Hi,
sorry if my problem has already been discussed, but I don't find any
answers it in the archive.
I'm runnning Scid 4.0 on a WinXP system and my settings are not saved -
there's no scid.opt file in the bin-directory. Rather annoying.
But for the rest - Scid is great. À Pascal: Une sacrée pro
for example when you want to see where your kids or trainees made blunders.
think of it like this: one chess coach with a group of 10 trainees, each
playing 5 games in a day. that's 50 games to look at. do you really want to
have your computer "analyzing" what your trainees' opponents did?
On Thu,
I just downloaded the scid src and have it building on OS X. I am curious
about how the game data is actually stored on disk. Which src files should I
be looking at for that?
Thanks.
--
- DAP
-
The ol
Hello,
a chess game is (hopefully a logical flow). It does not help me to
understand a game, if I check only my moves. I have also to understand where
my opponent missed chances. So I even do not understand the options to
analyze a game from one side.
Also it does not save much
On Thu, Oct 15, 2009 at 2:13 AM,
wrote:
>
> All this seems too specific for me : complex UI for very particular use.
>
> Pascal
It might be a complex UI to create, but at a time when scholastic chess is
attracting more and more kids I think that both parents and chess coaches
would greatly appr
1. Open a db in scid. Must have at least a few games.
2. I am opening one with about 8.
3. Set one flag. close the db main window.
4. CLOSE SCID.
5. Reopen SCID and then open the db. The flag is not there.
Perhaps it does not happen always.
*Another way to replicate: *
1. Se