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\listoverridecount0\ls7}{\listoverride\listid768165129\listoverridecount0\ls8}{\listoverride\listid903878531\listoverridecount0\ls9}{\listoverride\listid781152802\listoverridecount0\ls10}{\listoverride\listid1240552867\listoverridecount0\ls11}\r
{\listoverride\listid640160996\listoverridecount0\ls12}{\listoverride\listid349260549\listoverridecount0\ls13}{\listoverride\listid1021513731\listoverridecount0\ls14}{\listoverride\listid1405952460\listoverridecount0\ls15}{\listoverride\listid1332292840\r
-\listoverridecount0\ls16}}{\*\revtbl {Unknown;}{Tim Mann;}}{\info{\title + $ # KWinBoard: Chessboard for Windows}{\author TRIO}{\operator hgm}{\creatim\yr2009\mo9\dy9\hr14\min34}{\revtim\yr2010\mo1\dy14\hr10\min42}{\printim\yr1997\mo4\dy22\hr23\min5}{\version7}{\edmins38}\r
-{\nofpages79}{\nofwords18314}{\nofchars-32766}{\*\company DEC SRC}{\nofcharsws0}{\vern73}}\margl1417\margr1417\margt1417\margb1417 \r
+\listoverridecount0\ls16}}{\*\revtbl {Unknown;}{Tim Mann;}}{\info{\title + $ # KWinBoard: Chessboard for Windows}{\author TRIO}{\operator hgm}{\creatim\yr2009\mo9\dy9\hr14\min34}{\revtim\yr2010\mo3\dy26\hr11\min42}{\printim\yr1997\mo4\dy22\hr23\min5}{\version16}{\edmins357}\r
+{\nofpages83}{\nofwords19937}{\nofchars113643}{\*\company DEC SRC}{\nofcharsws139561}{\vern73}}\margl1417\margr1417\margt1417\margb1417 \r
\widowctrl\endnotes\aendnotes\hyphhotz425\ftnnrlc\aftnnar\noxlattoyen\expshrtn\noultrlspc\dntblnsbdb\nospaceforul\hyphcaps0\viewkind4\viewscale100 \fet1{\*\aftnsep \pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\chftnsep \r
\r
\par }}\sectd \linex0\headery709\footery709\colsx709\sectdefaultcl {\*\pnseclvl1\pnucrm\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta .}}{\*\pnseclvl2\pnucltr\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta .}}{\*\pnseclvl3\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta .}}{\*\pnseclvl4\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li119\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 An updated description with the release of version 4.2010xxxx.\r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\f1\cf11 \tab \tab \tab \ldblquote For the ultimate WinBoard Experience\rdblquote \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 New features since WinBoard 4.2.7 that are implemented in Allessandro Scotti\rquote s Winboard_x are highlighted in red. }{\f1\cf11 \r
-New features in the WinBoard 4.3.xx series by H.G. Muller are highlighted in green}{\f1\cf2 , that in the unified 4.4 series in blue}{\f1\cf11 .}{\f1 \r
+New features in the WinBoard 4.3.xx series by H.G. Muller are highlighted in green}{\f1\cf2 , that in the unified 4.4 series in blue. }{\f1\cf5 Additions for the 4.5 series are in purple}{\f1\cf11 .}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Description}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Description}}}{\f1 Description\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\i\f1 WinBoard}{\f1 \r
- is a graphical user interface for chess. It displays a chessboard on the screen, accepts moves made with the mouse, and loads and saves game files in standard chess notation. WinBoard serves as a front-end for many different services, including:\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\i\f1 WinBoard}{\f1 is a graphical user interface for chess. It displays a chessboa\r
+rd on the screen, accepts moves made with the mouse, and loads and saves game files in standard chess notation. WinBoard serves as a front-end for many different services, including:\r
\par {\pntext\pard\plain\f3\fs20\lang1033\cgrid \loch\af3\dbch\af0\hich\f3 \'b7\tab}}\pard\plain \fi-360\li480\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\jclisttab\tx480{\*\pn \pnlvlblt\ilvl0\ls3\pnrnot0\pnf3\pnstart1\pnindent360\pnhang{\pntxtb \'b7}}\ls3\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\b\i\f1 Chess engines}{\f1 that run on your PC. You can play a game against an engine, set up arbitrary positions, force variations, or watch a game between two engines. }{\i\f1\cf11 Fairy-Max}{\f1 is supplied with WinBoard }{\f1\cf11 \r
4.3.14}{\f1 , and over 100 other free chess engines are available separately. Of these, Crafty is the most popular. See }{\f1\uldb Installing Chess Engines}{\v\f1 InstallingChessEngines}{\f1 for instructions on installing additional chess engines.\r
The Web}{\f1 and your own saved games. You can use WinBoard as a helper application to view files in your Web browser or the Explorer. You can use it to keep track of email postal games, browse games off the net, or review games you have saved.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ Getting Started}}\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ GettingStarted}}}{\f1 Getting Started\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-WinBoard starts up in one of three major modes: chess engine mode, ICS client mode, or game viewer mode. You cannot change modes while WinBoard is running, but you can access all the game viewer features directly from the other two modes.\r
- Also, you can start WinBoard several times to get multiple chessboard windows running in any combination of modes.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {You will usually run WinBoard by choosing an item from the Windows Start menu that runs it in the mode you want. If you just double-click on\r
- WinBoard.exe, you get a startup dialog asking which mode you want. If you choose chess engine mode, you can then select from the installed engines; if you choose ICS client mode, you can then select from a list of known chess servers. More advanced users\r
- can }{\uldb customize}{\v icsNames}{ these lists or type in WinBoard }{\uldb command line options}{\v Options}{ directly.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBo\r
+ard starts up in one of three major modes: chess engine mode, ICS client mode, or game viewer mode. You cannot change modes while WinBoard is running, but you can access all the game viewer features directly from the other two modes. Also, you can start W\r
+inBoard several times to get multiple chessboard windows running in any combination of modes.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {You will usually run WinBoard by choosing an item from the Windows Start menu that runs it in the mode you want. If you just double-click on WinBoard.exe, you get \r
+a startup dialog asking which mode you want. If you choose chess engine mode, you can then select from the installed engines; if you choose ICS client mode, you can then select from a list of known chess servers. More advanced users can }{\uldb customize}\r
+{\v icsNames}{ these lists or type in WinBoard }{\uldb command line options}{\v Options}{ directly.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 After starting WinBoard, you can make }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 move}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 move}}}{\f1 \r
-moves in several different ways. To move by dragging, press the left mouse button while the cursor is on one o\r
-f your pieces, move the cursor to another square, and release the button. You can also move by clicking the left mouse button once (press and release) over one of your pieces, moving the cursor to another square, and clicking again. You drop new pieces on\r
- \r
-the board (when applicable) by selecting from a context menu. Press the right mouse button over a square to bring up the menu; no menu will come up in modes where dropping a new piece is not permitted. You can also make moves by typing them in standard al\r
-gebraic chess notation. Either a dialog box will pop up for you to type into, or in ICS mode, your typing will be redirected into the ICS interaction window.\r
-\par When WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is iconized, its }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icon}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
-\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icon}}}{\f1 icon is a white knight if it is White's turn to move, a black knight if it is Black's turn.\r
+moves in several different ways. To move by dragging, press the left mouse button while the cursor is on one of your pieces, move the cursor to ano\r
+ther square, and release the button. You can also move by clicking the left mouse button once (press and release) over one of your pieces, moving the cursor to another square, and clicking again. You drop new pieces on the board (when applicable) }{\r
+\f1\cf2 by similarly dragging them from the holdings displayed next to the board}{\f1\cf5 . The old way of selecting them from a context menu can still be enabled by an option.}{\f1\cf2 }{\f1 \r
+Press the right mouse button over a square to bring up the menu; no menu will come up in modes where dropping a new piece is not permitted. }{\f1\cf5 \r
+Normally pressing the right mouse button will enable you to see the position at the end of the PV given by an active engine as thinking output. Moving the mouse with the right button kept down will allow you to step through this PV.}{\f1\cf2 }{\f1 \r
+You can also make moves by typing them in standard algebraic chess notation. Either a dialog box will pop up for you to type into, or in ICS mode, your typing will be redirected into the ICS interaction window. }{\f1\cf2 In the dialog box you can also typ\r
+e a move number, to call up the position of the current game after that move in the display, or (in Edit Position mode) type a FEN.\r
+\par }{\f1 When WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is iconized, its }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icon}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
+\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icon}}}{\f1 icon is a white knight if it is White's turn to move, a black knight if it is Black's turn.\r
+\par }{\f1\cf5 \r
+Next to the main window, WinBoard does use many auxiliary windows for dedicated tasks. We mention the Engine-Output window (formerly analysis window) for a better display of the thinking output of engines (which you can then right-click to play out the se\r
+lected PV in the board window), the Game-History window (where the game is displayed in SAN, and where you can double-click a move to call up the corresponding position in the board window), the Evaluation Graph window (where you see a graph of engine sco\r
+r\r
+es vs. move number, and can call up the corresponding position in the board window by clicking a point on the graph), the Comment popup (where you can right-click variation comments to play them out on the main board, or add and edit comments), the Game-L\r
+i\r
+st window (where you see an overview of all games in a game file you loaded, and can select a game for loading by clicking on it, and limit the list to games you are interested in by filtering). These auxiliary windows can be opened or closed as the need \r
+arises.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Additional Information\r
\par }\pard\plain \s29\fi-240\li360\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\uldb Menus}{\v\f1\uldb Menus}{\f1\uldb \r
\par Shortcut Buttons}{\v\f1\uldb Buttons}{\f1\uldb \r
\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 File Menu}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 File Menu\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 New Game}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 NewGame}}}{\f1\cf6 New Game (former }{\f1 Reset}{\f1\cf6 )\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Resets WinBoard and the chess engine (if any) to the beginning of\r
- a new chess game. In Internet Chess Server mode, clears the current state of WinBoard, then resynchronizes with ICS by sending a }{\b\f1 refresh }{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Resets WinBoard and the chess engine (if any) to the beginning of a new chess game. In Internet Chess Server mode, clears the current state of WinBoard, then resynchronizes with ICS by sending a }{\b\f1 refresh }{\f1 \r
command. If you want to stop playing, observing, or examining a game on ICS, use an appropriate command from the }{\f1\uldb Action}{\v\f1 ActionMenu}{\f1 menu, not }{\f1\cf6 New Game}{\f1 .\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 New Shuffle Game}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 NewShuffleGame}}}{\f1\cf11 New Shuffle Game\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Brings you to a dialog box where you can enter the number of an opening setup for shuffle variants like FRC, or ask for a random number.\r
- After pressing OK, a new game is set up, using this position. The chosen position will continue to be used on every subsequent \ldblquote New Game\rdblquote , }{\f1\cf11 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Brings you to a dialog box where you can enter the number of an opening setup for shuffle variants like FRC, or ask for a random number. \r
+After pressing OK, a new game is set up, using this position. The chosen position will continue to be used on every subsequent \ldblquote New Game\rdblquote , }{\f1\cf11 \r
even if you are playing a variant that normally is not shuffled, until you select a new variant through the \ldblquote New Variant\'85\rdblquote menu.}{\f1\cf6 If you enter \ldblquote -1\rdblquote \r
for the position number, new random number is drawn before every game.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 The type of shuffling that is done in reaction to a given position number obeys restrictions that depend on the selected variant. In variants that allow \r
-castling, Kings remain on the central files, Rooks in the corners. In games with FRC-style castlings, the King starts between the Rooks, but apart from that they could be anywhere. In games without castling, there are no restrictions on King and Rook plac\r
-ement. Pairs of color-bound pieces (such as Bishops) will be placed on oppositely colored squares. In ICS mode this feature has no effect, as the ICS determines the starting position.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 The type of shuffling that is done in reaction to a given position number obeys restrictions that depend on the selected variant. In variants that allow c\r
+astling, Kings remain on the central files, Rooks in the corners. In games with FRC-style castlings, the King starts between the Rooks, but apart from that they could be anywhere. In games without castling, there are no restrictions on King and Rook place\r
+ment. Pairs of color-bound pieces (such as Bishops) will be placed on oppositely colored squares. In ICS mode this feature has no effect, as the ICS determines the starting position.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 New Variant}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 NewVariant}}}{\f1\cf11 New Variant\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Select a new variant. There are controls to enter a board width, board height and holdings size, but normally you leave them at \lquote -1\rquote \r
-, which means the default value for the selected variant will be used (e.g. 8x8 for normal Chess, 9x10 for xiangqi, 10x8 for capablanca, holdings for 5 pie\r
-ces in crazyhouse). You can set a deviating value for each of the three parameters (e.g. to play a crazyhouse version of xiangqi or capablanca you would set the holdings to 6 or 7). If the board width deviates from the default, the game will start with an\r
- empty board. \r
+, which means the default value for the selected variant will be used (e.g. 8x8 for normal Chess, 9x10 for xiangqi, 10x8 for capablanca, holdings for 5 pieces in crazyhouse). You can \r
+set a deviating value for each of the three parameters (e.g. to play a crazyhouse version of xiangqi or capablanca you would set the holdings to 6 or 7). If the board width deviates from the default, the game will start with an empty board. \r
\par The variant will remain in force until you select a new one; i.e. subsequent \ldblquote New Game\rdblquote commands will start a new game of the same variant. In ICS mode this command has no effect, as the ICS determines which variant will be played.\r
\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Load Game}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadGame}}}{\f1 Load Game\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Plays a game from a record file. A popup dialog prompts you for the filename. If the file contains more than one game, a second popup dialog displays a list of games (with information drawn from their PGN tags, if any), and you ca\r
-n select the one you want.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Plays a game from a recor\r
+d file. A popup dialog prompts you for the filename. If the file contains more than one game, a second popup dialog displays a list of games (with information drawn from their PGN tags, if any), and you can select the one you want.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The game file parser will accept PGN (portable game notation), or in fact almost any file that contains moves in algebraic notation. Notation of the form }{\i\f1 P@f7}{\r
-\f1 is accepted for piece-drops in bughouse games; this is a nonstandard e\r
-xtension to PGN. If the file includes a PGN position (FEN tag), or a WinBoard position diagram bracketed by "[--" and "--]" before the first move, the game starts from that position. Text enclosed in parentheses, square brackets, or curly braces is assume\r
-d to be commentary and is displayed in a pop-up window. Any other text in the file is ignored. PGN variations (enclosed in parentheses) are treated as comments; WinBoard is not able to walk variation trees. The nonstandard PGN tag }{\f2 \r
-[Variant "varname"]}{\f1 functions similarly to the }{\f1\uldb variant}{\v\f1 variant }{\f1 command-line option, allowing games in certain chess variants to be loaded. There is also a heuristic to recognize chess variants from the }{\f2 Event}{\f1 \r
+\f1 is accepted for piece-drops in bughouse games; this is a nonstandard extension to PGN. If the file includes a PGN positio\r
+n (FEN tag), or a WinBoard position diagram bracketed by "[--" and "--]" before the first move, the game starts from that position. Text enclosed in parentheses, square brackets, or curly braces is assumed to be commentary and is displayed in a pop-up win\r
+dow. Any other text in the file is ignored. PGN variations (enclosed in parentheses) }{\f1\cf5 \r
+appear in the comment popup amongst genuine comments; to walk the variation tree, you have to right-click them in this window. This will cause WinBoard to load them as the current line. You can revert to the previous line with the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Revert}{\r
+\v\f1\cf5 variant }{\f1\cf5 command. (Beware! Currently WinBoard\rquote s PGN parser is limited to 3 levels of nesting in variations.)}{\f1 The nonstandard PGN tag }{\f2 [Variant "varname"]}{\f1 functions similarly to the }{\f1\uldb variant}{\v\f1 vari\r
+ant }{\f1 command-line option, allowing games in certain chess variants to be loaded. }{\f1\cf5 Note that it has to appear before any FEN tag!}{\f1 There is also a heuristic to recognize chess variants from the }{\f2 Event}{\f1 \r
tag, by looking for the strings that the Internet Chess Servers put there when saving variant ("wild") games.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Load Next Game}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadNextGame}}}{\f1 Load Next Game\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Reloads the last game you loaded. Not available if the last game was loaded from a pipe.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Save Game}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 SaveGame}}}{\f1 Save Game\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Appends a record of the current game to a file. A popup dialog prompts you for the filename. If the game did not begin with the standard starting position, the game file includes the starting position used. Game files are saved in the PGN (portabl\r
-e game notation) format, unless the }{\f1\uldb oldSaveStyle}{\v\f1 oldSaveStyle}{\f1 option is True, in which case they are saved in an older format that is specific to WinBoard}{\i\f1 .}{\f1 \r
- Both formats are human-readable, and both can be read back by the Load Game command. Notation of the form }{\i\f1 P@f7}{\f1 is generated for piece-drops in bughouse games; this is a nonstandard extension to PGN.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Appends a record of the current game to a file. A popup dialog prompts you for the filename. If the game did not b\r
+egin with the standard starting position, the game file includes the starting position used. Game files are saved in the PGN (portable game notation) format, unless the }{\f1\uldb oldSaveStyle}{\v\f1 oldSaveStyle}{\f1 \r
+ option is True, in which case they are saved in an older format that is specific to WinBoard}{\i\f1 .}{\f1 Both formats are human-readable, and both can be read back by the Load Game command. Notation of the form }{\i\f1 P@f7}{\f1 \r
+ is generated for piece-drops in bughouse games; this is a nonstandard extension to PGN.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Copy Game To Clipboard}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 CopyGameToClipboard}}}{\f1 Copy Game To Clipboard\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {Copies the record of the current game to the Windows clipboard in PGN (portable game notation) format.\r
Load Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadPosition}}}{\f1 Load Position\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets up a position from a position file. A popup dialog prompts you for the filename. Position files must be in FEN (Forsythe-Edwards notation), or in the format that the }\r
{\f1\uldb Save Position}{\f1 command writes when }{\f1\uldb oldSaveStyle}{\v\f1 oldSaveStyle}{\f1 is turned on. }{\f1\cf11 \r
-Note that many variants require an extension of the original FEN standard. WinBoard tries to be as universal as possible in understanding FENs when different standards ar\r
-e raound, but has to make a choice when writing them. In FRC is uses Shredder-FEN (Haha castling notation) , but it understands KQkq as the outermost Rook, so it also reads X-FEN. In Crazyhouse / Bughouse it appends the holdings immediately behind the boa\r
-r\r
-d info between brackets [], but on input it also understands bFEN (which puts it behind a slash / as if it were an extra board rank). It uses a tilde ~ behind a piece to indicate it is really a promoted Pawn (like bFEN). In Shogi the holdings are printed \r
-like in Crazyhouse, but promoted pieces are represented by a plus sign + before the letter of the original piece. Letters used for the pieces can be set with the /pieceToCharTable command-line option.}{\f1 \r
+Note that many variants require an extension of the original FEN standard. WinBoard tries to be as universal as possible in understanding FENs when different standards are raound, but has to make a choice when writing them. In FRC is uses Shredder-FEN (\r
+Haha castling notation) , but it understands KQkq as the outermost Rook, so it also reads X-FEN. In Crazyhouse / Bughouse it appends the holdings immediately behind the board info between brackets [], but on input it also understands bFEN (which puts it b\r
+e\r
+hind a slash / as if it were an extra board rank). It uses a tilde ~ behind a piece to indicate it is really a promoted Pawn (like bFEN). In Shogi the holdings are printed like in Crazyhouse, but promoted pieces are represented by a plus sign + before the\r
+ letter of the original piece. Letters used for the pieces can be set with the /pieceToCharTable command-line option.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Load Next Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadNextPosition}}}{\f1 Load Next Position\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Loads the next position from the last position file you loaded.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Load Previous Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadPreviousPosition}}}{\f1 Load Previous Position\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Loads the previous position from the last position file you loaded. Not available if the last position was loaded from a pipe.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- Reload Same Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ReloadSamePosition}}}{\f1 Reload Same Position\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Reload Sam\r
+e Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ReloadSamePosition}}}{\f1 Reload Same Position\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Reloads the last position you loaded. Not available if the last position was loaded from a pipe.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Save Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 SavePosition}}}{\f1 Save Position\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Exit}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Exit}}}{\f1 Exit\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Exits from WinBoard.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\r
-\f1 Mode Menu}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ModeMenu}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\b\f1\super K}\r
+{\f1 Mode Menu}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ModeMenu}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Mode Menu}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 Mode Menu\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Machine White}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 MachineWhite}}}{\f1 Machine White\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Starts a game between two chess engines.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 Machine Both}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 Machine Both}}}{\f1\cf11 Machine Both\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 A single chess engine plays itself. Mainly useful for pseudo-engines, \r
-that are in fact communication links to another machine, where you want to observe a game that is being played. (E.g. the gothic-chess.com server). This command is not implemented yet (version 4.3.14).\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 A single chess engine plays itself. Mainly useful for pseudo-engines, that are in fact communication links to another machine, where you want to observe a game \r
+that is being played. (E.g. the gothic-chess.com server). This command is not implemented yet (version 4.3.14).\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Analysis Mode}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AnalysisMode}}}{\f1 Analysis Mode\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 In thi\r
-s mode, you can make moves for both sides on the board. After each move, the chess engine will think about possible replies and display its analysis in a separate window. Crafty was the first engine to support this feature, but by now there are many other\r
-s that support it as well.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 In this mode, you can make moves for both sides on the board. After each move, the chess engine will think about possible repli\r
+es and display its analysis in a separate window. Crafty was the first engine to support this feature, but by now there are many others that support it as well. }{\f1\cf5 With respect to playing variations, the same holds as in }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Edit Game}{\r
+\f1\cf5 mode.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf2 From WinBoard 4.4 on this function can also be invoked in \lquote zippy mode\rquote \r
-, i.e. when you are logged on to an ICS with an engine loaded. In that case it is not your own moves that the engine analyzes, but the moves that are played in \r
-a game on the ICS that you are observing. You must start observing before you start the analysis mode! See the file zippy.README for how to connect to an ICS and a chess engine running on your local computer at the same time. (Basically this amounts to ad\r
-ding the /zp command-line option in addition to all options you would need for connecting to the ICS, as well as those needed for running the chess engine.)\r
+, i.e. when you are logged on to an ICS with an engine loaded. In that case it is not your own moves that the engine analyzes, but the moves that are played in a game on the ICS that you are observing. You mu\r
+st start observing before you start the analysis mode! See the file zippy.README for how to connect to an ICS and a chess engine running on your local computer at the same time. (Basically this amounts to adding the /zp command-line option in addition to \r
+all options you would need for connecting to the ICS, as well as those needed for running the chess engine.)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Analyze File}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AnalyzeFile}}}{\f1 Analyze File\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 In this mode, you can load a game from a file, and the \r
-chess engine will analyze each move as in Analysis Mode. Crafty was the first engine to support this feature, but by now there are many others that support it as well.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 In this mode, you can load a game from a file, and the chess engine will analyze each move as in Analysis Mode. Crafty was the first\r
+ engine to support this feature, but by now there are many others that support it as well.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 ICS Client\r
}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ICSClient}}}{\f1 ICS Client\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This is the normal mode when WinBoard is connected to a chess server. If you have moved into Edit Game or Edit Position mode, you can select this option to get out.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 When you run WinBoard in ICS mode, it starts up a console window in which you can type comm\r
-ands and receive text responses from the chess server. You can use the standard Windows editing keys to edit your command line before pressing Enter. The console window keeps a history of the last few commands you typed. Press the up-arrow key to go back \r
-to a previous command; press the down-arrow key to go forward again to a later command. Press the right mouse button in the output area for a }{\f1\uldb context menu}{\v\f1 ICSInteractionContextMenu}{\f1 of editing commands and ICS command shortcuts.\r
-\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+When you run WinBoard in ICS mode, it starts up a console window in which you can type commands and receive text responses from the chess server. You can use the standard Windows editing keys to edit your command line before pressing Enter. T\r
+he console window keeps a history of the last few commands you typed. Press the up-arrow key to go back to a previous command; press the down-arrow key to go forward again to a later command. Press the right mouse button in the output area for a }{\r
+\f1\uldb context menu}{\v\f1 ICSInteractionContextMenu}{\f1 of editing commands and ICS command shortcuts.\r
\par Some useful ICS commands include }{\b\f1 who}{\f1 to see who is logged on, }{\b\f1 games}{\f1 to see what games are being played, }{\b\f1 match}{\f1 to challenge another player to a game, }{\b\f1 observe}{\f1 to observe an ongoing game, }{\b\f1 \r
examine}{\f1 or }{\b\f1 smoves}{\f1 to review a recently completed game, and of course }{\b\f1 help}{\f1 . \r
\par Whenever you ask to observe an ongoing game, review a completed game, or resume an adjourned game, WinBoard retrieves and parses the list of past moves from the ICS, so you can review them with }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 and }{\f1\uldb \r
Backward}{\v\f1 Backward}{\f1 or save them with }{\f1\uldb Save Game}{\v\f1 SaveGame}{\f1 .\r
-\par Some special ICS Client features are activated when you are in }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 or }{\b\f1 bsetup }{\f1 mode on ICS. See the descriptions of the menu commands }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 , }{\f1\uldb Backward}{\v\f1 Backward}{\f1 , }{\r
-\f1\uldb Pause}{\v\f1 Pause}{\f1 , and }{\f1\uldb Stop Examining}{\v\f1 StopExamining}{\f1 below. You can also issue the ICS position-editing comma\r
-nds with the mouse. Move pieces by dragging with the left mouse button, or by left-clicking once on the starting square and once on the ending square. Press the right mouse button over a square for a context menu that lets you drop a new piece, empty the \r
-s\r
-quare, or clear the board. Click on the White or Black clock to set the side to play. You cannot set the side to play or drag pieces to arbitrary squares while examining on ICC, but you can do so in bsetup mode on FICS. You can also make moves by typing t\r
-hem into the ICS window; you may have to do this occasionally if you are playing a chess variant whose rules WinBoard does not understand, such as Fischer Random.\r
-\par If you are playing a bughouse game on the ICS, a list of the offboard pieces that each player \r
-holds is shown in the window title bar. To drop an offboard piece, press the right mouse button over an empty square to bring up a context menu. To observe your partner's games, start a second copy of WinBoard, log in as a guest, and use the ICS }{\b\f1 \r
-follow}{\f1 or }{\b\f1 pfollow}{\f1 command in the new window.\r
+\par }{\f1\cf5 In ICS mode a graph of players seeking games can be displayed in stead of the chess board, when you are idle (i.e. not playing, observing or examining). When this fe\r
+ature is enabled, left-clicking in the board area will switch between board and the seek graph. For details on this, see the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Seek Graph}{\f1\cf5 command.\r
