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I'll still bet there are a number of folks manually entering hands from hand records from their last FTF event to see how they could have played the hands better.
There probably is a number, but that number is pretty tiny. If you are betting that there are
a lot, you lose the bet. At the club, you'll find
a lot of people that are just there to play, they aren't in to carefully reviewing their play for every single error & trying to markedly improve. They play for years & years, never get much better. So these people aren't going to take the trouble to replay the hands on computer. As Marlowe says they probably don't even have the program in the first place.
Then you have a group of better players who do analyze hand records, but for most hands, they don't need a computer to find the errors. The errors are easily spotted with very fast manual analysis, at most a pencil required to cross off cards. A lot of the time the error was already known before the hand was finished
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. It takes a pretty complex hand to require a computer. I only find a hand I find interesting enough to use computer analysis once every few sessions or so.
As a newcomer, I'd advise you to seek out & join better players who go out after the games for drinks/meals & to discuss the hands. You'll get better insight into how they think about what to bid/play than what you can get out of a computer program. (The best players won't be right in their opinions 100% of the time, and often there is no single "right answer" esp. for bidding, but you can review the logic presented & decide if you agree with it later. Beware of advice presented as "this is right because I say so" without backing logic, especially in bidding; there are many possible successful styles/agreements in a lot of areas.) A computer program will always be able to tell you the optimal double dummy play, but it won't warn you when playing in that sequence would be anti-percentage, even ludicrous, single dummy. They can be used for answering questions like "could that hand be made/defeated", but will often be inconclusive about "
should that hand be made/defeated" until you are skilled enough to analyze that question for yourself.
Reading a lot of books helps, if you see & understand a lot of hands analyzed in books eventually you will be able to analyze the hands quickly yourself just seeing the hand record.
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Even if they're not generated at the source, I would have thought that someone on the planet would have cobbled together a utility, even if it were as barbaric as extracting the hand information from the raw .pdf file offline and converting it to .pbn. Anybody know of such a thing?
There's no standard for hand records pdf, so no one is likely to write a parser for pdf. It would be easier to find out what program(s) they are using to generate the pdf, then obtain source code & modify it with an option to spit out pbn also. Who knows, maybe their program already can.