@jdannan said in #9:
> Is there a good tool for calculating centipawn loss on a move by move basis, and also for processing a bunch of games? lichess reports the average for an individual game of course but that's a bit limited.
I used python-chess to write a program go through the game, analyse each move and calculated the centipawn loss afterwards. I don't know if there exists a program that does this.
@jdannan said in #10:
> One observation I can make about centipawn loss is that it varies substantially with the style of the player and/or nature of the individual game. I sometimes get very low values for a player of my modest ability, whereas a club mate with very similar (actually higher) rating usually generates much larger values. He takes more risks but this means he poses more questions.
In a previous post (chessenginelab.substack.com/p/evaluating-sharpness-using-lc0s-wdl) I looked at a way to quantify the sharpness of a position. In the situation that you described, the sharpness of the games of your club mate should be higher. I still want to do some testing to see if sharpness and centipawn loss/accuracy are correlated.
> Is there a good tool for calculating centipawn loss on a move by move basis, and also for processing a bunch of games? lichess reports the average for an individual game of course but that's a bit limited.
I used python-chess to write a program go through the game, analyse each move and calculated the centipawn loss afterwards. I don't know if there exists a program that does this.
@jdannan said in #10:
> One observation I can make about centipawn loss is that it varies substantially with the style of the player and/or nature of the individual game. I sometimes get very low values for a player of my modest ability, whereas a club mate with very similar (actually higher) rating usually generates much larger values. He takes more risks but this means he poses more questions.
In a previous post (chessenginelab.substack.com/p/evaluating-sharpness-using-lc0s-wdl) I looked at a way to quantify the sharpness of a position. In the situation that you described, the sharpness of the games of your club mate should be higher. I still want to do some testing to see if sharpness and centipawn loss/accuracy are correlated.