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Portable Draughts Notation (.PDN) is the standard computer-processable format for recording
draughts Checkers (American English), also known as draughts (; British English), is a group of strategy board games for two players which involve diagonal moves of uniform game pieces and mandatory captures by jumping over opponent pieces. Checkers ...
games. This format is derived from
Portable Game Notation Portable Game Notation (PGN) is a standard plain text format for recording chess games (both the moves and related data), which can be read by humans and is also supported by most chess software. History PGN was devised around 1993, by Steven J. ...
, which is the standard chess format. PDN files are text files which must contain Tag Pairs and Movetext for each game.


Tag Pairs

Tag pairs begin with " , the name of the tag, the tag value enclosed in double-quotes, and a closing ". There must be a newline after each tag. Tag names are case-sensitive. PDN data for archival storage is required to provide 7 tags. ;Event: the name of the tournament or match event ;Site: the location of the event. This is in "City, Region COUNTRY" format, where COUNTRY is the 3-letter International Olympic Committee code for the country. An example is "New York City, NY USA". ;Date: the starting date of the game, in YYYY.MM.DD form. "??" are used for unknown values ;Round: the playing round ordinal of the game ;White: the player of the White pieces, in "last name, first name" format ;Black: the player of the Black pieces, same format as White ;Result: the result of the game. This can only have four possible values: "1-0" (White won), "0-1" (Black won), "1/2-1/2" (Draw), or "*" (other, e.g., the game is ongoing) ;FEN: the initial position of the checkers board. This is used to record partial games (starting at some initial position). It is also necessary for some draughts variants where the initial position is not always the same as traditional checkers. If a FEN tag is used, a separate tag pair "SetUp" is required and have its value set to "1". A position can be stored by the FEN tag: etUp "1" EN "[Turn[Color 1">urn.html" ;"title="EN "[Turn">EN "[Turn[Color 1K">urn">EN_"[Turn<_a>[Color_1.html" ;"title="urn.html" ;"title="EN "[Turn">EN "[Turn[Color 1">urn.html" ;"title="EN "[Turn">EN "[Turn[Color 1KSquare number][,]...]:[Color 2][K][Square number][,]...]"] ;Turn: the side to move, B for Black, W for White ;Color 1 and Color 2: the color for the Square numbers that follow B for Black, W, and the sequence is unimportant. ;K: optional before square number, indicates the piece on that square is a king, otherwise it is a man. ;Square number: indicates the square number occupied by a piece. The square number must be at least a "1". On an 8×8 board, it has a range from 1-32. These are comma separated, and the sequence is unimportant. Examples: EN "B:W18,24,27,28,K10,K15:B12,16,20,K22,K25,K29" EN "B:W18,19,21,23,24,26,29,30,31,32:B1,2,3,4,6,7,9,10,11,12"


Movetext

Movetext contains the actual moves for the game. Moves begin with the source square number, then a "-" or "x", finally destination square number. Jumps must be specified by each square that would be jumped ("11x18x25"), or two squares only ("11x25"). The end of the game must contain the 4 standard result codes: "1-0", "1/2-1/2" "0-1", and "*". The codes must be the same as the Result tag pair. An annotator who wishes to suggest alternative moves to those actually played in the game may insert variations enclosed in parentheses. Comments may be added by either a ";" (a comment that continues to the end of the line) or a ""). Comments do not nest.


Variants

PDN can be used in a wide variety of draughts variants synthesized with different board sizes. For example, PDN can represent 88 and 1010 boards. It can represent unmatched board sizes by specifying unequivalent values in the Board-width and the Board-height headers. It can include the optional GameType tag to differentiate between different variants. ;Type-number: this is one of the following type-numbers: :* 0: Chess :* 1:
Chinese chess ''Xiangqi'' (; ), also called Chinese chess or elephant chess, is a strategy board game for two players. It is the most popular board game in China. ''Xiangqi'' is in the same family of games as '' shogi'', '' janggi'', Western chess, '' ch ...
:* 2-19: future chess expansion :* 20: 1010 draughts (international) :* 21:
English draughts English draughts (British English) or checkers (American English), also called straight checkers or simply draughts, is a form of the strategy board game checkers (or draughts). It is played on an 8×8 checkerboard with 12 pieces per side. The ...
(kings only move 1 step at a time) :* 22:
Italian draughts Italian draughts ( it, Dama italiana) is a variant of the draughts family played mainly in Italy and Northern Africa. It is a two-handed game played on a board consisting of sixty-four squares, thirty-two white and thirty-two black. There are twe ...
(as English, Men cannot take kings, must capture max) :* 23: American pool draughts (as 1010, not obliged to take max) :* 24: Spanish pool draughts (as 1010 rules, but men cannot capture backwards) :* 25:
Russian draughts Russian draughts (also known as Shashki or Russian shashki) is a variant of draughts (checkers) played in Russia and some parts of the former USSR, as well as parts of Eastern Europe and Israel. Rules As in all draughts variants, Russian draughts ...
:* 26: Brazilian 88 draughts (same as 1010 rules) :* 27: Canadian 1212 draughts (same as 1010 rules) :* 28: Portuguese draughts :* 29:
Czech draughts Czech draughts is a board game played in the territory formerly occupied by Czechoslovakia (the present day Czech Republic and Slovakia). It is governed by the Czech Draughts Federation. Game rules The draughtsboard has eight ranks and eight f ...
:* 30:
Turkish draughts Turkish draughts (Turkish: Dama)(Armenian: շաշկի)(Arabic: دامە)(Kurmanji: دامە) is a variant of draughts (checkers) played in Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Kuwait, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and several other locations around the Mediterranean Se ...
:* 31:
Thai draughts Thai or THAI may refer to: * Of or from Thailand, a country in Southeast Asia ** Thai people, the dominant ethnic group of Thailand ** Thai language, a Tai-Kadai language spoken mainly in and around Thailand *** Thai script *** Thai (Unicode bloc ...
:* 40:
Frisian draughts Frisian draughts is a variant of draughts native to Friesland in the Netherlands.The rules are similar to International draughts, but is notable for its unique feature of allowing for orthogonal captures (up, down, left, right) in addition to the ...
:* 41: Spantsiretti (Russian draughts 108) :* 32-39, 42-49: Future draughts expansion :* 50:
Othello ''Othello'' (full title: ''The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice'') is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare, probably in 1603, set in the contemporary Ottoman–Venetian War (1570–1573) fought for the control of the Island of Cyp ...
:* 98: Antidraughts ;Start-color: B for Black, W for White ;Board-width: board width ;Board-height: board height ;Notation :* A - alpha/numeric like chess :* N - numeric like draughts :* S - SAN - short-form chess notation. Then follows a number 0-4 telling where square A1 or 1 is for the side who starts the game (White or Black), 0 = Bottom left, 1=Bottom right, 2=Top left, 3=Top right. ;Invert-flag :* 0 - pieces on dark squares :* 1 - pieces on light squares


