Well... believe me, life is too short for such sterile arguments.
I am sure the end user does not want so many Polyglot forks.
Olivier
Moderator: Andres Valverde
Michel wrote: ... then I cannot work with you.
Olivier Deville wrote:Well... believe me, life is too short for such sterile arguments.
I am sure the end user does not want so many Polyglot forks.
Olivier
H.G.Muller wrote:... sabotage ...
...
2) It is upto the users to decide what version they prefer.
H.G.Muller wrote:... I will _always_ call any bluff...
H.G.Muller wrote:.... How would you define cheating?
Charles Browne wrote:No biggy guy.
In the makefile of Winboard, past and present versions, which compiles with Cygwin is an option that forces Cygwin to compile Winboard with the mingw compiler so that a dll file is not required to be used with Winboard. That's all I was asking for, I can whip a makefile up for myself some day to use with Polyglot. Cheers.
Take it easy man.
Eric Mullins wrote:I wrote those makefiles for both winboard and polyglot.
Eric Mullins wrote:For polyglot, it's going to depend on where you got the source. I probably wrote the one Fonzy has in his tree, but there may not be a way to change if it uses cygwin or not, I really can't remember. Assuming there isn't a way, then I'm pretty sure it defaults to using -mno-cygwin, thus using mingw to produce a native win32 build.
Eric Mullins wrote:If you got recent source from Michel, then the option to use MingW or not should already be present. It defaults to using a native win32 build, eg using mingw instead of cygwin.
Charles Browne wrote:No reference to mingw (-mno-cygwin) that I can see in any of Fonzy's B.'s Polyglot sources. All executables compiled with the makefile (I haven't tried the .ms one) require the dll file to function.
Charles Browne wrote:If I compile it with
g++ (-O2 or -O3) -mno-cygwin -o polyglot *.cpp
it functions fine as far as I can tell and does not require the dll file to work. I just need to really know if the above used to compile F. Bluemers' Polyglot is/are the best commands to use.
Charles Browne wrote:or...
am I safe in using the makefile in Michel's Polyglot sources to compile F. Bluemers' sources. Yea I could try it but the thing is that depending on how and what I use to compile it (the Polyglot sources), though I may not receive any compiler errors, I always come out with different size executable files.
Eric Mullins wrote:As he said earlier in this thread, he doesn't use gcc...
Volker Pittlik wrote:
Changing the subject doesn't work with me.
H.G.Muller wrote:Olivier Deville wrote:Well... believe me, life is too short for such sterile arguments.
I am sure the end user does not want so many Polyglot forks.
Olivier
The end user will only want one Polyglot. One that works well with WinBoard. (That is not overestimating the importance of WinBoard, but a logical consequence of the fact that other GUIs hardly need Polyglot, as they support UCI protocol natively.) I will do whatever it takes to make it available to them. If others, more qualified than I, think it is a good idea to sabotage their Polyglot so that it doesn't work well with WinBoard... Well:
1) I cannot prevent that, so why would I worry about it?
2) It is upto the users to decide what version they prefer.
I am sorry about this state of affairs, but it is not me that chooses it. I have _never_ made any insulting or derogatory remark, only well-founded criticism based on good arguments. People that cannot distinguish the two should indeed better ignore me than seek cooperation. And they better not utter threats unless they really mean it, as I will _always_ call any bluff. That is my (quite simple and straightforward) attitude, and if others think that is a problem, I consider it _their_ problem.
To come back to the point that seemed to trigger all this: I happen to think that if there exists a 1:1 translation of moves between WB and UCI protocol, because they both specify long-algebraic notation to be used, a UCI2WB adapter is totally out of line if it refuses to pass the message. That is not the task of an adapter. It is the task of the GUI to decide if it is going to accept the move. Not of the adapter. If someone disagrees with that, it would be interesting if he presented his arguments here as to why.
If someone, however, thinks that the fact that I have this opinion is a good reason to (out of the blue) "punish" the computer Chess community by sabotaging any future joint effort, ... Well I think that makes it clear to any reader which of us is out of line and putting his own interest above that of the community!
H.G.Muller wrote:To come back to the point that seemed to trigger all this: I happen to think that if there exists a 1:1 translation of moves between WB and UCI protocol, because they both specify long-algebraic notation to be used, a UCI2WB adapter is totally out of line if it refuses to pass the message. That is not the task of an adapter. It is the task of the GUI to decide if it is going to accept the move. Not of the adapter. If someone disagrees with that, it would be interesting if he presented his arguments here as to why.
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