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Chess notation

Chess notation systems are used to record either the moves made or the position of the pieces in a game of chess. Chess notation is used in chess literature, and by players keeping a record of an ongoing game. The earliest systems of notation used lengthy narratives to describe each move; these gradually evolved into more compact notation systems. Algebraic notation is now the accepted international standard, with several variants. Descriptive chess notation was used in English- and Spanish-language literature until the late 20th century, but is now obsolescent. Portable Game Notation (PGN) is a text file format based on English algebraic notation which can be processed by most chess software. Other notation systems include ICCF numeric notation, used for international correspondence chess, and systems for transmission using Morse code over telegraph or radio. The standard system for recording chess positions is Forsyth–Edwards Notation (FEN).

Notation systems edit

 
Correspondence chess card showing algebraic notation and ICCF notation

In organized competition, both players are required to keep a record of the moves played on a score sheet. If required, score sheets may be used to resolve disputes, for example about whether an illegal move has been made or whether a threefold repetition has occurred. In addition, if the time control requires the players to complete a specified number of moves in a specified time, an accurate count of the moves must be kept.[1] All chess coaches strongly recommend the recording of one's games so that one can look for improvements in one's play.[2]

  • Algebraic notation is the most widely used method for recording moves. It is based on a system of coordinates (a–h for files, 1–8 for ranks) to uniquely identify each square. In embryonic form it was used by Philip Stamma in the 1737 book Essai sur le jeu des echecs. It was later adopted (in long form) by the influential Handbuch des Schachspiels and became standard in German publications. It is more compact and less prone to error than the English descriptive system. Algebraic notation is the official notation of FIDE; if a player records the game in a different notation system, their scoresheet may not be used as evidence in the event of a dispute.[3][4][5] The U.S. Chess Federation prefers the use of algebraic notation but still permits descriptive notation.[6]
  • Long algebraic notation includes the starting file and rank of the piece.
  • Short algebraic notation omits the starting file and rank of the piece, unless it is necessary to disambiguate the move.
  • Minimal algebraic notation is similar to short algebraic notation but omits the indicators for capture ("x"), en passant capture ("e.p."), check ("+") and checkmate ("#"). It was used by Chess Informant.[7]
  • Figurine algebraic notation replaces the letter that stands for a piece by its symbol, e.g., ♞c6 instead of Nc6 or ♖xg4 instead of Rxg4. Pawns are omitted as in standard algebraic notation. This style is widely used in chess literature to allow the moves to be read independent of language. To display or print these symbols on a computer, one or more fonts with good Unicode support must be installed, and the document (web page, word processor document, etc.) must use one of these fonts.[8] For more information see Chess symbols in Unicode.
  • Reversible algebraic notation is based on long algebraic notation, but adds an additional letter for the piece that was captured, if any. The move can be reversed by moving the piece to its original square, and restoring the captured piece. For example, Rd2xBd6.[7]
  • Concise reversible algebraic notation is similar to reversible algebraic notation, but omits the file or rank if it is not needed to disambiguate the move. For example, Rd2xB6. This notation is recommended by Gene Milener in Play Stronger Chess by Examining Chess 960: Usable Strategies for Fischer Random Chess Discovered.[7]
  • is a form of concise reversible algebraic notation with non-Staunton figurines, used by Gene Milener during Chess960 tournaments.
  • Descriptive notation was the prevalent notation in English-speaking countries until the late 1970s. In this system, files are named after the piece that is initially on the back rank, and each square has two names depending on whether it is from White's or Black's point of view. This is still used by a dwindling number of mainly older players, and knowledge of descriptive notation is necessary to study older chess books. Similar systems were used in other languages, including Spanish and French.[9]
  • ICCF numeric notation. In international correspondence chess the use of algebraic notation may cause confusion, since different languages have different names for the pieces. The standard for transmitting moves in this form of chess is ICCF numeric notation.[10]
  • Smith notation is a straightforward chess notation designed to be reversible and represent any move without ambiguity. The notation encodes the source square, destination square, and what piece was captured, if any.[11]
  • Coordinate notation is similar to algebraic notation except that no abbreviation or symbol is used to show which piece is moving. It can do this almost without ambiguity because it always includes the square from which the piece moves as well as its destination, but promotions must be disambiguated by including the promoted piece type, such as in parentheses. It has proved hard for humans to write and read, but is used internally by some chess-related computer software.

