Calling 7 komi fair and 7.5 komi unfair is your opinion. However, I do not think that integer versus non-integer komi is a matter of fairness. If we knew perfect play and wanted to compensate it exactly, the komi would have to be the integer of the perfect play score. Since we do not know perfect play, komi serves the practical purpose of enabled a game with close to 50% winning chances between roughly equally strong players. For this purpose, komi can be integer or non-integer - neither is fairer than the other.
Granularity and score accuracy are wrong descriptions of your concern. Instead, it is frequency of scores of even or odd parity (of the integer component of the scores in the case of fractional komi).
Quote:
without seki, since B+6 and B+7 both usually result in B+7 area
("With an even number of not scoring intersections" is the more general case of "without seki".)
I think you are trying to say: "Without seki, B+6 and B+7 under territory scoring both usually result in B+7 area scoring." Please try to apply your statement to the following examples:
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B
$$---------------
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$|. . . X . . .|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$|X X X X X X X|
$$|X X X O O O O|
$$|O O O O O O O|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$---------------[/go]
Komi 7, territory score 6, area score 6
Komi 6, territory score 7, area score 7
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B
$$---------------
$$|. . . X . . .|
$$|. . . X . . .|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$|X X X X X X X|
$$|X X X O O O O|
$$|O O O O O O O|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$---------------[/go]
Komi 7, territory score 5, area score 6
Komi 6, territory score 6, area score 7
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B
$$---------------
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$|. . . X . . .|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$|X X X X X X X|
$$|O O O O O O O|
$$|. . . O . . .|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$---------------[/go]
Komi 7, territory score 0, area score 0
Komi 6, territory score 1, area score 1
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B
$$---------------
$$|. . . X . . .|
$$|. . . X . . .|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$|X X X X X X X|
$$|O O O O O O O|
$$|. . . O . . .|
$$|. . . . . . .|
$$---------------[/go]
Komi 7, territory score -1, area score 0
Komi 6, territory score 0, area score 1
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I spoke about the last move changing the winner. You have replied that, with area komi 7, the last move changing the winner can occur without seki. Please explain for the examples, how this can occur! An area komi 7 means using area scoring. How does the last move change the winner under area scoring?
Maybe you do not want to say something about komi only for area scoring but maybe you want to compare territory scoring to area scoring when speaking about komi 7. Komi 7 and the last move changes the winner (or jigo-getting players) from jigo to white win. Komi 6 and the last move changes the winner (or jigo-getting players) from black win to jigo. Under area scoring, 6 or 7 komi keeps the winner the same.
Now, maybe you want to express some opinion on these observations, but which? Since you called the komi 7 fair, does this make the komi 6 any more or less fair?
Quote:
hiding a defect with another.
What defects? Why are they defects?
I think you refer to 1) frequencies of scores of even or odd parity and 2) when some conditions allow, or do not allow, a changed winner. Please explain what of either would be your perceived defect and why you think that it is a defect!
Furthermore, if we compare final positions for which we can compare territory scoring to area scoring, the last move (often even many moves) under territory scoring tends to fill a dame. This last move does not change the winner! Instead, altering the komi changes the winner. (And no, the last move is not played to fill inside one's own territory - the last move is played to fill a dame (or teire).)
EDIT: I deleted a first draft. In this second draft, alternate stone playing is possible in all examples.