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Canada-0-LOGISTICS 公司名錄
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公司新聞:
- draw - Game drawn - timeout vs insufficient material - Chess Stack Exchange
My finger was hovering on the Vote to Close as duplicate (of the many time-out vs 'dead-reckoning' draw questions we've had) but this question doesn't quite require the subtleties of insufficient material vs dead-reckoning
- Why does stockfish win when playing against itself in these games? It . . .
Why does stockfish win when playing against itself in these games? It should have been a draw, but it wasn't The accuracy of the game was 99%
- rules - Is it ethical to take a draw in a winning position, if a draw . . .
Offering a draw in positions that are much worse is frequently regarded as However, bad etiquette does not always equate to unethical behaviour In a tournament situation, it is correct to seek the best results in each pairing, and offering a draw in a worse position is a means to that end I assume that your opponent is not offering you a draw as a sign of disrespect or to annoy you
- draw - What happens if a strong chess engine plays with itself many . . .
If a strong engine (eg Stockfish) plays with itself many times (say, 100 times), what will be the outcomes in terms of the following: What will be the proportion of draws? Will there be wins losse
- Why was this a draw? What move I supposed to play to win?
This question is similar to: Why was this a draw? If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem
- history - Why is stalemate a draw? - Chess Stack Exchange
It is so difficult to force stalemate and sometimes unintentional too, so why is stalemate a draw? As the opponent doesn't have a further move, why is it not considered a win?
- Queen - is this a draw? - Chess Stack Exchange
Black and white both have one queen and the king Is this game a draw?
- With only the King left, how can you get a draw?
A draw also occurs when neither player has sufficient material to checkmate the opponent or when no sequence of legal moves can lead to checkmate Unless specific tournament rules forbid it, players may agree to a draw at any time
- Is it ethical to force a draw via perpetual check? [duplicate]
Actually, the second is a variation of the third Perpetual check is one specific type of threefold repetition It's only a draw because it causes the same position to be repeated Threefold repetition is a rule of the game Perpetual check is an unofficial term for a threefold repetition that involves a player is repeatedly giving check
- analysis - If there was perfect play from both sides, will it be draw . . .
If there was perfect play from both the colors, will white win because of the first move advantage or will it be a draw?
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