+\par }{\f1 Some special ICS Client features are activated when you are in }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 or }{\b\f1 bsetup }{\f1 mode on ICS. See the descriptions of the menu commands }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 , }{\f1\uldb Backward}{\v\f1 Backward}{\f1 , }\r
+{\f1\uldb Pause}{\v\f1 Pause}{\f1 , and }{\f1\uldb Stop Examining}{\v\f1 StopExamining}{\f1 below. You can also issue the ICS position-editing commands with the mouse. Move pieces by dragging with the left mouse button, or by left-clicking once \r
+on the starting square and once on the ending square. Press the right mouse button over a square for a context menu that lets you drop a new piece, empty the square, or clear the board. Click on the White or Black clock to set the side to play. You cannot\r
+ \r
+set the side to play or drag pieces to arbitrary squares while examining on ICC, but you can do so in bsetup mode on FICS. You can also make moves by typing them into the ICS window; you may have to do this occasionally if you are playing a chess variant \r
+whose rules WinBoard does not understand. }{\f1\cf5 (But this list is getting shorter, and Fischer Random is not on it anymore; you can enter castling there with the mouse by dragging the King on top of the Rook.)}{\f1 \r
+\par If you are playing a bughouse game on the ICS, a list of the offboard pieces that each player holds is shown in the window title bar, }{\f1\cf2 and graphically in the holdings area next to the board.}{\f1 To drop an offboard piece, }{\f1\cf2 \r
+drag it from the holdings to the board.}{\f1 }{\f1\cf5 (Pressing the right mouse button over an empty square to bring up a context menu will still work if you have set the /dropMenu option.)}{\f1 \r
+ To observe your partner's games, start a second copy of WinBoard, log in as a guest, and use the ICS }{\b\f1 follow}{\f1 or }{\b\f1 pfollow}{\f1 command in the new window. }{\f1\cf5 You can also use the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Background Observe}{\f1\cf5 or }\r
+{\f1\uldb\cf5 Dual Board}{\f1\cf5 features to follow your partner\rquote \r
+s game through a single connection on which you are also playing yourself, in the background (peeking at it by pressing the right mouse button), or on side-by-side boards in the board window.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Edit Game}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 EditGame}}}{\f1 Edit Game\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Allows you to make moves for both Black and White, and to change moves after backing up with the }{\f1\uldb Backward}{\v\f1 Backward}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
In chess engine mode, the chess engine continues to check moves for legality but does not participate in the game. You can bring the chess engine back into the game by selecting }{\f1\uldb Machine White}{\v\f1 MachineWhite}{\f1 , }{\f1\uldb Machine Black}\r
{\v\f1 MachineBlack}{\f1 , or }{\f1\uldb Two Machines}{\v\f1 TwoMachines}{\f1 .\r
-\par In ICS mode, the moves are not sent to the ICS: Edit Game takes WinBoard out of ICS Client mode and lets you edit games locally. If you want to edit a game on ICS in a way that other ICS users can see, use the ICS }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 \r
- command or start an ICS match against yourself.\r
+\par In ICS mode, the moves are not sent to the ICS: Edit Game takes WinBoard out of ICS Client mode and lets you edit games locally. If you want to edit a game on ICS in a way that other ICS users can see, use the ICS }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 command or\r
+ start an ICS match against yourself.\r
+\par }{\f1\cf5 If you edit an existing game locally by playing new moves while not at the end, you will create a new variation. (New moves at the end will simply be appended to the existing game.) WinBoard will then shelve the original variation (\lquote \r
+main line\rquote ) from beyond the point where you played a new move. You can later revert to that new line with the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Revert}{\f1\cf5 or }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Annotate}{\f1\cf5 \r
+ commands. This will discard the variation you just entered, and restores the moves of the original main line tha\r
+t you overwrote. This procedure can be applied recursively, so you an make (sub-)variations on variations. Rather than entering variations move by move, you can also recall them from PGN variations in the Comment window, by right-clicking those.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Edit Position}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 EditPosition}}}{\f1 Edit Position\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you set up an arbitrary board position. Use the left mouse button to drag pieces to new squares, or to d\r
-elete a piece by dragging it off the board or dragging an empty square on top of it. To drop a new piece on a square, press the right mouse button over the square. This brings up a menu of pieces. Additional menu choices let you empty the square or clear \r
-the board. You can set the side to play next by clicking on the White or Black indicator at the top of the screen. }{\f1\cf11 The pop-up menu also contains options to \lquote promote\rquote or \lquote demote\rquote \r
- the piece currently in the square. (In variants like Crazyhouse a piece has a d\r
-ifferent representation when it is a promoted Pawn rater than an original piece.) This allows you to create some of the not-so-common pieces (e.g. a Unicorn is a promoted King, a Commoner is a demoted King).}{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Lets you set up an arbitrary board position. Use the left mouse button to drag pieces to new squares, or to delete a piece by dragging it off the board or dragging an empty square on top of it. To drop a new piece on a square, press the right mouse \r
+button over the square. This brings up a menu of pieces. Additional menu choices let you empty the square or clear the board. You can set the side to play next by clicking on the White or Black indicator at the top of the screen. }{\f1\cf11 \r
+The pop-up menu also contains options to \lquote promote\rquote or \lquote demote\rquote \r
+ the piece currently in the square. (In variants like Crazyhouse a piece has a different representation when it is a promoted Pawn rater than an original piece.) This allows you to create some of the not-so-common pieces\r
+ (e.g. a Unicorn is a promoted King, a Commoner is a demoted King).}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Selecting Edit Position causes WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 to discard all remembered moves in the current game.\r
-\par In ICS mode, change made to the position by Edit Position are not sent to the ICS: Edit Position takes WinBoard out of ICS Client mode and lets you edit positions locally. If you want to edit positions o\r
-n ICS in a way that other ICS users can see, use the ICS }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 command, or start an ICS match against yourself. (See also }{\f1\uldb ICS Client}{\v\f1 ICSClient}{\f1 above.)\r
+\par In ICS mode, change made to the position by Edit Position are not sent to the ICS: Edit Positio\r
+n takes WinBoard out of ICS Client mode and lets you edit positions locally. If you want to edit positions on ICS in a way that other ICS users can see, use the ICS }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 command, or start an ICS match against yourself. (See also }{\r
+\f1\uldb ICS Client}{\v\f1 ICSClient}{\f1 above.)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Show Engine Output}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 Show Engine Output}}}{\f1\cf6 Show Engine Output\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf6 Open a new window dedicated to showing the thinking output of the engine(s), as controlled by \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote . }{\cf11 \r
-In ICS mode kibitzed info of an opponent engine can appear here as well, under control of the /autoKibitz option.}{\cf6 \r
+In ICS mode kibitzed info of an opponent engine can appear here as well, under control of the /autoKibitz option. }{\cf5 \r
+Right-clicking a line of thinking output will allow you to step through the PV it contains on the main board, by vertically moving the mouse, keeping the right-button pressed.}{\cf5 \r
+\par WinBoard will display lines of thinking output of the same depth ord\r
+ered by score, (highest score on top), rather than in the order the engine produced them. Usually this amounts to the same, as a normal engine search will only find new PV (and emit it as thinking output) when it searches a move with a higher score than t\r
+h\r
+e previous variation. But when the engine is in multi-variation mode this needs not always be true, and it is more convenient for someone analyzing games to see the moves sorted by score. The order in which the engine found them is only of interest o the \r
+engine author, and can still be deduced from the time or node count printed with the line.}{\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Show Evaluation Graph}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 Show Evaluation Graph}}}{\f1\cf6 Show Evaluation Graph\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf6 Open a new window dedicated to displaying a graph, representing the development of the engine score(s) from the current game over time. (Needs \ldblquote show Thinking\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Shows or hides the list of games generated by the last }{\f1\uldb Load Game}{\v\f1 LoadGame}{\f1 command.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Show Move History}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 Show Move History}}}{\f1\cf6 Show Move History\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf6 Open a new window dedicated to showing the game currently in progress. Clicking a point on a move selects the corresponding position in the board display.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf6 Open a new window dedicated to showing the game currently in progress. Double-clicking on a move selects the corresponding position in the board display.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
\f1\cf2 Open Chat Window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 Open Chat Window}}}{\f1\cf2 Open Chat Window\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf2 Open a new window that in ICS mode can be u\r
-sed to display messages received from ICS tell commands from a specified ICS handle, from a channel (when you set the handle to the channel number), or whispers from co-observers of a game (when you set the handle to \ldblquote WHISPER\rdblquote \r
-). You have to press the \ldblquote Change\rdblquote \r
- button in the chat window to activate the entered handle. Typing into the bottom field of the window will send tell messages to the handle or channel, or whispers to co-observers. You can open up to three chat windows. Messages that are diverted to suc\r
-h a chat window will not appear in the ICS interaction window.}{\cf6 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf2 \r
+Open a new window that in ICS mode can be used to display messages received from ICS tell commands from a specified ICS handle, from a channel (when you set the handle to the channel number), }{\cf5 shouts / c-shouts,}{\cf2 or whispers }{\cf5 / kibitzes}\r
+{\cf2 from co-observers of a game (when you set the handle to }{\cf5 \ldblquote \rdblquote shouts, \ldblquote c-shouts\rdblquote , \ldblquote whisper\rdblquote or \ldblquote kibitzes\rdblquote }{\cf2 ). You have to press the \ldblquote Change\rdblquote \r
+ button in the chat window to activate the entered handle}{\cf5 , or type <Enter>}{\cf2 . Typing into the bottom field of the window will send tell messages to the handle or channel, or whispers to co-observers. You can open up to }{\cf5 five}{\cf2 \r
+ chat windows. Messages that are diverted to such a chat window will not appear in the ICS interaction window. }{\cf5 A window dedicated to shouts will also capture c-shouts (if there is no dedicated c-shout box) and \lquote It\rquote \r
+ messages, recognizable on the type of brackets used around the shouter name ( [ ], ( ) or < >, respectively).}{\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Training}}\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Training}}}{\f1 Training\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {Training mode lets you interactively guess the moves of a game for one of the players. While in Training mode, the navigation buttons are disabled. You guess t\r
-he next move of the game by playing the move on the board (or using the }{\uldb Type In Move}{\v\uldb TypeInMove}{ command). If the move played matches the next move of the game, the move is accepted and the opponent\rquote \r
-s response is autoplayed. If the move played is incorrect, an error message is displayed. \r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {Training mode l\r
+ets you interactively guess the moves of a game for one of the players. While in Training mode, the navigation buttons are disabled. You guess the next move of the game by playing the move on the board (or using the }{\uldb Type In Move}{\v\uldb \r
+TypeInMove}{ command). If the move played matches the next move of the game, the move is accepted and the opponent\rquote s response is autoplayed. If the move played is incorrect, an error message is displayed. \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Edit Tags}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 EditTags}}}{\f1 Edit Tags\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you edit the PGN (portable game notation) tags for the current game. After editing, the tags must still conform to the PGN tag syntax:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 See the PGN Standard for full details. Here is an example:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s43\li520\sa60\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs20\cgrid {\f2 \line [Event "Portoroz Interzonal"]\line [Site "Portoroz, Yugoslavia"]\line [Date "1958.08.16"]\line [Round "8"]\line \r
[White "Robert J. Fischer"]\line [Black "Bent Larsen"]\line [Result "1-0"]\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Any characters that do not match this syntax are silently ignored. Note that the PGN standard requires all gam\r
-es to have at least the seven tags shown above. Any that you omit will be filled in by WinBoard with }{\f2 "?"}{\f1 (unknown value) or }{\f2 "-"}{\f1 (inapplicable value).\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- Edit Comment}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 EditComment}}}{\f1 Edit Comment\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Any characters that do not match this syntax are\r
+ silently ignored. Note that the PGN standard requires all games to have at least the seven tags shown above. Any that you omit will be filled in by WinBoard with }{\f2 "?"}{\f1 (unknown value) or }{\f2 "-"}{\f1 (inapplicable value).\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Edit\r
+ Comment}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 EditComment}}}{\f1 Edit Comment\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Adds or modifies a comment on the current position. Comments are saved by }{\f1\uldb Save Game}{\v\f1 SaveGame}{\f1 and are displayed by }{\f1\uldb Load Game}{\v\f1 \r
LoadGame}{\f1 , }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 , and }{\f1\uldb Backward}{\v\f1 Backward}{\f1 .\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 Allows you to type the name of the human player, which will appear in the PGN header and in the window title.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Pause}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Pause}}}{\f1 Pause\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Pauses updates to the board, and if you are playing against a local chess engine, also pauses your clock. To continue, select Pause again, and the display w\r
-ill automatically update to the latest position. The }{\b\f1 P}{\f1 (or }{\b\f1 C}{\f1 ) button is equivalent to selecting Pause.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Pauses updates to the board, and if you are playing against a local chess engine, also pauses your clock. To continue, select Pause again, and the display will automatically update to the latest position. The }{\b\f1 P}{\f1 (or }{\b\f1 C}{\f1 \r
+) button is equivalent to selecting Pause.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you select Pause when you are playing{\*\bkmkstart WHATSelSavT}{\*\bkmkend WHATSelSavT} {\*\bkmkstart fWHATtopic}against{\*\bkmkend fWHATtopic}\r
- a chess engine and it is not your move, the chess engine\rquote s clo\r
-ck will continue to run and it will eventually make a move, at which point both clocks will stop. Since board updates are paused, however, you will not see the move until you exit from Pause mode (or select }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 \r
-). This behavior is meant to simulate adjournment with a sealed move.\r
-\par If you select Pause while you are in }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 mode on ICS, you can step backward and forward in the current history of the examined game without affecting the other examiners or observers. Select Pause again to reconnect y\r
-ourself to the current state of the game on ICS.\r
+ a chess engine and it is not your move, the chess engine\rquote s clock will continue to run and it will eventually make a move, at which point both clocks will stop. Since board updates a\r
+re paused, however, you will not see the move until you exit from Pause mode (or select }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 ). This behavior is meant to simulate adjournment with a sealed move.\r
+\par If you select Pause while you are in }{\b\f1 examine}{\f1 mode on ICS, you can step backward and \r
+forward in the current history of the examined game without affecting the other examiners or observers. Select Pause again to reconnect yourself to the current state of the game on ICS.\r
\par If you select Pause while you are loading a game, the game stops loading. You can load more moves one at a time by selecting }{\f1\uldb Forward}{\v\f1 Forward}{\f1 , or resume automatic loading by selecting Pause again.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
K}{\f1 Action Menu}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ActionMenu}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Offers a draw to your opponent, accepts a pending draw offer from your opponent, or claims a draw by repetition or the 50-move rule, as appropriate.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Adjourn}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Adjourn}}}{\f1 Adjourn\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Asks your opponent to agree to adjourning the current game, or agrees to a pending adjournment offer from yo\r
-ur opponent. You continue an adjourned ICS game by challenging the same player again with the ICS }{\b\f1 match}{\f1 command.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Asks your opponent to agree to adjourning the current game, or agrees to a pending adjournment offer from your opponent. You continue an adjourned ICS game by challenging the same player again with the ICS }{\b\f1 match}{\f1 command.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Abort}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Abort}}}{\f1 Abort\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Asks your opponent to agree to abort the current game, or agrees to a pending abort offer from your opponent. An abort\r
-ed ICS game ends immediately without affecting either player's rating.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Asks your \r
+opponent to agree to abort the current game, or agrees to a pending abort offer from your opponent. An aborted ICS game ends immediately without affecting either player's rating.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Resign}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Resign}}}{\f1 Resign\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Resigns the game to your opponent.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Stop Examining}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 StopExamining}}}{\f1 Stop Examining\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Ends your participation in observing a game, by issuing the ICS }{\b\f1 unobserve}{\f1 command.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Upload to Examine}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 Upload to Examine}}}{\f1\cf5 Upload to Examine\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Starts an examined game on the ICS, and uploads the game currently loaded in WinBoard (by pasting it, or loading from a file) to it.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Adjudicate To White}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 AdjudicateToWhite}}}{\f1\cf6 Adjudicate To White\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 End the current game and stop participating engine. The result will appear in the PGN as a win for white.\r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Step Menu}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 Step Menu\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Type In Move}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 TypeInMove}}}{\f1 Type In Move\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Pops up a dialog box, into which you can type moves in standard algebraic chess no\r
-tation. (You can also get this dialog box by simply starting to type over the chessboard, except in ICS mode, where such typing is redirected into the ICS interaction window.)\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Pops up a dialog box, into which you can type moves in standard algebraic chess notation. (You can also get this dialog box by simply star\r
+ting to type over the chessboard, except in ICS mode, where such typing is redirected into the ICS interaction window.) }{\f1\cf5 \r
+Typing a number will have the same effect as stepping forward or backward to the position after that move. In Edit Position mode you can also type a FEN to set up the position.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Backward}}\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Backward}}}{\f1 Backward\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Steps backward through a series of remembered moves. The }{\b\f1 <}{\f1 button is equivalent to selecting Backward}{\f1\cf2 , as is turning the mouse wheel towards you}{\r
-\f1 . In most modes, Backward only lets you look back at old positions; it does not retract moves. This is the case if you are playing against a chess engine, pla\r
-ying or observing a game on the ICS, or loading a game. If you select Backward in any of these situations, you will not be allowed to make a different move. Use }{\f1\uldb Retract Move}{\v\f1 RetractMove}{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb Edit Game}{\v\f1 EditGame}{\f1 \r
- if you want to change past moves.\r
+\f1 . In most modes, Backward only lets you look back at old po\r
+sitions; it does not retract moves. This is the case if you are playing against a chess engine, playing or observing a game on the ICS, or loading a game. If you select Backward in any of these situations, you will not be allowed to make a different move.\r
+ Use }{\f1\uldb Retract Move}{\v\f1 RetractMove}{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb Edit Game}{\v\f1 EditGame}{\f1 if you want to change past moves.\r
\par If you are examining a game on the ICS, the behavior of Backward depends on whether WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is in }{\f1\uldb Pause}{\v\f1 Pause}{\f1 mode. If Pause mode is off, Backward issues the ICS command}{\b\f1 backward}{\f1 \r
, which backs up everyone's view of the game and allows you to make a different move. If Pause mode is on, Backward only backs up your local view.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Forward}}#\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Steps forward through a series of remembered moves (undoing the effect of }{\f1\uldb Backward}{\v\f1\uldb Backward}{\f1 ) or through a game file. The }{\b\f1 >}{\f1 \r
button is equivalent}{\f1\cf2 , as is turning the mouse wheel away from you}{\f1 .\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you are examining a game on the ICS, the behavior of Forward depends on whether WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is in }{\f1\uldb Pause}{\v\f1 Pause}{\f1 \r
- mode. If Pause mode is off, Forward issues the ICS command}{\b\f1 forward}{\f1 , which moves everyone's view of t\r
-he game forward along the current line. If Pause mode is on, Forward only moves your local view forward, and it will not go past the position the game was in when you paused.\r
+ mode. If Pause mode is off, Forward issues the ICS command}{\b\f1 forward}{\f1 \r
+, which moves everyone's view of the game forward along the current line. If Pause mode is on, Forward only moves your local view forward, and it will not go past the position the game was in when you paused.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Back to Start}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 BacktoStart}}}{\f1 Back to Start\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Jumps backward to the first remembered position in the game. The }{\b\f1 << }{\f1 button is equivalent.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-In most modes, Back to Start only lets you look back at old positions; it does not retract moves. This is the case if you are playing against a chess engine, playing or observing a game on the ICS, or\r
- loading a game. If you select Back to Start in any of these situations, you will not be allowed to make a different move. Use }{\f1\uldb Retract Move}{\v\f1 RetractMove}{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb Edit Game}{\v\f1 EditGame}{\f1 \r
+In most modes, Back to Start only lets you look back at old positions; it does not retract moves. This is the case if you are playing against a chess engine, playing or observing a \r
+game on the ICS, or loading a game. If you select Back to Start in any of these situations, you will not be allowed to make a different move. Use }{\f1\uldb Retract Move}{\v\f1 RetractMove}{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb Edit Game}{\v\f1 EditGame}{\f1 \r
if you want to change past moves; or use }{\f1\uldb New Game}{\v\f1 NewGame}{\f1 to start a new game.\r
\par If you are examining a game on the ICS, the behavior of Back to Start depends on whether WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is in }{\f1\uldb Pause}{\v\f1 Pause}{\f1 mode. If Pause mode is off, Backward issues the ICS command }{\b\f1 backward 999999}{\f1 \r
, which backs up everyone's view of the game to the start and allows you to make different moves. If Pause mode is on, Back to Start only backs up your local view.\r
Forward to End}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ForwardtoEnd}}}{\f1 Forward to End\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Jumps forward to the last position in the game. The }{\b\f1 >>}{\f1 button is equivalent.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you are examining a game on the ICS, the behavior of Forward to End depends on whether WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is in }{\f1\uldb Pause}{\v\f1 Pause}{\f1 \r
- mode. If Pause mode is off, Forward to End issues the ICS command }{\b\f1 forward 999999}{\f1 , which moves everyone's view of the game forward to the end of the current line. If Pause mode i\r
-s on, Forward to End only moves your local view forward, and it will not go past the position the game was in when you paused.\r
+ mode. If Pause mode is off, Forward to End issues the ICS command }{\b\f1 forward 999999}{\f1 , which moves everyone's view of the game forward to the end of the current line. If Pause mode is on, Forward\r
+ to End only moves your local view forward, and it will not go past the position the game was in when you paused.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Revert}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Revert}}}{\f1 Revert\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you are examining a game on the ICS, issues the ICS command }{\b\f1 revert}{\f1 .\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you are examining a game on the ICS, issues the ICS command }{\b\f1 revert}{\f1 . }{\f1\cf2 In local mode, it reverts to the previous line that was loade\r
+d in WinBoard, before you started entering a variation on it in }{\f1\uldb\cf2 Edit Game}{\v\f1\cf2 EditGame}{\f1\cf2 or }{\f1\uldb\cf2 Analyze}{\v\f1\cf2 EditGame}{\f1\cf2 mode.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Annotate}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 Annotate}}}{\f1\cf5 Annotate\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Similar to the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Revert}{\f1\cf5 command, but in local mode it will add the variation you are abandoning as a comment to the move where it first dev\r
+iated, in PGN variation format (i.e. in parentheses).\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Truncate Game}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 TruncateGame}}}{\f1 Truncate Game\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Discards all remembered moves of the game beyond the current position. Puts WinBoard into }{\f1\uldb Edit Game}{\v\f1 EditGame}{\f1 mode if it was not there already.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Move Now}}\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 MoveNow}}}{\f1 Move Now\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Forces the chess engine to move immediately. May not work with all chess engines.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- Retract Move}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 RetractMove}}}{\f1 Retract Move\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Retrac\r
+t Move}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 RetractMove}}}{\f1 Retract Move\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Retracts your last move.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 In chess engine mode, you can do this only after the chess engine has replied to your move. If the chess engine is still thinking, use }{\f1\uldb Move Now}{\v\f1 MoveNow}{\r
\f1 first.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Flip View}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 FlipView}}}{\f1 }{\f1\ul Flip View}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Inverts your view of the chessboard.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If you are playing a game on the ICS, the board is always oriented at the start of the game so that your pawns move from the bottom of the window towards the top. Otherwise, the starting position is determined by the }{\f1\uldb flipView}{\v\f1 flipVie\r
-wOption}{\f1 command line option.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you are playing a game on the ICS, the board is always orient\r
+ed at the start of the game so that your pawns move from the bottom of the window towards the top. Otherwise, the starting position is determined by the }{\f1\uldb flipView}{\v\f1 flipViewOption}{\f1 command line option.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\ul\cf11 Swap Clocks}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\ul\cf11 SwapClocks}}}{\f1\cf11 }{\f1\ul\cf11 Swap Clocks}{\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Interchanges the position of the w\r
-hite and black clocks on the screen. Intended for manually-operated computer-computer games, where the monitor is standing to the side of the playing board, to make sure that the operator sees the time of his own machine on his side of the table. Note tha\r
-t it is possible to adjust the clocks in steps of one minute, by left- (decrement) or right-clicking (increment) it with the mouse in \ldblquote Edit Game\rdblquote mode. (Clicking the clocks in other modes is interpreted as claiming the flag.)\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Interchanges the position of the white and b\r
+lack clocks on the screen. Intended for manually-operated computer-computer games, where the monitor is standing to the side of the playing board, to make sure that the operator sees the time of his own machine on his side of the table. Note that it is po\r
+ssible to adjust the clocks in steps of one minute, by left- (decrement) or right-clicking (increment) it with the mouse in \ldblquote Edit Game\rdblquote mode. (Clicking the clocks in other modes is interpreted as claiming the flag.)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
\f1\cf2 }{\f1\ul\cf2 Mute all Sounds}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 }{\f1\ul\cf2 MuteAllSounds}}}{\f1\cf2 }{\f1\ul\cf2 Mute all Sounds}{\f1\cf2 \r
\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is on, WinBoard sets its chessboard to be a }{\i\f1 topmost}{\f1 window, meaning that it always appears on top of all ordinary windows on the screen.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Always Queen}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AlwaysQueen}}}{\f1 Always Queen\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Always Queen is off, WinBoard brings up a dialog box whe\r
