Swiss Pairs
#1
Posted 2016-May-12, 12:34
Did I do something wrong when I set the tables to change after 3 boards? Should I have set it so tables didn't move at all? Or ? I've never heard of this happening before so trying to avoid it happening again.
#2
Posted 2016-May-12, 13:09
There was some defect in the movement. The movement that you ran and the movement that your computer thought you were running were different. That would account for pairs having scores attributed to them that they did not earn.
I see that the topic heading is BBO tournament discussion. This was a BBO tournament? This kind of thing should never happen. It was obviously some sort of glitch in the programming.
#3
Posted 2016-May-13, 00:15
#4
Posted 2016-May-13, 04:57
onoway, on 2016-May-12, 12:34, said:
Pam, did you look at the tournament results yourself? What tournament was it?
#5
Posted 2016-May-13, 10:26
We've recently made some changes to the server code that saves results, so it's possible that it has a bug like this. But we need details so we can investigate.
#6
Posted 2016-May-13, 20:46
barmar, on 2016-May-13, 10:26, said:
We've recently made some changes to the server code that saves results, so it's possible that it has a bug like this. But we need details so we can investigate.
messaged you.
I ran another one today, this one a 12 board tourney and heard nothing about this happening this time.
I do have a question though. Is it still possible to set up a swiss team match? I see the settings for it on the web version but have been told I am not allowed to set such an event, as either onoway or as BBO_IAC so was curious. I'm not truly sure I want to, I think setting individual team matches might be less problematic even if hands do have to be loaded into each match instead of in one go for all of them, but someone is trying to set up multiple team matches as a basis for a teaching session and thought that might be an option.
#7
Posted 2016-May-17, 14:15
We run them once in a while, and BBOItalia has run them too (free versions), but they are fully cautioned and aware of the bugs, and have assured us their Italian player pool is aware.
They are not suitable for the multiple team match teaching games you're thinking of IMO (the one you recently told me about). We are interested in making team match creators life a bit easier though. It's a funny coincidence actually because I think Barry is just starting on a new project related to this and we're thinking of asking for your feedback once it's more ready.
Anyway STT is not suitable for what you're thinking of as a teaching tool. It is more a fun tourney, team game style, swiss scoring.
John Nelson.
#8
Posted 2016-June-07, 19:12
Rain, on 2016-May-17, 14:15, said:
We run them once in a while, and BBOItalia has run them too (free versions), but they are fully cautioned and aware of the bugs, and have assured us their Italian player pool is aware.
They are not suitable for the multiple team match teaching games you're thinking of IMO (the one you recently told me about). We are interested in making team match creators life a bit easier though. It's a funny coincidence actually because I think Barry is just starting on a new project related to this and we're thinking of asking for your feedback once it's more ready.
Anyway STT is not suitable for what you're thinking of as a teaching tool. It is more a fun tourney, team game style, swiss scoring.
Anything I can do just let me know, happy to help in any way I can
#9
Posted 2016-June-14, 09:33
I write this because frequently pairs are re-matched and play each other more than once, sometimes more than that as well.
Seems to make a mockery of Swiss Pairs
#10
Posted 2016-June-23, 23:51
shintaro, on 2016-June-14, 09:33, said:
I write this because frequently pairs are re-matched and play each other more than once, sometimes more than that as well.
Seems to make a mockery of Swiss Pairs
I don't know specifically about Swiss but usually that happens in a small UNclocked tourney, the faster pairs move and there aren't enough pairs once they split so people end up playing each other twice or more. Basically you end with two tourneys inside a tourney. It's a major reason to use the clocked option in small tourneys. Of course, then people get upset about having to wait for the others to finish before changing, everyone is in a hurry these days or else trying to prove they're not.
#11
Posted 2016-June-28, 12:30
onoway, on 2016-June-23, 23:51, said:
Sorry onoway but I am talking about a 'clocked' 14 minutes per round Swiss Pairs