Cheng

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an UCI compliant open source chess engine by Martin Sedlak, written in C++ as exercise in generic programming, first released as Cheng3 in April 2011. Cheng is able to play Chess960, target platforms are Windows, Linux, Mac OS and Android systems. **Cheng4** 0.38, released in January 2015, is available at [|GitHub] under the permissive [|zlib license].
 * Cheng**,

=Description= Cheng is a bitboard engine using fancy magic bitboards to determine sliding piece attacks. It applies staged move generation.

Search
The parallel multi-threaded search performs PVS alpha-beta with a shared transposition table inside a fractional ply iterative deepening framework with aspiration windows, featuring Lazy SMP. Search routines are instantiated at [|compile time] from a generic routine with three boolean [|template parameters], PV-node, in check, and null move pruning on-off, similar quiescence search has four instances for on-off combinations of PV-node and check. Further selectivity is applied by mate distance pruning, razoring, IID, futility pruning, check extensions and late move reductions. Move ordering is improved by the killer- and history heuristic.

Evaluation
Evaluation employs three further hash tables - evaluation hash table, material hash table and pawn hash table. The evaluation function determines hardware population count support at compile time, passed as template parameter to internal eval functions, finally adding a tempo bonus. Pawn and piece specific evaluators are further implemented with a color template, considering pawn structure, mobility, king safety and various piece pattern. Most of the gain in **Cheng4** 0.38, released in January 2015, is due to eval tuning using the Texel's Tuning Method by Peter Österlund.

=Forum Posts=

2011

 * [|cheng3 uci v1.0] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, April 19, 2011
 * [|cheng3 1.03 released] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, May 27, 2011
 * [|cheng3 1.05 released] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, September 26, 2011
 * [|cheng3 1.06 released] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, November 23, 2011

2012 ...

 * [|cheng3 1.07 released] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, January 21, 2012
 * [|cheng4 0.35] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, September 24, 2013
 * [|cheng4 0.36] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, November 10, 2013
 * [|cheng4 0.36a (FRC bugfix)] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, November 15, 2013

2014 ...

 * [|cheng4 0.36c - last version] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, January 30, 2014
 * [|Tragic that Martin Sedlak has discontinued Cheng] by User923005, OpenChess Forum, January 31, 2014
 * [|Cheng: A great lost to the community] by Frank Quisinsky, CCC, January 15, 2015
 * [|cheng4 0.38 release] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, January 18, 2015
 * [|Lazy SMP in Cheng] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, February 02, 2015 » Lazy SMP
 * [|Lazy SMP scaling Cheng0.38] by Bertil, FishCooking, February 24, 2015
 * [|Empirical results with Lazy SMP, YBWC, DTS] by Kai Laskos, CCC, April 16, 2015 » Lazy SMP, YBWC, DTS
 * [|Cheng 4.39 release] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, July 20, 2015
 * [|Cheng 4.39 Android version bugfix] by Martin Sedlak, CCC, November 13, 2015

=External Links=

Chess Engine

 * [|GitHub - kmar/cheng4: cheng4 chess engine]
 * [|Cheng chess engine] hosted by Emil Vlasák
 * [|Index of /chess/engines/Jim Ablett/CHENG] by Jim Ablett hosted by Kirill Kryukov
 * [|Cheng4 0.36a 64-bit] in CCRL 40/40

Misc

 * [|Cheng (Disambiguation) from Wikipedia]

=References= =What links here?= include page="Cheng" component="backlinks" limit="30"
 * Up one level**