🕸Fergus Duniho wrote on Tue, Sep 26, 2017 01:22 PM UTC:
At present, the Game Courier preset for Amoeba will not let you make any move at all. The only line of code in it is the conserve command, which will now give an error message that it has been removed. Until someone can make one that does enforce rules, I have made one that doesn't at
In this one, you can move a space with two moves. First, delete a space by preceding it with a hyphen, then add an empty space to it. You can do this by adding an @ to the space, or by moving the "piece" on the space nowhere. So, assuming you want to move the space at d3 to d4, your move could look like "-d3; @-d4" or like "-d3; d4-". Using commands, which are not banned in this bare preset, but which could be in a programmed one, your move could look like "delete d3; add @ d4" or "delete d3; empty d4". The delete command deletes a space from the board, while the empty command empties a space of any pieces, a side effect being that it will undelete any deleted space. Alternately, you could move the "piece" on one space to another, then delete the origin space. For example, "d3-d4; -d3". In a game that allowed it, this notation would have the advantage of letting you move a space with a piece on it. But that is not allowed in Amoeba.
At present, the Game Courier preset for Amoeba will not let you make any move at all. The only line of code in it is the conserve command, which will now give an error message that it has been removed. Until someone can make one that does enforce rules, I have made one that doesn't at
/play/pbm/play.php?game%3DAmoeba%26settings%3Dbare
In this one, you can move a space with two moves. First, delete a space by preceding it with a hyphen, then add an empty space to it. You can do this by adding an @ to the space, or by moving the "piece" on the space nowhere. So, assuming you want to move the space at d3 to d4, your move could look like "-d3; @-d4" or like "-d3; d4-". Using commands, which are not banned in this bare preset, but which could be in a programmed one, your move could look like "delete d3; add @ d4" or "delete d3; empty d4". The delete command deletes a space from the board, while the empty command empties a space of any pieces, a side effect being that it will undelete any deleted space. Alternately, you could move the "piece" on one space to another, then delete the origin space. For example, "d3-d4; -d3". In a game that allowed it, this notation would have the advantage of letting you move a space with a piece on it. But that is not allowed in Amoeba.