-never you move a pawn to the last rank, asking what piece you want to promote it to. If the option is on, your pawns are always promoted to queens. Your opponent can still underpromote, however.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- Animate Dragging}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AnimateDragging}}}{\f1 Animate Dragging\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If A\r
-nimate Dragging is on while you are dragging a piece with the mouse, an image of the piece follows the mouse cursor. If Animate Dragging is off, there is no visual feedback while you are\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+If Always Queen is off, WinBoard brings up a dialog box whenever you move a pawn to the last rank, asking what piece you want to promote it to. If the option is on, your pawns are always promoted to queens. Your opponent can still underpromote, however.\r
+\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Anim\r
+ate Dragging}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AnimateDragging}}}{\f1 Animate Dragging\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+If Animate Dragging is on while you are dragging a piece with the mouse, an image of the piece follows the mouse cursor. If Animate Dragging is off, there is no visual feedback while you are\r
\par dragging a piece, but if Animate Moving is on, the move will be animated when it is complete.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Animate Moving}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AnimateMoving}}}{\f1 Animate Moving\r
already animated by Animate Dragging). If Animate Moving is off, a moved piece instantly disappears from its old square and reappears on its new square when the move is complete.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Auto Flag}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AutoflagCmd}}}{\f1 Auto Flag\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is on and one player ru\r
-ns out of time before the other, WinBoard will automatically call his flag, claiming a win on time. In ICS mode, Auto Flag will only call your opponent's flag, not yours, and the ICS may award you a draw instead of a win if you have insufficient mating ma\r
-terial. On most chess servers, you can now do}{\b\f1 set autoflag 1 }{\f1 instead and have the server call the flag. In local chess engine mode, WinBoard may call either player's flag and will not take material into account.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is on and one player runs out of time before the \r
+other, WinBoard will automatically call his flag, claiming a win on time. In ICS mode, Auto Flag will only call your opponent's flag, not yours, and the ICS may award you a draw instead of a win if you have insufficient mating material. On most chess serv\r
+ers, you can now do}{\b\f1 set autoflag 1 }{\f1 instead and have the server call the flag. In local chess engine mode, WinBoard may call either player's flag and will not take material into account.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\b\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ Auto Flip View}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ AutoFlipView}}}{\b Auto Flip View\r
\par }{If this option is on when you}{\f1 start a game, the board will be automatically oriented so that your pawns move from the bottom of the window towards the top.}{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Highlight Dragging}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 HighlightDragging}}}{\f1 Highlight Dragging\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If Highlight Dragging is on while you are dragging a piece with the mouse, the starting square and the square that the mouse cursor is over are highlighted. This option works even if Animate Dragging is off.\r
+If Highlight Dragging is on while you are dragging a piece with the mouse, the starting square and the square that the mouse cursor is over are highlighted. This option works even if Animate Dragging is off. }{\f1\cf5 \r
+Also controls if the option /showTargetSquares, which can cause marking of al squares a piece you \lquote pick up\rquote can legally move to, can be active.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Extended PGN Info}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 ExtendedPGNInfo}}}{\f1\cf6 Extended PGN Info\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-The PGN will contain the engine search depth, score and time for each move where the depth is non-zero, as a comment behind the move if this option is on. Works only when \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote is enabled.\r
- The recorded time is the time reported by the engine.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The PGN will contain the engine search depth, score and time for eac\r
+h move where the depth is non-zero, as a comment behind the move if this option is on. Works only when \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote is enabled. The recorded time is the time reported by the engine.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Extra Info In Move History}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 ExtraInfoInMoveHistory}}}{\f1\cf6 Extra Info In Move History\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Same as above, but in move-history window. \r
Highlight Last Move}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 HighlightLastMove}}}{\f1 Highlight Last Move\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Highlight Last Move is on, after a move is made, the starting and ending squares remain highlighted. In addition, after you use }{\f1\uldb Backward}{\v\f1 Backward}{\f1 \r
or }{\f1\uldb Back to Start}{\v\f1 BackToStart}{\f1 , the starting and ending squares of the last move to be }{\i\f1 unmade}{\f1 are highlighted.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Perio\r
-dic Updates}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 PeriodicUpdatesCmd}}}{\f1 Periodic Updates\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
+ Periodic Updates}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 PeriodicUpdatesCmd}}}{\f1 Periodic Updates\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
If Periodic Updates is on, the Analysis window is updated every two seconds. If not, it is updated only when the best move found changes. The Analysis window currently works only with Crafty, and Periodic Updates may not work with all versions of Crafty.\r
\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is off, the chess engine will think only when it is on move. If the option is on, the engine will also think while waiting for you to make your move.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Popup Exit Message}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 PopupExitMessageCmd}}}{\f1 Popup Exit Message\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If this option is on, when WinBoard wants to display a message just before exiting, it brings up a modal dialog box and waits for you to click OK before exiting. If the option is off, WinBoard prints exits immediately without showing the message. If }{\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If t\r
+his option is on, when WinBoard wants to display a message just before exiting, it brings up a modal dialog box and waits for you to click OK before exiting. If the option is off, WinBoard prints exits immediately without showing the message. If }{\r
\f1\uldb debugMode}{\v\f1 debugMode}{\f1 is on, however, the message will appear in the debug log.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Popup Move Errors}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 PopupMoveErrorsCmd}}}{\f1 Popup Move Errors\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is off, when you make an error in moving (such as attempting an illegal move or moving the wrong color piece\r
-), the error message is displayed in the message area. If the option is on, move errors are displayed in small popup windows like other errors. You can dismiss an error popup either by clicking its OK button or by clicking anywhere on the board, including\r
- downclicking to start a move.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is off, when you make an error in moving (such as attempting an illegal move or moving the wrong color piece), the error message is displayed in the mess\r
+age area. If the option is on, move errors are displayed in small popup windows like other errors. You can dismiss an error popup either by clicking its OK button or by clicking anywhere on the board, including downclicking to start a move.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Show Button Bar}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ShowButtonBarCmd}}}{\f1 Show Button Bar\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Show Button Bar is on, WinBoard displays on-screen }{\f1\uldb buttons}{\v\f1 BUTTONS}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Show Thinking}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ShowThinkingCmd}}}{\f1 Show Thinking\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is set, WinBoard displays the chess engine\rquote \r
-s current search depth and its notion of the score and best line of play from the current position as it is thinking. The score indicates how many pawns ahead (or if negative, behind) the engine thinks it is. In matches between two machines\r
-, the score is prefixed by W or B to indicate whether it is showing White's thinking or Black's.\r
+s current search depth and its notion of the score and best line of play from the current position as it is thinking. The score in\r
+dicates how many pawns ahead (or if negative, behind) the engine thinks it is. In matches between two machines, the score is prefixed by W or B to indicate whether it is showing White's thinking or Black's.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Test Legality}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 TestLegalityCmd}}}{\f1 Test Legality\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Test Legality is on, WinBoard tests whether the moves you enter with the mouse or read from game files ar\r
-e legal, and displays an error if they are not. Turn this option off if you are playing a chess variant that WinBoard does not understand. (Bughouse, suicide, and wild variants where the king may castle after starting on the }{\b\f1 d}{\f1 \r
- file are generally supported with Test Legality on. }{\f1\cf11 \r
-The same holds for variants with non-FIDE pieces, like shatranj, xangqi, shogi, gothic, capablanca, courier, knightmate: WinBoard knows how all pieces occurring in those variants move. Falcon, cylinder and berolina are only partly su\r
-pported, though, and the latter two should definitely be played with legality testing off, and falcon uses a wildcard piece for the Falcons, so it considers any move of them legal, but might miss checkmates that involve a Falcon. So you should not play it\r
- with claim verification switched on.}{\f1 )\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Test Legality is on, WinBoard\r
+ tests whether the moves you enter with the mouse or read from game files are legal, and displays an error if they are not. Turn this option off if you are playing a chess variant that WinBoard does not understand. (Bughouse, suicide, and wild variants wh\r
+ere the king may castle after starting on the }{\b\f1 d}{\f1 file are generally supported with Test Legality on. }{\f1\cf11 \r
+The same holds for variants with non-FIDE pieces, like shatranj, xangqi, shogi, gothic, capablanca, courier, knightmate: WinBoard knows how all pieces occurr\r
+ing in those variants move. Falcon, cylinder and berolina are only partly supported, though, and the latter two should definitely be played with legality testing off, and falcon uses a wildcard piece for the Falcons, so it considers any move of them legal\r
+, but might miss checkmates that involve a Falcon. So you should not play it with claim verification switched on.}{\f1 )\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Hide Thinking From Human}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 HideThinkingFromHuman}}}{\f1\cf6 Hide Thinking From Human\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 An alternative to suppressing the Thinking Output in the display above the board by switching \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote off, but doing it in a way th\r
-at still allows the extended PGN info to be recorded.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 An alternative to suppressing the Thinking Output in the display above the board by switching \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote off,\r
+ but doing it in a way that still allows the extended PGN info to be recorded.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Highlight Move With Arrow}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 HighlightMoveWithArrow}}}{\f1\cf6 Highlight Move With Arrow\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 A big, fat arrow is drawn between the start and target field of the last move, so you cannot possibly miss it. \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Display Logos}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 DisplayLogos}}}{\f1\cf5 Display Logos\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Controls the display of engine, user or ICS logos above the board, next to the clocks, by switching on or off the option /autoLogo.. \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\ul\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ Board Options}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ BoardOptions}}}{\f1\ul Board\r
\par }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Board Size}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid \r
{\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 BoardSizeCmd}}}{\f1 Board Size\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Determines how large the board will be and what fonts and piece bitmaps will be used. On a Titanic board the piece bitmaps are 129x129 pixels, on Colossal 116x116, Giant 108x108\r
-, Huge 95x95, Big 87x87, Large 80x80, Bulky 72x72, Medium 64x64, Moderate 58x58, Average 54x54, Middling 49x49, Mediocre 45x45, Small 40x40, Slim 37x37, Petite 33x33, Dinky 29x29, Teeny 25x25, and Tiny 21x21. The smaller boards have no system menu, but yo\r
-u can minimize or close them from the File menu.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Determines how large the board will be and what fonts and piece bitmaps will be used. On a Titanic board the piece bitm\r
+aps are 129x129 pixels, on Colossal 116x116, Giant 108x108, Huge 95x95, Big 87x87, Large 80x80, Bulky 72x72, Medium 64x64, Moderate 58x58, Average 54x54, Middling 49x49, Mediocre 45x45, Small 40x40, Slim 37x37, Petite 33x33, Dinky 29x29, Teeny 25x25, and \r
+Tiny 21x21. The smaller boards have no system menu, but you can minimize or close them from the File menu.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 You can also change the board size by dragging the window edges or corners with the mouse. The board will snap to the largest size that fits into the area you outline.\r
\r
-\par }{\cf11 Note that only sizes Bulky, Middling and\r
- to a lesser extent Petite have built-in bitmaps for the non-FIDE- pieces. Archbishop, Chancellor and the wildcard Lance exist in all sizes from Petite to Bulky, though. In size Moderate, variant shogi uses the traditional Japanese piece representation.}{\r
-\f1\cf11 \r
+\par }{\cf11 Note that only sizes Bulky, Middling and to a lesser extent Petite have built-in bitmaps for the non-FIDE- pieces. Archbishop, Chancellor and the wildcard Lance exist in all sizes from Petite to Bulky, though. In size Moderate, variant sh\r
+ogi uses the traditional Japanese piece representation.}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Board Colors}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 BoardColors}}}{\f1 Board Colors\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you change the colors WinBoard is using to draw the board and pieces.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 All White}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 AllWhite}}}{\f1\cf11 All White\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Uses the representation of the white pieces (a filled-in black outline) also for the black pieces (whe\r
-re you can fill them with another color to distinguish them). If you do not choose a very dark color for the black pieces, they look very ugly without outline, and using this option can fix that.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Uses the representation of the white pieces (a filled-in black outline) also for the black piece\r
+s (where you can fill them with another color to distinguish them). If you do not choose a very dark color for the black pieces, they look very ugly without outline, and using this option can fix that.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 Flip Black}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 FlipBlack}}}{\f1\cf11 Flip Black\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Displays the black pieces upside down (or the white pieces in \ldblquote Flip View\rdblquote \r
Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 Detect Mates}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 DetectMates}}}{\f1\cf11 Detect Mates\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
-Let WinBoard detect checkmate and stalemate, even before the engine gets the chance to claim it. Useful with buggy engines, that exit without a claim, or just hang. Needs \ldblquote Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Let WinBoard detect checkmate and stalemate, even b\r
+efore the engine gets the chance to claim it. Useful with buggy engines, that exit without a claim, or just hang. Needs \ldblquote Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 Draw If Insufficient Material}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 DrawIfInsufficientMaterial}}}{\f1\cf11 Draw If Insufficient Material\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 If this option is on, WinBoard will recognize KBKB positions with equally colored Bishops\r
-, KBK, KNK, and KK positions as draws, even before the engine can claim them. Needs \ldblquote Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 If this option is on, WinBoard will recognize KBKB positions\r
+ with equally colored Bishops, KBK, KNK, and KK positions as draws, even before the engine can claim them. Needs \ldblquote Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 Adjudicate Trivial Draws}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 AdjudicateTrivialDraws}}}{\f1\cf11 Adjudicate Trivial Draws\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 If this option is on, KBKB (with B on unlike colo\r
-r), KBKN, KNKN, KNNK, KRKR and KQKQ positions will be adjudicated draw after 6 ply. For KQKQ this is not really sound, and in the future it might be taken out of this option. But as long as tablebase adjudications are not implemented, it seems best to gro\r
-up this end-game with the trivial draws. Needs \ldblquote Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 If this option is on, KBKB (with B on unlike color), KBKN, KNKN, KNNK, K\r
+RKR and KQKQ positions will be adjudicated draw after 6 ply. For KQKQ this is not really sound, and in the future it might be taken out of this option. But as long as tablebase adjudications are not implemented, it seems best to group this end-game with t\r
+he trivial draws. Needs \ldblquote Test Legality\rdblquote to be on in order to work.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 N-Move Rule}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 N-MoveRule}}}{\f1\cf11 N-Move Rule\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Here you can set the number of reversible moves (non-pawn, non-capture) after which WinBoard should adjudicate a game as draw\r
-. Engine draw claims are always considered valid after 50 moves (in the context of \ldblquote Verify Claims\rdblquote \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
+Here you can set the number of reversible moves (non-pawn, non-capture) after which WinBoard should adjudicate a game as draw. Engine draw claims are always considered valid after 50 moves (in the context of \ldblquote Verify Claims\rdblquote \r
), but you can set a different value here to either give the engine more leeway if it wants to play on, or test its claiming capabilities, or set it to a smaller value if you are impatient.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 N-Fold Repetition Rule}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 N-FoldRepetitionRule}}}{\f1\cf11 N-Fold Repetition Rule\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Here you can set the number of repetitions of the same position that should occur in order for WinBoard to adjudicate the game as draw. Engine draw cl\r
-aims are always considered valid after 3 repetitions (in the context of \ldblquote Verify Claims\rdblquote \r
-) , but you can set a different value here to either give the engine more leeway if it wants to play on, or test its claiming capabilities, or set it to 2 if you are impatient. (Do not set it to 1!)\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
+Here you can set the number of repetitions of the same position that should occur in order for WinBoard to adjudicate the game as draw. Engine draw claims are always considered valid after 3 repetitions (in the context of \ldblquote Verify Claims\r
+\rdblquote ) , but you can set a different value here to either give the engine more leeway if it wants to play on, or test its claiming capabilities, or set it to 2 if you are impatient. (Do not set it to 1!)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s5\li115\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel4\adjustright \f5\fs20\ul\cgrid {\b \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\ul\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ }{\r
-\f1\ul\cf6 Global Settings}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ }{\f1\ul\cf6 Global Settings}}}{\f1\ul\cf2 Global}{\f1\ul\cf6 Settings (}{\b0\f1\ul\cf6 formerly}{\r
-\f1\ul\cf6 Engine Settings)\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\ul\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ }{\r
+\f1\ul\cf6 Global Settings}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ }{\f1\ul\cf6 Global Settings}}}{\f1\ul\cf5 Common Engine Settings\r
\par }{\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 Polyglot Directory}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 PolyglotDirectory}}}{\f1\cf6 Polyglot Directory\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 If WinBoard knows where to find \r
-Polyglot, you can install UCI engines as if they were WinBoard engines, and WinBoard will automatically invoke Polyglot as an adapter to run them.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
+If WinBoard knows where to find Polyglot, you can install UCI engines as if they were WinBoard engines, and WinBoard will automatically invoke Polyglot as an adapter to run them.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 Hash Size}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 HashSize}}}{\f1\cf6 Hash Size, }{\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 EGTB Path}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 \r
\par }{\cs58\f1\ul\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\cf2\super K}{\cf2 }{\f1\ul\cf2 Engine Settings}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\cf2\super #}{\cf2 }{\f1\ul\cf2 Engine Settings}}}{\f1\ul\cf2 Engine #1 Settings }{\f1\cf2 , }{\f1\ul\cf2 Engine #2 Settings\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 \r
-This pops up a dialog that allows the user to set engine-defined options of the mentioned engine (if it is in use). What is in the dialog is entirely determined by the engine. Generally, any changes you make to the contro\r
-ls are only sent to the engine after you press \ldblquote OK\rdblquote \r
+This pops up a dialog that allows the user to set engine-defined options of the mentioned engine (if it is in use). What is in the dialog is entirely determined by the engine. Generally, any c\r
+hanges you make to the controls are only sent to the engine after you press \ldblquote OK\rdblquote \r
. An exception are engine-defined push buttons; the corresponding signal is sent to the engine immediately when you push those. To see the options of UCI engines, you need a Polyglot adapter that supports the recent WB-protocol extensions.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s5\li115\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel4\adjustright \f5\fs20\ul\cgrid {\b \r
\par \r
\cs58\super #}{ ICSOptions}}}{\b ICS\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Auto Comment}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AutoCommentCmd}}}{\f1 Auto Comment\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If Auto Comment is on, any remarks made on ICS while you are observing or playing a game are recorded as a comment on the current move. This includes remarks made with the ICS commands }{\b\f1 say, tell, whisper, }{\f1 and }{\b\f1 kibitz}{\f1 \r
-. Limitation: remarks that you type yourself are not \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Auto Comment is on, any remarks made on ICS while you are observing or playing a game are recorded as a comment on the current move. This includes remarks made with \r
+the ICS commands }{\b\f1 say, tell, whisper, }{\f1 and }{\b\f1 kibitz}{\f1 . Limitation: remarks that you type yourself are not \r
\par recognized; WinBoard scans only the output from ICS, not the input you type to it.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Auto Observe}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AutobsCmd}}}{\f1 Auto Observe\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Auto Observe is on and you add a player to your }{\b\f1 gnotify}{\f1 list on ICS, WinBoard will automatically observe all of th\r
-at player's games, unless you are doing something else (such as observing or playing a game of your own) when one starts. On most chess servers, you can now do }{\b\f1 follow }{\b\i\f1 player}{\f1 \r
- instead, and the server will automatically observe all of }{\b\i\f1 player\rquote s}{\f1 games.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Get M\r
-ove List}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 GetMoveListCmd}}}{\f1 Get Move List\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Auto Observe is on and you add a player to your }{\b\f1 gnotify}{\f1 \r
+ list on ICS, WinBoard will automatically observe all of that player's games, unless you are doing something else (such as observing or playing a game of your own) when one starts. On most chess servers, you can now do }{\b\f1 follow }{\b\i\f1 player}{\r
+\f1 instead, and the server will automatically observe all of }{\b\i\f1 player\rquote s}{\f1 games.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Auto Kibitz}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 AutoKibitzCmd}}}{\f1\cf5 Auto Kibitz\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf5 \r
+Auto Kibitz controls how output of computers playing on an ICS is handled. In many tournaments, computers are obliged to kibitz their thinking output to the ICS, and this option will do th\r
+at automatically, without the engine having to know it. In addition, such kibitzed output by your opponent will be kept out of the console window, and will be diverted to the engine-output window.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
+ Get Move List}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 GetMoveListCmd}}}{\f1 Get Move List\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Get Move List is on, whenever WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 \r
receives the first board of a new ICS game (or a different ICS game from the one it is currently displaying), it retrieves the list of past moves from the server. You can then review the moves with the Forward and Backward commands or save them with Save \r
Game. You might want to turn off this option if you are observing several blitz games at once, to keep from wasting time and network bandwidth fetching the move lists over and over. If you turn this option on while a game is in progress, WinBoard}{\i\f1 \r
Local Line Editing}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LocalLineEditing}}}{\f1 Local Line Editing\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Local Line Editing is }{\b\f1 on}{\f1 \r
, your machine handles echoing, backspacing, etc., for the characters that you type into the ICS Interaction window. Output is forwarded to the ICS only when you hit Enter.The Enter key produces a newline character, also known as Ctrl+J, \\\r
-n, LF, linefeed, or decimal ASCII code 10. In this mode you can force a control character into the edit buffer by preceding it with Ctrl+Q (\ldblquote quote\rdblquote ); h\r
-owever, the edit buffer will not accept certain control characters even when they are quoted in this way. You can force a control character to be sent immediately to ICS, bypassing the edit buffer, by preceding it with Ctrl+S (\ldblquote send\rdblquote ).\r
-\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard keeps a his\r
-tory of lines you recently typed in Local Line Editing mode. You can bring back old lines by pressing the cursor up key in the text entry box. Press the cursor down key to go back down to newer lines.\r
+n, LF, linefeed, or decimal ASCII code 10. In this mode you can force a control character into the edit buffer by preceding it with Ctrl+Q (\ldblquote quote\rdblquote ); however, the edit buffer will not accept \r
+certain control characters even when they are quoted in this way. You can force a control character to be sent immediately to ICS, bypassing the edit buffer, by preceding it with Ctrl+S (\ldblquote send\rdblquote ).\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard keeps a history of lines you recently typed in Loca\r
+l Line Editing mode. You can bring back old lines by pressing the cursor up key in the text entry box. Press the cursor down key to go back down to newer lines.\r
\par If Local Line Editing is }{\b\f1 off}{\f1 , all characters are sent to ICS as you type them. The Enter key produces a carriage return character, also known as Ctrl+M, \\\r
-r, CR, or decimal ASCII code 13. Use Ctrl+Backspace if you need the ASCII DEL character. You can enter any character code by holding down the Alt key and typ\r
-ing its decimal value (always beginning with 0) on the numeric keypad; this is a little-known standard feature of Windows.\r
+r, CR, or decimal ASCII code 13. Use Ctrl+Backspace if you need the ASCII DEL character. You can enter any character code by holding down the Alt key and typing its decimal value (always beginning \r
+with 0) on the numeric keypad; this is a little-known standard feature of Windows.\r
\par In both modes, if WinBoard}{\i\f1 \rquote s }{\f1 internal telnet protocol implementation is active, it translates all \\n characters to the standard telnet end-of-line sequence \\r\\n just before sending them out to ICS; see }{\f1\uldb telnetProgram}{\r
\v\f1 telnetProgram}{\f1 .\r
\par It is generally not a good idea to turn off this option while connected to ICS. If you are tempted to do so because everything you type is being echoed an extra time, see the paragraph about extra echoes under }{\f1\uldb LIMITATIONS}{\v\f1 LIMITATIONS}{\r
\f1 below.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Quiet Play\r
}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 QuietPlayCmd}}}{\f1 Quiet Play\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Quiet Play is on, WinBoard will automatically issue an ICS }{\b\f1 set shout 0}{\f1 command whenever you start a game and a }{\b\f1 set shout 1}{\f1 command\r
- whenever you finish one. Thus you will not be distracted by shouts from other ICS users while playing.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Quiet Play is on, WinBoard will automatically issue an ICS }{\b\f1 set shout 0}{\f1 command whenever you start a game and a }{\b\f1 set shout 1}{\f1 \r
+ command whenever you finish one. Thus you will not be distracted by shouts from other ICS users while playing.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Seek Graph}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 SeekGraphCmd}}}{\f1\cf5 Seek Graph, }{\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
+\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\f1\cf5 Auto Refresh}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 \r
+ AutoRefreshCmd}}}{\f1\cf5 Auto Refresh\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf5 \r
+If Seek Graph is on, you can summon up a graphical representation of players seeking a game on the ICS in stead of the chess board, by left-clicking the latter when you are not using it. Th\r
+e requested games are separated out by rating and time control. Rated, unrated and wild games are displayed in different colors, computers as squares, humans as dots. Hovering the mouse over a dot in the graph will display the details of the corresponding\r
+ seek ad in the message field above the board. Left-clicking the dot will take up the challenge. Right-clicking dots will \lquote push them to the back\rquote \r
+, so you can see seek ads that might have been hidden behind it. Right-clicking off dots will refresh the graph, left-clicking off dots will take the graph down ad display the chess board again.\r
+\par In combination with Auto Refresh, the seek graph will be updated automatically. This is only implemented for the FICS and ICC servers. To make switching on of this option ef\r
