Bo Haglund, Soren Hein, Bob Richardson

Rev X, 2014-11-16

Latest DLL issue with this description is available at http://www.bahnhof.se/wb758135/

Description of the DLL functions supported in Double Dummy Problem Solver 2.8.2

Callable functions

The callable functions are all preceded with extern "C" __declspec(dllimport) int __stdcall. The prototypes are available in dll.h, in the include directory.

Return codes are given at the end.

Not all functions are present in all versions of the DLL. For historical reasons, the function names are not entirely consistent with respect to the input format. Functions accepting binary deals will end on Bin, and those accepting PBN deals will end on PBN in the future. At some point existing function names may be changed as well, so use the new names!

The Basic Functions

The basic functions SolveBoard and SolveBoardPBN each solve a single hand and are thread-safe, making it possible to use them for solving several hands in parallel. The other callable functions use the SolveBoard functions either directly or indirectly.

The Multi-Thread Double Dummy Solver Functions

The double dummy trick values for all 5 * 4 = 20 possible combinations of a hand’s trump strain and declarer hand alternatives are solved by a single call to one of the functions CalcDDtable and CalcDDtablePBN. Threads are allocated per strain. in order to save computations.

To obtain better utilization of available threads, the double dummy (DD) tables can be grouped using one of the functions CalcAllTables and CalcAllTablesPBN.

Solving hands can be done much more quickly using one of the multi-thread alternatives for calling SolveBoard. Then a number of hands are grouped for a single call to one of the functions SolveAllBoards, SolveAllChunksBin and SolveAllChunksPBN. The hands are then solved in parallel using the available threads.

The number of threads is automatically configured by DDS on Windows, taking into account the number of processor cores and available memory. The number of threads can be influenced using by calling SetMaxThreads. This function should probably always be called on Linux/Mac, with a zero argument for auto-configuration.

Calling FreeMemory causes DDS to give up its dynamically allocated memory.

The PAR Calculation Functions

The PAR calculation functions find the optimal contract(s) assuming open cards and optimal bidding from both sides. In very rare cases it matters which side or hand that starts the bidding, i.e. which side or hand that is first to bid its optimal contract.

Two alternatives are given:

  1. The PAR scores / contracts are calculated separately for each side. In almost all cases the results will be identical for both sides, but in rare cases the result is dependent on which side that “starts the bidding”, i.e. that first finds the bid that is most beneficial for the own side. One example is when both sides can make 1 NT.
  2. The dealer hand is assumed to “start the bidding”.

The presentation of the par score and contracts are given in alternative formats.

The functions Par, SidesPar and DealerPar do the par calculation; their call must be preceded by a function call calculating the double dummy table values.

The functions SidesParBin and DealerParBin provide binary output of the par results, making it easy to tailor-make the output text format. Two such functions, ConvertToSidesTextFormat and ConvertToDealerTextFormat, are included as examples.

It is possible as an option to perform par calculation in CalcAllTables and CalcAllTablesPBN.

The par calculation is executed using a single thread. But the calculation is very fast and its duration is negligible compared to the double dummy calculation duration.

Double Dummy Value Analyser Functions

The functions AnalysePlayBin, AnalysePlayPBN, AnalyseAllPlaysBin and AnalyseAllPlaysPBN take the played cards in a game or games and calculate and present their double dummy values.

Function Arguments Format Comment
SolveBoard struct deal dl Binary The most basic function, solves a single hand from the beginning or from later play
int target
int solutions
int mode
struct futureTricks *futp
int threadIndex
 
SolveBoardPBN struct dealPBN dlPBN PBN As SolveBoard, but with PBN deal format.
int target
int solutions
int mode
struct futureTricks *futp
int threadIndex
 
CalcDDtable struct ddTableDeal tableDeal Binary Solves an initial hand for all possible declarers and denominations (up to 20 combinations.)
struct ddTableResults *tablep
 
CalcDDtablePBN struct ddTableDealPBN tableDealPBN PBN As CalcDDtable, but with PBN deal format.
struct ddTableResults *tablep
 
CalcAllTables struct ddTableDeals *dealsp Binary Solves a number of hands in parallel. Multi-threaded.
int mode
int trumpFilter[5]
struct ddtablesRes *resp
struct allParResults *pres
 
CalcAllTablesPBN struct  ddTableDealsPBN *dealsp PBN As CalcAllTables, but with PBN deal format.
int mode
int trumpFilter[5]
struct ddTablesRes *resp
struct allParResults *pres
 
SolveAllBoards struct boardsPBN *bop PBN Consider using this instead of the next 3 “Chunk” functions”!
struct solvedBoards *solvedp
 
