Jim Ablett wrote:Hi Ron,
Yes, but John Stanback's was first. By twenty years! First version of Chess was released 1988.
I agree completely. No new author should use the name of an older engine!
We have the same problem with the name 'Chaturanga.' If the original Chaturanga source becomes available there will be another problem!
I wonder if there are other engines with duplicate names?
Jim Ablett wrote:I name Evgeny Korniloff's engine 'Chess One' because that's what it's called in the source code.
Jim.
When I run Evgeny Korniloff's engine in console mode, it prints "Chess" as the name. I don't have access to the source code, so I will change my information to 'Chess One' based on your observation. But maybe 'Chess Two' would be more accurate!
One of the reasons for the
Private Engine List is to reserve names for future chess engines. The list also exposes naming conflicts in advance of a public release.
In my opinion: When there is a conflict in names, the original program is the one that gets to keep its name and the newer one using its name gets renamed!
Thanks, Jim!
Ron