+fective might require you to log off and on again to the ICS, as it requires changing ICS settings that are locked during a session.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Background Observe}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 BackgndobsCmd}}}{\f1\cf5 Background Observe, }{\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \r
+\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\f1\cf5 Dual Board}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\r
+\f1\cf5 DualBoardCmd}}}{\f1\cf5 Dual Board\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf5 If Background Observe is on, boards sent to you by the ICS when you are playing, but w\r
+hich are not of your game, (but of games you are observing), will not be displayed automatically. In stead WinBoard will remember the last board it received that way, and display it when you press the right mouse button in stead of the board of your own g\r
+ame. This feature is meant to enable bughouse players a peek at their partner\rquote s game, without the need to log on to the ICS a second time.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf5 If in addition Dual Board is also on, such background games are even displayed on a second board, side by side with yo\r
+ur own game, so that it is always in view. This feature is experimental, and largely undeveloped; there is no animation of moves on this second board, while the effets are undefined if the board format of the observed game is not the same as that of your \r
+own game.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Premove}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 PremoveCmd}}}{\f1 Premove\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {Premove allows you to play a move on the board before you have received your opponent\rquote s move. This move is highlighted on the board using the }{\uldb Premove Highlight\r
}{\v\uldb premoveHighlightColor}{ color, and is sent to the ICS as soon as your opponent\rquote s move is received. To cancel a premove, either click twice on the piece that was premoved or premove an illegal move.\r
\par This group of controls allows you to set the following options: }{\uldb premove}{\v premove}{, }{\uldb premoveWhite}{\v premoveWhite}{, }{\uldb premoveWhiteText}{\v premoveWhiteText}{, }{\uldb premoveBlack}{\v premoveBlack}{, }{\uldb premoveBlackText}{\v \r
premoveBlackText}{.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\cf5\super K}{\cf5 \r
+ One-Click Move}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\cf5\super #}{\cf5 OneClickMoveCmd}}}{\cf5 One-Click Move\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf5 When One-Click Move is set, }{\v\cf5 icsAlarmTime}{\cf5 \r
+a click on an own piece will immediately move that piece if it only has a single legal move, without waiting for you to click a to-squa\r
+re. Similarly, clicking an opponent piece or empty square will immediately perform the move to that square, if only a single legal move to it existed. This is the mouse equivalent of having to type only e4 when you mean e2-e4. Finally, double clicking an \r
+own piece (or clicking an already selected piece) will make it execute its only capture, which can save you some time if the target square was far away. Legality testing has to be switched on for this to work.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ ICS Alarm}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ ICSAlarm}}}{ICS Alarm\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {When }{\b icsAlarm}{ is set to True, the }{\uldb alarm sound}{\v soundIcsAlarm}{ is played when your clock counts down to }{\uldb icsAlarmTime}{\v icsAlarmTime}{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
ICS Interaction Colors}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ICSInteractionColors}}}{\f1 ICS Interaction Colors\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Lets you change the colors and type styles that WinBoard uses to distinguish between different types of messages in the ICS Interaction window. The types distinguished are: shout\r
-, sshout, channel 1 tell, other channel tell, kibitz (or whisper), personal tell (or new message notification), challenge, request (including abort, adjourn, draw, pause, and takeback), seek, and normal (all other messages).\r
+Lets you change the colors and type styles that WinBoard uses to distinguish between different types of messages in the ICS Interaction window. The types distinguished are: shout, sshout, channel 1 tell, other channel tell, kibitz (or whisp\r
+er), personal tell (or new message notification), challenge, request (including abort, adjourn, draw, pause, and takeback), seek, and normal (all other messages).\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 Startup Chat Boxes}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 StartupChatBoxes}}}{\f1\cf5 Startup Chat Boxes\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 You can put a semicolon-separated list of ICS handles or channel number\r
+s here, WinBoard will open a chat window for each handle at startup in ICS mode. (See the Open Chat Window command.)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Fonts}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Fonts}}}{\f1 }{\f1\ul Fonts}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Lets you change the fonts WinBoard is using. The clock font, message font and coordinates font are specific to each board size. The tags font, comments font and ICS Interaction font are not dependent on the current size of the board. The \ldblquote \r
-Revert to Defaults\rdblquote button will reset the clock font, message font and coordinates font for the current board size, and will set the tags font, message font and Ics Interaction font for all board sizes.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you change the fonts WinBoard is using. The clock font, message font and coordinates font are specific to each board size. \r
+The tags font, comments font and ICS Interaction font are not dependent on the current size of the board. The \ldblquote Revert to Defaults\rdblquote \r
+ button will reset the clock font, message font and coordinates font for the current board size, and will set the tags font, message font and Ics Interaction font for all board sizes.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Sounds}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Sounds}}}{\f1 }{\f1\ul Sounds}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you change the sounds that WinBoard plays for various events.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Move Sound}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \r
-\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 MoveSound}}}{\f1 \r
-If the Move sound is on, WinBoard alerts you by playing a sound after each of your opponent's moves (or after every move if you are observing a game on the Internet Chess Server). The sound is not play\r
-ed after moves you make or moves read from a saved game file. If you turn on the Move sound when using WinBoard with the Internet Chess Server, you will probably want to give the }{\b\f1 set bell 0}{\f1 \r
- command to the ICS. Otherwise the ICS will send a bell character a\r
-fter every move (not just yours), causing WinBoard to play the ICS Bell sound too. Alternatively, you could turn off the ICS Bell sound in WinBoard, but that might cause you to miss ICS alerts for other interesting events.\r
+\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 MoveSound}}}{\f1 If the Move sound is on, WinBoard alerts you by playing a sound after each of your opponent's moves (or after every mo\r
+ve if you are observing a game on the Internet Chess Server). The sound is not played after moves you make or moves read from a saved game file. If you turn on the Move sound when using WinBoard with the Internet Chess Server, you will probably want to gi\r
+ve the }{\b\f1 set bell 0}{\f1 \r
+ command to the ICS. Otherwise the ICS will send a bell character after every move (not just yours), causing WinBoard to play the ICS Bell sound too. Alternatively, you could turn off the ICS Bell sound in WinBoard, but that might cause you\r
+ to miss ICS alerts for other interesting events.\r
\par The other sound events correspond directly to the types of messages that the }{\f1\uldb ICS Interaction Colors}{\v\f1 ICSInteractionColors}{\f1 option knows how to colorize.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Sounds}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Sounds}}}{\f1 }{\f1\ul Game List}{\f1 \r
saveGameFile}{\v\f1 saveGameFile}{\f1 options).\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Time Control}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 TimeControlCmd}}}{\f1 }{\f1\ul Time Control}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you change the time control to be used in games against a chess engine. Two types of timing are available.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Lets you change the time control to be used in games against a chess engine. }{\f1\cf5 Three}{\f1 types of timing are available.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 With conventional chess clocks, each player begins with his clock set to the }{\f1\uldb timeControl}{\v\f1 timeControl}{\f1 period. When both players have made }{\r
\f1\uldb movesPerSession}{\v\f1 movesPerSession}{\f1 moves, a new time control period begins. The time in the new period is added to whatever time the players have left on their clocks.\r
-\par With incremental clocks, each player is given an initial time allotment, and a }{\f1\uldb timeIncrement}{\v\f1 timeIncrement}{\f1 \r
- is added to his clock after every move. The increment may be zero, in which case the entire game must be finished within the initial time allotment.\r
+\par With incremental clocks, each player is given an initial time allotment, and a }{\f1\uldb timeIncrement}{\v\f1 timeIncrement}{\f1 is added to his clock after every move. The increment may be zero, \r
+in which case the entire game must be finished within the initial time allotment.\r
+\par }{\f1\cf5 With fixed time per move, each player gets a certain (maximum) time to make one move, and any left-over time is not carried to subsequent moves.\r
+\par Note that in local modes it is always possible to adjust the clocks during a game by Shift + click on it, where a right-click adds a minute, and a left-click subtracts one.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Save Settings Now}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 SaveSettings}}}{\f1 }{\f1\ul Save Settings Now}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Save the current option settings to a file, along with the current window sizes and positions, to be automatically reloaded next time WinBoard is run. See }{\f1\uldb \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is on, the current settings are automatically saved when WinBoard exits, as with Save Settings Now.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
K}{\f1 Help Menu}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 HelpMenu}}}{\b0\f1\fs18\up6 }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super ${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
-\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Help Menu}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 \r
- Help Menu\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- Help Contents}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 HelpContents}}}{\f1 Help Contents\r
+\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Help Menu}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 Help Me\r
+nu\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Help C\r
+ontents}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 HelpContents}}}{\f1 Help Contents\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Brings up this help file, starting at the Contents page.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
Search for Help on}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 SearchHelp}}}{\f1 Help Index\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Book}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Book}}}{\f1 Book\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Displays a list of possible moves from the chess engine\rquote \r
-s opening book. The first column gives moves, the second column gives one possible response for each move, and the third column shows \r
-the number of lines in the book that include the move from the first column. If you select this option and nothing happens, the engine is out of its book or does not support the book command.\r
+s opening book. The first column gives moves, the second column gives one possible response for each move, and the third column shows the number of lines\r
+ in the book that include the move from the first column. If you select this option and nothing happens, the engine is out of its book or does not support the book command.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
About WinBoard}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 AboutWinBoard}}}{\f1 About WinBoard\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Displays the WinBoard version number.\r
K}{\f1 ICS Interaction Context Menu}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ICSInteractionContextMenu}}}{\b0\f1\fs18\up6 }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super ${\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 ICS Interaction Context Menu}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}\r
{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 ICS Interaction Context Menu\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 To see this menu, press the right mouse button anywhere in the output (upper) pane of the ICS Inter\r
-action window. Pressing the right mouse button in the input (lower) pane gives a standard editing context menu, not described here. Use the }{\b\f1 help}{\f1 command on ICS to learn what these commands mean.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+To see this menu, press the right mouse button anywhere in the output (upper) pane of the ICS Interaction window. Pressing the right mouse button in the input (lower) pane gives a standard editing context menu, not described here. Use the }{\b\f1 help}{\r
+\f1 command on ICS to learn what these commands mean.\r
\par You can customize the lower part of this menu (below the Paste option) by setting the }{\f1\uldb icsMenu}{\v\f1 icsMenu}{\f1 option. The easiest way to accomplish this is to edit your }{\f1\uldb settings file}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 \r
with Notepad or another plain text editor. Sorry, there is no graphical user interface for customizing the menu.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- Copy and Paste}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 CopyAndPaste}}}{\f1 Copy and Paste\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Copies the current selection to the clipboard, then pastes it to the input box. As a shortcut to this function, you can press the middle mouse button (if you have one), or Shift plus the right mouse button.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Copy and P\r
+aste}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 CopyAndPaste}}}{\f1 Copy and Paste\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Copies the current selection to the clipboard, then pastes it to the input box. As a shortcut to this function, you can press the middle mouse button (if\r
+ you have one), or Shift plus the right mouse button.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Copy}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Copy}}}{\f1 Copy\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Copies the current selection to the clipboard.\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Tell}}}{\f1 Tell (name)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Inserts \ldblquote tell }{\i\f1 name }{\f1 \rdblquote }{\b\i\f1 }{\f1 into the input box. The string }{\i\f1 name }{\f1 \r
is the current selection if it is not empty. Otherwise }{\i\f1 name }{\f1 is the word surrounding the mouse position, where a \ldblquote word\rdblquote is a string of letters, digits, or hyphens (-), such as an ICS user handle or game number.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\pnrnot1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
+\cs58\f1\cf5\revised\super\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 K}{\f1\cf5\revised\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 }{\f1\cf5 Open Chat Box}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\pnrnot1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
+\cs58\f1\cf5\revised\super\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 #}{\f1\cf5\revised\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 }{\f1\cf5 OpenChatbox}}}{\f1\cf5 Open Chat Box (name)\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Causes WinBoard to open a new Chat Window, with }{\i\f1\cf5 name}{\f1\cf5 in the chat Partner field, where }{\i\f1\cf5 name}{\f1\cf5 is as defined above.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Message}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Message}}}{\f1 Message (name)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Inserts \ldblquote message }{\i\f1 name }{\f1 \rdblquote }{\b\i\f1 }{\f1 into the input box, where }{\i\f1 name}{\f1 is as defined above.\r
K}{\f1 Command Line Options}}K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Options}}}{\f1\fs20 }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super #{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Options}}}{\f1\fs20 }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super ${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $\r
}{\f1 Command Line Options}}}{\f1\fs20 }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 COMMAND LINE OPTIONS\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 All WinBoard options can be set either on the command line (if you start\r
- WinBoard by typing into an MSDOS Prompt box), in the Properties/Shortcut/Target box of a Windows shortcut, in a }{\f1\uldb settings file}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 All WinBoard options can be set either o\r
+n the command line (if you start WinBoard by typing into an MSDOS Prompt box), in the Properties/Shortcut/Target box of a Windows shortcut, in a }{\f1\uldb settings file}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 \r
, or in the Additional Options box of the WinBoard startup dialog. Exactly the same syntax is used in all four places. Most options can also be set from the menus and saved using }{\f1\uldb Save Settings Now}{\v\f1 SaveSettings}{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb \r
Save Settings on Exit}{\v\f1 SaveSettingsOnExit}{\f1 , so most people will not need to read this section.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Most options have two names, a long one that is easy to read and a short one that is easy to type. To turn on a boolean (true/false) option }{\i\f1 opt}{\f1 \r
:true). If a string option contains spaces or special characters, enclose it in double quotes and use the \\ quoting convention of C to name the special characters. Alternatively, you can enclose a string value in curly braces (/opt=\{string\}\r
), as long as the value does not contain a closing curly brace. If a filename option contains spaces, enclose it in either single or double quotes. In filename options, the \\\r
character is not treated specially, so use single quotes around the outside of the value if it has double quotes inside (and vice versa).\r
-\par When you start WinBoard, it will pop up the Startup \r
-dialog box unless you provide sufficient options on the command line for WinBoard to determine which major mode to be in and what engines to use or chess server to connect to. To bypass this box, you must at minimum give one of the three options }{\r
-\f1\uldb /cp}{\v\f1 cp}{\f1 , /}{\f1\uldb ics}{\v\f1 ics}{\f1 , or /}{\f1\uldb ncp}{\v\f1 ncp}{\f1 . If you give the /cp option, you must also give the /}{\f1\uldb fcp}{\v\f1 fcp}{\f1 and /}{\f1\uldb scp}{\v\f1 scp}{\f1 \r
+\par When you start WinBo\r
+ard, it will pop up the Startup dialog box unless you provide sufficient options on the command line for WinBoard to determine which major mode to be in and what engines to use or chess server to connect to. To bypass this box, you must at minimum give on\r
+e of the three options }{\f1\uldb /cp}{\v\f1 cp}{\f1 , /}{\f1\uldb ics}{\v\f1 ics}{\f1 , or /}{\f1\uldb ncp}{\v\f1 ncp}{\f1 . If you give the /cp option, you must also give the /}{\f1\uldb fcp}{\v\f1 fcp}{\f1 and /}{\f1\uldb scp}{\v\f1 scp}{\f1 \r
options. If you give the /ics option, you must also give the /}{\f1\uldb icshost}{\v\f1 icshost}{\f1 option.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s29\fi-240\li360\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\uldb Chess Engine Options}{\v\f1 ChessEngineOptions}{\f1 \r
\par }{\f1\uldb UCI Engine Support !NEW!}{\v\f1 UCIEngineSupport}{\f1 \r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 inc}}}{\f1 /inc }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 timeIncrement}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 timeIncrement}}}{\f1 /timeIncrement }{\i\f1 seconds\r
\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If this option is specified, movesPerSession is ignored. Instead, after each player's move, timeIncrement seconds are added to his clock. Use -timeIncrement 0 if you want to require the entire game to be played in one timeControl period, with no increment\r
-. Default: -1, which specifies movesPerSession mode.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is specified, movesPerSession is ignored. Instead, after each player's move, timeIncrement seconds are added to h\r
+is clock. Use -timeIncrement 0 if you want to require the entire game to be played in one timeControl period, with no increment. Default: -1, which specifies movesPerSession mode.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 clock }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 clock }}}{\f1 /clock }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xclock}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 clockMode}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 clockMode}}}{\f1 \r
/clockMode }{\i\f1 true|false\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Determines whether or not to display the chess clocks. If clockMode is False, the clocks are not shown, but the \r
-side that is to play next is still highlighted. Also, unless searchTime is set, the chess engine still keeps track of the clock time and uses it to determine how fast to make its moves.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Determines whether or not \r
+to display the chess clocks. If clockMode is False, the clocks are not shown, but the side that is to play next is still highlighted. Also, unless searchTime is set, the chess engine still keeps track of the clock time and uses it to determine how fast to\r
+ make its moves.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 st}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 st}}}{\f1 /st }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
-\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 searchTime }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 searchTime }}}{\f1 /searchTime }{\i\f1 minutes\r
-[:seconds]}{\f1 \r
+\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 searchTime }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 searchTime }}}{\f1 /searchTime }{\i\f1 \r
+minutes[:seconds]}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Tells the chess engine to spend at most the given amount of time searching for each of its moves. Without this option, the engine chooses its search time based on the number of moves and amount of time remaining until the next time control. Sett\r
-ing this option also sets clockMode to False.\r
+Tells the chess engine to spend at most the given amount of time searching for each of its moves. Without this option, the engine chooses its search time based on the number of moves and amount of \r
+time remaining until the next time control. Setting this option also sets clockMode to False.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 sd}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 sd}}}{\f1 /depth }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 searchDepth}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 searchDepth}}}{\f1 /searchDepth }{\i\f1 number}{\f1 \r
\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Tells the chess engine to look ahead at most the given number of moves when searching for a move to make. Without this option, the engin\r
-e chooses its search depth based on the number of moves and amount of time remaining until the next time control. With the option, the engine will cut off its search early if it reaches the specified depth.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Tells the chess engine to look ahead at most the given number of moves when searching for a move to make. Without this option,\r
+ the engine chooses its search depth based on the number of moves and amount of time remaining until the next time control. With the option, the engine will cut off its search early if it reaches the specified depth.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li119\sb120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 firstNPS}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 firstNPS}}}{\f1\cf11 /firstNPS }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 secondNPS}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 secondNPS}}}{\f1\cf11 /secondNPS }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Tel\r
-ls the chess engine to use an internal time standard based on its node count, rather then wall-clock time, to make its time decisions. The time in virtual seconds should be obtained by dividing the node count through the given }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
+Tells the chess engine to use an internal time standard based on its node count, rather then wall-clock time, to make its time decisions. The time in virtual seconds should be obtained by dividing the node count through the given }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\r
\f1\cf11 , like the number was a rate in nodes per second. WinBoard will manage the clocks in accordance with this, relying on the number of nodes reported by the engine in its thinking output. If }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
- equals zero, it can obviously not be used to convert nodes to seconds, and the time \r
-reported by the engine is used to decrement the WinBoard clock. The engine is supposed to report in CPU time it uses, rather than wall-clock time in this mode. This option can provide fairer conditions for engine-engine matches on heavily loaded machines,\r
- or with very fast games (where the wall clock is too inaccurate). \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote must be on for this option to work. Not many engines might support this yet!\r
+ equals zero, it can obviously not be used to convert nodes to seconds, and the \r
+time reported by the engine is used to decrement the WinBoard clock. The engine is supposed to report in CPU time it uses, rather than wall-clock time in this mode. This option can provide fairer conditions for engine-engine matches on heavily loaded mach\r
+ines, or with very fast games (where the wall clock is too inaccurate). \ldblquote Show Thinking\rdblquote must be on for this option to work. Not many engines might support this yet!\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li119\sb120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 firstTimeOdds}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 firstTimeOdds}}}{\f1\cf11 /firstTimeOdds }{\i\f1\cf11 factor}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 secondTimeOdds}}#\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\pnrnot1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\revised\super\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 K}{\f1\revised\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 }{\f1\cf11 timeOddsMode}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\pnrnot1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\revised\super\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 #}{\f1\revised\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 }{\f1\cf11 timeOddsMode}}}{\f1\cf11 /timeOddsMode }{\i\f1\cf11 mode\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
-This option determines how the case is handled when both engines have a time-odds handicap. If mode=1, the engine that gets the most time will always get the nominal time, as specified by the time-control options, and its opponent\rquote s tim\r
-e is normalized similarly. If mode=0, both play with reduced time.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 This option determines how the case is handled when both engines have a\r
+ time-odds handicap. If mode=1, the engine that gets the most time will always get the nominal time, as specified by the time-control options, and its opponent\rquote s time is normalized similarly. If mode=0, both play with reduced time.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\pnrnot1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\revised\super\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 K}{\f1\revised\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 ponder}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\pnrnot1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\revised\super\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 #}{\f1\revised\revauth1\revdttm-1506646559 ponder}}}{\f1 /ponder}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xponder}{\b0\f1 ,}{\f1 }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 matchPause}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 matchPause}}}{\f1\cf11 /matchPause }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Sets the length of the pause between games in match mode to }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
- msec. Default value is 10000, i.e. 10 sec. (If this pause is too short, engines not implementing \lquote ping\rquote will sometimes send the last move of thei\r
-r previous game only when a new game has started, at which time the move is illegal, and causes them to forfeit the game.)\r
+ msec. Default value is 10000, i.e. 10 sec. (If this pause is too short, engines not implementing \lquote ping\rquote \r
+ will sometimes send the last move of their previous game only when a new game has started, at which time the move is illegal, and causes them to forfeit the game.)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 fd}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 fd }}}{\f1 /fd }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 firstDirectory}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 firstDirectory}}}{\f1 /firstDirectory }{\i\f1 dir\r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K}{\f1\cf11 scp }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super #}{\f1\cf11 scp }}}{\f1 /scp }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K}{\f1\cf11 secondChessProgram }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super #}{\f1\cf11 secondChessProgram}{\f1 }}}{\f1 /secondChessProgram }{\i\f1 command}{\cs58\f1\super }{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Names of the chess engines and working directories in which they are to be run. The second chess engine is started only in Two Machines (match) mode. These arguments are parsed as filenames; that is, the \\\r
- character is interpreted literally, not as a C-style escape.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 \r
- argument specifies the initial working directory for the chess engine. It should usually be the directory where the engine and its working files are installed. If }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 is not an absolute pathname, it is interpreted relative to the directo\r
-ry from which WinBoard.exe itself was loaded. The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 argument is ignored if the chess engine is being run on a remote machine (see firstHost and secondHost below). The default value for }{\i\f1 dir }{\f1 \r
-"", meaning that the chess engine is expected to be installed in the same directory as WinBoard.\r
-\par The }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 argument is actually the command line to the chess engine, so if the engine itself needs command line arguments, you can include them by enclosing }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 in single or double quotes. If the engine name or an engi\r
-ne argument has a space in it, use single quotes around the whole }{\i\f1 command, }{\f1 and inside them use double quotes around each item that contains spaces. If the engine name has more than one period in it (for example, }{\f2 QChess1.5.exe}{\f1 \r
-), you must include the "}{\f2 .exe}{\f1 " extension; otherwise you can leave it out. The default value for }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 is "", which brings up the startup dialog to ask which engines you want.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Names of the chess engines and working directories in which they are to be run. The sec\r
+ond chess engine is started only in Two Machines (match) mode. These arguments are parsed as filenames; that is, the \\ character is interpreted literally, not as a C-style escape.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 argument specifies the initial working directory for the chess engin\r
+e. It should usually be the directory where the engine and its working files are installed. If }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 is not an absolute pathname, it is interpreted relative to the directory from which WinBoard.exe itself was loaded. The }{\i\f1 dir}{\f1 \r
