Apart from the move generator, the evaluation function is the most expensive part of the program. It examines the pawn structure, king's security, static positions of the pieces, everlasting knights etc. as well as special situations in the endgame (e.g. there are positions when two pawns are more worth than a rook).
On a Pentium 90MHz the program will search about 10.000 nodes per second. Cheiron is more a positional playing than a tactical playing program. Cheiron uses an opening book containing about 12,000 positions to get a good start into the game. Using the Bednorz-Toennissen test, Cheiron has an estimated rating of 2100 ELO on a 50MHz PC. Tournament results against humans supports this number. Originally, the program was developed for Unix boxes, but a version has been developed with a graphical interface using Turbo C in a DOS-Windows 3.1 environment.
a computer chess program written by Ulf Lorenz. It played the 8th World Computer Chess Championship 1995 in Shatin, Hong Kong and the 13th World Microcomputer Chess Championship 1995 in Paderborn, and the IPCCC 1994 and IPCCC 1997.
Table of Contents
Description
from the ICGA-site [2]:See also
External Links
Chess Program
Misc
References
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