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Chess Informant, issue No. 97 (2006). Chess Informant (Serbian: Šahovski Informator) is a publishing company from Belgrade, Serbia that periodically (since 2012, four volumes per year) produces volumes of a book entitled Chess Informant, as well as the Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings, Encyclopaedia of Chess Endings, Opening Monographs, other print publications, and software (including ...
The bulk of the content consists of diagrams of positions and chess moves, annotated with symbols, many of them developed by Chess Informant. Chess Informant pioneered the use of Figurine Algebraic Notation to avoid the use of initials for the names of the pieces, which vary between languages. Instead of the traditional names for the openings ...
Chess Informant is a series which collects chess games annotated by top players and publishes them in a language independent format. Chess game collections can be categorized by: 1. OTB (Over the board) 2. Correspondence 3. Online played games 4. Engines vs engine 5. Engine vs human 6. Puzzles 7. mid games 8. endgames
There are other symbols used by various chess engines and publications, such as Chess Informant and Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings, when annotating moves or describing positions. [8] Many of the symbols now have Unicode encodings, but quite a few still require a special chess font with appropriated characters.
Chess Informant: 1966– 4 times a year Serbia General Chess Life: 1946– Monthly United States General CHESS magazine: 1935– Monthly England General Chess Player's Chronicle: 1841–56 1859–75 1877–1902 Monthly England General - Chess Review: 1933–1969 Monthly United States General - Chess Today: 2000–2020 Daily Online/e-mail General
He was one of the group of pioneering originators of the Chess Informant publications. Beginning in 1966, led by Alexander Matanovic , Chess Informant systematized opening classifications, game information, and analysis to a much deeper level of sophistication, and produced volumes of annotated games from major events involving top players ...
Braslav Rabar (27 September 1919, Zagreb – 6 December 1973, Zagreb) was a Croatian-Yugoslavian chess International Master (1950) and chess writer. He was Yugoslav champion in 1951, and in 1953 again tied for the tournament lead, but lost a playoff match. He played for Yugoslavia in three chess Olympiads (1950, 1952, 1954), winning a total of ...
He also wrote a book annotating the games from his World Chess Championship 1985 victory, World Chess Championship Match: Moscow, 1985. [309] He has annotated his own games extensively for the Yugoslav Chess Informant series. [310] In 1982, he co-authored Batsford Chess Openings with British grandmaster Keene.