The following table lists examples of the same moves in some of the notations which may be used by humans. Each table cell contains White's move followed by Black's move, as they are listed in a single line of written notation.

Chess notation examples
Algebraic Figurine algebraic Long algebraic Reversible algebraic Concise reversible Smith Descriptive Coordinate ICCF
e4 e5 e4 e5 e2e4 e7e5 e2-e4 e7-e5 e24 e75 e2e4 e7e5 P-K4 P-K4 E2-E4 E7-E5 5254 5755
Nf3 Nc6 ♘f3 ♞c6 Ng1f3 Nb8c6 Ng1-f3 Nb8-c6 Ng1f3 Nb8c6 g1f3 b8c6 N-KB3 N-QB3 G1-F3 B8-C6 7163 2836
Bb5 a6 ♗b5 a6 Bf1b5 a7a6 Bf1-b5 a7-a6 Bf1b5 a76 f1b5 a7a6 B-N5 P-QR3 F1-B5 A7-A6 6125 1716
Bxc6 dxc6 ♗xc6 dxc6 Bb5xc6 d7xc6 Bb5xNc6 d7xBc6 Bb5:Nc6 d7:Bc6 b5c6n d7c6b BxN QPxB B5-C6 D7-C6 2536 4736
d3 Bb4+ d3 ♝b4+ d2d3 Bf8b4+ d2-d3 Bf8-b4+ d23 Bf8b4+ d2d3 f8b4 P-Q3 B-N5ch D2-D3 F8-B4 4243 6824
Nc3 Nf6 ♘c3 ♞f6 Nb1c3 Ng8f6 Nb1-c3 Ng8-f6 Nb1c3 Ng8f6 b1c3 g8f6 N-B3 N-B3 B1-C3 G8-F6 2133 7866
0-0 Bxc3 0-0 ♝xc3 0-0 Bb4xc3 0-0 Bb4xNc3 0-0 Bb4:Nc3 e1g1c b4c3n 0-0 BxN E1-G1 B4-C3 5171 2433

In all forms of notation, the result is usually indicated at the conclusion of the game by either "1–0", indicating that White won, "0–1" indicating that Black won or "½–½", indicating a draw. Moves that result in checkmate can be marked with "#", "++", "≠", or "‡" or to indicate the end of game and the winner, instead of or in addition to "1–0" or "0–1".

Annotators commenting on a game frequently use question marks ("?") and exclamation marks ("!") to label a move as bad or praise the move as a good one (see Chess annotation symbols).[12]

Notation systems for computers edit

The following are commonly used for chess-related computer systems (in addition to Coordinate and Smith notation, which are described above):

  • Portable Game Notation (PGN). This is a text-based file format in which chess moves are recorded with standard English algebraic notation with a small amount of markup to record the players and circumstances of the game. Most chess software is configured to process PGN files.[13]
  • Steno-Chess. This is another format suitable for computer processing. It sacrifices the ability to play through games (by a human) for conciseness, which minimises the number of characters required to store a game.[14]
  • Forsyth–Edwards Notation (FEN). A single line format which gives the current positions of pieces on a board, to enable generation of a board in something other than the initial array of pieces. It also contains other information such as castling rights, move number, and color on move. It is incorporated into the PGN standard as a Tag Pair in conjunction with the SetUp tag.
  • Extended Position Description (EPD). Another format which gives the current positions of a board, with an extended set of structured attribute values using the ASCII character set. It is intended for data and command interchange among chessplaying programs. It is also intended for the representation of portable opening library repositories.[15] It is better than FEN for certain chess variants, such as Chess960.

