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I'm wondering how hard it would be to implement a chess engine. Are there already open-source implementations?

It seems that you'd need a scoring function for a given board constellation, and a very fast way of exploring several likely future board constellations. Exploring all possible future moves is of course impossible, so one could greedily follow the most promising moves, or use approximate techniques like simulated annealing to follow likely moves probabilistically.

Do you think that is within the scope of a machine learning graduate student project -- assuming there was an open-source implementation that the students could use, that does the basic things like returning the next possible moves for a given figure? Probably too hard?

It would be a fun project to have different teams work on chess engines and then let them play against each other ...

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  • Thanks for all the answers. One more aspect is a chess database of previous games. A big one is used on chessgames.com, but is there one available for free use? Also, ideally one would like to learn the opponent's way of playing as the game proceeds, to better predict his or her next moves.
    – Frank
    Jul 19, 2009 at 0:32
  • 1
    Have a look at www.chessbin.com its takes you through the implementation of a chess engine from the beggining. It also provides a chess game starter kit. Jul 20, 2009 at 17:55

13 Answers 13

57

I have spent the last year building my own chess engine in C#. It was not all that difficult. During my work I have made mistakes, I have found that information on the internet was just not presented clearly, and much of it was simply copied from other sites.

In order to make life easier for someone else going through this process, I have been documenting the development of my chess engine and posted much of the source code on my blog:

http://www.chessbin.com

I have even created a Chess Game Development Kit that will get you started in developing your own chess engine, which contains:

  1. All the code necessary to represent a chess board and chess pieces
  2. Code related to validating chess piece movement
  3. Graphical User Interface that displays the chess position and allows you to move pieces around the board

My site is basically dedicated for people just like you; people that want to get started on building their own chess engine.

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37

Yes, this is definitely within the scope of a student project. Here are some links from my archive to get you started:

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  • 1
    I just wanted to note that rotated bitboards are no longer the prefered way to go. Most programmers that were using rotated bitboard are now using a technique called Magic Bitboards (chessprogramming.wikispaces.com/Magic+Bitboards). Jan 5, 2010 at 16:32
  • Thanks, Mathieu - I will investigate this technique further.
    – HTTP 410
    Jan 6, 2010 at 10:49
  • My new C# chess engine uses magic bitboards. They're very fast, but initially difficult to wrap your head around them (rotated bitboards are even worse).
    – HTTP 410
    Mar 16, 2012 at 11:18
  • 'This is a good analysis of MTD, a sophisticated search algorithm.' The link seems to have expired. Here's a paper examining MTD(f): people.csail.mit.edu/plaat/mtdf.html
    – bytefire
    Aug 25, 2013 at 7:48
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Crafty is one of the top chess engines and completely open source. However I would discourage you from using it for a student project it's written in C, very complex and very hard to understand because it is highly optimized.

For educational purposes I would recommend taking a look at Adam Berents site where he describes the process he went through when he implemented a chess engine in C#. The source code is available as well of course. It's an excellent point to start from, in my opinion.

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    Adam Berent has answered this question himself and his answer is definitely worth checking out. Jul 23, 2009 at 12:43
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I cannot answer on your question, but I can answer to your final comment

"It would be a fun project to have different teams work on chess engines and then let them play against each other ... "

This is already done on FICS chess server. I suggest you to login there (needs telnet) and check the documentation as well, you will probably be able to get in touch with people able to give you specific hints on their chessbots

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A reasonable chess engine on modern PCs is certainly doable, especially if you're old enough to remember there were many Chess programs that used just a few K of memory on 1 and 2 MHz 8-bit machines that could play pretty well. You can whip out a chess engine in an interpreted language nowadays and beat the pants off a top 6502 or Z80 programmer coding his tightest fastest stuff.

I got to work with Dan Spracklen, who did the original Sargon in 1978 with his wife Kathleen. Kathleen's brother did the port to Apple II, and I worked with him and with his son. (At the time I worked with these guys, the chess-for-consumer-profit business was done. I remember one guy who brought out Atari ST and Amiga Chess games and there was really not much market for them by that time.)

"Computer Gamesmanship" is a terrific introduction to chess programming as hobbyists performed it in 1983. It's still a delight to read. Covers the good stuff: alpha-beta, minimax, etc.

It's a good enough book that you can start there and then learn about the advances made since.

alt text

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To make a good one is hard, but probably at about the right level for a graduate project (when I took my batchelor's in Computer Science, a friend of mine wrote a chess engine for his final year dissertation).