+ argument is ignored if the chess engine is being run on a remote machine (see firstHost and secondHost below). The default value for }{\i\f1 dir }{\f1 "", meaning that the chess engine is expected to be installed in the same directory as WinBoard.\r
+\par The }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 argument is actually the command line to the chess engine, so if the engine itself needs command line arguments, you can include them by enclosing }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 \r
+ in single or double quotes. If the engine name or an engine argument has a space in it, use single quotes around the whole }{\i\f1 command, }{\f1 and inside t\r
+hem use double quotes around each item that contains spaces. If the engine name has more than one period in it (for example, }{\f2 QChess1.5.exe}{\f1 ), you must include the "}{\f2 .exe}{\f1 \r
+" extension; otherwise you can leave it out. The default value for }{\i\f1 command}{\f1 is "", which brings up the startup dialog to ask which engines you want.\r
\par Examples:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\fi-518\li1036\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2 WinBoard /cp /fd="C:\\Program Files\\Crafty" /fcp=WCrafty-15.12.exe /scp=GNUChess\r
\par WinBoard /cp /fd="C:\\Miracle Games" /fcp='"Miracle Chess.exe" /wow' /scp=GNUChess\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
-The basic rule is thus that what is inside the quotes delimiting the argument to /fcp and /scp, all goes to the engine, and is ignored by WinBoard. WinBoard 4.3.13 and later, however, knows an\r
- exception to this: If, within the quotes, the word WBopt appears, everything that follows this word will be interpreted as a WinBoard argument, in stead of being passed to the engine on startup of the latter. (The WBopt itself is also not passed to the e\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 The basic rule is thus th\r
+at what is inside the quotes delimiting the argument to /fcp and /scp, all goes to the engine, and is ignored by WinBoard. WinBoard 4.3.13 and later, however, knows an exception to this: If, within the quotes, the word WBopt appears, everything that follo\r
+w\r
+s this word will be interpreted as a WinBoard argument, in stead of being passed to the engine on startup of the latter. (The WBopt itself is also not passed to the engine.) This possibility of hiding WinBoard arguments in the engine command is provided i\r
n\r
-gine.) This possibility of hiding WinBoard arguments in the engine command is provided in order to create options that follow the engine in a tournament, when a tournament manager like PSWBTM is used to invoke WinBoard. Because, in order to apply to a giv\r
-en engine, some options need to know if they apply to first or second engine, which might vary during the tournament, options hidden inside the engine command-line can contain \lquote %s\rquote which will be replaced at the time the option is used by \r
-\lquote first\rquote or \lquote second\rquote , as applicable.\r
+ order to create options that follow the engine in a tournament, when a tournament manager like PSWBTM is used to invoke WinBoard. Because, in order to apply to a given engine, some options need to know if they apply to first or second engine, which might\r
+ vary during the tournament, options hidden inside the engine command-line can contain \lquote %s\rquote which will be replaced at the time the option is used by \lquote first\rquote or \lquote second\rquote , as applicable.\r
\par Examples:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\fi-518\li1036\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\cf11 WinBoard /cp /fd="C:\\Engines\\Crafty" /fcp=\rdblquote WCrafty-15.12 WBopt /%sTimeOdds=2\rdblquote /scp=GNUChess\r
\r
\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 sh }}}{\f1 /sh }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 secondHost }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 secondHost }}}{\f1 /secondHost }{\i\f1 host}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Hosts on which the chess engines are to run. The default for each is "localhost". If you specify another host, WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 uses }{\f1\uldb rsh}{\v\f1 rsh}{\f1 \r
- to run the chess program there. The /fd and /sd flags do not work in conjunction with these flags; if you need a remote chess engine to run somewhere other than your default login directory on the remote machine, you will have to include a "cd" command i\r
-n the argument to /fcp or /scp.\r
+ to run the chess program there. The /fd and /sd flags do not work in conjunction with these flags; if you need a remote chess engine to run somewhere other than your default login directory on the remote machine, y\r
+ou will have to include a "cd" command in the argument to /fcp or /scp.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 initString\r
}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 initString}}}{\f1 /firstInitString }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /initString }{\i\f1 string\line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \r
-\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 secondInitString}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 \r
- secondInitString}}}{\f1 /secondInitString }{\i\f1 string}{\f1 \r
+\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 secondInitString}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 s\r
+econdInitString}}}{\f1 /secondInitString }{\i\f1 string}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The strings that are sent to initialize the chess engines. Default: "new\\nrandom\\n". The "\\n" sequences represent newlines. You can type "\\\r
n" on the command line or in a }{\f1\uldb settings file}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 , and WinBoard will convert it to a newline.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 All chess engines require the "new" command to start a new game.\r
-\par You can remove the "random" command if you lik\r
-e; including it causes GNU Chess to randomize its move selection slightly so that it doesn't play the same moves in every game. Even without "random", GNU Chess randomizes its choice of moves from its opening book. You can also try adding other commands t\r
-o the initString; see the GNU Chess documentati{\*\bkmkstart _Hlt386545814}o{\*\bkmkstart _Hlt386567280}{\*\bkmkend _Hlt386545814}n{\*\bkmkend _Hlt386567280}\r
- (gnuchess.txt) for details. Crafty ignores the "random" command; see its documentation for the commands it accepts.\r
+\par You can remove the "random" command if you like; including it causes \r
+GNU Chess to randomize its move selection slightly so that it doesn't play the same moves in every game. Even without "random", GNU Chess randomizes its choice of moves from its opening book. You can also try adding other commands to the initString; see t\r
+he GNU Chess documentati{\*\bkmkstart _Hlt386545814}o{\*\bkmkstart _Hlt386567280}{\*\bkmkend _Hlt386545814}n{\*\bkmkend _Hlt386567280} (gnuchess.txt) for details. Crafty ignores the "random" command; see its documentation for the commands it accepts.\r
+\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 initString\r
}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 initString}}}{\f1 /firstComputerString }{\i\f1 string\line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 secondInitString}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 secondInitString}}\r
}{\f1 /secondComputerString }{\i\f1 string}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If the chess engine is playing against another computer program (whether locally or on a chess server), by default the command "computer\\\r
n" is sent to it. Some chess engines change their playing style when they receive this command. If you do not want the engine to know when it is playing another computer, you can set the string to "".\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s66\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cf11\cgrid {Note that the computer string is sent to the engine aft\r
-er most other initialization commands, and is thus ideal for hiding a WinBoard-protocol command in that should be sent only to one engine, when the WinBoard option that normally specifies this command cannot be differentiated by engine, but s always sent \r
-to both engines. E.g. if you want one of the engines to ponder, and the other not. Because it is sent last, in can overrule earlier commands.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s66\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cf11\cgrid {\r
+Note that the computer string is sent to the engine after most other initialization commands, and is thus ideal for hiding a WinBoard-protocol command in that should be sent only to one engine, when the WinBoard option that n\r
+ormally specifies this command cannot be differentiated by engine, but s always sent to both engines. E.g. if you want one of the engines to ponder, and the other not. Because it is sent last, in can overrule earlier commands.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 fb }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 fb }}}{\f1 /fb }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xfb}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 firstPlaysBlack }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 firstPlaysBlack}}}\r
{\f1 /firstPlaysBlack }{\i\f1 true|false\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 In games between\r
- two chess programs, the firstChessProgram normally plays white. (This is a change from earlier versions of WinBoard.) If this option is True, firstChessProgram plays black. In a multi-game match, this option affects the colors only for the first game; th\r
-ey still alternate in subsequent games.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+In games between two chess programs, the firstChessProgram normally plays white. (This is a change from earlier versions of WinBoard.) If this option is True, firstChessProgram plays black. In a multi-game match, this option affects th\r
+e colors only for the first game; they still alternate in subsequent games.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 reuse}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 reuse}}}{\f1 /reuse}{\cs58\f1\super }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xreuse}{\b0\f1 , or }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 reuseFirst}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 reuseFirst}}}{\f1 \r
/reuseFirst}{\i\f1 true|false\line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 reuse2}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 reuse2}}}{\f1 /reuse2}{\cs58\f1\super }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xreuse2}{\b0\f1 , or }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 reuseSecond}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 reuseSecond}}}{\f1 /reuseSecond}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is True (the default), WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 \r
-uses the same chess engine process repeatedly when playing multiple games. If the option is False, WinBoard kills off the chess engine after every game and starts a fresh one for the next game. Starting a fres\r
-h chess engine can be slow, so it is not recommended. However, some chess engines may not work properly when reused, such as versions of Crafty earlier than 12.0.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is True (the default), WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 uses the same chess engine proce\r
+ss repeatedly when playing multiple games. If the option is False, WinBoard kills off the chess engine after every game and starts a fresh one for the next game. Starting a fresh chess engine can be slow, so it is not recommended. However, some chess engi\r
+nes may not work properly when reused, such as versions of Crafty earlier than 12.0.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
firstProtocolVersion}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 firstProtocolVersion}}}{\f1 /firstProtocolVersion }{\i\f1 ver\line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 secondProtocolVersion}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 \r
secondProtocolVersion}}}{\f1 /secondProtocolVersion }{\i\f1 ver}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-This option specifies which version of the chess engine communication protocol to use. By default, version-number is 2. In version 1, the "protover" command is not sent to the engine; since version \r
-1 is a subset of version 2, nothing else changes. Other values for version-number are not supported.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option specifies which version of the chess engine communication protocol to use. By default, version-number i\r
+s 2. In version 1, the "protover" command is not sent to the engine; since version 1 is a subset of version 2, nothing else changes. Other values for version-number are not supported.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 firstScoreAbs}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 firstScoreAbs}}}{\f1\cf6 /firstScoreAbs}{\i\f1\cf6 true|false\line }{\cs58\f1\cf6\super K\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 secondScoreAbs}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 secondScoreAbs}}}{\f1\cf6 /secondScoreAbs}{\i\f1\cf6 true|false\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-If this option is true, the score reported by the engine is taken to be that in favor of white, even when the engine plays black. Important when winboard uses the score for adjudications, or in PGN reporting. This can be a useful option in combination wit\r
-h WBopt in the engine command-line, see under /fcp.}{\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
-\f1\cf6 niceEngines}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 niceEngines}}}{\f1\cf2 /niceEngines}{\i\f1\cf2 priority\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 This option allows you to lower the priority of the engine processes, so that the generally insatiable hunger for CPU time of chess engines does not inte\r
-rfere so much with smooth operation of WinBoard (or the rest of your system). Try priority = 10 or even 20 to lower the priority of the engines. Negative values could increase the engine priority, which is not recommended.}{\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
-\f1\cf6 firstOptions}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 firstOptions}}}{\f1\cf2 /firstOptions}{\i\f1\cf2 string\line }{\cs58\f1\cf2\super K\r
-{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 secondOptions}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
-\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 secondOptions}}}{\f1\cf2 /secondOptions}{\i\f1\cf2 string\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 If this option \r
+is true, the score reported by the engine is taken to be that in favor of white, even when the engine plays black. Important when winboard uses the score for adjudications, or in PGN reporting. This can be a useful option in combination with WBopt in the \r
+engine command-line, see under /fcp.}{\cf6 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf2 niceEngines}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 niceEngines}}}{\f1\cf2 /niceEngines}{\i\f1\cf2 priority\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 \r
+This option allows you to lower the priority of the engine processes, so that the generally insatiable hunger for CPU time of chess engines does not interfere so much with smooth operation of WinB\r
+oard (or the rest of your system). Try priority = 10 or even 20 to lower the priority of the engines. Negative values could increase the engine priority, which is not recommended.}{\cf6 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf2 firstOptions}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 firstOptions}}}{\f1\cf2 /firstOptions}{\i\f1\cf2 string\line }{\cs58\f1\cf2\super K\r
+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\f1\cf2 secondOptions}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
+\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 secondOptions}}}{\f1\cf2 /secondOptions}{\i\f1\cf2 string\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 The given string is a comma-separated list of (option name, option value) pairs, like the following example: \ldblquote style=Karpov,blunder rate=0\rdblquote \r
. If the options announced by the engine at startup through the feature commands of WinBoard protocol matches one of the option names (i.e. \ldblquote style\rdblquote or \ldblquote blunder rate\rdblquote ), it would be set to the given value (i.e. \r
\ldblquote Karpov\rdblquote or 0) through a corresponding option command to the engine. This provided that the type of the value (text or numeric) matches as well.}{\cf6 \r
\f1\cf2 firstNeedsNoncompliantFEN}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 firstNeedsNoncompliantFEN}}}{\f1\cf2 /firstNeedsNoncompliantFEN}{\i\f1\cf2 string\r
\line }{\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\f1\cf2 secondNeedsNoncompliantFEN}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 secondNeedsNoncompliantFEN}}}{\f1\cf2 /secondNeedsNoncompliantFEN}{\i\f1\cf2 string\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 Th\r
-e castling rights and e.p. fields of the FEN sent to the mentioned engine with the setboard command will be replaced by the given string. This can for instance be used to run engines that do not understand Chess960 FENs in variant fischerandom, to make th\r
-em at least understand the opening position, through setting the string to \ldblquote KQkq -\rdblquote \r
-. (Note you also have to give the e.p. field!) Other possible applications are to provide work-arounds for engines that want to see castling and e.p. fields in variants that \r
-do not have castling or e.p. (shatranj, courier, xiangqi, shogi) so that WinBoard would normally omit them (string = \ldblquote - -\ldblquote \r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 \r
+The castling rights and e.p. fields of the FEN sent to the mentioned engine with the setboard command will be replaced by the given string. This can for instance be used to run engines that do not understand Chess960 FENs in variant\r
+ fischerandom, to make them at least understand the opening position, through setting the string to \ldblquote KQkq -\rdblquote \r
+. (Note you also have to give the e.p. field!) Other possible applications are to provide work-arounds for engines that want to see castling and e.p\r
+. fields in variants that do not have castling or e.p. (shatranj, courier, xiangqi, shogi) so that WinBoard would normally omit them (string = \ldblquote - -\ldblquote \r
, or to add variant-specific fields that are not yet supported by WinBoard (e.g. to indicate the number of checks in 3check).\r
\par }{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\cf6\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 sUCI}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /sUCI }{\b0\f1\cf6 or}{\f1\cf6 }{\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 secondIsUCI}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 \r
secondIsUCI}}}{\f1\cf6 /secondIsUCI}{\i\f1\cf6 true|false}{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Indicates if the mentioned engine executable file is an UCI engine,}{\v\cf6 ICSLogon}{\cf6 \r
- and should be run with the aid of the Polyglot adapter rather than directly. WinBoard will then pass the other UCI options and engine name to Polyglot through a .ini temporary file ceated for the purpose.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Indicates if the mentioned engine executable file is an UCI engine,}{\v\cf6 ICSLogon}{\cf6 and should be run with the aid of the Polyglot adapter rat\r
+her than directly. WinBoard will then pass the other UCI options and engine name to Polyglot through a .ini temporary file ceated for the purpose.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 PolyglotDir}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 PolyglotDir}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /PolyglotDir }{\i\f1\cf6 filename}{\f1\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Gives the name of the folder in which Polyglot is installed}{\v\f1\cf6 ICSLogon}{\f1\cf6 .\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icshost }}}{\f1 /icshost }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 internetChessServerHost }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 internetChessServerHost }}}{\f1 \r
/internetChessServerHost }{\i\f1 hostname}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The host name or numeric address of the Intern\r
-et Chess Server to connect to when in ICS mode. The default is the empty string, which causes WinBoard to pop up a menu of known ICS sites. The file ics-address{\*\bkmkstart _Hlt386546221}e{\*\bkmkend _Hlt386546221}\r
-s.txt in the WinBoard distribution gives slightly more information on these sites. It includes their numeric addresses, which you can use if your site does not have a working name server.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+The host name or numeric address of the Internet Chess Server to connect to when in ICS mode. The default is the empty string, which causes WinBoard to pop up a menu of known ICS sites. The file ics-address{\*\bkmkstart _Hlt386546221}e\r
+{\*\bkmkend _Hlt386546221}s.txt in the WinBoard distribution gives slightly more information on these sites. It includes their numeric addresses, which you can use if your site does not have a working name server.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icsport }}\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icsport }}}{\f1 /icsport }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 internetChessServerPort }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 internetChessServerPort }}}{\f1 \r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 telnet}}}{\f1 /telnet}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xtelnet}{\b0\f1 ,}{\f1 }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 useTelnet}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 useTelnet}}}{\f1 \r
/useTelnet}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option is poorly named; it should be called }{\b\f1 /useHelper}{\f1 \r
-. If set to True, it instructs WinBoard to use an external helper program to communicate with the ICS, as specified by the telnetProgram option. The external program must be a pure console applicat\r
-ion that can communicate with WinBoard through pipes; the Windows telnet application is not suitable. If the option is False (the default), WinBoard communicates with the ICS by opening a Winsock TCP socket and using its own internal implementation of the\r
- telnet protocol.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option is poorly named; it should be called }{\b\f1 /useHelper}{\f1 . If set to True, it instructs WinBoard to use an external helper program to communicate with the \r
+ICS, as specified by the telnetProgram option. The external program must be a pure console application that can communicate with WinBoard through pipes; the Windows telnet application is not suitable. If the option is False (the default), WinBoard communi\r
+cates with the ICS by opening a Winsock TCP socket and using its own internal implementation of the telnet protocol.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 gateway}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 gateway}}}{\f1 /gateway }{\i\f1 hostname}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is set to a host name, WinBoard uses }{\f1\uldb rsh}{\v\f1 rsh}{\f1 \r
- to run the telnetProgram remotely on the given host to communicate with the Internet Chess Server instead of using its own internal implementation of the telnet protocol. See the }{\f1\uldb FIREWALLS}{\v\f1 FIREWALLS}{\f1 \r
- section below for an explanation of when this option is useful.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is set to a host name, WinBoard uses }{\f1\uldb rsh}{\v\f1 rsh}{\f1 to run the telnetProgram remotely on the given host to commun\r
+icate with the Internet Chess Server instead of using its own internal implementation of the telnet protocol. See the }{\f1\uldb FIREWALLS}{\v\f1 FIREWALLS}{\f1 section below for an explanation of when this option is useful.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
telnetProgram}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 telnetProgram}}}{\f1 /telnetProgram }{\i\f1 program}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option is poorly named; it should be called }{\b\f1 /helperProgram}{\f1 . It gives the\r
- name of the remote or external helper program to be used with the gateway or useTelnet option. The default is "telnet". The telnet program is invoked with the value of internetChessServer as the first argument and the value of internetChessServerPort as \r
-the second argument on its command line.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option is poorly named; it should be called }{\b\f1 /helperProgram}{\f1 \r
+. It gives the name of the remote or external helper program to be used with the gateway or useTelnet option. The default is "telnet". The telnet program is invoked with the value of internetChessServer as the first argumen\r
+t and the value of internetChessServerPort as the second argument on its command line.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icscom }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icscom }}}{\f1 /icscom }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 internetChessServerComPort }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 internetChessServerComPort }}}{\f1 \r
/internetChessServerComPort }{\i\f1 name}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is set, WinBoard communicates with the Internet Chess Server using a seri\r
-al communication port instead of a network connection. Use this option if your machine is not connected to a network (not even via SLIP or PPP), but you do have Internet access through another machine by dialing in using a modem or by connecting directly \r
-to a serial terminal port. Example:\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is set, WinBoard communicates with the Internet Chess Server using a serial communication port instead of \r
+a network connection. Use this option if your machine is not connected to a network (not even via SLIP or PPP), but you do have Internet access through another machine by dialing in using a modem or by connecting directly to a serial terminal port. Exampl\r
+e:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li120\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2 WinBoard /ics /icscom:com1\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 After you start WinBoard in this way, type whatever modem commands are necessary to dial out to your Internet provider and log in. You may need to turn off }{\f1\uldb \r
Local Line Editing}{\v\f1 LocalLineEditing}{\f1 on the Options menu while typing commands to the modem, but turn it on again afterwards. Then telnet to the ICS, using a command like "telnet chessclub.com 5000". Important: See the paragraph in the }{\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icslogon }}}{\f1 /icslogon }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 internetChessServerLogonScript }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 internetChessServerLogonScript }}\r
}{\f1 /internetChessServerLogonScript }{\i\f1 filename\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option lets you change the name used for the }{\f1\uldb ICS Logon}{\v\f1 ICSLogon}{\f1 file. Def\r
-ault: "ICS.ini". The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's installation directory (the directory containing WinBoard.exe).\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option lets you change the name used for the }{\f1\uldb ICS Logon}{\v\f1 ICSLogon}{\f1 \r
+ file. Default: "ICS.ini". The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's installation directory (the directory containing WinBoard.exe).\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 autocomm }\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 autocomm }}}{\f1 /autocomm }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xautocomm}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 autoComment }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 autoComment }}}{\f1 \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 quietPlay }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 quietPlay }}}{\f1 \r
/quietPlay}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the }{\f1\uldb Quiet Play}{\v\f1 quietPlayCmd}{\f1 option. Default: False\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 seekGraph (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_seekGraph }}}{\f1\cf5 /seekGraph }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\b0\f1\cf5 , or }{\r
+\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\f1\cf5 sg (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
+\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_sg}}}{\f1\cf5 /sg\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Enables summoning up of the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Seek Graph}{\f1\cf5 by left-clicking the board. Default: False\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 autoRefresh (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_autoRefresh }}}{\f1\cf5 /autoRefresh }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\f1\cf5 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Sets the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Auto Refresh}{\v\f1\cf5 BlindfoldCmd}{\f1\cf5 option of the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Seek Graph}{\f1\cf5 . Default: False\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 backgroundObserve (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_backgroundObserve }}}{\f1\cf5 /backgroundObserve }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\r
+\f1\cf5 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Sets the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Background Observe}{\v\f1\cf5 BlindfoldCmd}{\f1\cf5 option for observing other games during play. Default: False\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 dualBoard (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_dualBoard }}}{\f1\cf5 /dualBoard }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\f1\cf5 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Sets the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Dual Board}{\v\f1\cf5 BlindfoldCmd}{\f1\cf5 option for observing your partner\rquote s bughouse game. Default: False\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
blindfold (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 opt_blindfold }}}{\f1 /blindfold }{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the }{\f1\uldb Blindfold}{\v\f1 BlindfoldCmd}{\f1 option. Default: False\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If }{\b\f1 premoveBlack}{\f1 is set to True and you are playing black in an ICS game, the text specified by the }{\b\f1 premoveBlackText}{\f1 \r
option is sent to the ICS as soon as the first move is received from your opponent, even if you make a different premove on the board before the first white move is received. These options can be set from the }{\f1\uldb Premove}{\v\f1 PremoveCmd}{\f1 \r
section of the }{\f1\uldb ICS Options}{\v\f1\uldb ICSOptions}{\f1 dialog box. The default for }{\b\f1 premoveBlack}{\f1 is False.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 \'f2neClickMove (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_oneClickMove }}}{\f1\cf5 /oneClickMove }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\f1\cf5 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Sets the }{\f1\uldb\cf5 One-ClickMove}{\v\f1\cf5 BlindfoldCmd}{\f1\cf5 option. Default: False\r
\par }\pard\plain \li115\sb120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\b\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ alarm}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ alarm}}}{\b /alarm }{or}{\b }{\cs58\b\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\super K}{ xalarm}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ xalarm}}}{\b /xalarm}{, or }{\cs58\b\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
ICS options}{\v\uldb ICSOptions}{ dialog. The default is 5 seconds.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
\f1\cf2 keepAlive }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 keepAlive }}}{\f1\cf2 /keepAlive }{\i\f1\cf2 time}{\f1\cf2 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 When }{\i\f1\cf2 time}{\f1\cf2 is non-zero, send a \ldblquote date\rdblquote command every }{\i\f1\cf2 time}{\f1\cf2 minutes after your last move to the ICS, t\r
-o prevent it from logging you off. (Do not use frivolously! The ICS operator might ban you.) Default: 0.}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
-+}{\f1 main}}K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Load and Save Options}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
-\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Load and Save Options}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadandSaveOptions}}}{\b0\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 \r
-Load and Save Options\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 When }{\i\f1\cf2 time}{\f1\cf2 is non-zero, send a \ldblquote date\rdblquote command every }{\i\f1\cf2 time}{\f1\cf2 minutes after your last move t\r
