X-ko

  Difficulty: Expert   Keywords: Ko, Go term

RobertJasiek:

Ko is an ambiguous term. It refers to one particular shape, a class of shapes, a particular nature of a fight, the fact that a ko shape is under fight, etc. The most frequent usage is for the 2 adjacent intersections and its basic ko shape. To reduce ambiguity, the nature of a ko should not also be called "ko". Therefore, a new term shall be introduced:

An x-ko is a ko with x approach-moves that one side has to make while for the other side the ko is direct.

So a 0-ko is what was called a direct ko. A 1-ko is an indirect ko with 1 approach move (also called 1-move approach ko or 1-move approach move ko). A 2-ko is an indirect ko with 2 approach moves (also called 2-move approach ko or 2-move approach move ko). Etc.

Teigo Nakamura uses a similar terminology, where K^x denotes an x-ko, except that he still calls K^0 a direct ko. Below the x, he might also attach L (for Black) or R (for White) for the (mathematical) player for whom it is an x-ko.


Discussion

Hyperpape: "The nature of a ko should not also be called 'ko'." I'm afraid I can't follow what this means.

RobertJasiek: "ko" is the part of the board with potentially repetitive behaviour. The "nature of a ko" is a ko's characteristic of how tactics and strategy develop (Who captures first, direct or with approach moves, important for both or flower-viewing, etc.). If we called the part of the board "ko" and its nature "ko", then we would not know whethere "ko" refers to the part of the board or to its nature. By writing x-ko for a specific nature, we know that we are talking about the nature and not just about the part of the board.


This is a copy of the living page "X-ko" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2016 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
[Welcome to Sensei's Library!]
StartingPoints
ReferenceSection
About