Kifu

Kifu

"Kifu" (棋譜) is the Japanese term for a game record for a game of Go or shogi. "Kifu" is traditionally used to record games on a grid diagram, marking the plays on the points by numbers.

This term is originally from China. In China, people named this kind of record "Qipu" (Traditional Chinese: 棋譜, Simplified Chinese: 棋谱). The earliest surviving kifu is collected by the ancient book "Yi Zhi" (The Principle of the Go, 弈旨), written by Ban Gu.

A large corpus — many thousands of games — of "kifu" records from the Edo period has survived. Quite a low proportion was published in book form; strong players used to make their own copies by hand of games to study. This accounts for one feature of the records passed down: they often omit much of the endgame, since for a strong player reconstructing the smaller endgame plays is routine. This explains the survival of some games in different versions, and possible discrepancies in the final margin.

The early Western Go players found the "kifu" inconvenient, probably because as chess players they were more familiar with algebraic notation, and because as beginning players they found it difficult to locate moves. But they quickly discovered the advantages of kifu-style notation -- as much as an entire game can be visually displayed in one diagram -- and now virtually all Go books and magazines use some modification of the "kifu" to display games, variations and problems. While a typical piece of chess literature is in algebraic notation punctuated by occasional diagrams, Go literature mostly consists of diagrams with a sequence of plays marked, and prose commentary.

The dislike of the pioneer European player Oskar Korschelt for "kifu" is because nineteenth century "kifu" always used Chinese numerals, which are indeed difficult to read unless one is familiar with them. Numbering in that style continued until 1945, having been popular in the 1930s on the basis of nationalist feeling in Japan. (Hindu-Arabic numerals were also used). In Japanese Go books, when unoccupied points of the board are mentioned in the commentary, they are usually labelled by hiragana (in iroha order) to this day.

The playing-through on a Go board of a game record given as a "kifu" on a single diagram is still a little taxing for a beginner player, because the plays have to be found. An amateur "dan" player would expect to play through a game of normal length in around 20 minutes. A player of professional level would take ten minutes, and could easily sight-read a professional game from the "kifu". Stronger players can locate plays more easily because they often know where the next move is likely to be found.

In most games, a small number of plays are at intersections that were previously occupied (this happens, for example, during a ko fight). Annotations by the side of the "kifu" give this information, usually in the form '57 at 51' or something comparable. Game records are usually completed by information on the players' ranks, the date and competition data, and often the location.

Many of the most important games are now available in machine-readable form, using one of a small number of Go file formats. This has great advantages in terms of ease of playing through games, and lends itself well to database storage and archival. The common opinion is that playing games through on a board (rather than computer monitor) from a printed record is a qualitatively different experience.

Other notations

There is no other universally recognised notation comparable to algebraic chess notation for Go. There are several methods in use, including
* Using chess-like notation so on a 19x19 board points are a-s for one axis, and 1-19 for the other. cite web |url=http://groups.google.co.uk/group/rec.games.go/browse_thread/thread/e27718af9fd1ac65/a0e0b403dba80d20?lnk=gst&q=notation#a0e0b403dba80d20 |title=Go notation thread on rec.games.go |accessdate=2008-08-12]
* A similar system using Japanese characters instead of letters. [cite web |url=http://www.pbase.com/damezumari/image/1361252 |title=Japanese numbering of Go-board |accessdate=2008-08-12]
* Using numbers for both axes, e.g. 3-4 is on the third row and fourth column from a corner.
* Dmitry Andreev in the 1970s suggested a system where each point is identified from its position relative to all four corners. [cite web |url=http://www.davar.net/GO/COORDS.HTM |title=Dmitry Andreev's Go coordinate system |accessdate=2008-08-12]

Since the Go board is symmetrical with no particular sides, it makes no difference which corner is used as the reference point to count coordinates from.

References

External links

* [http://senseis.xmp.net/?Kifu Kifu in Sensei's Library]


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