lycier, on 2017-January-15, 19:59, said:
Stephen Tu, what you said are really very very good, yes, yes, I agree. This is a normal human's routine in the most of situations.
Now please you would allow me to make my comments which I am afraid you usually would be very angry with me.
I think such sequence is just a Gib TPish bidding style.
1- Whenever Gib really holds 11+TPs, it always will cuebid opp's opening suit.
You waste a lot of time doing these things without gaining any understanding or making any useful observation for the group.
As has been explained multiple times, it has nothing to do with "TP bidding style". It is not a hand evaluation issue. It is a prioritizing of bidding rules issue.
Do you not agree that more than 1 bid can contain hands of the same TP range? Yes or no? For example if GIB open 1c it require the same 6+ to respond 1H or 1S, no? So how does it decide to bid 1h or 1s? It is not based on TP, it is based on shape. It follow the normal human ordering of bid longer suit, or H if 4-4 or spade if 5+ 5+. How does it know these rules? The programmers put in a lot of them and it just goes down the list matching the hand to first rule that fits. So it is easy for it to be changed to say jump to 2S instead of cue bid with inv values and spades but not hearts. You just put the rule for jump to 2s (4+ spades, 3- hearts, 10-12 TP or whatever) on the list higher than the cue bid. So it will prefer to bid 2s to cue bid since the single suited jump is higher priority like it should be. When it holds both majors it will cue since the jump to 2s denies heart length and it won't match the rule for bidding 2s.
So it is not the case that all hands of particular TP range must be lumped into one bid. When responding to takeout double, there are multiple bids that cater to 10/11+ TP: jumps in a new suit, NT bids, and the cue bid. It is not required that it always cue bid first! It might be currently programmed that way, but the point of my posts is that this is a mistake, and must be changed!! I don't know why you go on and on claiming that this is the way GIB bids and that GIB can't be changed here to bid in a more normal human fashion. It bids this way NOW, doesn't mean it has to bid this way forever.
If it holds invitational values (~10-12), basically it just has to use an ordered rule set:
- with only one major, jump in that major
- with neither major, if holding stoppers, bid 1nt with ~8-10/11 hcp, 2nt with 11/12-13. (11 is on the borderline should be upgraded/downgraded based on long suits/tens etc.)
- without stopper and without major, jump in the long other minor
- with both majors, cue bid.
with GF values, like this hand, it can reasonably cue, but only the first round.
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2- Then often Gib will try to show extra values on the second round - or bidding new suit (for example,only 4-card another major), or cuebid.
Yes, and it should have properly ordered rules here too. Like not bid 4 cd major in suit partner bypassed. And bid some number of NT if appropriate as higher priority to cue bid a second time.
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Why would Gib do so? I think Gibs need to make some mechanical TP calculation, orelse Gibs can't understand human's routine
It makes some TP calculation to determine how strong it thinks its hand is. But then it uses rules and the priority of those rules, which are based on BOTH TP and distribution to decide which bid to choose. There is nothing that forces it to cue bid as first priority with TP > 10, other than the broken order of the current rule set. If the programmers reordered the rules, it could be made to jump with one suiters in preference to cue bid, reserving cue bid for only both majors and 13+ TP hands. The problem has nothing to do with using TP to guage hand strength. No one is disputing on these particular deals how strong the hand is. It is the priority of choosing one bid over another. Single suited jumps should be higher in priority than cue bid. Cue bid is fine this hand since it has enough to GF. It just needs more and better defined rules for responding to the cue bid, and for the next round of bidding, and also for another round if it chooses to cue bid a 2nd time.