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Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count
http://www.lifein19x19.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=18014
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Author:  Maharani [ Wed Jan 20, 2021 10:06 pm ]
Post subject:  Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Why has no one developped a go mod like this, either as a wooden board or online, yet? Instead of playing on intersections, place stones inside the squares. (Obv for a 19 x 19 board, you would need 19 x 19 squares.) Instantly, counting becomes 30 times easier for everyone involved. 100 Go Professionals Hate This Cheat. Seriously, nobody?!

“If aliens play go, they play inside the squares” - Maharani

Author:  bogiesan [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 8:23 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Traditions run deep. Traditions survive because they either work or there's no rational reason to change them. Personally, counting after rearranging the stones is an endearing part of go's endgame ritual.I would not change it for frivolous reasons, certainly not to make it easier to count or for playing inside the squares, which aren't really squares, you know. There's another tradition with no rational reason to change although folks have tried.

Author:  mhlepore [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 9:38 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

It sounds like you are talking about counting during the game, and not after the game is finished. Either way, I don't really see how counting squares is "30 times easier" than counting dots.

People don't like counting because it is mentally taxing. Especially in close tournament games, where you are counting and recounting many times. Dots vs. squares is not an issue, in my opinion.

Author:  Bill Spight [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 10:42 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

mhlepore wrote:
People don't like counting because it is mentally taxing. Especially in close tournament games, where you are counting and recounting many times.


Why so often? IMHO, I doubt if it does much good to count — and plan — more than 4 times per game, as a rule. OC, when there is a large furikawari you need to reassess, and maybe after a ko fight. Note that I said count and plan. If counting isn't part of making a plan, it is probably a waste of time. As Znosko-Borovsky says, don't be quick to change your plan. Have some confidence in yourself. :) Even at the SDK level, counting after move 200 is probably too late.

Author:  Knotwilg [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 1:19 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

First I was skeptical but then I put it to the test. 30 is of course proverbial but it's surprisingly easier to count a table of squares than a table of points. Never occurred to me!

Author:  Maharani [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 1:21 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Further discussion: https://forums.online-go.com/t/visualiz ... -to-count/

Author:  Bill Spight [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 1:34 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Besides which, if you have a board of 19x19 squares, you can play 20x20 go on the intersections. :cool:

Author:  mhlepore [ Thu Jan 21, 2021 2:01 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Bill Spight wrote:
mhlepore wrote:
People don't like counting because it is mentally taxing. Especially in close tournament games, where you are counting and recounting many times.


Why so often? IMHO, I doubt if it does much good to count — and plan — more than 4 times per game...



Because I'm Lee Changho? :-)

Actually, because endgame is hard to me. I believe amateurs lose a lot of won games by thinking they are a few points behind and trying something stupid, when actually good endgame play would grind out a win.

But most importantly, we cannot move to squares because Sorin's website is already named 361points.com.

Author:  daal [ Fri Jan 22, 2021 5:53 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

For many of us who have been playing on the intersections for so long it's hard to imagine not putting the stones anywhere but the intersections, but I think for most people who grew up with chess and checkers, many aspects of the game, not just counting, would have been easier to learn, visualize and understand if the stones were placed in the squares.

In real life, it's quite easy to try out. For computer go, a client that translated squares into intersections would also be fairly trivial. It does however seem to be an utterly moot point because nobody does that.

Author:  jlt [ Fri Jan 22, 2021 6:03 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

I find that vizualising squares in my head is easier than vizualising intersections.

Attachment:
tetris.png
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Author:  daal [ Fri Jan 22, 2021 6:20 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Tetris will never be the same :lol:

Author:  mhlepore [ Fri Jan 22, 2021 1:16 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Supposing it is easier to count the score with squares instead of intersections (seems it is, given the feedback), are there any downsides?

Reading out sequences: better/worse/same
Life and death: better/worse/same
What else???

Author:  luigi [ Fri Jan 22, 2021 1:36 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

mhlepore wrote:
Supposing it is easier to count the score with squares instead of intersections (seems it is, given the feedback), are there any downsides?

Reading out sequences: better/worse/same
Life and death: better/worse/same
What else???

Number of lines visible when the board is full: zero with intersections, all with squares.

What is required to make an unambiguous move: covering an intersection (and it is impossible to cover two) versus covering a significantly greater portion of the intended square than of any other square (more difficult).

Author:  Joaz Banbeck [ Fri Jan 22, 2021 10:00 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

If I use this method, but maintain the same amount of effort, will I be thirty times as precise?

Author:  Maharani [ Tue Jan 26, 2021 10:14 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

luigi wrote:
Number of lines visible when the board is full: zero with intersections, all with squares.


I didn't think of that. I agree it's a downside.

Author:  justtysen [ Wed Feb 10, 2021 11:08 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

I agree that using a 20x20 board and playing in the squares can make counting more visually intuitive for many players but I actually find the uniqueness of the current norm as part of the charm and larger lesson of the game. I have spent a little time actively practicing counting using the lines and also using mentally modified versions of the squares and I think this helps to change the intuitions one comes to the table with and thereby broadens one's horizons, making more creative thought possible. So I wouldn't discourage someone from playing as proposed but I would hesitate doing it to the exclusion of the alternatives. I am reminded of an old study of observing an image of fish. Westerners were more likely to remember details of the large and central fish, while easterners would remember more details of the smaller and peripheral fish. This is of course a generalization and things are always changing, but the intersection thought pattern is one I think is underdeveloped in many westerners.

Regarding visualization techniques: You might also try playing with the board rotated 45°. I feel like this potentially places more visual gravity at the corners and uniquely reflects certain aspects the dynamics at play.

Author:  Maharani [ Wed Jul 14, 2021 10:42 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Maharani wrote:
luigi wrote:
Number of lines visible when the board is full: zero with intersections, all with squares.


I didn't think of that. I agree it's a downside.


Solution: square stones (with slightly rounded edges) instead of lines? On a physical board you could indicate the lines by carving them out a tiny bit instead of drawing them with ink...

Author:  bogiesan [ Thu Jul 15, 2021 4:15 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

[quote="Maharani"

Solution: square stones (with slightly rounded edges) instead of lines? On a physical board you could indicate the lines by carving them out a tiny bit instead of drawing them with ink...[/quote]

Folks have been playing around with the format of the board and playing pieces for hundreds of years. We seem to have arrived, by consensus, at the existing paradigm. Your proposals have probably been tried and discarded more than once. Easy to pest your theories in modeling applications and you could easily build a set with CNC and 3d printing or adapting playing pieces from other toys.

Author:  Maharani [ Thu Aug 12, 2021 8:30 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Maharani wrote:
Maharani wrote:
luigi wrote:
Number of lines visible when the board is full: zero with intersections, all with squares.


I didn't think of that. I agree it's a downside.


Solution: square stones (with slightly rounded edges) instead of lines? On a physical board you could indicate the lines by carving them out a tiny bit instead of drawing them with ink...


A few hours before I posted this, someone on the OGS forums actually showed an example that I didn't see until later:

Image

Author:  Maharani [ Thu Aug 12, 2021 8:35 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Visualize go this way, make it 30 times easier to count

Maharani wrote:
Maharani wrote:
luigi wrote:
Number of lines visible when the board is full: zero with intersections, all with squares.


I didn't think of that. I agree it's a downside.


Solution: square stones (with slightly rounded edges) instead of lines? On a physical board you could indicate the lines by carving them out a tiny bit instead of drawing them with ink...


A few hours before I posted this, someone on the OGS forums actually showed an example that I didn't see until later:

Image

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