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Approaching ALife And Death Problem The Right Way
You know when you are dealing with a life and death problem if you ask yourself either one of the following questions:
In order to answer these questions, it is a good habit to work systematically through all the possible moves that may work. I seem to recall it was some Kobayashi Koichi book or article that recommended the following order: Isolate the group from the centerIf the group still has access to the center, it has a possibility to link up to friendly forces. Reduce the eye space of the group under attackThe classic example is a hane, hence the proverb that there is death in the hane. Look at the cutsIf there is a defect remaining in the group under attack, it may become a good deal easier to kill it if you manage to divide it into separate pieces. PlacementsThe rationale is that the placement will mess up the shape of the group under attack. However if you start with this technique, the group under attack may still have options of running to the center or becoming a bigger group, i.e. a group with more space to create eyes. This is why you should first look at isolating it and reducing the eye space. --Stefan The professional approach vs the amateur approachTo solve tsumego or real game problems, there is the professional approach as opposed to the amateur approach. Amateurs have more or less the following approach: Suppose we are to solve a tsumego
In a real game, when our group is threatened, it goes something like this
The professional approach is very different, or so I have been told Suppose they are to solve a tsumego. They
In a real game, when their group is threatened, they
For one thing, professionals have exactly the same approach to tsumego as to real game situations. For another, a professional reads until he knows exactly what is going on (locally) and knows the meaning of each move in each of the branches. Finally, once the problem has been read out, a pro never returns to verify the status. He'll only continue to perform the third step (weighing local result/global position) regularly. We could try at least the professional approach in tsumego. If you continue to explore each possibility, even if you have found a solution, then you'll be surprised to find sequences that do the same thing as the one you already found, but with a better result in terms of points or aji. Moreover, exploring all moves, also the ones that don't work, does a great deal to your reading skills and your knowledge of shape. This is a copy of the living page "Approaching ALife And Death Problem The Right Way" at Sensei's Library. (C) the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0. |