And yes there are Open Source ones, the leading contender being GNU Chess, which is very well respected.

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It depends on the strength level you are targeting and your programming skills. Assuming you area an experienced programmer, here's my opinion (i know lots of engines, but never coded one):

*A very simple engine, that can beat an beginner/amateur(ELO 1200-1600): lots of code, but easy.

*A engine, that can beat a 'club player' (ELO 1800-2000): it starts to get hard, you'll need opening books, optimizations and a solid AI

*A engine that can beat a master: hard, you'll need some years of previous experience

*A top engine (like Rybka, Houdini, Stockfish, Hiarcs), that can beat any human being on earth 99% of time: this is a tremendous effort, you'll need a LOT of patience and years of experience.

That's how i see it!

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  • I like this answer because I'm considering doing it and am trying to see a rough guideline for what kind of performance I should be aiming for. I'm wondering how you came up with these estimates though?
    – emschorsch
    Aug 27, 2013 at 13:38
  • I'm a player (club level) and programmer.
    – Fernando
    Aug 27, 2013 at 14:12
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Every year at my university, the Introduction to AI course (3rd year course) requires students to create a chess program from scratch along with a paper, and we covered a chapter about adversarial search in lecture so that students have enough knowledge to do it. For us, the project can be done either on our own or with another (obviously expecting a better program if done with a partner, such as deeper ply, etc.). Because the Computer Graphics course is also a 3rd year course, students are allowed to combine the final project of that with the final project of the AI course.

Since I happen to be in my 3rd year and am taking both courses (which have now ended with the first semester), I teamed up with a friend who's also in both courses and we've been working on the program since the end of our exams (which was around Dec. 21) and it's due on Jan. 11.

It's completely doable within a month (especially as a graduate project). We're making a 3d chess program thus it requires more work than just a chess engine of course. The hardest parts will be deciding on a board representation, implementing all the rules (en passant, castling, promotion, etc.), creating a heuristic function, and the game tree (which is usually done with alpha-beta pruning).

Here is the site which we're using to document progress, and later host the code and the paper once we're done (it's a bit empty right now). http://sites.google.com/site/chessatbrock/

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You need to generate all the vaild moves for the given state. Then for every possibility you should to check the opponents possible moves. If there is at least one of them which makes your position worse then you should not follow that branch. To do this you need some kind of scoring to determine how well you are doing. Chess already have some rules about which unit worth how much points. It is enough to look ahead only a few steps like this. Beating the program will still be challenging.

This is of course far from perfect: real players can sacrifice some units to achieve long term goals. This algorithm will not do that.

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  • That's the alpha-beta algorithm, right? Your last comment is right on: If the human opponent sacrifices a piece, to gain something long-term, then he is doing a move that the computer didn't expect. That's probably how the grandmasters beat good chess engines.
    – Frank
    Jul 19, 2009 at 0:47
  • I almost got it right. Now that I know it's name I found the actual algorithm: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha-beta_pruning#Pseudocode It is not so quick to decide which branches are worthless. The algo in my answer is less accurate but faster.
    – stribika
    Jul 19, 2009 at 1:13
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We did a mancala AI followed by a chess AI in Algorithms and Data Structures (sophomore CS).

However, the professor provided big chunks of the chess engine, and we had to do things like improve the decision function, implement checkmate, and other things.

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All depend of the goal that you fix about the AI of the game ! if it's a 2 players game.. easy ! But the AI is quite hard ...Right, the well know open source is GNU Chess !

Some algorithms : http://www.vclcomponents.com/s/0__/source_code_genetic_algorithm_chess
Here is a chess programming wiki !

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In my undergrad AI course we spent half a semester creating various chess engines and testing them out using XBoard or WinBoard. Then at the end of the semester we had a tournament where the student's chess engines competed with each other in XBoard. Overall it worked out pretty well.

Interfacing to XBoard is fairly easy if I recall correctly. Here are some links.

http://www.gnu.org/software/xboard/

interface for XBoard

http://www.tim-mann.org/xboard/engine-intf.html

I'm not sure if this gets you everything you want, I think our chess engines had to create their own board representations and come up with moves on their own, but at least it gets you a graphical board that knows the rules and has a GUI.

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This is probably too simple, but still, interesting lessons to be learned: I present to you the ZX81 Chess game

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