Computer Games ISpringer New York, 1988 M03 28 - 456 páginas Computer Games I is the first volume in a two part compendium of papers covering the most important material available on the development of computer strategy games. These selections range from discussions of mathematical analyses of games, to more qualitative concerns of whether a computer game should follow human thought processes rather than a "brute force" approach, to papers which will benefit readers trying to program their own games. Contributions include selections from the major players in the development of computer games: Claude Shannon whose work still forms the foundation of most contemporary chess programs, Edward O. Thorpe whose invention of the card counting method caused Las Vegas casinos to change their blackjack rules, and Hans Berliner whose work has been fundamental to the development of backgammon and chess games. |
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Página 101
... assigned a value by an analysis procedure . We said above that the move generators have the responsibility for finding positive reasons for making moves . Correspondingly , the analysis procedure is concerned only with the acceptability ...
... assigned a value by an analysis procedure . We said above that the move generators have the responsibility for finding positive reasons for making moves . Correspondingly , the analysis procedure is concerned only with the acceptability ...
Página 314
... assigned . This is done for each target pawn and in each case , squares darkened in Figure 5 are always excluded from the process . The last assign- ment process is conducted for centralization , with center squares ( d4 , d5 , e4 , and ...
... assigned . This is done for each target pawn and in each case , squares darkened in Figure 5 are always excluded from the process . The last assign- ment process is conducted for centralization , with center squares ( d4 , d5 , e4 , and ...
Página 317
... assigned to White . The remaining squares are assigned to the contested category . The results of this procedure are summarized in Figure 9. The squares assigned to Black are indicated by the letter B and the squares assigned to White ...
... assigned to White . The remaining squares are assigned to the contested category . The results of this procedure are summarized in Figure 9. The squares assigned to Black are indicated by the letter B and the squares assigned to White ...
Contenido
Dama CHAPTER | 10 |
by EDWARD O THORP | 44 |
by EMMETT B KEELER and JOEL SPENCER | 71 |
Derechos de autor | |
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00 BEGIN alpha alpha-beta pruning analysis ANORS ARRAY Artificial Intelligence assigned ATTACKS backgammon best move BIT BOARD Black King board position CAPTURE MOVE CASTLE checkers chess players chess program coefficients computer chess considered continuations coordinate squares cube depth DESTINATION SQUARES double endgame endgame play ENPASSANT evaluation function example EXIT Figure FILE frontier squares goal GOTO heuristics home board human players INDEX INITIALIZE INRS INTJ INTR INTS INTT INTV INTY JNTJ JNTK JNTM KAISSA killer heuristic learning legal moves letters Levy MAC HACK machine mate middle game minimax MOVESI opponent opponent's PANN parameters passed pawn piece pips plausibility play polynomial possible PRIONE problem procedure pruning roll ROOK routine SCRATCH selection side situation state-class static evaluation strategy Table technique terminal positions transposition table tree-search variations White King winning words