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🕸Fergus Duniho wrote on Tue, Nov 12, 2019 04:29 PM UTC:

What I cannot imagine is that the original inventor would have thought it reasonable to allow e.p. capture

  1. when the capturing Pawn has not seen the other one move past it
  2. when the Pawn that moved is no longer there
  3. when the e.p. square gets occupied

That's all reasonable, and what I've coded for Game Courier is in conformity with it. The first one is already handled by the rule that en passant is not allowed on the second move unless the player is making two en passant captures. This prevents a player from using his first move to move a Pawn into position to do an en passant capture. (Note that a Pawn that was already in the position to do this could just capture the double-moved Pawn normally and then use its second move to go to the space the now captured Pawn had passed over, reaching the same position without using en passant.)

The second is handled by setting the ep1 variable to false whenever a player moves the same Pawn again. Since ep1 would store the position of the previously moved Pawn if the last move were a Pawn move, it checks whether the second move is from that location.

The third is handled by checking for a normal capture before checking for other types of Pawn moves. If the move is a normal capture, it never gets to the code for en passant. If it's not a normal Pawn capture, then the move was to an empty space. By the time it reaches the elseif clause for en passant, it has already been determined that the space is empty.

 


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