PyChess explained

PyChess
Developer:The PyChess Project
Latest Release Version:1.0.3
Programming Language:Python (PyGTK)
Operating System:Unix-like, Windows
Genre:Computer chess
Language Count:61
Language Footnote:[1]
License:GNU General Public License 3

PyChess is a free software chess client developed for GNU. It allows users to play offline or online via the Free Internet Chess Server (FICS). PyChess also incorporates a built-in chess engine, which in contrast to most other chess AIs is written in the Python language and focuses more on fun of play than raw strength. For more advanced users, PyChess allows for virtually any other external chess engine to be used with it.[2]

History

Development on PyChess was started by Thomas Dybdahl Ahle in 2006, and the first public release was sent out later that year.[3] The release contained the bare minimum of features to play a game of chess, and was backed only by the GNU Chess engine.

In the end of 2006, PyChess was close to become a part of GNOME Games, which were holding a usage survey of aspiring new games to include in the suite.[4] Being nearly just started at the time, it lost to the more established glChess, which managed to fix its hardware accelerating dependency before the end of the trial.[5] glChess is still developed as a part of GNOME today.Afterwards there were talks of the two programs merging, but the developers decided they were targeting different user segments, with PyChess aiming towards more advanced users.[6]

In 2009 PyChess won Les Trophées du Libre in Paris in the category of hobby computing.[7]

PyChess has grown steadily since then, with increasing year-to-year development activity, and would cost more than $500,000 to develop today in terms of the man-hours required to develop such a codebase.[8] By 2011 it was among the seven most frequently used chess clients to access the Free Internet Chess Server,[9] which in turn is the only non-web-based chess server available for Linux.

Version 0.12 of PyChess uses PyGObject and GTK+ 3, prior versions used the obsoleted PyGTK.[10]

Logo

The current PyChess logo was contributed by Karol Kreński in 2007.[11] Karol's original design was very cartoonish, but was modified into a slightly calmer expression.[12]

Aims

According to the PyChess website:The PyChess project puts heavy emphasis on simplicity, trying to avoid the complicated user interfaces of XBoard and BabasChess. This implies adding new features slowly, so they can be integrated in the overall usage scheme, and make things "just work". At the same time the project strives to contain most of the features known from major Windows chess clients such as Chessbase and Aquarium by ChessOK.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: pychess/lang . Github . 25 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210801230535/https://github.com/pychess/pychess/tree/master/lang . 1 August 2021. 61 files for languages can be counted, excluding one other file (pychess.pot).
  2. Web site: About PyChess . 25 August 2021 . pychess.github.io.
  3. Web site: 13 September 2006 . Pychess 0.2 .
  4. Web site: 3 September 2006 . GNOME Games Plan for Included Games . unfit . https://web.archive.org/web/20060903141629/http://live.gnome.org/GnomeGames/NewGamesPlan . 3 September 2006.
  5. Web site: Ancell . Robert . 15 September 2006 . glChess... Now in 2D! .
  6. Web site: Ancell . Robert . 17 December 2006 . Summary of current open-source chess programs .
  7. Web site: Kehrer . Anika . 2009-06-09 . Die kleine große Freiheit . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20161231075244/http://www.linux-magazin.de/Online-Artikel/Gewonnen-Trophees-du-Libre-2009 . 31 December 2016 . 17 July 2011 . Linux Magazin . Linux New Media AG . de.
  8. Web site: 9 July 2011 . PyChess at Ohloh .
  9. Web site: PyChess News . 10 July 2011 . 30 December 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161230230309/http://www.pychess.org/news/ . dead .
  10. Web site: PyChess 0.12 in Debian 9 repository .
  11. Web site: Kreński . Karol . Issue 160 – Alternative Logo . 25 March 2007.
  12. Web site: Kreński . Karol . Galeria Karola Kreńskiego . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20161231074635/http://www.inf.sgsp.edu.pl/pub/MALUNKI/2007/ . 31 December 2016 . 10 July 2011.