There then follow more paragraphs of complicated rules which, in truth, were generated from the original algorithms used by the first FIDE pairing program. In other words, in every score group there is ALWAYS an ordering. Here is what article A.2 of C.04.3 FIDE (Dutch) System says:įor pairings purposes only, the players are ranked in order of, respectivelyī: pairing numbers assigned to the players accordingly to the initial ranking list and subsequent modifications depending on possible late entries or rating adjustments I guess you might think that the pairing program would go berserk because with only two results possible for each game there would only be 2, 3 or 4 score groups and as more players play each other and so are ineligible to play each other the program would "struggle" to find acceptable pairings which meet the rules. This is one of four approved pairing systems: It implements the FIDE (Dutch) pairing system. The pairing system used by Swiss Manager is the FIDE proprietary JaVaFo pairing engine. ![]() ![]() This kind of stuff is covered in the FA exam. Thank you for clarifying the difference between NA (National Arbiter) exam you took in Germany and the full FA (FIDE Arbiter) exam. Will the pairing computer (definitely not super quantum) go berserk? ![]() Assume a 9 round Swiss tournament with 2^9 players, White always wins.
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