Checkerboard

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File:Chess.board.fabric.png
A checkerboard

A checkerboard (American English) or chequerboard (British English) is a game board of checkered pattern on which checkers (also known as English draughts) is played.[1] Most commonly, it consists of 64 squares (8×8) of alternating dark and light color, typically green and buff (official tournaments), black and red (consumer commercial), or black and white (printed diagrams). An 8×8 checkerboard is used to play many other games, including chess, whereby it is known as a chessboard. Other rectangular square-tiled boards are also often called checkerboards. In The Netherlands, however, a dambord (checker board) has 10 rows and 10 columns for 100 squares in total (see article International draughts).

Games and puzzles using checkerboards

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File:The Childrens Museum of Indianapolis - Checkers.jpg
A game of checkers within the permanent collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

Martin Gardner featured puzzles based on checkerboards in his November 1962 Mathematical Games column in Scientific American. A square checkerboard with an alternating pattern is used for games including:

The following games require an 8×8 board and are sometimes played on a chessboard.

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Mathematical description

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Given a grid with m rows and n columns, a function f(m,n),

f(m,n)={blackif mn(mod2),whiteif m≢n(mod2)

or, alternatively,

f(m,n)={blackif m+n is even,whiteif m+n is odd

The element (m,n)=(0,0) is black and represents the lower left corner of the board.

Encoding

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In Unicode, checkerboard characters are encoded at various code points:

  • U+2427 <reserved-2427>
  • U+2428 <reserved-2428>
  • U+1F67E 🙾 <reserved-1F67E>
  • U+1F67F 🙿 <reserved-1F67F>
  • U+1FB95 🮕 <reserved-1FB95>
  • U+1FB96 🮖 <reserved-1FB96>

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).