Notation for telegraph and radio edit

Some special methods of notation were used for transmitting moves by telegraph or radio, usually using Morse Code. The Uedemann code and Gringmuth notation worked by using a two-letter label for each square and transmitting four letters – two letters for the origin square followed by two letters for the destination square. Castling is shown as a king move. Squares are designated from White's side of the board, files from left to right and ranks from nearest to farthest. The Rutherford code first converted the move into a number and then converted the move number into a composite Latin word. It could also transmit moves of two games at the same time.

Uedemann code edit

This code was devised by Louis Uedemann (1854–1912). The method was never actually used, mainly because a transposition of letters can result in a valid but incorrect move. Many sources incorrectly use this name for the Gringmuth code.

The files are labeled "A", "E", "I", "O", "O", "I", "E", and "A". The ranks are labeled "B", "D", "F", "G", "H", "K", "L", and "P". A square on the queenside is designated by its file letter and then its rank letter. A square on the kingside is designated by its rank letter then its file letter.[16]

Gringmuth notation edit

This method was invented by Dmitry Alexeyevich Gringmuth but it is sometimes incorrectly called the Uedemann Code. It was used as early as 1866. Files were designated with one of two letters, depending on whether it was on White's side or Black's side. These letters were: B and M, C and N, D and P, F and R, G and S, H and T, K and W, L and Z. Ranks were labeled: "A", "E", "I", "O", "O", "I", "E", and "A".[16]

Rutherford code edit

This code was invented in 1880 by Sir William Watson Rutherford (1853–1927). At the time, the British Post Office did not allow digits or ciphers in telegrams, but they did allow Latin words. This method also allowed moves for two games to be transmitted at the same time. In this method, the legal moves in the position were counted using a system until the move being made was reached. This was done for both games. The move number of the first game was multiplied by 60 and added to the move number of the second game. Leading zeros were added as necessary to give a four-digit number. The first two digits would be 00 through 39, which corresponded to a table of 40 Latin roots. The third digit corresponded to a list of 10 Latin prefixes and the last digit corresponded to a list of 10 Latin suffixes. The resulting word was transmitted.

After rules were changed so that ciphers were allowed in telegrams, this system was replaced by the Gringmuth Notation.[16]

Recording positions edit

Positions are usually shown as diagrams (images), using the symbols shown here for the pieces.

There is also a notation for recording positions in text format, called the Forsyth–Edwards notation (FEN). This is useful for adjourning a game to resume later or for conveying chess problem positions without a diagram. A position can also be recorded by listing the pieces and the squares they reside on, for example: White: Ke1, Rd3, etc.

Written chess notation recording is often necessary when participating in chess tournaments. In many tournaments players are required to record their games' notation on a score sheet.[17]

Endgame classification edit

There are also systems for classifying types of endgames. See Chess endgame § Endgame classification for more details.

History edit

 
Page from 1841 Chess Player's Chronicle. In modern algebraic notation, this would be written as 1.e4 e5 2.Bc4 Bc5 3.b4 Bxb4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Nf6 6.fxe5 Nxd5 7.Nf3 Bg4 8.0-0 0-0 9.c3 Ba5 10.Ba3 Re8 11.Qb3 Bxf3 12.Rxf3 Bb6+ 13.d4 Rxe5 14.Nd2 Nc6 15.Kh1 Na5 16.Qc2 Nxc4 17.Nxc4 Rh5 18.Ne5 Nxc3 19.Nxf7 Qxd4 20.Rg1 c5 21.Rxc3 Bc7 22.h3 b6 23.Rf3 Qd5 24.Bb2 g5 25.Qc3 Qd4 26.Qb3 c4 27.Qb4 Qc5 28.Qc3 Be5 29.Nxe5 1–0

The notation for chess moves evolved slowly, as these examples show. The last is in algebraic chess notation; the others show the evolution of descriptive chess notation and use spelling and notation of the period.