SolveAllChunksBin struct boards *bop Binary Solves a number of hands in parallel. Multi-threaded.
struct solvedBoards *solvedp
int chunkSize
 
SolveAllChunks struct boardsPBN *bop PBN Alias for SolveAllChunksPBN; don’t use!
struct solvedBoards *solvedp
int chunkSize
 
SolveAllChunksPBN struct boardsPBN” *bop PBN Solves a number of hands in parallel. Multi-threaded.
struct solvedBoards *solvedp
int chunkSize
 
Par struct ddTableResults *tablep No format Solves for the par contracts given a DD result table.
struct <a href”#parResults”>parResults *presp
int vulnerable
 
DealerPar struct <a href”#ddTableResults”>ddTableResults *tablep No format Similar to Par(), but requires and uses knowledge of the dealer.
struct parResultsDealer *presp
int dealer
int vulnerable
 
DealerParBin struct ddTableResults *tablep Binary Similar to DealerPar, but with binary output.
struct parResultsMaster *presp
int dealer
int vulnerable
 
ConvertToDealerTextFormat struct parResultsMaster *pres Text Example of text output from DealerParBin.
char *resp
 
SidesPar struct ddTableResults *tablep No format Par results are given for sides with the DealerPar output format.
struct parResultsDealer *presp
int vulnerable
 
SidesParBin struct ddTableResults *tablep Binary Similar to SidesPar, but with binary output.
struct parResultsMaster sidesRes[2]
int vulnerable
 
ConvertToSidesTextFormat struct parResultsMaster *pres Text Example of text output from SidesParBin.
char *resp
 
CalcPar struct ddTableDeal tableDeal Binary Solves for both the DD result table and the par contracts. Is deprecated, use a CalcDDtable function plus Par() instead!
int vulnerable
struct ddTabeleResults *tablep
struct parResults *presp
 
CalcParPBN struct ddTableDealPBN tableDealPBN PBN As CalcPar, but with PBN input format. Is deprecated, use a CalcDDtable function plus Par() instead!
struct ddTableResults *tablep
int vulnerable
struct parResults *presp
 
AnalysePlayBin struct deal dl Binary Returns the par result after each card in a particular play sequence.
struct playTraceBin play
struct solvedPlay *solvedp
int thrId
 
AnalysePlayPBN struct dealPBN dlPBN PBN As AnalysePlayBin, but with PBN deal format.
struct playTracePBN playPBN
struct solvedPlay *solvedp
int thrId
 
AnalyseAllPlaysBin struct boards *bop Binary Solves a number of hands with play sequences in parallel. Multi-threaded.
struct playTracesBin *plp
struct solvedPlays *solvedp
int chunkSize
 
AnalyseAllPlaysPBN struct boardsPBN *bopPBN PBN As AnalyseAllPlaysBin, but with PBN deal format.
struct playTracesPBN *plpPBN
struct solvedPlays *solvedp
int chunkSize
 
SetMaxThreads int userThreads PBN Used at initial start and can also be called with a request for allocating memory for a specified number of threads. Is apparently¸mandatory on Linux and Mac (optional on Windows)
 
FreeMemory void   Frees DDS allocated dynamical memory.
 
ErrorMessage int code Turns a return code into an error message string.
char line[80]

Data structures

Common encodings are as follows

Encoding Element Value
Suit Spades 0
Hearts 1
Diamonds 2
Clubs 3
NT 4
 
Hand North 0
East 1
South 2
West 3
 
Side N-S 0
E-W 1
 
Card Bit 2 Rank of deuce
 
Bit 13 Rank of king
Bit 14 Rank of ace
 
Holding A value of 16388 = 16384 + 4 is the encoding for the holding “A2” (ace and deuce).
The two lowest bits are always zero.
 
