In the game of Go, a ladder (四丁, シチョウ, shichō),(Chinese: 征子, romanized: zhengzi) is a basic sequence of moves in which an attacker pursues a group in atari in a zig-zag pattern across the board. If there are no intervening stones, the group will hit the edge of the board and be captured.

The sequence is so basic that there is a Go proverb saying "if you don't know ladders, don't play Go."

The ladder tactic fails if there are stones supporting those being chased close enough to the diagonal path of the ladder. Such a failing ladder is called a broken ladder. Secondary double threat tactics around ladders, involving playing a stone in such a way as to break the ladder and also create some other possibility, are potentially very complex. Such a play is called a ladder breaker.

A ladder can require reading 50 or more moves ahead, which even amateur players can do, as most of the moves are forced. Although ladders are one of the first techniques which human players learn, AlphaGo Zero was only able to handle them much later in its training than many other Go concepts. Other Go AI such as AlphaGo (before AlphaGo Zero) or KataGo use information about ladder outcomes as input features of their neural nets.

See also

  • Lee's Broken Ladder Game

References

Further reading

  • Cho, Chikun (1997). Go: A Complete Introduction to the Game. Tokyo: Kiseido Publishing Company. ISBN 4-906574-50-5.
  • Kageyama, Toshiro (1978). Lessons in the Fundamentals of Go. Translated by Davies, James. Tokyo: Ishi Press.
  • Kim, Janice; Jeong, Soo-hyun (1997). Learn to Play Go: A Master's Guide to the Ultimate Game (2nd ed.). Good Move Press. ISBN 0-9644796-1-3.
  • Shotwell, Peter (2003). Go! More Than a Game. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4629-0006-0.

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