1614:  The white king commands his owne knight into the third house before his owne bishop.
1750:  K. knight to His Bishop's 3d.
1837:  K.Kt. to B.third sq.
1848:  K.Kt. to B's 3rd.
1859:  K. Kt. to B. 3d.
1874:  K Kt to B3
1889:  KKt-B3
1904:  Kt-KB3
1946:  N-KB3
Modern:  Nf3[18]

A text from Shakespeare's time uses complete sentences to describe moves, for example, "Then the black king for his second draught brings forth his queene, and placest her in the third house, in front of his bishop's pawne", which nowadays would be written simply as 2...Qf6.[19] The great 18th-century player Philidor used an almost equally verbose approach in his influential book Analyse du jeu des Échecs, for example, "The king's bishop, at his queen bishop's fourth square."[20]

Algebraic chess notation was first used by Philipp Stamma (c. 1705–1755) in an almost fully developed form, before the now-obsolete descriptive chess notation evolved. The main difference between Stamma's system and the modern system is that Stamma used "p" for pawn moves and the original file of the piece ("a" through "h") instead of the initial letter of the piece.[21] In London in 1747, Philidor convincingly defeated Stamma in a match. Consequently, his writings (which were translated into English) became more influential than Stamma's in the English-speaking chess world; this may have led to the adoption of a descriptive system for writing chess moves, rather than Stamma's coordinate-based approach. However, algebraic notation became popular in Europe following its adoption by the highly influential Handbuch des Schachspiels, and became dominant in Europe during the 20th century. It did not become popular in the English-speaking countries, however, until the 1970s.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gijssen, G. "An Arbiter's Notebook". ChessCafé.com. from the original on 2007-11-05.
  2. ^ . The Chess House. Archived from the original on 2007-10-24. Includes sample hand-written score sheet.
  3. ^ "FIDE Handbook: Rules – Appendices". Fédération Internationale des Échecs. from the original on October 3, 2013. Retrieved September 29, 2013.
  4. ^ "FIDE Handbook E. Miscellaneous / 01. Laws of Chess / FIDE Laws of Chess taking effect from 1 January 2018 /". Fédération Internationale des Échecs.
  5. ^ Schiller, Eric, The Official Rules of Chess, 2003, ISBN 978-1-58042-092-1, p. 25
  6. ^ "Rulebook Changes (as of August 2007)". The United States Chess Federation. from the original on 2015-06-10.
  7. ^ a b c Jeffreys, Michael. . Archived from the original on 22 June 2006. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  8. ^ "Test for Unicode support in Web browsers". from the original on 2008-01-03.
  9. ^ McKim, D.K. "Great Chess Books". Jeremy Silman. from the original on 2007-12-19. Published by an International Master and prolific writer.
  10. ^ "ICCF Numeric Chess Notation". ChessNotation.com. Archived from the original on 2017-01-05.
  11. ^ . ChessClub.com. Archived from the original on 2016-01-17.
  12. ^ . Exeter Chess Club. Archived from the original on 2007-12-23. See section "Symbols: evaluation and comment codes"
  13. ^ Members of the Internet newsgroup rec.games.chess. Edwards, S.J. (ed.). "ICC Help: PGN spec". The Internet Chess Club. from the original on 2004-08-07.
  14. ^ Angelini, Éric. "Steno-Chess". www.chessvariants.com. from the original on 10 January 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  15. ^ "Archived copy". from the original on 2007-08-22. Retrieved 2007-06-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. ^ a b c David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld, 1992, The Oxford Companion to Chess, ISBN 0-19-280049-3
  17. ^ "How to Read and Write Chess Notation". from the original on 2017-04-13.
  18. ^ McCrary, Robert John (ed.). The Hall-of-Fame History of U.S. Chess. Vol. 1. pp. 14–15.[full citation needed]
  19. ^ Saul, Arthur (1614). The famous game of Chesse-play, Truely discouered, and all doubts resolued. London, UK: A.S. Gent. from the original on 2018-05-04. Retrieved 2017-06-29 – via University of Michigan. So that by reading this small Booke thou shalt profit more then[sic] by the playing a thousand Mates. An Exercise full of delight; fit for Princes, or any person of what qualitie soeuer.
  20. ^ Philidor, François-André Danican (2005) [1777]. Analyse du jeu des Échecs [Analysis of the Game of Chess] (reprint, translated ed.). Hardinge Simpole. p. 2.
  21. ^ Davidson, Henry (1981) [1949]. A Short History of Chess. McKay. pp. 152–53. ISBN 0-679-14550-8.
  22. ^ McCrary, R.J. . Archived from the original on 2008-07-04.