+o the ICS, to prevent it from logging you off. (Do not use frivolously! The ICS operator might ban you.) Default: 0.}{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 chatBoxes (option)}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 opt_chatBoxes }}}{\f1\cf5 /chatBoxes }{\i\f1\cf5 handles}{\f1\cf5 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 Sets the list of }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Chat Windows}{\v\f1\cf5 BlindfoldCmd}{\f1\cf5 to be opened at startup. The given string }{\i\f1\cf5 handles}{\f1\cf5 \r
+ should be a semicolon-separated list, like \ldblquote shouts;53;Johnny\rdblquote to open 3 chat boxes, to capture all shouts (including c-shouts and \lquote it\rquote \r
+ messages), the traffic on channel 53, and for a player named Johnny. Default: no chat windows.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20\cf5 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
+\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Load and Save Options}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
+\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Load and Save Options}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 LoadandSaveOptions}}}{\b0\f1\fs18\up6 }{\r
+\f1\fs20 Load and Save Options\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li115\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 lgf }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 lgf }}}{\f1 /lgf }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 loadGameFile }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 loadGameFile }}}{\f1 /loadGameFile }{\i\f1 \r
filename}{\f1 \line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 lgi }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 lgi }}}{\f1 /lgi }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 loadGameIndex }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 loadGameIndex }}}{\f1 /loadGameIndex }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If loadGameFile is set, WinBoard reads the specified game file at startup. You can leave out the name of this option and give just the fil\r
-e name, which is handy if you want to configure WinBoard as a game viewer with a browser such as the Windows Explorer or Netscape. The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's initial working directory. The filename "-" specifies the standard input.\r
- If there is more than one game in the file, WinBoard pops up a menu of the available games, with entries based on their PGN tags. If loadGameIndex is set to }{\i\f1 N, }{\f1 the menu is suppressed and the }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 \r
-th game found in the file is loaded immediately.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+If loadGameFile is set, WinBoard reads the specified game file at startup. You can leave out the name of this option and give just the file name, which is handy if you want to configure WinBoard as a game viewer\r
+ with a browser such as the Windows Explorer or Netscape. The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's initial working directory. The filename "-" specifies the standard input. If there is more than one game in the file, WinBoard pops up a menu of t\r
+he available games, with entries based on their PGN tags. If loadGameIndex is set to }{\i\f1 N, }{\f1 the menu is suppressed and the }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 th game found in the file is loaded immediately.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 td }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 td }}}{\f1 /td }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 timeDelay }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 timeDelay }}}{\f1 /timeDelay }{\i\f1 seconds}{\f1 \r
\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Time delay between moves during }{\f1\uldb Load Game}{\v\f1 LoadGame}{\f1 \r
-. Fractional seconds are allowed; try 0.4. A time delay value of -1 tells WinBoard not to step through game files automatically. Default: 1 second.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Time delay between moves during }{\f1\uldb Load Game}{\v\f1 LoadGame}{\f1 . Fract\r
+ional seconds are allowed; try 0.4. A time delay value of -1 tells WinBoard not to step through game files automatically. Default: 1 second.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 sgf }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 sgf }}}{\f1 /sgf }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 saveGameFile }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 saveGameFile }}}{\f1 /saveGameFile }{\i\f1 \r
filename}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If this option is set, WinBoard appends a record of every game played to the specified file. The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's initial working directory. The filename "-" specifies the standard output.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is set, WinBoard appends a record of every game played to the s\r
+pecified file. The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's initial working directory. The filename "-" specifies the standard output.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 autosave }\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 autosave }}}{\f1 /autosave}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xautosave}{\b0\f1 ,}{\f1 }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 autoSaveGames }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 \r
autoSaveGames }}}{\f1 /autoSaveGames}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If this option is True, at the end of every game WinBoard prompts you for a filename and appends a record of the game to the file you specify. Ignored if saveGameFile is set. Default: False.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is True, at the end of every game WinBoa\r
+rd prompts you for a filename and appends a record of the game to the file you specify. Ignored if saveGameFile is set. Default: False.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 lpf}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 lpf}}}{\f1 /lpf }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 loadPositionFile }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 loadPositionFile }}}{\f1 /loadPositionFile }{\r
\i\f1 filename}{\f1 \line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 lpi }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 lpi }}}{\f1 /lpi }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
loadPositionIndex }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 loadPositionIndex }}}{\f1 /loadPositionIndex }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If loadPositionFile is set, WinBoard loads the specified position file at startup. The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's ini\r
-tial working directory. The filename "-" specifies the standard input. If loadPositionIndex is set to }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 , the }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 th position found in the file is loaded; otherwise the first is loaded.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If loadPositionFile is set, WinBoard loads t\r
+he specified position file at startup. The filename is interpreted relative to WinBoard's initial working directory. The filename "-" specifies the standard input. If loadPositionIndex is set to }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 , the }{\i\f1 N}{\f1 \r
+th position found in the file is loaded; otherwise the first is loaded.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 spf }}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 spf }}}{\f1 /spf }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 savePositionFile }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 savePositionFile }}}{\f1 /savePositionFile }{\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 oldsave }}}{\f1 /oldsave }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xoldsave}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 oldSaveStyle }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 oldSaveStyle }}}{\f1 \r
/oldSaveStyle}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-If this option is False (the default), WinBoard saves games in PGN (portable game notation) and positions in FEN (Forsythe-Edwards notation). If the option is True, a save style that is compatible with older versions of WinBoard (and of xboard) is used in\r
-stead.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is F\r
+alse (the default), WinBoard saves games in PGN (portable game notation) and positions in FEN (Forsythe-Edwards notation). If the option is True, a save style that is compatible with older versions of WinBoard (and of xboard) is used instead.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 debug}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 debug}}}{\f1 /debug}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xdebug}{\b0\f1 ,}{\f1 }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 debugMode}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 debugMode}}}{\f1 \r
/debugMode}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Writes debugging information to the file \ldblquote WinBoard.debug\rdblquote \r
-, including all commands sent to the chess engine, all output received from it, and all commands sent t\r
-o ICS. You can press Ctrl+Alt+F12 to turn this option on or off while WinBoard is running. Each time you turn it on, any existing debug file is overwritten.\r
+, including all commands sent to the chess engine, all output received from it, and all commands sent to ICS. You can press Ctrl+Alt+F12 to turn this option on or\r
+ off while WinBoard is running. Each time you turn it on, any existing debug file is overwritten.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 debugFile}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 debugFile}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /debugFile}{\cs58\f1\cf6\super }{\f1\cf6 }{\i\f1\cf6 filename}{\r
\f1\cf6 }{\b0\f1\cf6 or}{\f1\cf6 }{\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 nameOfDebugFile}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\f1\cf11 }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Specifies how WinBoard should handle unsolicited output from the engine, with respect to saving it in the debug file. The output is further (hopefully) ignored. If }{\r
\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 =0, WinBoard refrains from writing such spurious output to the debug file. If}{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 =1, all engine output is written faithfully to the debug file. If }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
-=2, any protocol-violating line is prefixed with a \lquote #\rquote character, as the engine itself should have done if it wanted to submit info for inclusion in the debug file.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 This option is provided for the benefit of application\r
-s that use the debug file as a source of information, such as the broadcaster of live games TLCV / TLCS. Such applications can be protected from spurious engine output that might otherwise confuse them.\r
+=2, any protocol-violating line is prefixed with a \lquote #\rquote character, as the engine itself should have done if it wanted to submit info for inclusion in the debug file. }{\f1\cf5 The case }{\i\f1\cf5 number}{\f1\cf5 =3 is similar, but now\r
+ marks non-compliant engine output with a more conspicuous prefix.}{\f1\cf11 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 This option is provided for the benefit of applications that use the debug file as a source of information, such as the br\r
+oadcaster of live games TLCV / TLCS. Such applications can be protected from spurious engine output that might otherwise confuse them.\r
\par }{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
+}{\f1 main}}K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 User Interface Options}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
firstLogo}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 firstLogo}}}{\f1\cf2 /firstLogo }{\i\f1\cf2 filename}{\f1\cf2 \r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\f1\cf2 secondLogo}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 secondLogo}}}{\f1\cf2 /secondLogo }{\i\f1\cf2 filename}{\f1\cf2 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 \r
-The appearance of either of these options causes WinBoard to reserve space for displaying logos on both sides of the clocks. Normally the first logo goes left, the second right, unless the option \lquote swap clocks\rquote is in effect. The }{\i\f1\cf2 \r
-filename}{\f1\cf2 must refer to a bitmap file (.bmp) containing a logo for the particular player (usually a 130x65 or 100x50 bitmap, which will be scaled to the height of two clock lines.)\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 The appearance of either of these options ca\r
+uses WinBoard to reserve space for displaying logos on both sides of the clocks. Normally the first logo goes left, the second right, unless the option \lquote swap clocks\rquote is in effect. The }{\i\f1\cf2 filename}{\f1\cf2 \r
+ must refer to a bitmap file (.bmp) containing a logo for the particular player (usually a 130x65 or 100x50 bitmap, which will be scaled to the height of two clock lines.)\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
\f1\cf2 autoLogo}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 autoLogo}}}{\f1\cf2 /autoLogo}{\i\f1\cf2 true|false}{\f1\cf2 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 When true, causes WinBoard to automatically supply a logo \r
-for the first and second chess program, by looking for a fie named logo.bmp in the engine directory (as specified by the /fd or /sd option), and then displays it like this file was given as an argument to the /firstLogo or /secondLogo option. In this mode\r
- it will also look in a sub-folder of its installation folder called \ldblquote logos\rdblquote , for finding logos with names corresponding to the ICS (e.g. \ldblquote chessclub.com.bmp\rdblquote ) or to the human user, should they be involved in a game.\r
-\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 When true, causes WinBoard to automatically supply a logo for the first and second chess program, by looking for a file name\r
+d logo.bmp in the engine directory (as specified by the /fd or /sd option), and then displays it like this file was given as an argument to the /firstLogo or /secondLogo option. In this mode it will also look in a sub-folder of its installation folder cal\r
+led \ldblquote logos\rdblquote , for finding logos with names corresponding to the ICS (e.g. \ldblquote chessclub.com.bmp\rdblquote ) or to the human user, should they be involved in a game.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 hideThinkingFromHuman}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 hideThinkingFromHuman}}}{\f1\cf6 /hideThinkingFromHuman}{\i\f1\cf6 true|false}{\f1\cf6 \r
\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-Prevents the engine thinking output to appear in the display, without necessitating to suppress the sending of this information altogether (so it can still appear in the PGN).\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Prevents the engine thinking output to appear in the display, without\r
+ necessitating to suppress the sending of this information altogether (so it can still appear in the PGN).\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super K}{\r
\f1\cf2 noGUI}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf2\super #}{\f1\cf2 noGUI}}}{\f1\cf2 /noGUI\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 Suppresses all GUI functions of WinBoard (to speed up automated ultra-fast engine-engine games, which you don\rquote \r
-t want to watch). There will be no board or clock updates, no printing of moves, and no update of the icon on the task bar in this mode.}{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 Suppresses all GUI functions of WinBoard (to speed up automated ultra-fast engine-engine games, which you don\rquote t want to watch). There will \r
+be no board or clock updates, no printing of moves, and no update of the icon on the task bar in this mode.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 top}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 top}}}{\f1 /top }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xtop}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 alwaysOnTop}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 alwaysOnTopOpt}}}{\f1 \r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 flip}}}{\f1 /flip }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xflip}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 flipView}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 flipViewOption}}}{\f1 \r
/flipView}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Auto Fl\r
-ip View is not set, or if you are observing but not participating in a game, then the positioning of the board at the start of each game depends on the flipView option. If flipView is False (the default), the board is positioned so that the white pawns m\r
-ove from the bottom to the top; if True, the black pawns move from the bottom to the top. In any case, the }{\f1\uldb Flip View}{\v\f1 FlipView}{\f1 menu command can be used to flip the board after the game starts\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If Auto Flip View is not set, or if you are observing but not participating in a game, then the positioning of the board at the start of each game depends on\r
+ the flipView option. If flipView is False (the default), the board is positioned so that the white pawns move from the bottom to the top; if True, the black pawns move from the bottom to the top. In any case, the }{\f1\uldb Flip View}{\v\f1 FlipView}{\r
+\f1 menu command can be used to flip the board after the game starts\r
\par }\pard\plain \li115\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\b\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ autoflip}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ autoflip}}}{\b /autoflip}{ or }{\b /xautoflip}{, or }{\cs58\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ autoFlipView}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ autoFlipViewOption}}}{\b /autoFlipView }{\b\i true|false\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 highdrag}}}{\f1 /highdrag }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xhighdrag}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 highlightDragging\tab \tab }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 \r
highlightDraggingOpt}}}{\f1 /highlightDragging }{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the }{\f1\uldb Highlight Dragging}{\v\f1 highlightDragging}{\f1 option. Default: False.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the }{\f1\uldb Highlight Dragging}{\v\f1 highlightDragging}{\f1 option. }{\f1\cf5 Must be on for /showTargetSquares to work.}{\f1 Default: False.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 showTargetSquares\tab \tab }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 showTargetSquaresOpt}}}{\f1\cf5 /showTargetSquares }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\f1\cf5 \r
+\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 When set, causes WinBoard to mark all squares the piece you \lquote pick up\rquote \r
+ can legally move to with big fat dot, in different colors for captures and non-captures. }{\f1\uldb\cf5 Highlight Dragging}{\v\f1\cf5 highlightDragging}{\f1\cf5 must be on for this to work. Default: False.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 dropMenu\tab \tab }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 dropMenuOpt}}}{\f1\cf5 /dropMenu }{\i\f1\cf5 true|false}{\f1\cf5 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 When set, the righ\r
+t mouse button used on the board will call up a context menu, (old behavior) rather than allowing you to walk the latest engine PV (new behavior). Default: False.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 highlight}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 highlight}}}{\f1 /highlight }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xhighlight}{\b0\f1 , or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 highlightLastMove}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 \r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 size }}}{\f1 /size }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 boardSize }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 boardSize }}}{\f1 /boardSize }{\i\f1 sizename}{\f1 \r
\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the }{\f1\uldb Board Size}{\v\f1 BoardSizeCmd}{\f1 option. Also chooses \r
-which board size any following Font options will affect. The default is the largest size that will fit on your screen.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the }{\f1\uldb Board Size}{\v\f1 BoardSizeCmd}{\f1 \r
+ option. Also chooses which board size any following Font options will affect. The default is the largest size that will fit on your screen.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ wpc}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ wpc}}}{\f1 /wpc}{\b0\f1 or }{\cs58\b0\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 whitePieceColor}}}{\cs58\f1\super #{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 whitePieceColor}}}{\f1 /whitePieceColor }{\i\f1 color\r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ dsc}}}{\f1 /dsc }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 darkSquareColor}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 darkSquareColor}}}{\f1 /darkSquareColor }{\i\f1 color}{\cs58\f1\super }{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Color specifications for white pieces, black pieces, light squares, and dark squares. Colors can be specified only by red/green/blue intensity, either in hexadecimal (as }{\r
-\i\f1 #rrggbb}{\f1 ) or in decimal (as }{\i\f1 rrr,ggg,bbb}{\f1 ). In the latter format, you must enclose the st\r
-ring in quotation marks if you leave spaces after the commas. The defaults are respectively #FFFFCC, #202020, #C8C365, and #77A26D. Available on the }{\f1\uldb Board Colors}{\v\f1 BoardColors}{\f1 section of the }{\f1\uldb Board Options}{\v\f1 \r
-BoardOptions}{\f1 dialog.\r
+\i\f1 #rrggbb}{\f1 ) or in decimal (as }{\i\f1 rrr,ggg,bbb}{\f1 ). In the latter format, you must enclose the string in quotation marks if you leave spaces after the commas. The defaults are respectively #FFFFCC, #202020, #C8C365, and #77A26D. Available o\r
+n the }{\f1\uldb Board Colors}{\v\f1 BoardColors}{\f1 section of the }{\f1\uldb Board Options}{\v\f1 BoardOptions}{\f1 dialog.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you are using a }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 grayscale}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 grayscale}}}{\f1 grayscale monitor, try setting the colors to:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\fs20 -whitePieceColor:#FFFFFF\line -blackPieceColor:#000000\line -lightSquareColor:#CCCCCC\line -darkSquareColor:#999999\r
\cs58\f1\super }{\f1 \line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super K}{ phc}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\super #}{ phc}}}{\f1 /phc }{\b0\f1 or }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 premoveHighlightColor}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 premoveHighlightColor}}}{\f1 /premoveHighlightColor }{\i\f1 color}{\cs58\f1\super }{\f1 \r
-\par }{\b0\f1 Color specifications for the }{\b0\f1\uldb Highlight Last Move}{\b0\v\f1 HighlightLastMove}{\b0\f1 and }{\b0\f1\uldb Premove}{\b0\v\f1 PremoveCmd}{\b0\f1 options, respectively. Colors can be specified only by red\r
-/green/blue intensity, either in hexadecimal (as }{\b0\i\f1 #rrggbb}{\b0\f1 ) or in decimal (as }{\b0\i\f1 rrr,ggg,bbb}{\b0\f1 \r
+\par }{\b0\f1 Color specifications for the }{\b0\f1\uldb Highlight Last Move}{\b0\v\f1 HighlightLastMove}{\b0\f1 and }{\b0\f1\uldb Premove}{\b0\v\f1 PremoveCmd}{\b0\f1 \r
+ options, respectively. Colors can be specified only by red/green/blue intensity, either in hexadecimal (as }{\b0\i\f1 #rrggbb}{\b0\f1 ) or in decimal (as }{\b0\i\f1 rrr,ggg,bbb}{\b0\f1 \r
). In the latter format, you must enclose the string in quotation marks if you leave spaces after the commas. The defaults are respectively #FFFF00 and #FF0000, respectively.\r
\par }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 mono }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 mono }}}{\f1 /mono}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xmono}{\b0\f1 ,}{\f1 }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 monoMode}}#\r
BoardColors}{\f1 section of the }{\f1\uldb Board Options}{\v\f1 BoardOptions}{\f1 dialog.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 flipBlack}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 flipBlack}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf11 /flipBlack}{\i\f1\cf11 true|false}{\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
-Determines whether WinBoard displays the black pieces upside down (or the white pieces in Flip View). Useful with Shogi with the traditional Japanese pieces, which are not distinguished by color but by orientation.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Dete\r
+rmines whether WinBoard displays the black pieces upside down (or the white pieces in Flip View). Useful with Shogi with the traditional Japanese pieces, which are not distinguished by color but by orientation.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 allWhite}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 allWhite}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf11 /allWhite}{\i\f1\cf11 true|false}{\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
-Determines whether the white piece bitmaps will be used to display black pieces. The white pieces have a dark outline, which the black pieces lack. This makes the latter look vague if the color you give them is not very dark.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Determines whether th\r
+e white piece bitmaps will be used to display black pieces. The white pieces have a dark outline, which the black pieces lack. This makes the latter look vague if the color you give them is not very dark.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 renderPiecesWithFont}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 renderPiecesWithFont}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /renderPiecesWithFont }{\i\f1\cf6 fontname}\r
{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-Uses the named true-type font to render the pieces, rather than the built-in bitmaps. The font must be installed on your computer. If the name starts with a * it is ignored, allowing you to easily disable a font temporarily in the whinboard.ini file.\r
-\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Uses the named tr\r
+ue-type font to render the pieces, rather than the built-in bitmaps. The font must be installed on your computer. If the name starts with a * it is ignored, allowing you to easily disable a font temporarily in the whinboard.ini file.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 fontPieceToCharTable}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 fontPieceToCharTable}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /fontPieceToCharTable }{\i\f1\cf6 \r
characterstring}{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 If font-based rendering of the pieces is used, this table specifies which character of the font alphabet should \r
-be used for which piece. The format of the character strings is the same as that of the argument of /pieceToCharTable.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
+If font-based rendering of the pieces is used, this table specifies which character of the font alphabet should be used for which piece. The format of the character strings is the same as that of the argument of /pieceToCharTable.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 fontPieceSize}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 fontPieceSize}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /fontPieceSize }{\i\f1\cf6 number}{\f1\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The number gives the size of the piece, as a percentage of the square size.\r
\r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 darkBackTextureFile}{\f1 \r
}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 darkBackTextureFile}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /darkBackTextureFile }{\i\f1\cf6 filename}{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The filename indicates a bitmap file that should be used to display the light or dark squares, allowing you to make boards that look like wood, marble, etc. A filename \r
-starting with * is ignored.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The filename indicates a bitmap file that should be used to display the light or dark squares, allowing you to make boa\r
+rds that look like wood, marble, etc. A filename starting with * is ignored.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li119\sb120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 \r
liteBackTextureMode}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 liteBackTextureMode}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /liteBackTextureMode }{\i\f1\cf6 number}{\f1\cf6 \r
\r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 darkBackTextureMode}{\f1 \r
}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 darkBackTextureMode}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /darkBackTextureMode }{\i\f1\cf6 number}{\f1\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf6 The number indicates the way the files given in the background-texture options should be used to fill in the squares.}{\cf6\lang1043\cgrid0 \r
- Valid texture modes are 1 (default) and 2. In mode 1 the squares are taken from portions of the texture bitmap and copied without further \r
-processing. In mode 2, squares can also be rotated, mirrored and so on in order to provide a little more variety to the texture. The operations are selected at random so the board will look slightly different every time the program is run.\line }{\cf6 \r
-\r
+ Valid texture modes are 1 (default) and 2. In mode 1 the squares are taken from portions of the texture bitmap and copied without further processing. In mode 2, squares can also be rotated, mirrored and so on in order to provide a little more variety to \r
+the texture. The operations are selected at random so the board will look slightly different every time the program is run.\line }{\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 overideLineGap}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 overideLineGap}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /overideLineGap }{\i\f1\cf6 number}{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-The number specifies the width, in pixels, of the grid lines used to separate the squares. If it is very small (like a single pixel), it becomes vey hard to see which squares are highlighted (to indicate the l\r
-ast move), as this highlighting is a color change of these grid lines. Highlighting the moves with an arrow is then recommended.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The number specifies the width, in pixels, of the grid lines used to separate the squares. If it is very s\r
+mall (like a single pixel), it becomes vey hard to see which squares are highlighted (to indicate the last move), as this highlighting is a color change of these grid lines. Highlighting the moves with an arrow is then recommended.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 highlightMovesWithArrow}{\f1 }} #{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 highlightMovesWithArrow}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /highlightMovesWithArrow }{\r
\i\f1\cf6 true|false}{\f1\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Select colors and effects to colorize messages in the ICS Interaction window. The effects may be any combination of }{\b\f1 b}{\f1 old, }{\b\f1 i}{\f1 talic, }{\b\f1 u}{\r
\f1 nderline, and }{\b\f1 s}{\f1 trikeout. Colors are specified as for squares and pieces. Available on the }{\f1\uldb ICS Interaction Colors}{\v\f1 ICSInteractionColors}{\f1 section of the }{\f1\uldb ICS Options}{\v\f1 ICSOptions}{\f1 \r
dialog. Limitation: On 256 color displays, Windows chooses the nearest solid color from the system palette, which will not always be close to the color you selected.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 colorBa\r
-ckground}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 colorBackground}}}{\f1 /colorBackground }{\i\f1 color\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
+ colorBackground}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 colorBackground}}}{\f1 /colorBackground }{\i\f1 color\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the background color for the ICS Interaction window. Available on the }{\f1\uldb ICS Interaction Colors}{\v\f1 ICSInteractionColors}{\f1 section of the }{\f1\uldb \r
ICS Options}{\v\f1 ICSOptions}{\f1 dialog.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 colorize}}\r
\pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 commentFont}}}{\f1 /commentFont \ldblquote }{\i\f1 fontname:size effects}{\f1 \rdblquote \line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icsFont}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icsFont}}}{\f1 /icsFont \r
\ldblquote }{\i\f1 fontname:size effects}{\f1 \rdblquote \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The fonts used respectively for the clocks, the message display line, rank and file coo\r
-rdinate labels, the Edit Tags dialog, the Edit Comment dialog, and the ICS Interaction window. These options may be given more than once. Each occurrence affects the fonts for the current board size; that is, the size given in the last preceding /boardSiz\r
