RobertJasiek wrote:
Actually there is more to it:
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[go]$$W follow-up
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$$ | . 1 . X . X X . .
$$ | . . X , O . . . .
$$ | . . X O . . . . .
$$ | . O O O . . . . .
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$$ | . . O . . . . . .[/go]
Due to the aji, White's left side extension is bigger than usual because White 1 becomes possible. Black started making 2 points more but the effect can be that he loses more points in the corner. So to justify your "is playable", one must consider also this variation. It is not the kind of thing learned easily from opponents but is found in reasonable dictionaries.
Consider that black has been given a tenuki on both sides, and consider the difference between black follow-ups at A and B at the end of the following SGF. It's a 2 point difference, maybe even a 1 point...
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There I agree and so my next book will have comments of the kind "locally inferior but can be played if...".
For that very reason, my joseki dictionary will evaluate every joseki and failure variation. This is something I have missed in all other joseki dictionaries I have seen so far.
I feel this is certainly an improvement, and I'm glad to hear that this book will be different.
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Without reading, nothing works:)
Tesuji: Some tesuji are so unexpected that one cannot rediscover them all. It is possible, of course, to study them by reading tesuji books instead of joseki dictionaries.
I would say there is a difference here, Tesuji books involve the illustration of a concept over the course of many problems. They show us what is shared.
Joseki dictionaries (Generally speaking, yours sounds different), involve preparing a very specific position, where there is no guarantee that the concepts WILL carry over. (Unless it is also a tesuji theory book)
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Most of the low dans having told me not to have read a joseki dictionary have shown a poor variety of corner sequences in their games up to always playing 4-4 to avoid entering unknown waters. Your development is an exception.
I found star point joseki boring initially, it's not as though I wanted to avoid joseki, I actually loved them. Corners have some of the most interesting tesuji, I waded into the avalanche variations for a while, because I found the basic variation (out of our earlier fake joseki example), to just rush into the middlegame.
I actually tried to pick up a book for the avalanche variations, it was the one time I did. The problem was, I just didn't see how the joseki book was teaching me to choose a direction. I figured if I learned direction and tesuji, then the joseki would just make sense. And by the time I learned Direction and tesuji, I was pretty confident that I didn't need the joseki book.
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Tesuji and reading are necessary but "much more valuable"? Joseki study can make an SDK at least as much stronger as tesuji and reading. So I think "about equally valuable" is a better guess.
Hmm, I don't know, I feel as though it may make them stronger in the short term, but leave holes in their understanding. They won't have had the practice developing their joseki, so they won't feel as comfortable in unusual waters.
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No. First joseki study made me 2+ ranks stronger, afterwards opening study made me 1.5+ ranks stronger. Presumably it can also work in reversed order or if both joseki and openings are studied simultaneously.
I certainly think joseki study can improve a player. But my contention is that if they are not extremely careful, it can become a crutch.
Those players who study it and succeed must pay very very close attention to the writing of the book. As long as it is possible for a player to memorize variations without understanding them, they may not spend the due diligence that is required of various joseki.
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They should be constantly trying to invent.
Could you do that as a kyu player? I started doing it at about 2 dan.
Definitely started doing it as a Kyu player, I was always trying to play on the very edge of efficiency, which led to me getting too thin, which made my tesuji develop so that I'd stop getting cut apart.