It is possible to count such an unfinished position to get a score, but rather meaningless.Joelnelsonb wrote:So suppose both players passed after the first move or within a couple moves - I know this isn't practical but who would take the game? Would it be a draw?
You can't, you do have to surround it! Your computer program is wrong.Joelnelsonb wrote: I'm not understanding how you can "control" territory without actually surrounding it, just because you're in a position to.
There's not the same single goal of capturing the king in Go, so it is possible, but silly, to count an unfinished game. For example in your game the only surrounded territory is the marked bit on the right with the dead black stone inside:Joelnelsonb wrote: I've played chess my whole life so in my mind, it doesn't matter if you have the whole board in your favor; if you don't put the nail in the coffin then you don't win.
That black stone can't escape or make 2 eyes so we call it dead, so white has 3 points of territory there plus one capture which is 4 points. No other area of the board is completely surrounded by only one player so it is all neutral, no one's points. So white would win this game by 4 points (plus any komi). But it's better to finish the game before passing and counting.