-e option, if any, or else the default size. The font size may contain a decimal point, and the effects may be any combination of }{\b\f1 b}{\f1 old, }{\b\f1 i}{\f1 talic, }{\b\f1 u}{\f1 nderline, and }{\b\f1 s}{\f1 trikeout. Example: }{\f2\fs16 \r
-/clockFont="Arial:20.0 bi".}{\f1 Available on the }{\f1\uldb Fonts}{\v\f1 Fonts}{\f1 menu.}{\f2\fs16 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+The fonts used respectively for the clocks, the message display line, rank and file coordinate labels, the Edit Tags dialog, the Edit Comment dialog, and the ICS Interaction window. These options may be given more than once.\r
+ Each occurrence affects the fonts for the current board size; that is, the size given in the last preceding /boardSize option, if any, or else the default size. The font size may contain a decimal point, and the effects may be any combination of }{\b\f1 \r
+b}{\f1 old, }{\b\f1 i}{\f1 talic, }{\b\f1 u}{\f1 nderline, and }{\b\f1 s}{\f1 trikeout. Example: }{\f2\fs16 /clockFont="Arial:20.0 bi".}{\f1 Available on the }{\f1\uldb Fonts}{\v\f1 Fonts}{\f1 menu.}{\f2\fs16 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li115\sb120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 soundShout}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 soundShout}}}{ /soundShout}{\i sound\line }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 soundSShout}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 soundSShout}}}{ /soundSShout }{\i sound\line }{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icsMenu}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icsMenu}}}{\f1 /icsMenu=\{}{\i\f1 entries}{\f1 \} }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /icsMenu=@}{\i\f1 filename\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option lets you customize the right-button }{\f1\uldb context menu}{\v\f1 ICSInteractionContextMenu}{\f1 \r
- that is available in the upper (output) pane of the ICS Interaction window. It co\r
-nsists of a list of menu entries, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the entries. Each entry contains either four fields separated by commas or the single character }{\f2 "-"}{\f1 \r
-. The fields are:\r
+ that is available in the upper (output) pane of the ICS Interaction window. It consists of a list of menu entries, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the entries. Each entry\r
+ contains either four fields separated by commas or the single character }{\f2 "-"}{\f1 . The fields are:\r
\par {\pntext\pard\plain\f5\fs20\lang1033\cgrid \hich\af5\dbch\af0\loch\f5 1.\tab}}\pard\plain \fi-360\li480\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\jclisttab\tx480{\*\pn \pnlvlbody\ilvl0\ls14\pnrnot0\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent360\pnhang{\pntxta .}}\ls14\adjustright \r
-\f5\fs20\cgrid {The menu text. If this field begins with }{\f2 "|"}{, the item begins a new column in the menu and the }{\f2 "|"}{ is not shown. If this field contains an }{\f2 "&"}{\r
-, the character after the ampersand is underlined in the menu and acts as a keyboard shortcut for the item when the menu is displayed. Do not assign the same shortcut key to two different menu items.\r
+\f5\fs20\cgrid {The menu text. If this field begins with }{\f2 "|"}{, the item begins a new column in the menu and the }{\f2 "|"}{ is not shown. If this field contains an }{\f2 "&"}{, the character afte\r
+r the ampersand is underlined in the menu and acts as a keyboard shortcut for the item when the menu is displayed. Do not assign the same shortcut key to two different menu items.\r
\par {\pntext\pard\plain\s26 \f1\fs20\lang1033\cgrid \hich\af1\dbch\af0\loch\f1 2.\tab}}\pard\plain \s26\fi-360\li480\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\jclisttab\tx480{\*\pn \pnlvlbody\ilvl0\ls14\pnrnot0\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent360\pnhang{\pntxta .}}\ls14\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Text to insert into the input pane. The text cannot include a comma. You can use ICS aliases to get around this limitation.\r
\par {\pntext\pard\plain\s26 \f1\fs20\lang1033\cgrid \hich\af1\dbch\af0\loch\f1 3.\tab}}\pard \s26\fi-360\li480\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\jclisttab\tx480{\*\pn \pnlvlbody\ilvl0\ls14\pnrnot0\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent360\pnhang{\pntxta .}}\ls14\adjustright {\f1 \r
A flag (1 or 0) saying whether to insert a space and }{\i\f1 name }{\f1 (see }{\f1\uldb above}{\v\f1 Tell}{\f1 ) after the text. If you set this flag, you might also want to put "(name)" into the menu text as a memory aid.\r
\par {\pntext\pard\plain\s26 \f1\fs20\lang1033\cgrid \hich\af1\dbch\af0\loch\f1 4.\tab}}\pard \s26\fi-360\li480\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\jclisttab\tx480{\*\pn \pnlvlbody\ilvl0\ls14\pnrnot0\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent360\pnhang{\pntxta .}}\ls14\adjustright {\f1 \r
A flag (1 or 0) saying whether the result should be sent immediately to ICS or left in the input pane for further editing.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {The entry }{\f2 "-"}{ produces a separator line in the menu. The top three menu entries are always }{\b Copy and Paste}{, }{\b Copy}{, and }{\b Paste}{\r
-, but you have full control over the rest of the menu.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 You can now use two special insert texts \ldblquote chat\rdblquote and \ldblquote none\rdblquote \r
+ in the entry definitions. In stead of being sent to the ICS, WinBoard will recognize them as special cases (they are not valid ICS commands anyway). \ldblquote Chat\rdblquote will open a chat box for the handle you clicked on, \ldblquote none\rdblquote \r
+ will define a disabled entry (usually used with an item name of spaces), which you could put in the position of the menu that pops up under your mouse pointer, so there would be no default action when you up-click without moving the mouse first.\r
+\par }{The entry }{\f2 "-"}{ produces a separator line in the menu. The top three menu entries are always }{\b Copy and Paste}{, }{\b Copy}{, and }{\b Paste}{, but you have full control over the rest of the menu.\r
\par }{\f1 The default menu is:\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\fs20 \endash \line &Who,who,0,1\line Playe&rs,players,0,1\line &Games,games,0,1\line &Sought,sought,0,1\line \r
-|&Tell (name),tell,1,0\line M&essage (name),message,1,0\line \endash \line &Finger (name),finger,1,1\line &Vars (name),vars,1,1\line &Observe (name),observe,1,1\line &Match (name),match,1,1\line Pl&ay (name),play,1,1\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\fs20 \endash \line &Who,who,0,1\line Playe&rs,players,0,1\line &Games,games,0,1\line &Sought,sought,0,1\line |}{\f2\fs20\cf5 \r
+ ,none,0,0\r
+\par Open Chat Box (name),chat,1,0}{\f2\fs20 \r
+\par &Tell (name),tell,1,0\line M&essage (name),message,1,0\line \endash \line &Finger (name),finger,1,1\line &Vars (name),vars,1,1\line &Observe (name),observe,1,1\line &Match (name),match,1,1\line Pl&ay (name),play,1,1\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 There is no graphical user interface to set this option. To change it, edit your }{\f1\uldb settings}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 file with a plain text editor such as Notepad.\r
\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 icsNames}}\r
#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 icsNames}}}{\f1 /icsNames=\{}{\i\f1 names}{\f1 \} }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /icsNames=@}{\i\f1 filename\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-This option lets you customize the drop-down list of ICS names that appears in the WinBoard startup dialog. It consists of a list of strings, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the strings. When\r
- you select a string from the drop-down list, WinBoard prepends the text \rdblquote /ics /icsHost=\rdblquote and adds the result to the command-line options. There is no graphical user interface to set this option. To change it, edit your }{\f1\uldb \r
-settings}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 file with a plain text editor such as Notepad.\r
+This option lets you customize the drop-down list of ICS names that appears in the WinBoard startup dialog. It consists of a list of strings, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the s\r
+trings. When you select a string from the drop-down list, WinBoard prepends the text \rdblquote /ics /icsHost=\rdblquote and adds the result to the command-line options. There is no graphical user interface to set this option. To change it, edit your }{\r
+\f1\uldb settings}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 file with a plain text editor such as Notepad.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- firstChessProgramNames}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 firstChessProgramNames}}}{\f1 /firstChessProgramNames=\{}{\i\f1 names}{\f1 \} }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 firstCh\r
+essProgramNames}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 firstChessProgramNames}}}{\f1 /firstChessProgramNames=\{}{\i\f1 names}{\f1 \} }{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 \r
/firstChessProgramNames="@}{\i\f1 filename}{\f1 "\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option lets you customize the first drop-down list of chess engine names that appears in the WinBoar\r
-d startup dialog. It consists of a list of strings, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the strings. When you select a string from the drop-down list, WinBoard prepends the text \rdblquote \r
-/cp /firstChessProgram=\rdblquote and adds the result to the command-line options. \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option lets you customize the first drop-down list of chess engine names that appears in the WinBoard startup dialog. It consists of a li\r
+st of strings, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the strings. When you select a string from the drop-down list, WinBoard prepends the text \rdblquote /cp /firstChessProgram=\rdblquote \r
+ and adds the result to the command-line options. \r
\par \r
\par There is no graphical user interface to set this option. To change it, edit your }{\f1\uldb settings}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 file with a plain text editor such as Notepad. Example:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2 /firstChessProgramNames=\{GNUChess\line WCrafty-15_11 /fd="C:\\Program Files\\Crafty"\line ArasanX /fd="C:\\Program Files\\Arasan\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
secondChessProgramNames}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 secondChessProgramNames}}}{\f1 /secondChessProgramNames=\{}{\i\f1 names}{\f1 \}}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 \r
/secondChessProgramNames="@}{\i\f1 filename}{\f1 "}{\i\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-This option lets you customize the second drop-down list of chess engine names that appears in the WinBoard startup dialog. It consists of a list of strings, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that cont\r
-ains the strings. When you select a string from the drop-down list, WinBoard prepends the text \rdblquote /cp /secondChessProgram=\rdblquote and adds the result to the command-line options.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 This option lets you customize the second drop-down list of chess engine names tha\r
+t appears in the WinBoard startup dialog. It consists of a list of strings, one per line. If the option value starts with an @ sign, it is the name of a file that contains the strings. When you select a string from the drop-down list, WinBoard prepends th\r
+e text \rdblquote /cp /secondChessProgram=\rdblquote and adds the result to the command-line options.\r
\par \r
\par There is no graphical user interface to set this option. To change it, edit your }{\f1\uldb settings}{\v\f1 settings}{\f1 file with a plain text editor such as Notepad. Example:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {/secondChessProgramNames=\{GNUChess\line WCrafty-15_11 /sd="C:\\\\Program Files\\\\Crafty\\"\line ArasanX /sd="C:\\Program Files\\\r
Arasan\\Arasan 4.1"\line "EXchess xb" /sd=C:\\EXchess\line Comet-WB /sd=C:\\Comet\line \}}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
-xy coordinates of board}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xy}}}{\f1 /x=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /y=}{\i\f1 ycoord\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
+ xy coordinates of board}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xy}}}{\f1 /x=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /y=}{\i\f1 ycoord\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the initial location of the board window, giving the screen coordinates of the upper left-hand corner. Both arguments must be given together.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
xywh coordinates of Analysis window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xywh}}}{\f1 /analysisX=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /analysisY=}{\i\f1 ycoord}{\f1 /analysisW=}{\r
\i\f1 width}{\f1 /analysisH=}{\i\f1 height\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 \r
-These options have been deprecated, as the analysis window is replaced by the more general engine-output window. They are recognized, but ignored, and no longer saved in the winboard.ini file.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf2 These options have been deprecated, as the analysis window is replaced by the more general engine-outp\r
+ut window. They are recognized, but ignored, and no longer saved in the winboard.ini file.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
xywh coordinates of Comment window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xywh}}}{\f1 /commentX=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /commentY=}{\i\f1 ycoord}{\f1 /commentW=}{\r
\i\f1 width}{\f1 /commentH=}{\i\f1 height\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the initial location and size of the Game List window, giving the screen coordinates of the upper left-hand corner }{\f1\cf2 (relative to the main window), }{\f1 \r
the width, and the height. All four arguments must be given together.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
- xywh coordinates of ICS Interaction window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xywh}}}{\f1 /icsX=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /icsY=}{\i\f1 ycoord}{\f1 /icsW=}{\i\f1 wi\r
-dth}{\f1 /icsH=}{\i\f1 height\r
+ xywh coordinates of ICS Interaction window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xywh}}}{\f1 /icsX=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /icsY=}{\i\f1 ycoord}{\f1 /icsW=}{\i\f1 \r
+width}{\f1 /icsH=}{\i\f1 height\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the initial location and size of the ICS Interaction window, giving the screen coordinates of the upper left-hand corner }{\f1\cf2 (relative to the main window)}{\f1 \r
, the width, and the height. All four arguments must be given together.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 xywh coo\r
-rdinates of Tags window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xywh}}}{\f1 /tagsX=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /tagsY=}{\i\f1 ycoord}{\f1 /tagsW=}{\i\f1 width}{\f1 /tagsH=\r
-}{\i\f1 height\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
+ xywh coordinates of Tags window}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 xywh}}}{\f1 /tagsX=}{\i\f1 xcoord }{\f1 /tagsY=}{\i\f1 ycoord}{\f1 /tagsW=}{\i\f1 width}{\f1 \r
+ /tagsH=}{\i\f1 height\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Sets the initial location and size of the Tags window, giving the screen coordinates of the upper left-hand corner }{\f1\cf2 (relative to the main window)}{\f1 \r
, the width, and the height. All four arguments must be given together.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 \r
autoDisplayComment}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 autoDisplayComment}}}{\f1\cf6 /autoDisplayComment }{\i\f1\cf6 true|false\r
\par }\pard \s2\li119\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 autoDisplayTags}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 autoDisplayTags}}}{\f1\cf6 /autoDisplayTags }{\i\f1\cf6 true|false\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-If set to True, these options cause the window with the move comments, and the window with PGN tags, respectively, to pop up automatically when such tags or comments are encountered during the replaying a stored or loaded game.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 If set to True, these optio\r
+ns cause the window with the move comments, and the window with PGN tags, respectively, to pop up automatically when such tags or comments are encountered during the replaying a stored or loaded game.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 gameListTags}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 gameListTags}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /gameListTags }{\i\f1\cf6 string}{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The }{\i\f1\cf6 string}{\f1\cf6 \r
- contains single-character codes specifying the PGN tags that have to be listed for each game in the game-list window, and their order. The meaning of the characters is a=out-of-book info, b=black Elo, e=event, d=date, o=round, p=players, r=result, }{\r
-\f1\cf2 c=result comment, }{\f1\cf6 w=white Elo, s=site, t=time control and v=variant, Default: \ldblquote eprd\rdblquote .\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 The }{\i\f1\cf6 string}{\f1\cf6 contains single-char\r
+acter codes specifying the PGN tags that have to be listed for each game in the game-list window, and their order. The meaning of the characters is a=out-of-book info, b=black Elo, e=event, d=date, o=round, p=players, r=result, }{\f1\cf2 \r
+c=result comment, }{\f1\cf6 w=white Elo, s=site, t=time control and v=variant, Default: \ldblquote eprd\rdblquote .\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\cf6\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 Adjudication Options}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 Adjudication Options}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 AdjudicationOptions}}}{\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 adjudicateLossThreshold}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 adjudicateLossThreshold}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /adjudicateLossThreshold }{\i\f1\cf6 \r
scorethreshold}{\f1\cf6 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 \r
-If the given value is non-zero, WinBoard adjudicates the game as a loss if both engines agree for a duration of 6 consecutive ply that the score is below the given score threshold for that e\r
-ngine. Make sure the score is interpreted properly by WinBoard, using /firstScoreAbs and /secondScoreAbs if needed.}{\cf6 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 If the given value is non-zero, WinBoard adjudicates the game as a loss if both engines agree for a duration of 6 consecutive pl\r
+y that the score is below the given score threshold for that engine. Make sure the score is interpreted properly by WinBoard, using /firstScoreAbs and /secondScoreAbs if needed.}{\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 adjudicateDrawMoves}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 adjudicateDrawMoves}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf6 /adjudicateDrawMoves }{\i\f1\cf6 number}{\r
\f1\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 trivialDraws}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 trivialDraws}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf11 /trivialDraws}{\i\f1\cf11 true|false}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
-If this option is True, WinBoard adjudicates games as draws that cannot be usualy won without opponent assistance. This applies to KBKB with unlike bishops, and to KBKN, KNKN, KNNK, KRKR and KQKQ. The \r
-draw is called after 6 ply into these end-games, to allow quick mates that can occur in some positions. KQKQ does not really belong in this category, and might be taken out in the future. (When bitbase-based adjudications are implemented.) Legality-testin\r
-g must be on for this option to work.}{\cf11 \r
+If this option is True, WinBoard adjudicates games as draws that cannot be usualy won without opponent assistance. This applies to KBKB with unlike bishops, and to KBKN, KNKN, KNNK, KRKR and KQKQ. The draw is called after 6 \r
+ply into these end-games, to allow quick mates that can occur in some positions. KQKQ does not really belong in this category, and might be taken out in the future. (When bitbase-based adjudications are implemented.) Legality-testing must be on for this o\r
+ption to work.}{\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 ruleMoves}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 ruleMoves}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf11 /ruleMoves }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 If the given value is non-zero, WinBoard adjudicates the game as a draw after the given }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 repeatsToDraw}{\f1 }}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 repeatsToDraw}{\f1 }}}{\f1\cf11 /repeatsToDraw }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 If the given value is non-zero, WinBoard adjudicates the game as a draw if a position is repeated the given }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
- of times. Engines can claim draws after 3 repeats, (on the 3rd occurrence, actually), irrespective of the value of }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 \r
-. Beware that positions that have different castling or en-passant rights do not count as repeats, WinBoard is fully e.p. and castling aware!}{\cf11 \r
+ of times. Engines can claim draws after 3 repeats, (on the 3rd occurrence, actually), irrespective of the value of }{\i\f1\cf11 number}{\f1\cf11 . Beware th\r
+at positions that have different castling or en-passant rights do not count as repeats, WinBoard is fully e.p. and castling aware!}{\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20\cf11 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super +{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\r
\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 Other Options}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Other Options}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 OtherOptions}}}{\b0\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 Other Options\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ncp }}}{\f1 /ncp}{\b0\f1 or }{\f1 /xncp}{\b0\f1 ,}{\f1 }{\b0\f1 or}{\f1 }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \r
\s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 noChessProgram}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 noChessProgram}}}{\r
\f1 /noChessProgram}{\i\f1 true|false}{\f1 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is True, WinBoard acts as a passive chessboard; it does not start a chess program or connect to ICS. This opti\r
-on also sets clockMode to False. Default: False.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is True, WinBoard acts as a passive che\r
+ssboard; it does not start a chess program or connect to ICS. This option also sets clockMode to False. Default: False.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 mode}}#\r
{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 mode}}}{\f1 /mode}{\b0\f1 or }{\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 initialMode}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 initialMode}}}{\f1 /initialMode }{\i\f1 modename\r
\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is given, WinBoard selects the given }{\i\f1 modename}{\f1 from the }{\f1\uldb Mode menu}{\v\f1 ModeMenu }{\f1 after starting and (if applicable) proce\r
-ssing the }{\f1\uldb loadGameFile}{\v\f1 loadGameFile }{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb loadPositionFile}{\v\f1 loadPositionFile }{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If this option is given, WinBoard selects the given }{\i\f1 modename}{\f1 from the }{\f1\uldb Mode menu}{\v\f1 ModeMenu }{\f1 after start\r
+ing and (if applicable) processing the }{\f1\uldb loadGameFile}{\v\f1 loadGameFile }{\f1 or }{\f1\uldb loadPositionFile}{\v\f1 loadPositionFile }{\f1 \r
option. Default: "". Other supported values are TwoMachines, AnalyzeFile, Analysis, MachineWhite, MachineBlack, EditGame, EditPosition, and Training.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 variant}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 variant}}}{\f1 /variant}{\b0\f1 }{\i\f1 varname}{\f1 \r
A game with two Archbishops (10x8 board)\line shatranj\tab Ancient Arabic Chess, with Elephants and General replacing B and Q.\line courier\tab Medieval intermedite between shatranj and modern Chess (on 12x8 board) \line falcon\tab \tab \r
A patented Chess variant with two Falcon pieces (10x8) board \line berolina\tab Pawns capture straight ahead, and move diagonal (legality testing off!)\line cylinder\tab Pieces wrap around the board, as if it were a cylinder (legality testing off!) \line \r
fairy\tab \tab A variant in which all pieces known to WinBoard can participate\line knightmate\tab King moves a Knight, and vice versa\r
-\par }{\cf2 makruk\tab Thai Chess (shatranj-like, pawns promote on 6th rank)\line super\tab \tab Superchess, a shuffle variant with B+N, R+N, K+N and Q+N compound\line great\tab \tab Great Shatranj, variant without sliders, on 10x8 board (le\r
-gality testing off!)\line }{\r
+\par }{\cf2 makruk\tab Thai Chess (shatranj-like, pawns promote on 6th rank)\line super\tab \tab Superchess, a shuffle variant with B+N, R+N, K+N and Q+N compound\line great\tab \tab Great Shatranj, variant without sliders, on 10x8 boa\r
+rd (legality testing off!)\line }{\r
\par }\pard \s66\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright {In the shuffle variants, WinBoard does now shuffle the pieces, although you can still do it by hand using Edit Position. }{\cf0 \r
-Some variants are supported only in ICS mode, including bughouse, and kriegspiel.}{ }{\cf0 The winning/drawing conditions \r
-in crazyhouse (offboard interposition on mate), losers, suicide, giveaway, atomic, and 3check are not fully understood. In crazyhouse,}{\r
- WinBoard now does keep track of offboard pieces.In shatranj it does implement the baring rule when mate detection is switched on.\r
+Some variants are supported only in ICS mode, including bughouse, and kriegspiel.}{ }{\cf0 The winning/drawing conditions in crazyhouse (off-board interposition on mate) are not fully understood}{\cf2 , but }{\cf2 losers, suicide, give\r
+away, atomic, and 3check}{\cf2 this should be OK.}{\cf0 In crazyhouse}{\cf2 , WinBoard now does keep track of off-board pieces.In shatranj it does implement the baring rule when mate detection is switched on}{. }{\cf2 \r
+In xiangqi it does implement the rules for perpetual checking and chasing (in Two-Machines mode).}{\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super K}{\r
+\f1\cf5 shuffleOpenings}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf5\super #}{\f1\cf5 shuffleOpenings}}}{\f1\cf5 /shuffleOpenings\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf5 This volatile option will cause shuffling of all pieces on the back rank, even in variant\r
+s that normally have a fixed opening setup, according to the setting of the /defaultFrcPosition. It will remain in effect untill you se\r
+lect a new variant. In variants with normal castling, corner Rooks and King will be exempted from shuffling. Color-bound pieces such as Bishops will be kept on differently colored squares.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 boardHeight}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 boardHeight}}}{\f1\cf11 /boardHeight }{\i\f1\cf11 height}{\f1\cf11 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Allows you to set a non-standard number of board ranks in any variant. If the height is given as \lquote -1\rquote , the default height for the variant is used.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 boardWidth}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 boardWidth}}}{\f1\cf11 /boardWidth }{\i\f1\cf11 width}{\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Allows you to set a non-standard number of board files in any variant. If the width is given as \lquote -1\rquote \r
-, the default width for the variant is used. Width a non-standard width, the initial position will always be an empty board, as the usual opening array will not fit.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Allows you to set a non-standard number of board files in any variant. If the width is given as \lquote -1\rquote , the default width for the vari\r
+ant is used. Width a non-standard width, the initial position will always be an empty board, as the usual opening array will not fit.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf11 holdingsSize}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 holdingsSize}}}{\f1\cf11 /holdingsSize }{\i\f1\cf11 size}{\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Allows you to set a non-standard size for the holdings in any variant. If the size is given as \lquote -1\rquote \r
-, the default holdings size for the variant is used. The first }{\i\f1\cf11 size}{\f1\cf11 piece types will go into the holdings on capture, and you will be able to drop them on the board in stead of making a normal move. If }{\i\f1\cf11 size}{\f1\cf11 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Allows you to set a non-standard size for the holdings in any variant. If the size is given as \lquote -1\rquote ,\r
+ the default holdings size for the variant is used. The first }{\i\f1\cf11 size}{\f1\cf11 piece types will go into the holdings on capture, and you will be able to drop them on the board in stead of making a normal move. If }{\i\f1\cf11 size}{\f1\cf11 \r
equals 0, there will be no holdings.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf6\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
\f1\cf6 defaultFrcPosition}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf6 defaultFrcPosition}}}{\f1\cf6 /defaultFrcPosition }{\i\f1\cf6 number}{\f1\cf6 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf6 Specifies the number of the opening position in shuffle games like FRC. A value of \lquote -1\rquote means the position is randomly generated by WinBoard.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\cf11\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 }{\r
-\f1\cf11 pieceToSquareTable}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 pieceToSquareTable}}}{\f1\cf11 /pieceToSquareTable }{\i\f1\cf11 characterstring}{\r
-\f1\cf11 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 The characters\r
- that are used to represent the piece types WinBoard knows in FEN diagrams and SAN moves. The string argument has to have an even length (or it will be ignored), as white and black pieces have to be given separately (in that order). The last letter for ea\r
-c\r
-h color will be the King. The letters before that will be PNBRQ and then a whole host of fairy pieces in an order that has not fully crystallized yet (currently FEACWMOHIJGDVSLU, F=Ferz, Elephant, A=Archbishop, C=Chancellor, W=Wazir, M=Commoner, O=Cannon,\r
+\f1\cf11 pieceToCharTable}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 pieceToCharTable}}}{\f1\cf11 /pieceToCharTable }{\i\f1\cf11 characterstring}{\f1\cf11 \r
+\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 The characters that are used to represent the piece types \r
+WinBoard knows in FEN diagrams and SAN moves. The string argument has to have an even length (or it will be ignored), as white and black pieces have to be given separately (in that order). The last letter for each color will be the King. The letters befor\r
+e\r
+ that will be PNBRQ and then a whole host of fairy pieces in an order that has not fully crystallized yet (currently FEACWMOHIJGDVSLU, F=Ferz, Elephant, A=Archbishop, C=Chancellor, W=Wazir, M=Commoner, O=Cannon, H=Nightrider). You should list at least all\r
\r
-H=Nightrider). You should list at least all pieces that occur in the variant you are playing. If you have less than 44 characters in the string, the pieces not mentioned will get assigned a period, and you will not be able to distinguish them in FENs. You\r
- can also explicitly assign pieces a period, in which case they will not be counted in deciding which captured pieces can go into the holdings.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 A tilde as a piece name does mean this piece is used to represent a promoted Pawn in Crazyhouse-like games, i.e. \r
-on capture it turns back onto a Pawn. A + similarly indicate the piece is a Shogi-style promoted piece, that should revert to its non-promoted version on capture (rather than to a Pawn).\r
+pieces that occur in the variant you are playing. If you have less than 44 characters in the string, the pieces not mentioned will get assigned a period, and you will not be able to distinguish them in FENs. You can also explicitly assign pieces a period,\r
+ in which case they will not be counted in deciding which captured pieces can go into the holdings.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cf11 A tilde as a piece name does mean this piece is used to represent a promoted Pawn in Crazyhouse-like games, i.e. on capture it turns back onto a Pawn. A + si\r
+milarly indicate the piece is a Shogi-style promoted piece, that should revert to its non-promoted version on capture (rather than to a Pawn).\r
