Laser
Revision as of 13:02, 27 November 2020 by GerdIsenberg (talk | contribs)
Laser,
an UCI compliant open source chess engine by Jeffrey An and Michael An, written in C++11, first released in summer 2015 under the GNU General Public License. Laser 1.0, released in December 2015, already performes lazy SMP [2].
Contents
Features
Board Representation
Search
- Lazy SMP (rewritten with 1.6)
- Iterative Deepening
- Fail-Hard Principal Variation Search
- Transposition Table
- Selectivity
- Adaptive Null Move Pruning
- Late Move Reductions, since 1.3 also at PV nodes
- Futility Pruning
- Reverse Futility Pruning
- Razoring
- Move Count Based Pruning (Late Move Pruning)
- Check Extensions
- Singular Extensions
- Quiescence Search
- Captures
- Queen Promotions
- Checks on first three plies
- Move Ordering
Evaluation
- Evaluation Cache
- Piece-Square Tables
- King Safety
- Pawn Structure
- Mobility
- SWAR Tapered Eval à la Stockfish
- Tuned with reinforcement learning, coordinate descent, and a variation of Texel's Tuning Method
Misc
- Syzygy TB support (1.3)
Forum Posts
- Laser 0.1 moves instantly every move for me by Graham Banks, CCC, September 18, 2015
- Laser 1.0 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, December 24, 2015
- Laser 1.1 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, April 18, 2016
- Laser 1.2 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, September 17, 2016
- Laser 1.3 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, January 08, 2017
- Laser 1.4 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, May 11, 2017
- Laser 1.5 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, December 27, 2017
- Laser 1.6 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, July 14, 2018
External Links
Chess Engine
- jeffreyan11/uci-chess-engine · GitHub
- Releases · jeffreyan11/uci-chess-engine · GitHub
- Laser 1.6 64-bit 4CPU in CCRL 40/40
Misc
- Laser from Wikipedia
- Laser (disambiguation) from Wikipedia
- Au5 & Fractal - Laser Beam Show, YouTube Video
References
- ↑ In mid-August 2010 ESO Photo Ambassador Yuri Beletsky snapped this photo at ESO’s Paranal Observatory, Chile. A group of astronomers were observing the center of the Milky Way using the laser guide star facility at Yepun, one of the four Unit Telescopes of the Very Large Telescope. Wikimedia Commons
- ↑ Laser 1.0 Release by Jeffrey An, CCC, December 24, 2015
- ↑ uci-chess-engine/README.md at master · jeffreyan11/uci-chess-engine · GitHub