Ideas for Japanese-style rules

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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by RobertJasiek »

Apart from your personal preference, is there any advantage of using "all" instead of "at least one" for the string's initial intersections?
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by cyclops »

Cassandra wrote: ....
Strings in positions colloquially named "Seki" will all get the status not-2-eyed, therewith not being inside opposing 2-eyed-strings:
  • The evaluation sequence will be caught in a cycle.
  • The string will be captured, but not succeeded in toto on its primary points.
  • The string cannot be captured.


Click Here To Show Diagram Code
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$$ . . X . X . . . . . . . . . .
$$ . X . X X X X X X X X X . X .
$$ . X X X O O O O O O O X X X .
$$ , . . X O . X X X . O X , . .
$$ . . . X O O O O O O O X . . .
$$ . . . X X X X X X X X . . . .
$$ . . . . X . . . . X . . X . .
$$ . . . . X . . . . X . . . X .
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To me W lives in seki. According to your formulation??

BTW "damit" = "in order that" <> "therewith" = no english ( according to my dictionary )
"damit" = "with it/this/that" <> "therewith" = no english

Personally, I think my command of the English language is not enough to interfere too deeply into these discussions about the rules; I cannot express my thoughts well enough. Also sometimes I face problems in understanding the english of my German friends, which might have other reasons as well.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by RobertJasiek »

Well, Cassandra's English might be not the best, also not in his otherwise nice book. (I think he must be Thomas Redecker, author of Igo Hatsuyoron Problem 120.) What matters is factual discussion rather than language knowledge (except where the precise wording does matter, of course).

Cassandra, you claim Japanese style rules, but "all" (for "2-eyed") is not Japanese style. You might call it "my wish for what Japanese rules should be". (Then I would throw in the Simplified Japanese Rules.)
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by Cassandra »

RobertJasiek wrote:Apart from your personal preference, is there any advantage of using "all" instead of "at least one" for the string's initial intersections?

"Advantage" ?

Hmm, I'm not really sure, if "advantage" will be the right term. It might depend on the standpoint you are looking from.

But I'll try to explain.


Motivation 1:

"All" might be more adequate to associate the string with something "alive", despite the fact that the string has been captured. The whole string has been "killed", but is "reborn" in the end (if this end is positive).

You wouldn't call someting "alive" anymore, of which only a small part (let's say 1 of many stones) has been "reanimated". Would be similar to bring a starfish temporarily to death and thereafter reanimate one of his five arms. I think, you wouldn't say that the (primary) starfish lives on.


Motivation 2:

"All" might be simpler during evaluation, because there is only one (1 !) status you have to try to achive for your string.

Let's reclaim the aim of the game:
To get at least one point of territory more than your opponent.

If we let apart the aquivalence of prisoners taken during the course of "Play" with "territory" for this explanation in "Evaluate" and "Count", there is something that temporarily prevents territorial points to be recognised as "empty" during "Score": opponent's "dead" stones.

This class of stones can be associated with "not-2-eyed inside opponents' 2-eyed" or "not-independently-alive inside opponents' independently-alive". Only one (1 !) status (including it's complement) is sufficient to achive this.

As you already know (and have already written in your "User-friendly reading ..." thread), there is no need to have a further status with regard to "Seki". But there is a strong reference to Seki, when introducing "at least one".

"At least one" in only necessary, if you prefer to have an "alive-alive" coexistence of opposing strings in a Seki instead of a "not-alive-not-alive" one. Perhaps this preference is triggered by the fact that the stones in Seki remain on the board (like really, i.e. independently, "alive" strings) during "Count" and so naturally look "more alive than dead".

"At least one" introduces a status in "Evaluate", which will not be of any interest during "Count". And additionally, you might encounter difficulties, when you must explain, why there is no territory in Seki, despite some of the engaged strings look "alive", and some of the opponent's ones "dead".


Anti-Motivation 1:

"Seki" is an element of the game, that has its relevance during "Play".

So it might be difficult to explain, why this important concept is not mentioned or referenced to by the rules.
Last edited by Cassandra on Sun Jun 13, 2010 12:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by Cassandra »

RobertJasiek wrote:Well, Cassandra's English might be not the best, also not in his otherwise nice book. (I think he must be Thomas Redecker, author of Igo Hatsuyoron Problem 120.) What matters is factual discussion rather than language knowledge (except where the precise wording does matter, of course).

Cassandra, you claim Japanese style rules, but "all" (for "2-eyed") is not Japanese style. You might call it "my wish for what Japanese rules should be". (Then I would throw in the Simplified Japanese Rules.)

Robert, you know very well that my English is not the best indeed. Thanks that you are looking behind the curtain. ;-)

One advantage of writing in a foreign, unfamiliar language is the need to think longer how to say what one wants to say. Gives the time required to cool down.

For "all" vs. "2-eyed" see my posting above.
Last edited by Cassandra on Sun Jun 13, 2010 12:09 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by Cassandra »

cyclops wrote:To me W lives in seki.

Colloquially the position of the coexistence of Black's three stones and the surrounding White string is called "Seki".

Usually it is preferred to assume that these two strings "live", because they cannot be taken off the board.

