Ok, how?Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:06 am It is trivial to turn it into PGN.
Some of us already have all the positions deeply analyzed.
-Carl
Moderators: hgm, Rebel, chrisw
Ok, how?Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:06 am It is trivial to turn it into PGN.
Some of us already have all the positions deeply analyzed.
Back in the old days of ECO it was edited by grandmasters, and it was nice to be able to browse the physical books. I still have some of the early editions. But I am afraid the era for that is mostly over. There are still some exceptions: NIC Yearbooks for example are still print (you can get the games online but minus annotations).Eelco de Groot wrote: ↑Tue Mar 26, 2019 10:39 pm I'm hoping for a robot that can update the great NCO or some similar work. In textform. With all the computer analyses and human style comments, pages to flip through. Somebody would make spreadsheets from it I think. I would pay for that even if it was 10 volumes. But it would not make the publisher or authors rich I'm afraid, or would still be terribly expensive for us buyers even with robot help to make.
Thanks!Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:32 am You can turn it into PGN with bin2pgn.
That PGN is crappy PGN, because it uses algebraic.
So I feed it to pgn-extract to turn it into more suitable PGN.
When you finish those two steps you will have something that looks a bit like the attached file.
I found pgn-extract but I can't find bin2pgn. Do you have a link?Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:32 am You can turn it into PGN with bin2pgn.
That PGN is crappy PGN, because it uses algebraic.
So I feed it to pgn-extract to turn it into more suitable PGN.
When you finish those two steps you will have something that looks a bit like the attached file.
polyglot can dump the bin to text lines.clumma wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:14 amOk, how?Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:06 am It is trivial to turn it into PGN.
Some of us already have all the positions deeply analyzed.
-Carl
Code: Select all
Dump of "Cerebellum_Light_Poly.bin" for white.
1: 1. d4{33%} a6 2. e4{100%} a5 3. Nc3{100%} e6 4. Bd3{100%} d6 5. Qe2{100%}
2: 1. d4{33%} a6 2. e4{100%} b6 3. Nf3{100%} d6 4. Bd3{100%} e6 5. c4{100%}
[...]
It's been like that for a year.Nay Lin Tun wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 1:36 pm I cant see cerebellum demo evaluation scores on his website! My browser problem or it is the same to you ?