Difference between revisions of "Jean-Christophe Weill"

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=Chess Programs=  
 
=Chess Programs=  
Along with [[Marc-François Baudot]], Jean-Christophe Weill is co-author of the following chess programs <ref>[http://www.recherche.enac.fr/~weill/chess.html A Short Story of JCW's Computer Chess Program]</ref> <ref>[https://www.game-ai-forum.org/icga-tournaments/person.php?id=27 Jean-Christophe Weill's ICGA Tournaments]</ref>:
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Jean-Christophe Weill already had experience in programing [[Othello]], when he decited to develop a chess program for the upcoming [[1st Computer Olympiad#Chess|1st Computer Olympiad]] in 1989. He found his friend and chess player [[Marc-François Baudot]], who already made first trials in chess programming, to help him with the [[Evaluation|positional evaluation]] to start their successful collaboration with following chess programs <ref>[http://www.recherche.enac.fr/~weill/chess.html A Short Story of JCW's Computer Chess Program]</ref> <ref>[https://www.game-ai-forum.org/icga-tournaments/person.php?id=27 Jean-Christophe Weill's ICGA Tournaments]</ref>:
 
* [[Échec]]
 
* [[Échec]]
 
* [[Cumulus]]
 
* [[Cumulus]]

Revision as of 06:42, 28 June 2018

Home * People * Jean-Christophe Weill

Jean-Christophe Weill [1]

Jean-Christophe Weill,
a French computer scientist and computer chess and game programmer. He introduced the NegaC* search algorithm as a Negamax implementation of Kevin Coplan's C*. He also created the ABDADA non-synchronized, distributed search algorithm, apparently used in Frenchess. His 1995 Ph.D. thesis in French, Programmes d'Échecs de Championnat: Architecture Logicielle Synthèse de Fonctions d'Évaluations, Parallélisme de Recherche, covers history of computer chess, a broad range of search algorithms and evaluation, audited beside others by Tony Marsland and Jacques Pitrat.

Chess Programs

Jean-Christophe Weill already had experience in programing Othello, when he decited to develop a chess program for the upcoming 1st Computer Olympiad in 1989. He found his friend and chess player Marc-François Baudot, who already made first trials in chess programming, to help him with the positional evaluation to start their successful collaboration with following chess programs [2] [3]:

Selected Publications

[4] [5] [6]

Forum Posts

External Links

A Short Story of JCW's Computer Chess Program

References

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