straube Posted October 18, 2017 Report Share Posted October 18, 2017 52 6 AQJ832 QJ65KJ9 AJT K7 AK987 South is captain. Let's say North shows pattern and 5 QPs at 4C. 1) With rules of short to long (and stop with odd for singleton or doubleton), king parity last 4D-5C small heart, even spade, odd club, even diamondCards placed (if not AQ x Jxxxxx QJxx)5D-5H no club K 2) With rules of short to long (and stop with odd for singleton or doubleton), king parity first 4D-5D even kings, small heart, even spade, odd club, even diamondCards placed (if not AQ x Jxxxxx QJxx) 3) With rules of long to short (and stop for singleton only), K parity last 4D-4H even diamond4S-5C odd club, even spadeCards placed (if not AQ x Jxxxxx QJxx)5D-5S small heart, no club K 4) With rules of long to short (and stop for singleton only), K parity first 4D-4S even kings, even diamond4N-5D odd club, even spadeCards placed (if not AQ x Jxxxxx QJxx)5H-5S small heart (I suppose step one since we don't zoom to jacks) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
straube Posted October 18, 2017 Author Report Share Posted October 18, 2017 I've introduced a bit of unfairness here because I'm skipping with xx when I go from short to long but I'm stopping with xx when long to short. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
straube Posted October 18, 2017 Author Report Share Posted October 18, 2017 The marriage (KQ) problem or occasional AQ problem can only occur with two evens. How about a question that asks whether the honor count in the longer or higher ranking even is equal or greater than the honor count in the shorter or lower ranking suit? Only consider the first two even suits (if three or more). So this would be the last question and only apply with two or more evens? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foobar Posted October 19, 2017 Report Share Posted October 19, 2017 52 6 AQJ832 QJ65KJ9 AJT K7 AK987 South is captain. Let's say North shows pattern and 5 QPs at 4C.Here's a Byzantine method with the following rules: 1) K-parity first (with K=2 QPs always)2) Singletons and doubleton suits are scanned first, with ties broken in rank order. Skip with nothing or stop with A/K3) 4+ cards suits are scanned in length order with ties broken in rank order. Stop with even and continue with odd 4♦ - 4♥ (even K-parity]4♠ - 5♦ (nothing in ♥, ♠, even ♥) AQ of ♥, Q♣ perforce Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yunling Posted October 19, 2017 Report Share Posted October 19, 2017 4♦-4♠(ask 1&2, 0/3/6)So either xx x AQxxxx Qxxx or AQ K xxxxxx xxxx 4NT-5♣(ask 2&3, 1/4) My method also has an ambiguity here, but it is a little better and you can usually bet p not holding all honors in short suits.The ambiguity can be solved higher but I can't stop in a reasonable contract anyway(can stop on 5NT). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sieong Posted October 22, 2017 Report Share Posted October 22, 2017 EPCB.4♦ - 4♥ (even ♦)4♠ - 4n (odd others or ♣ parity is different)5♣ - 5♠ (even ♠ even ♥ odd ♣) Unresolved between AQ in ♠ vs ♦. Same is true for classic PCB. Note that classic PCB would have resolved at 5♥, so EPCB is worse by a step. Had there been a pair of relevant suits for the final ask, EPCB would have gained a step. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nullve Posted November 1, 2017 Report Share Posted November 1, 2017 (edited) 52 6 AQJ832 QJ65KJ9 AJT K7 AK987Auction, with some ambiguity omitted: (...)4♣-4♦ (10-12 hcp (say); relay)4♥-4♠ (even # of non-singleton Ks, no singleton K; relay)4N-5♣ (even # of non-singleton Qs; relay)6♣-? (♦Q, ♣Q, ♦J, ♣J, no ♠J; ?). Edited November 13, 2017 by nullve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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