PBN Example:
W:T5.K4.652.A98542 K6.QJT976.QT7.Q6 432.A.AKJ93.JT73 AQJ987.8532.84.K
struct Field Comment
deal int trump Suit encoding
int first The hand leading to the trick. Hand encoding.
int currentTrickSuit[3] Up to 3 cards may already have been played to the trick. Suit encoding.
int currentTrickRank[3] Up to 3 cards may already have been played to the trick. Value range 2-14. Set to 0 if no card has been played.
unsigned int remainCards[4][4] 1st index is Hand, 2nd index is Suit. remainCards is Holding encoding.
struct Field Comment
dealPBN int trump Suit encoding
int first The hand leading to the trick. Hand encoding.
int currentTrickSuit[3] Up to 3 cards may already have been played to the trick. Suit encoding. Set to 0 if no card has been played.
int currentTrickRank[3] Up to 3 cards may already have been played to the trick. Value range 2-14. Set to 0 if no card has been played.
char remainCards[80] Remaining cards. PBN encoding.
struct Field Comment
ddTableDeal unsigned int cards[4][4] Encodes a deal. First index is hand. Hand encoding. Second index is suit. Suit encoding.
struct Field Comment
ddTableDealPBN char cards[80] Encodes a deal. PBN encoding.
struct Field Comment
ddTableDeals int noOfTables Number of DD table deals in structure, at most MAXNOOFTABLES
struct ddTableDeal deals[X] X = MAXNOOFTABLES * DDS_STRAINS
struct Field Comment
ddTableDealsPBN int noOfTables Number of DD table deals in structure
struct ddTableDealPBN deals[X] X = MAXNOOFTABLES * DDS_STRAINS
struct Field Comment
boards int noOfBoards Number of boards
struct deal[MAXNOOFBOARDS]
int target[MAXNOOFBOARDS] See SolveBoard
int solutions[MAXNOOFBOARDS] See SolveBoard
int mode[MAXNOOFBOARDS] See SolveBoard
struct Field Comment
boardsPBN int noOfBoards Number of boards
struct dealPBN[MAXNOOFBOARDS]
int target[MAXNOOFBOARDS] See SolveBoard
int solutions[MAXNOOFBOARDS] See SolveBoard
int mode[MAXNOOFBOARDS] See SolveBoard
struct Field Comment
futureTricks int nodes Number of nodes searched by the DD solver.
int cards Number of cards for which a result is returned. May be all the cards, but equivalent ranks are omitted, so for a holding of KQ76 only the cards K and 7 would be returned, and the “equals” field below would be 2048 (Q) for the king and 54 (6) for the 7.
int suit[13] Suit of the each returned card. Suit encoding.
int rank[13] Rank of the returned card. Value range 2-14.
int equals[13] Lower-ranked equals. Holding encoding.
int score[13] -1: target not reached. Otherwise: Target of maximum number of tricks.
struct Field Comment
solvedBoards int noOfBoards
struct futureTricks solvedBoard [MAXNOOFBOARDS]
Struct Field Comment
ddTableResults int resTable[5][4] Encodes the solution of a deal for combinations of denomination and declarer. First index is denomination. Suit encoding. Second index is declarer. Hand encoding. Each entry is a number of tricks.
struct Field Comment
ddTablesRes int noOfBoards Number of DD table deals in structure, at most MAXNOOFTABLES
struct ddTableResults results[X] X = MAXNOOFTABLES * DDS_STRAINS
Struct Field Comment
parResults char parScore[2][16] First index is NS/EW. Side encoding.
char parContractsString[2][128] First index is NS/EW. Side encoding.
Struct Field Comment
allParResults struct parResults[MAXNOOFTABLES] There are up to 20 declarer/strain combinations per DD table
Struct Field Comment
parResultsDealer int number
int score
char contracts[10][10]
Struct Field Comment
parResultsMaster int score
int number
struct contractType contracts[10]
Struct Field Comment
contractType int underTricks
int overTricks
int level
int denom
int seats
Struct Field Comment
parTextResults char parText[2][128]
int equal
Struct Field Comment
playTraceBin int number Number of cards in the play trace, starting from the beginning of the hand.
int suit[52] Suit encoding.
int rank[52] Encoding 2 .. 14 (not Card encoding).
Struct Field Comment
playTracePBN int number Number of cards in the play trace, starting from the beginning of the hand.
int cards[106] String of cards with no space in between, also not between tricks. Each card consists of a suit (C/D/H/S) and then a rank (2 .. A). The string must be null-terminated.
Struct Field Comment
playTracesBin int noOfBoards
struct playTraceBin plays[MAXNOOFBOARDS / 10]
Struct Field Comment
playTracesPBN int noOfBoards
struct playTracePBN plays[MAXNOOFBOARDS / 10]
Struct Field Comment
solvedPlay int number
int tricks[53] Starting position and up to 52 cards
Struct Field Comment
solvedPlays int noOfBoards
struct solvedPlay solved[MAXNOOFBOARDS]

Functions

SolveBoard SolveBoardPBN
struct deal dl struct dealPBN dl
int target int target
int solutions int solutions
int mode int mode
struct futureTricks *futp struct futureTricks *futp
int threadIndex int threadIndex

SolveBoardPBN is just like SolveBoard, except for the input format. Historically it was one of the first functions, and it exposes the thread index directly to the user. Later functions generally don’t do that, and they also hide the implementation details such as transposition tables, see below.

SolveBoard solves a single deal “dl” and returns the result in “*futp” which must be declared before calling SolveBoard.

If you have multiple hands to solve, it is always better to group them together into a single function call than to use SolveBoard.

