![]() ![]() In both versions, level 6 gets many problems right that levelĥ gets wrong, and the average equity sacrificed over this series of 104ĭifficult problems almost halves as a consequence. (1) The improvement between levels, within the same version of JF is quite Some general conclusions from the above results: "Average" refers to the average equity sacrificed per problem (i.e. Refers to the total equity sacrificed as a result of these errors. The heading "Wrong" refers to the number of problems (out of a total ofġ04) each program got wrong (taking the solutions in the book, which areīased upon extensive rollouts, and expert opinion, as given). ![]() Wrong Equity Average Wrong Equity Average ![]() (3) A feel for the relative playing strengths of different levels within (2) A comparison of JF's standard of checker play with my own. (1) The relative merits of the two versions of Jellyfish. The idea was to get some sort of a handle on Having recently uprgaded my copy of Jellyfish from version 2.01 to versionģ.0, I decided see how many problems in the book each version got right JF and New Ideas in following may be of interest to owners of Woolsey's book, "New Ideas in ![]()
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