Example

{{sxhl, 2=moin, 1= vent "itsyourturn.com USA vs. World 8/04" ite "" ate "2004.08.23" ound "1" lack "Lindus Edwards" hite "Anthony Perez" esult "1/2-1/2" 1. 11-15 23-18 2. 8-11 26-23 {Crescent Cross} 3. 10-14 30-26 4. 6-10 24-19 5. 15-24 27-20* {28-19 loses PP} 6. 4-8 {the popular book line is 12-16 28-24 4-8 22-17* 8-12 32-28* = same} 32-27 {Perez' cook; 28-24 apparently goes to the previous note} 7. 12-16 {seems to be the only move with any strength} 27-24 8. 8-12 22-17 {returning to the book line mentioned earlier} 9. 10-15 17-10 10. 7-14 26-22* 1/2-1/2 {a very popular position} 1/2-1/2 vent "The Royal Tour" ite "" ate "??" ound "1" lack "a" hite "b" esult "1-0" etup "1" EN "W:W27,19,18,11,7,6,5:B28,26,25,20,17,10,9,4,3,2." {27-24 Beginning a spectacular shot in which White pitches (almost) all his men } 1. 19-15 10x19 2. 5-1 3x10 3. 11-8 4x11 4. 27-24 20x27 5. 18-14 9x18 6. 1-5 2x9 {2-9 and now the coup de grace that inspired the name of this problem...} 7. 5x32 {5-32 (Several different jumping sequences are possible, for example 5 x 14 x 7 x 16 x 23 x 14 x 21 x 30 x 23 x 32) White Wins. As an interesting side note, this nine-piece jump is the theoretical maximum number of pieces it is possible to jump in a single turn in checkers (try setting up a 10-piece jump - the board lacks sufficient space!)} 1-0 vent "WK 2003" ite "Zwartewaterland, Netherlands" ound "1" ate "2003.05.23" hite "Ndjofang, J.M." lack "Heusdens, R." esult "1/2-1/2" ameType "20" 1. 32-28 17-22 2. 28x17 12x21 3. 31-26 7-12 4. 26x17 12x21 5. 36-31 19-23 6. 34-29 23x34 7. 39x30 20-24 8. 30x19 14x23 9. 37-32 21-27 10. 31x22 18x27 11. 32x21 16x27 12. 41-37 10-14 13. 46-41 11-17 14. 33-29 23x34 15. 40x29 6-11 16. 35-30 14-20 17. 45-40 20-24 18. 30x19 13x33 19. 38x29 5-10 20. 42-38 10-14 21. 44-39 8-12 22. 40-34 14-19 23. 50-44 2-7 24. 48-42 19-23 25. 29x18 12x23 26. 39-33 7-12 27. 33-28 23x32 28. 37x28 9-13 29. 44-39 3-9 30. 38-33 9-14 31. 34-30 17-21 32. 33-29 21-26 33. 43-38 1-7 34. 41-37 11-17 35. 39-34 7-11 36. 30-24 11-16 37. 34-30 27-31 38. 28-23 16-21 39. 30-25 12-18 40. 23x12 17x8 1/2-1/2


See also

*
Portable Game Notation Portable Game Notation (PGN) is a standard plain text format for recording chess games (both the moves and related data), which can be read by humans and is also supported by most chess software. History PGN was devised around 1993, by Steven J. ...
– Format for recording chess games


External links


Original PDN specification

PDN 2.0 specification



The official PDN 3.0 specification
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PDN viewers


Checkers Land

Damaq

Dragon Draughts

Entry Dambo

Nemesis Checkers
Draughts Computer file formats Notation