According to the description of the Position ID in the gnubg manual,
http://www.gnu.org/software/gnubg/manual/html_node/A-technical-description-of-the-Position-ID.html
Position-ID , the first bits in the key describe the checkers for the player
_on_ roll. However, when copying the id from within
According to the description of the Position ID in the gnubg manual,
http://www.gnu.org/software/gnubg/manual/html_node/A-technical-description-of-the-Position-ID.html
Position-ID , the first bits in the key describe the checkers for the player
_on_ roll. However, when copying the id from within
According to the description of the Position ID in the gnubg manual,
http://www.gnu.org/software/gnubg/manual/html_node/A-technical-description-of-the-Position-ID.html
Position-ID , the first bits in the key describe the checkers for the player
_on_ roll. However, when copying the id from within
Is it possible to get hold of the win/loss percentages etc. from a rollout
while it is in process using the embedded Python interpreter ?
--
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Sent from the Gnu - Backgammon
I am making an app where I use the GNUbg match and position id formats. I
have read the two technical descriptions of the formats. The wording
(note that the bit order is reversed below for readability) in the
description of the match id puzzles me a little. Have I gotten the following
example
Are there any plans to do this ?
The bits for cubevalue, cubeownership, crawford flag, score can easily be
obtained from gnubg.cubeinfo(), but to me it seems tedious to get all the
remainng bits for constructing the matchid from the match data structure
when I want the resulting Python function
I am thinking maybe this is related to the fact that I have Python 2.6 on my
box but the embedded version in Gnubg is 2.5 and maybe some default fall
back path for looking for modules includes the version number ?
stormen wrote:
No problem, I should have specified that. Yes, the different
, stormen wrote:
I seem not to have a pythonlib subdir (?!) I am on a linux box and
have
installed from a repo.
Michael Petch wrote:
Are your Python modules inside of the pythonlib subdirectory within
the Gnubg install folder?
On 16-Apr-10, at 12:58 PM, Bob Harley wrote:
Hi,
I am