40C3a The scoring table: AI with memory aids?
#21
Posted 2010-August-14, 03:56
Please come back to the live game; I directed enough online during COVID for several lifetimes.
Bruce McIntyre,
#22
Posted 2010-August-14, 13:01
Is it therefore illegal to fill out or look at your personal score sheet or in teams your score sheet which is frequently kept face up on or near the table since by doing so I can easily and often find out that undertricks are worth 50 or 100 and games make 400 or 600 etc.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#23
Posted 2010-August-14, 13:22
Cascade, on Aug 14 2010, 02:01 PM, said:
Is it therefore illegal to fill out or look at your personal score sheet or in teams your score sheet which is frequently kept face up on or near the table since by doing so I can easily and often find out that undertricks are worth 50 or 100 and games make 400 or 600 etc.
If it is actually an aide to memory, I would say "yes". For most players it is not an aide to memory. No one who knows the scoring table is going to think down two NV, hmmm, I think we encountered that a while back, let's look at the score card to figure out what it is. Not when they can just do the 50 x 2 math in their head.
Perhaps a more realistic question is whether a player can refer to the IMP table during the auction or play. I think far fewer people have this memorized than have the scoring tables memorized. I could imagine someone wanting to know whether they were getting 8:5 or 9:5 odds for a certain action and wanting to refer to the IMP scale in order to figure out which it was.
#24
Posted 2010-August-14, 21:45
#25
Posted 2010-August-14, 23:13
barmar, on Aug 14 2010, 10:45 PM, said:
But this is not relevant to the question whether it is illegal to look.
#26
Posted 2010-August-15, 15:09
#27
Posted 2010-August-15, 17:03
gnasher, on Aug 15 2010, 10:09 PM, said:
A player is definitely not allowed to look up the laws himself, this would be construed as an intentional violation of Law 40C3a (regardless of which law he actually inspected).
He may certainly call the Director for cause and ask whatever question he likes, but the Director should see through this question as an attempt to violate the same law.
If I ever were to be called, apparently for such reason, I would inform the player about Law 40C3a and warn him that any repetition would result in a procedural penalty.
#28
Posted 2010-August-15, 21:37
Does the prohibition against memory aid really apply when the information isn't supposed to be in your memory?
#29
Posted 2010-August-16, 03:12
barmar, on Aug 16 2010, 04:37 AM, said:
Does the prohibition against memory aid really apply when the information isn't supposed to be in your memory?
For information relevant to the ongoing game - yes. Law 40C3a offers no exception (other than as explicitly permitted by the Regulating Authority).
Could you provide an example of the kind of information that you have in mind?
No player is expected to have the laws memorized, that is one of the reasons why we have Directors.
#30
Posted 2010-August-16, 14:28
barmar, on Aug 15 2010, 10:37 PM, said:
Does the prohibition against memory aid really apply when the information isn't supposed to be in your memory?
It probably depends on which law. I think players are expected to know the consequences of Law 1 by heart, for example, even if it is a law.
#31
Posted 2010-August-16, 15:19
barmar, on Aug 16 2010, 04:37 AM, said:
Are you suggesting that you can remember which Laws you cannot remember and you think a memory aid should be allowed to remember those Laws you cannot remember, while you should not be allowed to remember those Laws you can remember? How about a memory aid to aid your memory of when you can use a memory aid?
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#32
Posted 2010-August-16, 15:39
bluejak, on Aug 16 2010, 10:19 PM, said:
barmar, on Aug 16 2010, 04:37 AM, said:
Are you suggesting that you can remember which Laws you cannot remember and you think a memory aid should be allowed to remember those Laws you cannot remember, while you should not be allowed to remember those Laws you can remember? How about a memory aid to aid your memory of when you can use a memory aid?
Very well put!
I loved that
#33
Posted 2010-August-17, 22:48
bluejak, on Aug 16 2010, 05:19 PM, said:
barmar, on Aug 16 2010, 04:37 AM, said:
Are you suggesting that you can remember which Laws you cannot remember and you think a memory aid should be allowed to remember those Laws you cannot remember, while you should not be allowed to remember those Laws you can remember? How about a memory aid to aid your memory of when you can use a memory aid?
Are we permitted logic aids in interpreting these discussions?
#34
Posted 2010-August-18, 03:18
#35
Posted 2010-August-18, 06:04
Or do you need a memory aid to remember the name of the forum?
