Splinter Bug
#1
Posted 2018-June-21, 19:31
This was in a challenge match normal robots.
South opens 1♦ promising at least 3 cards in the suit.
Later South jumps in ♦ and Gib treats as a splinter in support of spades with 3♠ and now 1♦. So this is definitely a bug.
4♦ probably not wise bid but isn't the point.
After the splinter bidding gets out of control but again isn't relevant
Also interesting West Gib with A♠ cant find a double. Guess it was afraid it's 2 aces wasn't enough against 7NT? East surely also has a double. Mercy rule ?!
#2
Posted 2018-June-21, 22:58
1♦ shows 3(+) diamonds
2♥ shows 5(+) diamonds
What kind of program doesn't look at the previous round(s) of bidding for context on what the next round of bidding should be?
#3
Posted 2018-June-22, 01:31
johnu, on 2018-June-21, 22:58, said:
My guess is that 4♦ was never considered to have a natural meaning, and there is a rule that says jumps to the 4 level, unless defined otherwise, are splinters. Not too hard to see how/why a program might have that rule.
You could change that to 'a splinter unless you've bid the suit naturally', but adding that rule in itself would be entirely pointless without defining what the jump actually means. (Ie, saying it's a splinter is no more helpful/unhelpful than saying nothing at all, like most other descriptions of "impossible jumps").
So the question really is, what should the description of 4♦ be? 7-4 distribution or something like that? It's a pretty rare one.
#4
Posted 2018-June-22, 04:47
So 4♦ should probably be something like 7-4 or 8-4.
Is unusual enough if was undefined wouldn't be a big deal.
But you can not have a bid show 1 card or 0-1 card when previous bidding has shown 3+ cards in the suit and really this bidding has shown 5+ cards.
This mistake seem to indicated something I suspected, Gib may not always be considering previous bidding when it makes a current decision. This may explain some of Gib's horrid bidding mistakes.
#5
Posted 2018-June-22, 04:50
smerriman, on 2018-June-22, 01:31, said:
Not an excuse. I presume Gib has 1♦-1♠-4♦ showing 6♦4♠.
#7
Posted 2018-June-22, 10:14
smerriman, on 2018-June-22, 01:31, said:
You could change that to 'a splinter unless you've bid the suit naturally', but adding that rule in itself would be entirely pointless without defining what the jump actually means. (Ie, saying it's a splinter is no more helpful/unhelpful than saying nothing at all, like most other descriptions of "impossible jumps").
There should be a decision matrix to decide if a bid was a splinter (or anything else). It's absolutely unbelievable that checking if the suit was bid naturally isn't the first condition to test so you could be right that jumps to the 4 level are splinters. That doesn't make the programming any less unbelievable.
smerriman, on 2018-June-22, 01:31, said:
So the question really is, what should the description of 4♦ be? 7-4 distribution or something like that? It's a pretty rare one.
Maybe when in doubt, consider a bid natural? And if GIB is "confused" about a sequence, look back at the previous bidding to find a bid that is correctly defined which GIB seems to do a lot of (e.g. 11-21 points 5+ ♠ repeated for many spade bids in an auction)
#8
Posted 2018-June-22, 15:55
#9
Posted 2018-June-23, 09:54
virgosrock, on 2018-June-22, 08:37, said:
Nobody is using Human logic.
We are using Gib's own definitions
1♦=3+♦,
2♥=5+♦
4♦=1♦
#10
Posted 2018-June-25, 10:53