Sorry, I still don't understand the explanation in post #47.
You said that if your opponent times out and you don't have enough material to win under normal circumstances (i.e. your opponent doesn't play suicidal), it's a draw. You also said the position is irrelevant.
Now consider this example:
http://lichess.org/pjfw2so3
Under normal circumstances you can't deliver a checkmate with just two knights. It requires either suicidal play from the opponent, or a special position; but you said, the position is irrelevant.
So according to your explanation the game should be drawn, but the current implementation correctly rated it as black's victory (the game would continue Kg1 Nf3#).
If anyone knows, what the current rules actually are, please tell; I'm curious about it.
Sorry, I still don't understand the explanation in post #47.
You said that if your opponent times out and you don't have enough material to win under normal circumstances (i.e. your opponent doesn't play suicidal), it's a draw. You also said the position is irrelevant.
Now consider this example:
http://lichess.org/pjfw2so3
Under normal circumstances you can't deliver a checkmate with just two knights. It requires either suicidal play from the opponent, or a special position; but you said, the position is irrelevant.
So according to your explanation the game should be drawn, but the current implementation correctly rated it as black's victory (the game would continue Kg1 Nf3#).
If anyone knows, what the current rules actually are, please tell; I'm curious about it.