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19
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access and disk access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive. However, a few set-up and tear-down methods have been added to alleviate the time strain.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipOpponent interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other, round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner. (Smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to half, actually.)
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT 1:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 2:
Since there has been significant interest in persisting stats to disk and such, I have added a few non-timed set-up and tear-down events that should provide the required functionality. This is a semi-breaking change. That is to say: the interface has been modified to add functions, but no body is required for them. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 3:
Bug Fix 1: GameWon and GameLost were only getting called in the case of a time out.
Bug Fix 2: If an engine was timing out every game, the competition would never end.
Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 4:
Results!

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18
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access and disk access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive. However, a few set-up and tear-down methods have been added to alleviate the time strain.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipOpponent interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other, round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner. (Smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to half, actually.)
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT 1:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 2:
Since there has been significant interest in persisting stats to disk and such, I have added a few non-timed set-up and tear-down events that should provide the required functionality. This is a semi-breaking change. That is to say: the interface has been modified to add functions, but no body is required for them. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 3:
Bug Fix 1: GameWon and GameLost were only getting called in the case of a time out.
Bug Fix 2: If an engine was timing out every game, the competition would never end.
Please download the updated version of the framework.
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17
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access and disk access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive. However, a few set-up and tear-down methods have been added to alleviate the time strain.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor IBattleshipOpponent interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other, round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner. (Smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to half, actually.)
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT 1:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 2:
Since there has been significant interest in persisting stats to disk and such, I have added a few non-timed set-up and tear-down events that should provide the required functionality. This is a semi-breaking change. That is to say: the interface has been modified to add functions, but no body is required for them. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 3:
Bug Fix 1: GameWon and GameLost were only getting called in the case of a time out.
Bug Fix 2: If an engine was timing out every game, the competition would never end.
Please download the updated version of the framework.
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16
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access and disk access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive. However, a few set-up and tear-down methods have been added to alleviate the time strain.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other, round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner. (Smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to half, actually.)
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT 1:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 2:
Since there has been significant interest in persisting stats to disk and such, I have added a few non-timed set-up and tear-down events that should provide the required functionality. This is a semi-breaking change. That is to say: the interface has been modified to add functions, but no body is required for them. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 3:
Bug Fix 1: GameWon and GameLost were only getting called in the case of a time out.
Bug Fix 2: If an engine was timing out every game, the competition would never end.
Please download the updated version of the framework.
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15
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access and disk access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive. However, a few set-up and tear-down methods have been added to alleviate the time strain.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other, round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner. (Smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to half, actually.)
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 2:
Since there has been significant interest in persisting stats to disk and such, I have added a few non-timed set-up and tear-down events that should provide the required functionality. This is a semi-breaking change. That is to say: the interface has been modified to add functions, but no body is required for them. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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14
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Post Reopened by abelenky, Kyle Cronin, VonC, Nick D, Dominic Rodger
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Post Closed as "not a real question" by DJ, cletus, Matt Howells, sixlettervariables, Sinan Ünür
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13
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access and disk access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive. However, a few set-up and tear-down methods have been added to alleviate the time strain.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
EDIT 2:
Since there has been significant interest in persisting stats to disk and such, I have added a few non-timed set-up and tear-down events that should provide the required functionality. This is a semi-breaking change. That is to say: the interface has been modified to add functions, but no body is required for them. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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12
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap, but they may be adjacent.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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11
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Code should be posted on stack overflow as an answer, or, if too large, linked.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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10
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
Submit your entries early, so you don't miss your opportunity!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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9
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- A variation on the game allows firing multiple shots per volley, one for each surviving ship.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's the ships of any one player are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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8
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
EDIT:
Thanks to Freed, who has found an error in the Ship.IsValid function. It has been fixed. Please download the updated version of the framework.
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7
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 2.0 / 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
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6
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
- Officially, .Net 3.5 is the only framework requirement.
- Your entry must implement the IBattleshipCompetitor interface.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
Good luck! Have fun!
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Post Reopened by Yishai, DanSingerman, Lawrence Johnston, DR, John Gietzen
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5
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November, 2009. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
Good luck! Have fun!
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Post Closed as "not a real question" by George Stocker, Steven A. Lowe, Thomas Owens, dtb, Rich B
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4
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
- Network access is allowed, but you may find the time restrictions fairly prohibitive.
- Max total size (un-compressed) of an entry is 1 MB.
Good luck! Have fun!
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3
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algoritmalgorithm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
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2
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Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation! The competition will be held starting on the 17th of November. No entries or edits later than zero-hour on the 17th will be accepted. (Central Standard Time)
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algoritm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
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Post Made Community Wiki by John Gietzen
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1
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What is the best Battleship AI?
Battleship!
Back in 2003, (when I was 17,) I competed in a Battleship AI coding competition. Even though I lost that tournament, I had a lot of fun and learned a lot from it.
Now, I would like to resurrect this competition, in the search of the best battleship AI.
Here is the framework: Battleship.zip
The winner will be awarded +450 reputation!
To keep this OBJECTIVE, please follow the spirit of the competition.
Rules of the game:
- The game is be played on a 10x10 grid.
- Each competitor will place each of 5 ships (of lengths 2, 3, 3, 4, 5) on their grid.
- No ships may overlap.
- The competitors then take turns firing single shots at their opponent.
- The opponent will notify the competitor if the shot sinks, hits, or misses.
- Game play ends when all of one player's ships are sunk.
Rules of the competition:
- The spirit of the competition is to find the best Battleship algoritm.
- Anything that is deemed against the spirit of the competition will be grounds for disqualification.
- Interfering with an opponent is against the spirit of the competition.
- Multithreading may be used under the following restrictions:
- No more than one thread may be running while it is not your turn. (Though, any number of threads may be in a "Suspended" state).
- No thread may run at a priority other than "Normal".
- Given the above two restrictions, you will be guaranteed at least 3 dedicated CPU cores during your turn.
- A limit of 1 second of CPU time per game is allotted to each competitor on the primary thread.
- Running out of time results in losing the current game.
- Any unhandled exception will result in losing the current game.
Scoring:
- Best 51 games out of 101 games is the winner of a match.
- All competitors will play matched against each other round-robin style.
- The best half of the competitors will then play a double-elimination tournament to determine the winner.
- I will be using the TournamentApi framework for the tournament.
- The results will be posted here.
- If you submit more than one entry, only your best-scoring entry is eligible for the double-elim.
Good luck! Have fun!
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