External links edit

  • "Chess Notation" by Edward Winter

chess, notation, this, article, about, recording, moves, chess, game, evaluation, chess, moves, chess, annotation, symbols, systems, used, record, either, moves, made, position, pieces, game, chess, used, chess, literature, players, keeping, record, ongoing, g. This article is about the recording of moves in a chess game For the evaluation of chess moves see Chess annotation symbols Chess notation systems are used to record either the moves made or the position of the pieces in a game of chess Chess notation is used in chess literature and by players keeping a record of an ongoing game The earliest systems of notation used lengthy narratives to describe each move these gradually evolved into more compact notation systems Algebraic notation is now the accepted international standard with several variants Descriptive chess notation was used in English and Spanish language literature until the late 20th century but is now obsolescent Portable Game Notation PGN is a text file format based on English algebraic notation which can be processed by most chess software Other notation systems include ICCF numeric notation used for international correspondence chess and systems for transmission using Morse code over telegraph or radio The standard system for recording chess positions is Forsyth Edwards Notation FEN Contents 1 Notation systems 1 1 Notation systems for computers 1 2 Notation for telegraph and radio 1 2 1 Uedemann code 1 2 2 Gringmuth notation 1 2 3 Rutherford code 2 Recording positions 3 Endgame classification 4 History 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksNotation systems edit nbsp Correspondence chess card showing algebraic notation and ICCF notation In organized competition both players are required to keep a record of the moves played on a score sheet If required score sheets may be used to resolve disputes for example about whether an illegal move has been made or whether a threefold repetition has occurred In addition if the time control requires the players to complete a specified number of moves in a specified time an accurate count of the moves must be kept 1 All chess coaches strongly recommend the recording of one s games so that one can look for improvements in one s play 2 Algebraic notation is the most widely used method for recording moves It is based on a system of coordinates a h for files 1 8 for ranks to uniquely identify each square In embryonic form it was used by Philip Stamma in the 1737 book Essai sur le jeu des echecs It was later adopted in long form by the influential Handbuch des Schachspiels and became standard in German publications It is more compact and less prone to error than the English descriptive system Algebraic notation is the official notation of FIDE if a player records the game in a different notation system their scoresheet may not be used as evidence in the event of a dispute 3 4 5 The U S Chess Federation prefers the use of algebraic notation but still permits descriptive notation 6 Long algebraic notation includes the starting file and rank of the piece Short algebraic notation omits the starting file and rank of the piece unless it is necessary to disambiguate the move Minimal algebraic notation is similar to short algebraic notation but omits the indicators for capture x en passant capture e p check and checkmate It was used by Chess Informant 7 Figurine algebraic notation replaces the letter that stands for a piece by its symbol e g c6 instead of Nc6 or xg4 instead of Rxg4 Pawns are omitted as in standard algebraic notation This style is widely used in chess literature to allow the moves to be read independent of language To display or print these symbols on a computer one or more fonts with good Unicode support must be installed and the document web page word processor document etc must use one of these fonts 8 For more information see Chess symbols in Unicode Reversible algebraic notation is based on long algebraic notation but adds an additional letter for the piece that was captured if any The move can be reversed by moving the piece to its original square and restoring the captured piece For example Rd2xBd6 7 Concise reversible algebraic notation is similar to reversible algebraic notation but omits the file or rank if it is not needed to disambiguate the move For example Rd2xB6 This notation is recommended by Gene Milener in Play Stronger