Schachus wrote:Maybe this is the time to ask this stupid question:
I never understood how this rule translates to the rule we know.
if there is a dead white shape with a black nakade then usually the nakade stones CAN be "caputed", but somehow it doesnt make a difference, because there in white territory anyway after taking black stones. How is that inside the rules?.
So lets say I have this position at game end:
$$W
$$ . . . . . .
$$ . . . . . .
$$ . . X X X X
$$ . . X O O O
$$ . X . O . X
$$ . X X O X X
$$ . . X O X X
$$ -----------
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$W
$$ . . . . . .
$$ . . . . . .
$$ . . X X X X
$$ . . X O O O
$$ . X . O . X
$$ . X X O X X
$$ . . X O X X
$$ -----------[/go]
and white for some reason claims my stones were dead, becuase he can capture it. What would be the right way to answer this by the rules. Do I need to say "yes they are, but so is your group?"
Good question!
The more complete rule is: Stones are dead if they can be captured, and the owner cannot then get living stones on the same intersections by continuing play.
A simple example is snapback:
$$B
$$ X X X X
$$ X O O X
$$ O B . X
$$ O O X X
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B
$$ X X X X
$$ X O O X
$$ O B . X
$$ O O X X[/go]
Even though white can capture the marked black stoned, this is ruled as: the white stones are dead, the marked black stone is not.
Why? Because black can get a living stone on the same intersection, which white cannot capture.
How?
$$W
$$ X X X X | X X X X | X X X X | X X X X | X X X X |
$$ X O O X | X O O X | X . . X | X . . X | X . 4 X |
$$ O B . X | O . 1 X | O 2 . X | O X 3 X | O X . X |
$$ O O X X | O O X X | O O X X | O O X X | O O X X |
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$W
$$ X X X X | X X X X | X X X X | X X X X | X X X X |
$$ X O O X | X O O X | X . . X | X . . X | X . 4 X |
$$ O B . X | O . 1 X | O 2 . X | O X 3 X | O X . X |
$$ O O X X | O O X X | O O X X | O O X X | O O X X |[/go]
In the end,

ended up on the same intersection as

and could not be captured. Hence the original stone was alive.
The same is true for your example. Although white can capture the five black stones, black will ultimately capture white and can thus place living stones on (some of) the original five intersections. The same is not true for white. If white is captured here, any additional stones he triers to play inside will also be captured.