I am making an analysis of a game and I pretend to in the future present it to the community. I am did a bit in a noteblock and it looks as cringe like something like: (THE LICHESS AUTOMATIC FORMATATION CUTTED OFF THE INDENTATION)
A3:
B3:
Nxc3:
Cxe3:
C4:
Dxe3:
Nxc4
Cxd3:
F4:
D5,Nxb6
Do you guys how to indent something without making stuff cringe? By the way Lichess features doesn't fit. I need something in which I can write on it and preferably present to people. Mind mapping tools are cringe. I need something like you can click in a plus symbol, and then you see the ramification of possibilities of a move.
I am making an analysis of a game and I pretend to in the future present it to the community. I am did a bit in a noteblock and it looks as cringe like something like: (THE LICHESS AUTOMATIC FORMATATION CUTTED OFF THE INDENTATION)
A3:
B3:
Nxc3:
Cxe3:
C4:
Dxe3:
Nxc4
Cxd3:
F4:
D5,Nxb6
Do you guys how to indent something without making stuff cringe? By the way Lichess features doesn't fit. I need something in which I can write on it and preferably present to people. Mind mapping tools are cringe. I need something like you can click in a plus symbol, and then you see the ramification of possibilities of a move.
kkk
I don't understand. Maybe post an actual example of the problem and explain how you want to change it...
I don't understand. Maybe post an actual example of the problem and explain how you want to change it...
@clutchnutz For example: Look a part of my excerpt. Is there any way of indenting move variants better? Thinking well, I am adapting well to that cringe thing.
https://imgur.com/a/L9PH1KF
@clutchnutz For example: Look a part of my excerpt. Is there any way of indenting move variants better? Thinking well, I am adapting well to that cringe thing.
https://imgur.com/a/L9PH1KF
@AcabaComigo Have you used the "Study" feature on Lichess? You can create studies with multiple move lines and annotations. It can be a bit confusing to read at first but once you understand the format, it's pretty clear and the formatting is automatic.
@AcabaComigo Have you used the "Study" feature on Lichess? You can create studies with multiple move lines and annotations. It can be a bit confusing to read at first but once you understand the format, it's pretty clear and the formatting is automatic.
@AcabaComigo You said the Lichess automatic formatting cuts off the indentation... but why are you indenting? If you choose to format the notation in a non-standard manner - you will be forced to manually format everything or program your own text formatter.
@AcabaComigo You said the Lichess automatic formatting cuts off the indentation... but why are you indenting? If you choose to format the notation in a non-standard manner - you will be forced to manually format everything or program your own text formatter.
@AcabaComigo For what it's worth, your style of formatting is confusing because there are no move numbers. When looking at a series of moves, the lack of move numbers makes it's unclear if white or black is moving. Creating a new indent for every ply also seems like an inefficient use of space.
Perhaps you can explain why you want to change from standard formatting?
@AcabaComigo For what it's worth, your style of formatting is confusing because there are no move numbers. When looking at a series of moves, the lack of move numbers makes it's unclear if white or black is moving. Creating a new indent for every ply also seems like an inefficient use of space.
Perhaps you can explain why you want to change from standard formatting?
@clutchnutz I just want to get the analyzyzz on hand. I am a bit of a boomer.
@clutchnutz I just want to get the analyzyzz on hand. I am a bit of a boomer.
@AcabaComigo Code boomer, code.
@AcabaComigo Code boomer, code.
If I had a nickel!...