Chess by Examining Chess 960 Usable Strategies for Fischer Random Chess Discovered 7 Figurine concise reversible algebraic notation is a form of concise reversible algebraic notation with non Staunton figurines used by Gene Milener during Chess960 tournaments Descriptive notation was the prevalent notation in English speaking countries until the late 1970s In this system files are named after the piece that is initially on the back rank and each square has two names depending on whether it is from White s or Black s point of view This is still used by a dwindling number of mainly older players and knowledge of descriptive notation is necessary to study older chess books Similar systems were used in other languages including Spanish and French 9 ICCF numeric notation In international correspondence chess the use of algebraic notation may cause confusion since different languages have different names for the pieces The standard for transmitting moves in this form of chess is ICCF numeric notation 10 Smith notation is a straightforward chess notation designed to be reversible and represent any move without ambiguity The notation encodes the source square destination square and what piece was captured if any 11 Coordinate notation is similar to algebraic notation except that no abbreviation or symbol is used to show which piece is moving It can do this almost without ambiguity because it always includes the square from which the piece moves as well as its destination but promotions must be disambiguated by including the promoted piece type such as in parentheses It has proved hard for humans to write and read but is used internally by some chess related computer software The following table lists examples of the same moves in some of the notations which may be used by humans Each table cell contains White s move followed by Black s move as they are listed in a single line of written notation Chess notation examples Algebraic Figurine algebraic Long algebraic Reversible algebraic Concise reversible Smith Descriptive Coordinate ICCF e4 e5 e4 e5 e2e4 e7e5 e2 e4 e7 e5 e24 e75 e2e4 e7e5 P K4 P K4 E2 E4 E7 E5 5254 5755 Nf3 Nc6 f3 c6 Ng1f3 Nb8c6 Ng1 f3 Nb8 c6 Ng1f3 Nb8c6 g1f3 b8c6 N KB3 N QB3 G1 F3 B8 C6 7163 2836 Bb5 a6 b5 a6 Bf1b5 a7a6 Bf1 b5 a7 a6 Bf1b5 a76 f1b5 a7a6 B N5 P QR3 F1 B5 A7 A6 6125 1716 Bxc6 dxc6 xc6 dxc6 Bb5xc6 d7xc6 Bb5xNc6 d7xBc6 Bb5 Nc6 d7 Bc6 b5c6n d7c6b BxN QPxB B5 C6 D7 C6 2536 4736 d3 Bb4 d3 b4 d2d3 Bf8b4 d2 d3 Bf8 b4 d23 Bf8b4 d2d3 f8b4 P Q3 B N5ch D2 D3 F8 B4 4243 6824 Nc3 Nf6 c3 f6 Nb1c3 Ng8f6 Nb1 c3 Ng8 f6 Nb1c3 Ng8f6 b1c3 g8f6 N B3 N B3 B1 C3 G8 F6 2133 7866 0 0 Bxc3 0 0 xc3 0 0 Bb4xc3 0 0 Bb4xNc3 0 0 Bb4 Nc3 e1g1c b4c3n 0 0 BxN E1 G1 B4 C3 5171 2433 In all forms of notation the result is usually indicated at the conclusion of the game by either 1 0 indicating that White won 0 1 indicating that Black won or indicating a draw Moves that result in checkmate can be marked with or or to indicate the end of game and the winner instead of or in addition to 1 0 or 0 1 Annotators commenting on a game frequently use question marks and exclamation marks to label a move as bad or praise the move as a good one see Chess annotation symbols 12 Notation systems for computers edit The following are commonly used for chess related computer systems in addition to Coordinate and Smith notation which are described above Portable Game Notation PGN This is a text based file format in which chess moves are recorded with standard English algebraic notation with a small amount of markup to record the players and circumstances of the game Most chess software is configured to process PGN files 13 Steno Chess This is another format suitable for computer processing It sacrifices the ability to play through games by a human for conciseness which minimises the number of characters required to store a game 14 Forsyth Edwards Notation FEN A single line format which gives the current positions of pieces on a board to enable generation of a board in something other than the initial array of pieces It also contains other information such as castling rights move number and color on move It is incorporated into the PGN standard as a Tag Pair in conjunction with the SetUp tag Extended Position Description EPD Another format which gives the current positions of a board with an extended set of structured attribute values using the ASCII character set It is intended for data and command