Difference between revisions of "Chess Guru"

From Chessprogramming wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "'''Home * Engines * Chess Guru''' [[FILE:Raja Ravi Varma - Sankaracharya.jpg|border|right|thumb|[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adi_Shankara Adi Shankara] wi...")
 
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 10: Line 10:
 
   A first Chess program was written by C. Marche, G. Le Blanc, and J. Rivat in 1990. With this experience, J. Rivat rewrote everything using [[Bitboards|bitboards]]. After [[Robert Hyatt]] started using bitboards too, long discussions on ics and sharing new ideas permitted to improve considerably the technique.
 
   A first Chess program was written by C. Marche, G. Le Blanc, and J. Rivat in 1990. With this experience, J. Rivat rewrote everything using [[Bitboards|bitboards]]. After [[Robert Hyatt]] started using bitboards too, long discussions on ics and sharing new ideas permitted to improve considerably the technique.
  
  Chess Guru is a 64 bits intensive program and performs poorly on 32 bits computers. The search algorithm is using [[Principal Variation Search|PVS]] with [[Null Move Pruning|nullmove]], [[Transposition Table|Extended Transposition Table]], [[Refutation Table]], [[Internal Iterative Deepening]], several classical [[Extensions|extensions]] schemes (like [[Check Extensions|incheck extension]], [[Recapture Extensions|recaptures]]). The [[Evaluation|evaluation]] includes development, [[Mobility|mobility]], [[Pawn Structure|pawn structure]] and [[King Safety|king safety]] .  
+
  Chess Guru is a 64 bits intensive program and performs poorly on 32 bits computers. The search algorithm is using [[Principal Variation Search|PVS]] with [[Null Move Pruning|nullmove]], extended [[Transposition Table|transposition table]], [[Refutation Table|refutation table]], [[Internal Iterative Deepening|internal iterative deepening]], several classical [[Extensions|extensions]] schemes (like [[Check Extensions|incheck extension]], [[Recapture Extensions|recaptures]]). The [[Evaluation|evaluation]] includes [[Development|development]], [[Mobility|mobility]], [[Pawn Structure|pawn structure]] and [[King Safety|king safety]] .  
  
 
=External Links=  
 
=External Links=  
Line 24: Line 24:
 
<references />
 
<references />
 
'''[[Engines|Up one Level]]'''
 
'''[[Engines|Up one Level]]'''
=See also=
+
[[Category:DEC Alpha]]
 
[[Category:Magic]]
 
[[Category:Magic]]
 
[[Category:Metaphysics]]
 
[[Category:Metaphysics]]
 
[[Category:Guru Guru]]
 
[[Category:Guru Guru]]
 
[[Category:Klaus Schulze]]
 
[[Category:Klaus Schulze]]

Latest revision as of 17:19, 26 December 2019

Home * Engines * Chess Guru

Adi Shankara with Disciples [1]

Chess Guru,
a chess program designed and written by Joël Rivat. It was runner up at the 1995 French Computer Chess Championship (behind Virtua Chess), and won the 1996 French Computer Chess Championship. Chess Guru further competed at the WMCCC 1997.

Description

given in 1997 from the ICGA tournament page [2] :

 A first Chess program was written by C. Marche, G. Le Blanc, and J. Rivat in 1990. With this experience, J. Rivat rewrote everything using bitboards. After Robert Hyatt started using bitboards too, long discussions on ics and sharing new ideas permitted to improve considerably the technique.
Chess Guru is a 64 bits intensive program and performs poorly on 32 bits computers. The search algorithm is using PVS with nullmove, extended transposition table, refutation table, internal iterative deepening, several classical extensions schemes (like incheck extension, recaptures). The evaluation includes development, mobility, pawn structure and king safety . 

External Links

Chess Engine

Guru

References

  1. Srimad Guru Adi Shankaracharya, Adi Shankara with disciples, by Raja Ravi Varma, 1904
  2. Chess Guru's ICGA Tournaments

Up one Level