What do J89 rules say about a direct ko ?
Posted: Thu May 14, 2015 6:11 am
Hi,
I have studied the french and japanese rules and I have written an article about the differences between them in french.
But there is a case that I don't uderstand in the japanese rule. A direct ko remaining at the end of the game (figure attached below).
If fighting the ko was the last thing that both players did (Black played the last move in E3, recapturing one white stone), and White has no more ko threat, White passes.
What happens if Black passes too instead of connecting the ko ?
My two references for the japanese rules are Robert Jasiek's page about the World Amateur Championship rules, that are the closest I could find for the japanese 1949 professionnal rules, and James Davies' translation, on Wilfred Hansens' page, for the 1989 professional rules.
As far as I understand, under the 1949 rules, the relevant part is "A defensive move is required for a direct ko shape, when immediate means are available." Which means that black should add a stone in D3 before the score is counted.
But if I carefully follow the 1989 rules, I find the opposite. White can't immediately recapture the ko, and if White plays elsewhere, Black can connect. Thus, the E3 stone can't be captured. Therefore it is alive.
D3 is surrounded only by black stones that are alive, thus it is an eyespace.
The black strings has no dame, thus they are not in seki.
D3 is an eyespace surrounded by no strings that are in seki, therefore it is Black's territory.
This is in contradiction with the 1949 rules, but normally, both rulesets should agree, shouldn't they ?
I have studied the french and japanese rules and I have written an article about the differences between them in french.
But there is a case that I don't uderstand in the japanese rule. A direct ko remaining at the end of the game (figure attached below).
If fighting the ko was the last thing that both players did (Black played the last move in E3, recapturing one white stone), and White has no more ko threat, White passes.
What happens if Black passes too instead of connecting the ko ?
My two references for the japanese rules are Robert Jasiek's page about the World Amateur Championship rules, that are the closest I could find for the japanese 1949 professionnal rules, and James Davies' translation, on Wilfred Hansens' page, for the 1989 professional rules.
As far as I understand, under the 1949 rules, the relevant part is "A defensive move is required for a direct ko shape, when immediate means are available." Which means that black should add a stone in D3 before the score is counted.
But if I carefully follow the 1989 rules, I find the opposite. White can't immediately recapture the ko, and if White plays elsewhere, Black can connect. Thus, the E3 stone can't be captured. Therefore it is alive.
D3 is surrounded only by black stones that are alive, thus it is an eyespace.
The black strings has no dame, thus they are not in seki.
D3 is an eyespace surrounded by no strings that are in seki, therefore it is Black's territory.
This is in contradiction with the 1949 rules, but normally, both rulesets should agree, shouldn't they ?