interchange among chessplaying programs It is also intended for the representation of portable opening library repositories 15 It is better than FEN for certain chess variants such as Chess960 Notation for telegraph and radio edit Some special methods of notation were used for transmitting moves by telegraph or radio usually using Morse Code The Uedemann code and Gringmuth notation worked by using a two letter label for each square and transmitting four letters two letters for the origin square followed by two letters for the destination square Castling is shown as a king move Squares are designated from White s side of the board files from left to right and ranks from nearest to farthest The Rutherford code first converted the move into a number and then converted the move number into a composite Latin word It could also transmit moves of two games at the same time Uedemann code edit This code was devised by Louis Uedemann 1854 1912 The method was never actually used mainly because a transposition of letters can result in a valid but incorrect move Many sources incorrectly use this name for the Gringmuth code The files are labeled A E I O O I E and A The ranks are labeled B D F G H K L and P A square on the queenside is designated by its file letter and then its rank letter A square on the kingside is designated by its rank letter then its file letter 16 Gringmuth notation edit This method was invented by Dmitry Alexeyevich Gringmuth but it is sometimes incorrectly called the Uedemann Code It was used as early as 1866 Files were designated with one of two letters depending on whether it was on White s side or Black s side These letters were B and M C and N D and P F and R G and S H and T K and W L and Z Ranks were labeled A E I O O I E and A 16 Rutherford code edit This code was invented in 1880 by Sir William Watson Rutherford 1853 1927 At the time the British Post Office did not allow digits or ciphers in telegrams but they did allow Latin words This method also allowed moves for two games to be transmitted at the same time In this method the legal moves in the position were counted using a system until the move being made was reached This was done for both games The move number of the first game was multiplied by 60 and added to the move number of the second game Leading zeros were added as necessary to give a four digit number The first two digits would be 00 through 39 which corresponded to a table of 40 Latin roots The third digit corresponded to a list of 10 Latin prefixes and the last digit corresponded to a list of 10 Latin suffixes The resulting word was transmitted After rules were changed so that ciphers were allowed in telegrams this system was replaced by the Gringmuth Notation 16 Recording positions editPositions are usually shown as diagrams images using the symbols shown here for the pieces There is also a notation for recording positions in text format called the Forsyth Edwards notation FEN This is useful for adjourning a game to resume later or for conveying chess problem positions without a diagram A position can also be recorded by listing the pieces and the squares they reside on for example White Ke1 Rd3 etc Written chess notation recording is often necessary when participating in chess tournaments In many tournaments players are required to record their games notation on a score sheet 17 Endgame classification editThere are also systems for classifying types of endgames See Chess endgame Endgame classification for more details History edit nbsp Page from 1841 Chess Player s Chronicle In modern algebraic notation this would be written as 1 e4 e5 2 Bc4 Bc5 3 b4 Bxb4 4 f4 d5 5 exd5 Nf6 6 fxe5 Nxd5 7 Nf3 Bg4 8 0 0 0 0 9 c3 Ba5 10 Ba3 Re8 11 Qb3 Bxf3 12 Rxf3 Bb6 13 d4 Rxe5 14 Nd2 Nc6 15 Kh1 Na5 16 Qc2 Nxc4 17 Nxc4 Rh5 18 Ne5 Nxc3 19 Nxf7 Qxd4 20 Rg1 c5 21 Rxc3 Bc7 22 h3 b6 23 Rf3 Qd5 24 Bb2 g5 25 Qc3 Qd4 26 Qb3 c4 27 Qb4 Qc5 28 Qc3 Be5 29 Nxe5 1 0 The notation for chess moves evolved slowly as these examples show The last is in algebraic chess notation the others show the evolution of descriptive chess notation and use spelling and notation of the period 1614 The white king commands his owne knight into the third house before his owne bishop 1750 K knight to His Bishop s 3d 1837 K Kt to B third sq 1848 K Kt to B s 3rd 1859 K Kt to B 3d 1874 K Kt to B3 1889 KKt B3 1904 Kt KB3 1946 N KB3 Modern Nf3 18 A text from Shakespeare s time uses complete sentences