![]() ![]() My PC is relatively good with E7 64GB RAM and 1080 GTX. And it wins in the late mid game when 192 has blunders. (BTW, I run the 192 weight against 157 weight today and both times 157 won as black. I strongly recommend trying them and kudos to both writers! I really think Leela Zero has helped me a lot and I am glad I discovered this combo. I don’t know him and don’t know if he reads posts here but again Thank You! It took him three releases to get the things he wanted 0.40.0 -> 0.40.1 -> 0.41.0 but he did so quickly and so wonderfully. And it could save out all the edits, winrates, variations, etc onto a new sgf but the realtime analysis alone is good enough for all I wanted and needed. It can show better moves just like Lizzie and it can save those variations. It suddenly become a much better analyzing tool together with Leela zero. The most recent Leela zero release adds analysis features, like lz-genmove_analyze, and Thank You yichuanshen! the author of Sabaki responded very quickly and added a lot of useful tools into Sabaki. However it lacks realtime analysis like Lizzie so I have been using both… Until recently… Returns a boolean whether the engine supports the given command. I have been using Sabaki to write sgf and edit sgf and it’s been great. Learn more about sabaki/gtp: package health score, popularity, security, maintenance. And the move tree is always confusing as it appears to be not moving and I do not know which move I am at. Sabaki is a Japanese go term and English loanword that is most commonly understood as the process of establishing potential inside an opponents area by creation of a non-heavy stone(s) or group(s). And there’s no command line telling me what LZ is doing or thinking. Like when I hover mouse over the best move, the variation appears but keeps changing and I have to pause the “pondering” for it to stabilize in there. Lizzie was good but I always find it not quite user friendly. Its elegant, it can be customized with themes like Hikaru no Go, and you can also install open source. It’s like Sai in Hikaru no Go only in that it does not teach, only tells you a cold number - winrate percentage.īut for a long time, there’s no good interface for analyzing games. Sabaki is an open source SGF editor, and therefore free. However, it works OK for both of leela-zero and sai routines. It’s not proprietary, it’s not charging any fee, and it’s mighty strong. when I try to set engine of phoenixgo as analyzer in Sabaki v.0.52.0, a prompt of warning comes to show that, 'The select engine does not support analysis.'. When I discovered Leela Zero, it was eye opening. ![]()
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