Hi Ian, > I'm guessing that it's something to do with the match score that > affected how gnubg offers a resignation. For example, maybe 2 points > was enough for you to win the match anyway, so it didn't matter > whether gnubg conceded 2 or 3.
I think you're right, but that it is wrong for gnubg to do this. Yes, it doesn't affect the match, but it does affect the overall points, if some external tally is being kept. More importantly, it confuses novices, like me. "How could I have backgammoned it from that position? What am I missing? I only managed a gammon." Since I'm sure gnubg knows I'm going to gammon it at best, it should only offer a 2 resignation. Is this the right place to make that argument, or do I need to open an issue? I poked around the saved SGF file for the game and found that it records cube actions, but not the offer of a resignation, whether it was 1, 2, or 3, and that it was rejected. I looked because we here are uncertain on which of two board positions gnubg offered the resignation and expected the saved file to say. Similarly, when a resignation is accepted, the panel showing the moves says "Resign" at the end, but not a qualifying "gammon", for example. Since I can't pinpoint the backgammon resignation offer, I took more care the next time it occurred. Position 9wAAAGzfSQgAAA:MAvgAEAAQAAE was 6-4 to me in a 7 match, and gnubg offered a 2 resignation. Once last thing, since I'm making suggestions... When gnubg moves a counter one point, to an empty one, and it was the only thing on the old point, then it could avoid making such a long sharp arcing loop, but a squatter one instead. It would take long enough to be seen, but not too long when its destination it typically clear from the off. -- Cheers, Ralph. https://plus.google.com/+RalphCorderoy _______________________________________________ Bug-gnubg mailing list Bug-gnubg@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-gnubg