to describe moves for example Then the black king for his second draught brings forth his queene and placest her in the third house in front of his bishop s pawne which nowadays would be written simply as 2 Qf6 19 The great 18th century player Philidor used an almost equally verbose approach in his influential book Analyse du jeu des Echecs for example The king s bishop at his queen bishop s fourth square 20 Algebraic chess notation was first used by Philipp Stamma c 1705 1755 in an almost fully developed form before the now obsolete descriptive chess notation evolved The main difference between Stamma s system and the modern system is that Stamma used p for pawn moves and the original file of the piece a through h instead of the initial letter of the piece 21 In London in 1747 Philidor convincingly defeated Stamma in a match Consequently his writings which were translated into English became more influential than Stamma s in the English speaking chess world this may have led to the adoption of a descriptive system for writing chess moves rather than Stamma s coordinate based approach However algebraic notation became popular in Europe following its adoption by the highly influential Handbuch des Schachspiels and became dominant in Europe during the 20th century It did not become popular in the English speaking countries however until the 1970s 22 See also edit nbsp The Wikibook Chess has a page on the topic of Notating The Game Algebraic notation chess Chess opening theory table Chess symbols in UnicodeReferences edit Gijssen G An Arbiter s Notebook ChessCafe com Archived from the original on 2007 11 05 How to Read and Write Algebraic Chess Notation The Chess House Archived from the original on 2007 10 24 Includes sample hand written score sheet FIDE Handbook Rules Appendices Federation Internationale des Echecs Archived from the original on October 3 2013 Retrieved September 29 2013 FIDE Handbook E Miscellaneous 01 Laws of Chess FIDE Laws of Chess taking effect from 1 January 2018 Federation Internationale des Echecs Schiller Eric The Official Rules of Chess 2003 ISBN 978 1 58042 092 1 p 25 Rulebook Changes as of August 2007 The United States Chess Federation Archived from the original on 2015 06 10 a b c Jeffreys Michael Not Your Father s Chess Archived from the original on 22 June 2006 Retrieved 29 September 2013 Test for Unicode support in Web browsers Archived from the original on 2008 01 03 McKim D K Great Chess Books Jeremy Silman Archived from the original on 2007 12 19 Published by an International Master and prolific writer ICCF Numeric Chess Notation ChessNotation com Archived from the original on 2017 01 05 Chess Viewer Smith Notation ChessClub com Archived from the original on 2016 01 17 Algebraic and descriptive notations Exeter Chess Club Archived from the original on 2007 12 23 See section Symbols evaluation and comment codes Members of the Internet newsgroup rec games chess Edwards S J ed ICC Help PGN spec The Internet Chess Club Archived from the original on 2004 08 07 Angelini Eric Steno Chess www chessvariants com Archived from the original on 10 January 2018 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2007 08 22 Retrieved 2007 06 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld 1992 The Oxford Companion to Chess ISBN 0 19 280049 3 How to Read and Write Chess Notation Archived from the original on 2017 04 13 McCrary Robert John ed The Hall of Fame History of U S Chess Vol 1 pp 14 15 full citation needed Saul Arthur 1614 The famous game of Chesse play Truely discouered and all doubts resolued London UK A S Gent Archived from the original on 2018 05 04 Retrieved 2017 06 29 via University of Michigan So that by reading this small Booke thou shalt profit more then sic by the playing a thousand Mates An Exercise full of delight fit for Princes or any person of what qualitie soeuer Philidor Francois Andre Danican 2005 1777 Analyse du jeu des Echecs Analysis of the Game of Chess reprint translated ed Hardinge Simpole p 2 Davidson Henry 1981 1949 A Short History of Chess McKay pp 152 53 ISBN 0 679 14550 8 McCrary R J The History of Chess Notation Archived from the original on 2008 07 04 External links edit Chess Notation by Edward Winter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chess notation amp oldid 1181743364 Uedemann code, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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