Pawn Islands (Bitboards)

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Pawn Islands of either side are groups of pawns (at least one), separated by files without own pawns. Those files are therefore either halfopen or open. All other things being equal, the side with fewer pawn islands has an advantage, because the individual pawns are easier to defend against enemy attacks. Each island has a west- or east border file. Rook-files may be the most outer borders.

=Sample Filesets= Black has three islands here, white two: . . . . . . . . b. . . . . . b . b. b b. b. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . w. . . w. . w. w. . . w w .. . . . . . . Those are the black and white filesets, one byte each. b b. b b. b b

w w w. . w w w

=Island Borders= Based on filesets, we can simply determine the west- or east border-files of each island. By shifting left or right one, xor with the original fileset to get all the 0-1 or 1-0 transitions - to finally intersect it with the original fileset to restrict the transitions inside this set of occupied files. The result are the files with half-isolanis.

Since conjunction is distributive over xor, one may alternately swap both operands. In fact it is the relative complement of the shifted files in files and takes three operations each.

East
b b. b b. b b . b. . b. . b

w w w. . w w w .. w. . . . w

BYTE islandsEastFiles(BYTE f) {return f & (f ^ (f >> 1));} BYTE islandsEastFiles(BYTE f) {return f ^ (f & (f >> 1));} BYTE islandsEastFiles(BYTE f) {return f &    ~(f >> 1) ;}

1 . . . 1 1 . . files . . . 1 1 . . . files >> 1 (board left or west) 1 . . 1 . 1 . . xor       -> all the west 0-1 or 1-0 file-transitions 1 . . . . 1 . . and files -> east files of each island

West
b b. b b. b b b. . b. . b.

w w w. . w w w w. . . . w. .

BYTE islandsWestFiles(BYTE f) {return f & (f ^ (f << 1));} // ... (f+f) BYTE islandsWestFiles(BYTE f) {return f ^ (f & (f << 1));} BYTE islandsWestFiles(BYTE f) {return f &    ~(f << 1) ;}

1 . . . 1 1 . . files . 1 . . . 1 1 . files << 1  (board right or east) 1 1 . . 1 . 1 . xor       -> all the east 0-1 or 1-0 file-transitions 1 . . . 1 . . . and files -> west files of each island

=Number of Islands= Since each island has exactly one west- and one east border-file, the population count of either border-set might be used to determine the numbers of islands, see dispersion. Of course all byte-wise calculations may be implemented by small, preinitialized lookup tables, indexed by fileset (0..255), containing the number of islands, bitboards of isolated files and whatever else. The maximum number of islands is four.

=Isolated Files= The intersection of east- and west border-files are already files with isolated pawns. 1 . . . . 1 . . east files of each island 1 . . . 1 . . . west files of each island 1 . . . . . . . and -> isolated files . . . . 1 1 . . xor -> resets isolated files To isolate wider (2..8) islands is not that hard either.

=External Links=
 * Glossary of chess from Wikipedia - P
 * King Crimson - Islands, 1971, YouTube Video
 * lineup: Robert Fripp, Boz Burrell, Ian Wallace, Mel Collins, Peter Sinfield with Keith Tippett, Mark Charig, Harry Miller and Robin Miller

=References=

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