\par Note that promoted pieces are represented by pieces 11 further in the list.\r
\par You should not have to use this option often: each variant has its own default setting for the piece representation in FEN, which should be sufficient in normal use.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 rsh }}#\r
option while reading settings (whether from the command line or a file), it reads more settings from the given file before reading the next option.\r
\par The }{\f1\uldb Save Settings Now}{\v\f1 SaveSettings}{\f1 menu command writes the current values of most options to a file. In addition, settings are saved automatically when WinBoard exits if }{\f1\uldb Save Settings on Exit}{\v\f1 SaveSettingsOnExit}{\r
\f1 is checked. The settings are written to the last file named in a /settingsFile command }{\f1\cf2 \r
-that could be successfully read, or in a /saveSettingsFile command (where no attempt is made to read it at all, making it work even if the mentioned file did not exist yet),}{\f1 if any; otherwise to winboard.ini}{\i\f1 .}{\f1 The @ opt\r
-ion does not affect which file settings are saved to.\r
-\par Warning: Because Save Settings overwrites the last settings file (usually winboard.ini) and only saves a subset of WinBoard's options, you should not add settings of more options to such a file with a t\r
-ext editor. If you do this, your additional options will be lost on the next Save Settings. You can change the values of existing settings freely, using Notepad or any plain text editor. Be careful not to do this while WinBoard is running, however, unless\r
- you know that Save Settings on Exit is off. Otherwise all your changes will be overwritten and lost when WinBoard exits.\r
+that could be successfully read, or in a /saveSettingsFile command (where no attempt is made to read it at all, making it work even if the mentioned file did not exist yet),}{\f1 if any; otherwise to winboard.ini}{\i\f1 .}{\f1 \r
+ The @ option does not affect which file settings are saved to.\r
+\par Warning: Because Save Settings overwrites the last settings file (usually winboard.ini) and only saves a subset of WinBoard's options, you should not add settings of more options to\r
+ such a file with a text editor. If you do this, your additional options will be lost on the next Save Settings. You can change the values of existing settings freely, using Notepad or any plain text editor. Be careful not to do this while WinBoard is run\r
+ning, however, unless you know that Save Settings on Exit is off. Otherwise all your changes will be overwritten and lost when WinBoard exits.\r
\par }{\f1\cf11 Notice that tournament managers, like PSWBTM, usually call WinBoard with the option not to save settings on exit, so that the entire tournament uses the same settings. So it does make sense to edit \lquote volatile\rquote \r
- options, such as /variant, into the settings file before such a tournament.}{\f1 }{\f1\cf2 Also note that a settings file that contains a /settingsFile or /saveSettingsFile option to redirect later\r
- saving to another file effectively protects its own contents against being overwritten by saving settings.}{\f1 \r
+ options, such as /variant, into the settings file before such a tournament.}{\f1 }{\f1\cf2 Also note that a settings file that contains a /settingsFile or /saveSettingsFile opt\r
+ion to redirect later saving to another file effectively protects its own contents against being overwritten by saving settings.}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s66\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cf11\cgrid {\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super K}{\f1 ICS Logon}\r
}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 ICSLogon}}}{\f1 ICS Logon\r
\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 InstallingChessEngines}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs20 INSTALLING CHESS ENGINES\r
\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Introduction\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard is capable of operating with many different chess engines. You can play chess against a compati\r
-ble engine, set up matches between two engines, or (advanced users only) run an automated computer player on an ICS.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Typically, the main difficulty in installing a new chess engine for use by WinBoard comes in getting the engine itself running and setting \r
-its options appropriately. The connection to WinBoard is relatively straightforward.\r
-\par WinBoard-compatible chess engines are Win32 command line programs that you can run by hand in an MS-DOS Prompt box and type human-readable commands to. WinBoard connects t\r
-o an engine simply by starting the engine up in the background and communicating with it through a pair of pipes. Therefore the basic procedure for installing an engine is:\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+WinBoard is capable of operating with many different chess engines. You can play chess against a compatible engine, set up matches between two engines, or (advanced users only) run an automated computer player on an ICS.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Typically, the main difficulty in installing a new chess engine for use by WinBoard comes in getting the engine itself running and setting its options appropriately. The connection to WinBoard is relatively straightforward.\r
+\par WinBoard-compatible chess engin\r
+es are Win32 command line programs that you can run by hand in an MS-DOS Prompt box and type human-readable commands to. WinBoard connects to an engine simply by starting the engine up in the background and communicating with it through a pair of pipes. T\r
+herefore the basic procedure for installing an engine is:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 1. Get a copy of the engine and any supporting files it needs.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 2. Install and confi\r
-gure the engine as a command-line program by following the instructions that come with it. Try it out by running it from the command line in an MS-DOS Prompt box and make sure it works.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 2. Install and configure the engine as a command-line program by following the instructions that come with it. Try it out by running it \r
+from the command line in an MS-DOS Prompt box and make sure it works.\r
\par 3. Optional, but recommended: Try out the WinBoard plus engine combination by running WinBoard with the proper command line arguments in an MS-DOS Prompt box.\r
\par 4. Create a shortcut on your desktop or Start menu to run the engine with WinBoard.\r
\par 5. Optionally edit your WinBoard.ini file to add the engine to the drop-down lists on WinBoard's startup dialog.\r
in this example. Download your copy of Crafty into this directory from its author's FTP site, }{\f2 ftp://ftp.cis.uab.edu/pub/hyatt}{\f1 . At this writing, you will need at least the following files:\r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\fs20 read.me\line v15/crafty.doc\line v15/crafty.faq\line v15/wcrafty-15.*.exe}{\f1\fs20 \r
(where * is replaced by the largest number there)\line }{\f2\fs20 common/start.zip}{\fs20 \line }{\f2\fs20 common/medium.zip}{\fs20 }{\f1\fs20 (or another book).\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s16\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 2. The first three files are documentation that you can read with a text editor. Read the read.me file first and follow the instructions carefu\r
-lly. This will take some time. Do not write to the author of WinBoard if you have trouble with the instructions in the Crafty read.me. Try running Crafty from an MS-DOS Prompt box and make sure it works before you go on.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s16\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 2. \r
+The first three files are documentation that you can read with a text editor. Read the read.me file first and follow the instructions carefully. This will take some time. Do not write to the author of WinBoard if you have trouble with the instructions in \r
+the Crafty read.me. Try running Crafty from an MS-DOS Prompt box and make sure it works before you go on.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 3. Optional, but recommended: In an MS-DOS Prompt box,}{ }{\f2 cd }{\f1 to the directory where WinBoard is installed, typically }{\f2 "C:\\Program Files\\WinBoard"}{\f1 \r
. Then type the following command line. Use the actual name of the wcrafty file you downloaded, not an }{\f2 *}{\f1 , and if your browser changed the first period to an underscore when you downloaded the file, make that change in the command line too.\r
\r
\par }\pard\plain \s63\fi-720\li1440\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f2\fs20\cgrid {WinBoard /cp /fcp=WCrafty-15.* /fd="C:\\Program Files\\Crafty" /scp=WCrafty-15.* /sd="C:\\Program Files\\Crafty"\r
\par }\pard\plain \s16\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard should start up, with Crafty running as its chess engine. Check that you can play chess against Crafty.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-4. To make a shortcut or Start menu entry for Crafty: Right-click on the desktop and select New/Shortcut. Use the Browse button to find your winboard.exe file and get its name into the Command Line box. (It usually will be "C:\\Program Files\\WinBoard\\\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 4. To make a shortcut or Start menu entry for Crafty: Right-\r
+click on the desktop and select New/Shortcut. Use the Browse button to find your winboard.exe file and get its name into the Command Line box. (It usually will be "C:\\Program Files\\WinBoard\\\r
winboard.exe".) Click in the Command Line box and hit the End key to go to the end. Add the following to the end of the command line, }{\i\f1 after}{\f1 the closing quotation mark. Use the actual name of the wcrafty file you downloaded, not an }{\f2 *}{\r
\f1 , and if your browser changed the first period to an underscore when you downloaded the file, make that change in the command line too.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s63\fi-720\li1440\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f2\fs20\cgrid {/cp /fcp=WCrafty-15.* /fd="C:\\Program Files\\Crafty" \line /scp=WCrafty-15.* /sd="C:\\Program Files\\Crafty"\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s62\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
-Press Next, choose a name for the shortcut, and press Finish. You can now use this shortcut to run WinBoard with Crafty. Double-click it to check that it works. You can drag or copy the shortcut into your Start menu if you like.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 5. To add Crafty as an option in the WinBoard Startup dialog, edit your }{\f1\uldb WinBoard.ini file}{\v\f1 Settings}{\f1 \r
- with Notepad or another plain text editor, carefully following the example shown under }{\f1\uldb /firstChessProgramNames}{\v\f1 firstChessProgramNames}{\f1 above.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s62\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Press Next, choose a name for the shortcut, and press Finish. You can now use this shortcut to run WinBoard w\r
+ith Crafty. Double-click it to check that it works. You can drag or copy the shortcut into your Start menu if you like.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 5. To add Crafty as an option in the WinBoard Startup dialog, edit your }{\f1\uldb WinBoard.ini file}{\v\f1 Settings}{\f1 with Notepad or another plain text edi\r
+tor, carefully following the example shown under }{\f1\uldb /firstChessProgramNames}{\v\f1 firstChessProgramNames}{\f1 above.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s2\li120\sb120\sa60\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel1\adjustright \b\f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 For more information\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you would like to run an automated computer player on the ICS, see the separate file }{\f2 zippy.README}{\f1 \r
-. If you would like to write your own engine to interface to WinBoard, see the separate file }{\f2 engine-intf.html}{\f1 , and join the mailing list mentioned there.\r
- Both files are included in the WinBoard distribution. You might also want to get the source code for WinBoard. It is available from the author's Web page, http://www.tim-mann.org/chess.html}{\f2 .}{\f1 \r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 If you would like to run an automated computer player on the ICS, see the separate file }{\f2 zippy.README}{\f1 . If you would like to write your\r
+ own engine to interface to WinBoard, see the separate file }{\f2 engine-intf.html}{\f1 \r
+, and join the mailing list mentioned there. Both files are included in the WinBoard distribution. You might also want to get the source code for WinBoard. It is available from the author's Web page, http://www.tim-mann.org/chess.html}{\f2 .}{\f1 \r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
K}{\f1 Firewalls}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Firewalls}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Firewalls}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 FIREWALLS\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 By default, "WinBoard /ics"}{\i\f1 }{\f1 \r
-communicates with an Internet Chess Server by opening a TCP socket directly from the machine it is running on to the ICS. If there is a firewall between your machine and the ICS, this won't work. Here are some recipes for gettin\r
-g around common kinds of firewalls using special options to WinBoard}{\i\f1 .}{\f1 Important: See the paragraph in the }{\f1\uldb LIMITATIONS}{\v\f1 LIMITATIONS}{\f1 section below about extra echoes.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Suppose that you can't telnet directly to ICS, but you can telnet to a firewall host, log in,\r
- and then telnet from there to ICS. Let's say the firewall is called fire.wall.com. Set command-line options as follows: \r
+communicates with an Internet Chess Server by opening a TCP socket directly from the machine it is running on to the ICS. If there is a firewall between you\r
+r machine and the ICS, this won't work. Here are some recipes for getting around common kinds of firewalls using special options to WinBoard}{\i\f1 .}{\f1 Important: See the paragraph in the }{\f1\uldb LIMITATIONS}{\v\f1 LIMITATIONS}{\f1 \r
+ section below about extra echoes.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Suppose that you can'\r
+t telnet directly to ICS, but you can telnet to a firewall host, log in, and then telnet from there to ICS. Let's say the firewall is called fire.wall.com. Set command-line options as follows: \r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\fs20 WinBoard -ics -icshost fire.wall.com -icsport 23\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Then when you run WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 in ICS mode, you will be prompted to log in to the firewal\r
-l host. (This works because port 23 is the standard telnet login service.) Do so, then telnet to ICS, using a command like "telnet chessclub.com 5000", or whatever command the firewall provides for telnetting to port 5000.\r
-\par If your firewall lets you telnet \r
-(or rlogin) to remote hosts, but doesn't let you telnet to port 5000, you will have to find some other host outside the firewall that does let you do this, and hop through it. For instance, suppose you have an account at foo.edu. Follow the recipe above, \r
-but instead of typing "telnet chessclub.com 5000" to the firewall, type "telnet foo.edu" (or "rlogin foo.edu"), log in there, and then type "telnet chessclub.com 5000".\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Then when you run WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 \r
+in ICS mode, you will be prompted to log in to the firewall host. (This works because port 23 is the standard telnet login service.) Do so, then telnet to ICS, using a command like "telnet chessclub.com 5000", or whatever command the firewall\r
+ provides for telnetting to port 5000.\r
+\par If your firewall lets you telnet (or rlogin) to remote hosts, but doesn't let you telnet to port 5000, you will have to find some other host outside the firewall that does let you do this, and hop through it. For inst\r
+ance, suppose you have an account at foo.edu. Follow the recipe above, but instead of typing "telnet chessclub.com 5000" to the firewall, type "telnet foo.edu" (or "rlogin foo.edu"), log in there, and then type "telnet chessclub.com 5000".\r
\par Exception: chessclub.com itself lets you connect to the chess server on the default telnet port (23), which is what you get if you don\rquote t specify a port to the telnet program. But the other chess servers don\rquote t allow this.\r
\par Suppose that you can't telnet directly to ICS, but you can use rsh to run programs on a firewall host, and that host can telnet to ICS. Let's say the firewall is called rsh.wall.com. Set command-line options as follows: \r
\par }\pard\plain \s19\li520\sb60\sl-240\slmult0\keep\nowidctlpar\tx520\tx920\tx1320\tx1720\tx2120\adjustright \f6\fs16\cgrid {\f2\fs20 WinBoard -ics -gateway rsh.wall.com -icshost chessclub.com\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Then when you run WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 in ICS mode, it will connect to the ICS by using rsh to run the command "telnet chessclub.com 5000" on host rsh.wall.com.\r
-\par ICC timestamp and FICS timeseal do not work through many}{\b\f1 }{\f1 firewalls. You can use them only if your firewall gives a clean TCP connection with a full 8-bit wide path. If your firewall allows you to get out on\r
-ly by running a special telnet program, you can't use timestamp or timeseal across it. But if you have access to a computer just outside your firewall, and you have much lower netlag when talking to that computer than to the ICS, it might be worthwhile ru\r
-nning timestamp there. Follow the instructions above for hopping through a host outside the firewall (foo.edu in the example), but run timestamp or timeseal on that host instead of telnet.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Suppose that you have a SOCKS firewall that requires you to go throu\r
-gh some extra level of authentication, but after that will give you a clean 8-bit wide TCP connection to the chess server. In that case, if you are using timestamp or timeseal, you need to somehow socksify it; if not, you need to socksify WinBoard itself.\r
- Socksification is beyond the scope of this document, but see the SOCKS Web site at http://www.socks.nec.com/how2socksify.html.\r
+\par ICC timestamp and FICS timeseal do not work through many}{\b\f1 }{\f1 firewalls. You can use them only if your firewall gives a clean TCP connectio\r
+n with a full 8-bit wide path. If your firewall allows you to get out only by running a special telnet program, you can't use timestamp or timeseal across it. But if you have access to a computer just outside your firewall, and you have much lower netlag \r
+w\r
+hen talking to that computer than to the ICS, it might be worthwhile running timestamp there. Follow the instructions above for hopping through a host outside the firewall (foo.edu in the example), but run timestamp or timeseal on that host instead of tel\r
+net.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 \r
+Suppose that you have a SOCKS firewall that requires you to go through some extra level of authentication, but after that will give you a clean 8-bit wide TCP connection to the chess server. In that case, if you are using timestamp or timeseal, you nee\r
+d to somehow socksify it; if not, you need to socksify WinBoard itself. Socksification is beyond the scope of this document, but see the SOCKS Web site at http://www.socks.nec.com/how2socksify.html.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
K}{\f1 Limitations}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Limitations}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Limitations}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 LIMITATIONS }{\f1\fs20\cf11 \r
AND NON-LIMITATIONS}{\f1\fs20 \r
-\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is a Win32 application. It runs o\r
-nly on Windows NT and Windows 95. It does not work on Windows 3.11 or earlier, even with the Win32s compatibility package.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 is a Win32\r
+ application. It runs only on Windows NT and Windows 95. It does not work on Windows 3.11 or earlier, even with the Win32s compatibility package.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\i\f1 CMail, }{\f1 the companion program to xboard for playing electronic mail correspondence chess, has not been ported to Win32.\r
\par There is no way for two people running copies of WinBoard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 to play each other without going through the Internet Chess Server.\r
\par Under some circumstances, your ICS password may be echoed when you log on.\r
-\par If you are connecting to the ICS by running telnet, timestamp, or timeseal on an Internet provider host, you may find that each line you type is echoed back an extra time after you hit Enter. You can probably turn this echo off. If your Internet provider \r
-is a Unix system, type "}{\f2 stty -echo}{\f1 " after you log in to the provider but before you run telnet, timestamp, or timeseal. In addition, you may need to type the sequence \ldblquote }{\f2 Ctrl+Q Ctrl+E Enter}{\f1 \ldblquote \r
- after you have finished logging in to ICS. On VMS, type \ldblquote }{\f2 set terminal /noecho /nowrap}{\f1 \rdblquote , and after you telnet to the ICS, type \ldblquote }{\f2 Ctrl+Q Ctrl+] Enter set mode char Enter Enter}{\f1 \rdblquote \r
+\par If you are connecting to the ICS by running te\r
+lnet, timestamp, or timeseal on an Internet provider host, you may find that each line you type is echoed back an extra time after you hit Enter. You can probably turn this echo off. If your Internet provider is a Unix system, type "}{\f2 stty -echo}{\f1 \r
+" after you log in to the provider but before you run telnet, timestamp, or timeseal. In addition, you may need to type the sequence \ldblquote }{\f2 Ctrl+Q Ctrl+E Enter}{\f1 \ldblquote after you have finished logging in to ICS. On VMS, type \ldblquote }\r
+{\f2 set terminal /noecho /nowrap}{\f1 \rdblquote , and after you telnet to the ICS, type \ldblquote }{\f2 Ctrl+Q Ctrl+] Enter set mode char Enter Enter}{\f1 \rdblquote \r
. It is a good idea to turn off the extra remote echo if you can, because otherwise it can get interleaved with output from the ICS and confuse WinBoard's parsing routines. Don\rquote t just turn off }{\f1\uldb Local Line Editing}{\v\f1 localLineEditing}{\r
\f1 so that you see only the remote echo and not the local one; that will make the interleaving problem worse.\r
\par The game parser recognizes only algebraic notation (SAN).\r
But this way of dropping pieces should be considered an obsolete feature, now that pieces can be dropped by dragging them from the holdings to the board. }{\f1 Anyway, if you would attempt an illegal move when using a chess engine or the ICS,}{\f1\cf11 \r
}{\f1 WinBoard will accept the error message that comes back, undo the move, and let you try another.\r
\par }{\f1\cf11 FEN positions saved by WinBoard}{\i\f1\cf11 }{\f1\cf11 do include correct information about whether castling or en passant are legal, and also handle the 50-move counter.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The mate detector does not understand that non-contact mate is not really mate in bughouse.}{\f1\cf11 }{\f1 The only pro\r
-blem this causes while playing is minor: a "#" (mate indicator) character will show up after a non-contact mating move in the move list. WinBoard will not assume the game is over at that point,}{\f1\cf11 not even when the option Detect Mates is on.\r
-\r
-\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 Edit Game mode al\r
-ways uses the rules of the selected variant, which can be a variant that uses piece drops. You can load and edit games that contain piece drops. The (obsolete) piece menus are not active, but you can perform piece drops by dragging pieces from the holdin\r
-gs.\r
-\par Edit Position mode does not allow you to edit the Crazyhouse holdings properly. You cannot drag pieces to the holding, and using the popup menu to put pieces there does not adapt the holding counts and leads to an inconsistent state. Set up Crazyhouse p\r
-ositions by loading / pasting a bFEN, from there you can set the holdings.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \s20\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The mate detector does not understand that non-contact mate is not really mate in bughouse.}{\f1\cf11 }{\f1 \r
+The only problem this causes while playing is minor: a "#" (mate indicator) character will show up after a non-contact mating move in the move list. WinBoard will not assume the game is over at that point,}{\f1\cf11 \r
+ not even when the option Detect Mates is on.\r
+\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1\cf11 \r
+Edit Game mode always uses the rules of the selected variant, which can be a variant that uses piece drops. You can load and edit games that contain piece drops. The (obsolete) piece menus \r
+are not active, but you can perform piece drops by dragging pieces from the holdings.\r
+\par Edit Position mode does not allow you to edit the Crazyhouse holdings properly. You cannot drag pieces to the holding, and using the popup menu to put pieces there does n\r
+ot adapt the holding counts and leads to an inconsistent state. Set up Crazyhouse positions by loading / pasting a bFEN, from there you can set the holdings.\r
\par Fischer Random castling is fully understood. You can enter castlings by dragging the King on top of your Rook. You can probably also play Fischer Random successfully on ICS by typing castling moves into the ICS Interaction window.\r
\par }{\f1 Also see the ToDo file included with the distribution for many other possible bugs, limitations, and ideas for improvement that have been suggested.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Authors}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 AUTHORS AND CONTRIBUTORS\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 WinBoard is partly based on }{\i\f1 xboard}{\f1 , a chessboard program for Unix and the X Window System. Tim Mann has been responsible for all versions of WinBoard,}{\r
\i\f1 }{\f1 and for xboard versions 1.3 and beyond. }{\f1\cf11 H.G.Muller is responsible for version 4.3.}{\f1 \r
-\par Mark Willia\r
-ms added many features to WinBoard 4.1.0, including copy/paste, premove, icsAlarm, autoFlipView, training mode, auto raise, and blindfold. Hugh Fischer added piece animation to xboard, and Henrik Gram added it to WinBoard. Frank McIngvale contributed many\r
- xboard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 user interface improvements and improved Crafty support. Jochen Wiedmann ported xboard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 to the Amiga, creating }{\i\f1 AmyBoard}{\f1 \r
+\par Mark Williams added many features to WinBoard 4.1.0, including copy/paste, premove, icsAlarm, autoFlipView, training mode, auto raise, and blindfold. Hugh Fischer added piece animation to xboard, and Henrik Gram added it \r
+to WinBoard. Frank McIngvale contributed many xboard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 user interface improvements and improved Crafty support. Jochen Wiedmann ported xboard}{\i\f1 }{\f1 to the Amiga, creating }{\i\f1 AmyBoard}{\f1 \r
, and converted the documentation to texinfo. Elmar Bartel contributed the new piece bitmaps for version 3.2. Evan Welsh wrote }{\i\f1 CMail. }{\f1 \r
John Chanak contributed the initial implementation of ICS mode. The default color scheme was adapted from Wayne Christopher's }{\i\f1 XChess }{\f1 program. Chris Sears and Dan Sears wrote the original xboard}{\i\f1 . }{\f1 They were responsible for xboard\r
}{\i\f1 }{\f1 versions 1.0 through 1.2. }{\f1\cf6 \r
Allessandro Scotti added many elements to the user interface, including the board textures and font-based rendering, the evaluation-graph, move-history and engine-output window. He was also responsible for adding the UCI support.}{\f1 }{\f1\cf11 \r
-H.G. Muller made WinBoard\r
- castling- and e.p.-aware, added variant support with adjustable board sizes, the Crazyhouse holdings, and the fairy pieces. In addition he added most of the adjudication options, made WinBoard ore robust in dealing with buggy and crashing engines, and ex\r
-tended time control with a time-odds and node-count-based modes.}{\f1 \r
+H.G. Muller made WinBoard castling- and e.p.-aware, added variant support with adjustable board sizes, the Crazyhouse holdings, and the fairy pieces. In addition he added most of the adjudication options, made WinBoard ore robust in de\r
+aling with buggy and crashing engines, and extended time control with a time-odds and node-count-based modes.}{\f1 \r
\par Send bug reports to <bug-xboard@gnu.org>. Please run WinBoard with the /debug option and include the output from the resulting WinBoard.debug file in your message.\r
-\par }\pard\plain \s66\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cf11\cgrid {\f1 The WinBoard 4.3.xx line is \r
-being developed by H.G. Muller independently of the GNU Savannah xboard project. Bug reports on this version, and suggestions for improvements and additions, are best posted in the WinBoard forum, development section (}{\field{\*\fldinst {\f1 HYPERLINK\r
- http://www.open-aurec.com/wbforum) }{\f1 {\*\datafield \r
+\par }\pard\plain \s66\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cf11\cgrid {\f1 \r
+The WinBoard 4.3.xx line is being developed by H.G. Muller independently of the GNU Savannah xboard project. Bug reports on this version, and suggestions for improvements and additions, are best posted in the WinBoard forum, development section (}\r
+{\field{\*\fldinst {\f1 HYPERLINK http://www.open-aurec.com/wbforum) }{\f1 {\*\datafield \r
00d0c9ea79f9bace118c8200aa004ba90b02000000170000002300000068007400740070003a002f002f007700770077002e006f00700065006e002d00610075007200650063002e0063006f006d002f007700620066006f00720075006d0029000000e0c9ea79f9bace118c8200aa004ba90b460000006800740074007000\r
-3a002f002f007700770077002e006f00700065006e002d00610075007200650063002e0063006f006d002f007700620066006f00720075006d002900000000000000000000000000000000000000}}}{\fldrslt {\cs59\ul\cf2 http://www.open-aurec.com/wbforum)}}}{\f1 .\r
+3a002f002f007700770077002e006f00700065006e002d00610075007200650063002e0063006f006d002f007700620066006f00720075006d00290000000000000000000000000000000000000000}}}{\fldrslt {\cs59\ul\cf2 http://www.open-aurec.com/wbforum)}}}{\f1 .\r
\par }{\f1\cf2 Michel van den Bergh provided the code for reading Polyglot opening books.\r
-\par Arun Persaud worked with H.G. Muller to combine all the features of the never-released WinBoard 4.2.8 of the Savannah project (mainly \r
-by Daniel Mehrmann), and the never-released 4.3.16 into a unified WinBoard 4.4, which is now available both from the Savannah web site and the WinBoard forum.\r
+\par Arun Persaud worked with H.G. Muller to combine all the features of the never-released \r
+WinBoard 4.2.8 of the Savannah project (mainly by Daniel Mehrmann), and the never-released 4.3.16 into a unified WinBoard 4.4, which is now available both from the Savannah web site and the WinBoard forum.\r
\par }\pard\plain \s1\li120\sb280\sa120\sl-320\slmult0\nowidctlpar\outlinelevel0\adjustright \b\f5\cgrid {\f1\fs20 \page }{\cs58\f1\fs20\super K{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super \r
K}{\f1 Copyright}}#{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super #}{\f1 Copyright}}${\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \r
\f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super $}{\f1 Copyright}}+{\footnote\ftnalt \pard\plain \s57\li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\cs58\f1\super +}{\f1 main}}}{\f1\fs18\up6 }{\f1\fs20 COPYRIGHT\r
\par }\pard\plain \s26\li120\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 Copyright 1991 by Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts. \line Enhancements Copyright 1992-2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.\r
\par }\pard\plain \li120\sb80\sl-240\slmult0\nowidctlpar\adjustright \f5\fs20\cgrid {\f1 The following terms apply to Digital Equipment Corporation's copyright interest in WinBoard:\r
\par All Rights Reserved\r
-\par Permi\r
-ssion to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice \r
-appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Digital not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission.\r
-\par DIGITAL DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, IN\r
-CLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL DIGITAL BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, \r
-NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.\r
+\par Permission to use, copy, modify, and di\r
+stribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation\r
+, and that the name of Digital not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission.\r
+\par DIGITAL DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF \r
+MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL DIGITAL BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTIO\r
+N, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.\r
\par The following terms apply to the enhanced version of WinBoard distributed by the Free Software Foundation:\r
\par This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.\r
\par This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.\r