Ok, ignore that: I have discovered BBO refer to Bridge Base Forums.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#36
Posted 2010-August-18, 14:26
The Director was summoned, and he instructed that play should continue with the revoke established. He did not inform me that if I were to ruff the ace of spades, the penalty would be one trick (and I would go one down after that penalty was imposed), while if I discarded my remaining loser on the ace of spades, the penalty would be two tricks (and I would make the contract after that penalty was imposed).
Fortunately for the London team I already knew this. I discarded my loser, I made the contract, and our team won a tournament it would not have won had I not been able to remember the Laws.
Is the contention here that had I not known the relevant Law in detail but had been able to recall vaguely that the penalty would be different depending on whether or not I let the ace of spades hold, I would not have been entitled to have Law 64A2 read to me? If so, that contention is in my humble and considered opinion complete and utter balderdash.
And sealed the Law by vote,
It little matters what they thought -
We hang for what they wrote.
#37
Posted 2010-August-18, 14:49
dburn, on Aug 18 2010, 09:26 PM, said:
The Director was summoned, and he instructed that play should continue with the revoke established. He did not inform me that if I were to ruff the ace of spades, the penalty would be one trick (and I would go one down after that penalty was imposed), while if I discarded my remaining loser on the ace of spades, the penalty would be two tricks (and I would make the contract after that penalty was imposed).
Fortunately for the London team I already knew this. I discarded my loser, I made the contract, and our team won a tournament it would not have won had I not been able to remember the Laws.
Is the contention here that had I not known the relevant Law in detail but had been able to recall vaguely that the penalty would be different depending on whether or not I let the ace of spades hold, I would not have been entitled to have Law 64A2 read to me? If so, that contention is in my humble and considered opinion complete and utter balderdash.
Law 9B2: No player shall take any action until the Director has explained all matters in regard to rectification.
It was a Director's error not to inform you of the conditions for the rectification to become either one or two tricks. And the fact that RHO now produced the ♠A and not for instance the ♠2 is completely irrelevant, he should have made you aware of the "wins a later trick with a spade" rule that disappeared from the laws in 2007.
(Law 9B2 was also changed in 2007, but only in form not in reality)
#38
Posted 2010-August-18, 14:50
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#39
Posted 2010-August-18, 15:16
blackshoe, on Aug 18 2010, 03:50 PM, said:
If I am allowed to ask the Director what the ramifications are of an established revoke, why am I not allowed to ask the Director what the ramifications are of going four down doubled non-vulnerable?
At the time, the Director (one of England's very best and an occasional poster to this forum) considered that he should not tell me the ramifications of the established revoke expressly because to do so would constitute an aid to my memory, calculation or technique. Since he didn't actually need to tell me anyway, the point was not pursued.
But it remains the case in my view that if a player wants to know what the Laws say about anything at all, he is entitled to know what they say, and any attempt to find out what they say cannot be considered a breach of Law 40C3a or of anything else. If as pran remarks "no player is expected to have the laws memorized", then if players are expected to abide by the Laws, they should have unrestricted access to them at all times. Anything else is so at variance with the principles of natural justice as to be completely absurd - it's not only strange, it's also false.
And sealed the Law by vote,
It little matters what they thought -
We hang for what they wrote.
#40
Posted 2010-August-18, 15:24
dburn, on Aug 18 2010, 04:16 PM, said:
blackshoe, on Aug 18 2010, 03:50 PM, said:
If I am allowed to ask the Director what the ramifications are of an established revoke, why am I not allowed to ask the Director what the ramifications are of going four down doubled non-vulnerable?
At the time, the Director (one of England's very best and an occasional poster to this forum) considered that he should not tell me the ramifications of the established revoke expressly because to do so would constitute an aid to my memory, calculation or technique. Since he didn't actually need to tell me anyway, the point was not pursued.
But it remains the case in my view that if a player wants to know what the Laws say about anything at all, he is entitled to know what they say, and any attempt to find out what they say cannot be considered a breach of Law 40C3a or of anything else. If as pran remarks "no player is expected to have the laws memorized", then if players are expected to abide by the Laws, they should have unrestricted access to them at all times. Anything else is so at variance with the principles of natural justice as to be completely absurd - it's not only strange, it's also false.
Dburn makes a valid argument. In the original posted case, the person should then have called director and asked the TD "how much is 3 down doubled". His partner of course is under UI restrictions, right? Whether he asked TD or illegally (IMO) or legally consulted the scoring table?
Perhaps this is something new laws ,whenever they come, could consider: Move the scoring tables to an Attachment or Addendum instead of having them incorporated in the laws themselves. It is an aid memoire.