available in Go however, then I could use 
> another language --- I know C, C++ and Pascal, but not very well, and I 
> don't like them much.
> My background is in Forth (I've done that professionally), but ANS-Forth 
> killed Forth in 1994, so nobody really uses Forth anymore.
>
> thanks for any links --- Hugh
>
> My ultimate goal with Go is to write a program to "understand" the Ido 
> language, at least insomuch as generating a grammar diagram for a sentence 
> and determining if the sentence is grammatical.
> It could go from there to generating an English or Spanish translation. I 
> have a lot to learn about Go before I tackle such a program however.
>
> Does Go run on smart-phones? I have only heard of Java and Objective-C 
> being used. I have no interest in learning Java, and not much interest in 
> Objective-C.
>
> This program lends itself well to parallel processing. The meaning and 
> part-of-speech (POS) of each word in an Ido sentence is 
> context-insensitive, so the words can be analyzed in parallel.
> I have designed a multi-core Forth processor that can be built into an 
> FPGA --- that is what I would like to use --- build a handheld device to do 
> the translation.
>
>

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