But it would make no difference to call them "dead", because only "dead" strings inside opposing "alive" ones will become prisoners. This is true also with "2-eyed" vs. "not-2-eyed".
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by cyclops »

Cassandra wrote:Strings in positions colloquially named "Seki" will all get the status not-2-eyed, therewith not being inside opposing 2-eyed-strings:


I'm sincerely trying to get the meaning behind this sentence. But I fail because I don't understand "therewith". I tried the German "damit", trying to see behind the language, but it didn't help me.
Do you mean: 'Strings in positions colloquially named "Seki" will all get the status not-2-eyed, unless it is inside opposing 2-eyed-strings: '
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by cyclops »

Cassandra wrote:But it would make no difference to call them "dead", because only "dead" strings inside opposing "alive" ones will become prisoners. This is true also with "2-eyed" vs. "not-2-eyed".

The white string in my example is inside opposing "alive" ones. If you would call them dead they would become prisoners. I don't believe you want that.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by RobertJasiek »

Motivation 1: This is subjective. Concerning subjective opinion, I do not have a preference for either the minimally "at least one" or the maximally "all".

Motivation 2: "all" works also with only one status, see Intermediate Step Rules or Simplified Japanese Rules. So I don't buy this motivation.

The first ruleset with only one life status was a draft in probably 2003, where I permitted only uncapturable. The first traditionally reasonable acceptable ruleset was the Intermediate Step Rules in my J1989 commentary.

Concerning seki, I do not have a personal preference whether the strings are alive or not alive. Alive is the traditional status, of course.

"At least one" introduces a status in "Evaluate", which will not be of any interest during "Count".


This might be so (Simplified Japanese Rules) but is not needed to be so (Simplified Japanese Rules with independently alive as an additional criterion in the definition of terriory). Anyway, it is only an aesthetic aspect. Having consistent visible surrounding by one colour of an empty string is a more important aesthetic and functional aspect.

Anti-Motivation 1: With the same right one could state thousands of strategic objects that do not play any role for scoring. Seki is just one of them.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by RobertJasiek »

cyclops, if Cassandra were more careful in his wording than J1989, then surrounding would be expressed clearly in the topological sense, so the example does not create the problem you fear.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by Cassandra »

RobertJasiek wrote:cyclops, if Cassandra were more careful in his wording than J1989, then surrounding would be expressed clearly in the topological sense, so the example does not create the problem you fear.

Topological structures are not so simple as they might appear, aren't they, Robert ?

I remember we had this topic years before and you didn't like it. ;-)
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by Cassandra »

cyclops wrote:
Cassandra wrote:But it would make no difference to call them "dead", because only "dead" strings inside opposing "alive" ones will become prisoners. This is true also with "2-eyed" vs. "not-2-eyed".

The white string in my example is inside opposing "alive" ones. If you would call them dead they would become prisoners. I don't believe you want that.

Cyclops, typological structure often do not behave as they are assumed to do at first sight.

Let me explain, based on your Trojan Horse.

We will start with looking at each string seperately first.
  • Black's 3-stone-string in not closed, so the remaining area of the board lies at only one side of it. Colloquially one would say, that everything else lies "outside", but this statement is true only for the string alone.
  • White's string (let's name it the horse's stomach) is closed. So there is a smaller area on one side, containing Black's 3-stone-string (colloquially named "inside" White's string) and a larger area on the other side, containing the body of the Trojan Horse (colloquially named "outside" White's string).
  • The body of Black's Trojan Horse is closed, too, and has a smaller area on one side (the horse's stomach - colloquially named "inside") and a larger one on the other side (colloquially named "outside").

Combining what we had found above for the single strings, we get:
  • Black's 3-stone string (not-2-eyed) remains inside a White string (not-2-eyed), so it will not become prisoners.
  • White's stomach-string has Black's 3-stone-string on one side, the horse's body on the other side, so it lies "between" (= "inside", because the bordering is complete, despite the bordering consists of more that only one part) two Black strings, of which one is not-2-eyed. So White's string, not-2-eyed-also, will not become prisoners, too.

In relation to the horse's body, White's stomach is extra-territorial. As a concluding result, one might even say, that it is "outside" Black's string.
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by Cassandra »

RobertJasiek wrote:Having consistent visible surrounding by one colour of an empty string is a more important aesthetic and functional aspect.

This may be true for the final stage of counting. I think you will not have used "an" = "1" literally.

But during evaluation it would be sufficient to have a visible bordering line of one colour.

This bordering line will be destroyed when using "at least one". It will remain stable when using "all".
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by RobertJasiek »

Re topology: It does not need to get more complicated than J2003. But finding local-2 required real effort. I needed ca. 8 months of non-stop work until I found it. Luckily it turned out to be simpler than what I had in between - it went up to capturable-5 :)
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Re: Ideas for Japanese-style rules

Post by cyclops »

Cassandra wrote:Cyclops, typological structure often do not behave as they are assumed to do at first sight.

I assume you mean topological. It is the first time I see topology introduced in the discussion about go-rules. Because "connectedness" is a topological term I'm not surprised that it might play a role in rule formulation. It is used in topology in the same sense as in the connectedness of strings. But what I remember from my topology courses in the seventies is that finite unions of closed sets are closed, the same with open sets. So I would expect that all strings are all open or closed depending on the closedness or opennes of the single stoned string. I guess you have used the topological term "closed" in a non-topological sense. I understand that you call a string closed if the set of points not belonging to the string ( lets call it the complement ) is topological disconnected. You might split up the complement in maximal connected parts. The parts touching the border belong to the colloquial outside of the string. The remaining points of the complement belong to the colloquial inside of the string. Apart from your not topolical use of the term "closed" I think I can read your reply. If I totally misunderstand your concepts than can you please define your topological structure i.e. your topological space or give a link to such a definition.

edit: connected -> disconnected
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