Opening 4NT has no meaning?
#2
Posted 2012-September-25, 19:30
#3
Posted 2012-September-25, 21:05
#5
Posted 2012-September-26, 00:46
#6
Posted 2012-September-26, 01:01
lycier, on 2012-September-26, 00:46, said:
The purpose of this forum is to help the programmers improve GIB. This thread is to point out that there is an opening bid that is undefined, which should not be, so hopefully the programmers will assign a meaning. It is completely irrelevant why some human player chose to bid strangely and open 4NT on these cards.
#7
Posted 2012-September-26, 01:04
Thiros, on 2012-September-25, 21:05, said:
lycier, on 2012-September-26, 00:46, said:
So, I guess it's not obvious what the meaning should be
#10
Posted 2020-June-09, 06:12
The fact that there is no standard meaning and it is often unassigned suggests that it is clearly not essential to assign it.
I play it as a request for specific Ace(s), which was once standard Acol I believe.
But even then there is no real agreement about what to do with ♣A or two Aces.
Used it once this year and not really certain that was wise.
#11
Posted 2020-June-09, 15:03
golfcurler, on 2020-June-09, 05:07, said:
Nice necropost. Several years ago Bbradley62 was one of the most prolific reporters of GIB bugs in this subforum but he disappeared about 3 years ago. I hope he is doing well.
For GIB, 4NT is still undefined.
#12
Posted 2020-June-10, 01:08
pescetom, on 2020-June-09, 06:12, said:
The fact that there is no standard meaning and it is often unassigned suggests that it is clearly not essential to assign it.
I play it as a request for specific Ace(s), which was once standard Acol I believe.
But even then there is no real agreement about what to do with ♣A or two Aces.
Used it once this year and not really certain that was wise.
I too believe this - specific ace ask - was/is part of standard Acol.
Responder bids 5NT with two aces (should never have three!); 6C shows ♣A and opener needs to be aware of this when deciding to open 4NT.
I've used this opening twice in more than 20 years of bridge playing ...
#13
Posted 2020-June-10, 03:05
pgrice, on 2020-June-10, 01:08, said:
- Quantitative e.g. BAL 30 HCP (but there are more sensible ways of bidding such hands)
- Extreme minor 2-suiter e.g. ♠ - ♥ - ♦ Q J x x x x ♣ K J x x x x x as GolfCurler suggests.
- Ordinary Blackwood.
#14
Posted 2020-June-10, 03:22
pgrice, on 2020-June-10, 01:08, said:
Responder bids 5NT with two aces (should never have three!); 6C shows ♣A and opener needs to be aware of this when deciding to open 4NT.
nige1, on 2020-June-10, 03:05, said:
Our agreement is to show the specific Ace but that 5♣ is ambiguous (either ♣A or no A) and a successive 5♦ asks responder to clarify.
That keeps things clean and economical, but I agree it's a fairly daft ask anyway.