SolveBoard is thread-safe, so several threads can call SolveBoard in parallel. Thus the user of DDS can create threads and call SolveBoard in parallel over them. The maximum number of threads is fixed in the DLL at compile time and is currently 16. So “threadIndex” must be between 0 and 15 inclusive; see also the function SetMaxThreads. Together with the PlayAnalyse functions, this is the only function that exposes the thread number to the user.

There is a “transposition table” memory associated with each thread. Each node in the table is effectively a position after certain cards have been played and other certain cards remain. The table is not deleted automatically after each call to SolveBoard, so it can be reused from call to call. However, it only really makes sense to reuse the table when the hand is very similar in the two calls. The function will still run if this is not the case, but it won’t be as efficient. The reuse of the transposition table can be controlled by the “mode” parameter, but normally this is not needed and should not be done.

The three parameters “target”, “solutions” and “mode” together control the function. Generally speaking, the target is the number of tricks to be won (at least) by the side to play; solutions controls how many solutions should be returned; and mode controls the search behavior. See next page for definitions.

For equivalent cards, only the highest is returned, and lower equivalent cards are encoded in the futureTricks structure (see “equals”).

target solutions comment
-1 1 Find the maximum number of tricks for the side to play.
Return only one of the optimum cards and its score.
-1 2 Find the maximum number of tricks for the side to play.
Return all optimum cards and their scores.
0 1 Return only one of the cards legal to play, with score set to 0.
0 2 Return all cards that legal to play, with score set to 0.
1 .. 13 1 If score is -1: Target cannot be reached.
If score is 0: In fact no tricks at all can be won.
If score is > 0: score will always equal target, even if more tricks can be won.
One of the cards achieving the target is returned.
1 .. 13 2 Return all cards meeting (at least) the target.
If the target cannot be achieved, only one card is returned with the score set as above.
any 3 Return all cards that can be legally played, with their scores in descending order.
 
mode Reuse TT? comment
0 Automatic if same trump suit and the same or nearly the same cards distribution, deal.first can be different. Do not search to find the core if the hand to play has only one card, including its equivalents, to play. Score is set to –2 for this card, indicating that there are no alternative cards. If there are multiple choices for cards to play, search is done to find the score. This mode is very fast but you don’t always search to find the score.
1 Always search to find the score. Even when the hand to play has only one card, with possible equivalents, to play.
2 Always

Note: mode no longer always has this effect internally in DDS. We think mode is no longer useful, and we may use it for something else in the future. If you think you need it, let us know!

“Reuse” means “reuse the transposition table from the previous run with the same thread number”. For mode = 2 it is the responsibility of the programmer using the DLL to ensure that reusing the table is safe in the actual situation. Example: Deal is the same, except for deal.first. The Trump suit is the same.

1st call, East leads: SolveBoard(deal, -1, 1, 1, &fut, 0), deal.first=1

2nd call, South leads: SolveBoard(deal, -1, 1, 2, &fut, 0), deal.first=2

3rd call, West leads: SolveBoard(deal, -1, 1, 2, &fut, 0), deal.first=3

4th call, North leads: SolveBoard(deal, -1, 1, 2, &fut, 0), deal.first=0

CalcDDtable CalcDDtablePBN
struct ddTableDeal tableDeal struct ddTableDealPBN tableDealPBN
struct ddTableResults *tablep struct ddTableResults *tablep

CalcDDtablePBN is just like CalcDDtable, except for the input format. CalcDDtable solves a single deal “ tableDeal ” and returns the double-dummy values for the initial 52 cards for all the 20 combinations of denomination and declarer in “*tablep” , which must be declared before calling CalcDDtable.

CalcAllTables CalcAllTablesPBN
struct ddTableDeals *dealsp struct ddTableDealsPBN *dealsp
int mode int mode
int trumpFilter[5] int trumpFilter[5]
struct ddTablesRes *resp struct ddTablesRes *resp
<struct allParResults *presp struct allParResults *presp

CalcAllTablesPBN is just like CalcAllTables, except for the input format.

CalcAllTables calculates the double dummy values of the denomination/declarer hand combinations in “*dealsp” for a number of DD tables in parallel. This increases the speed compared to calculating these values using a CalcDDtable call for each DD table. The results are returned in “*resp” which must be defined before CalcAllTables is called.

The “mode” parameter contains the vulnerability (Vulnerable encoding; not to be confused with the SolveBoard mode) for use in the par calculation. It is set to -1 if no par calculation is to be performed.

There are 5 possible denominations or strains (the four trump suits and no trump). The parameter “trumpFilter” describes which, if any, of the 5 possibilities that will be excluded from the calculations. They are defined in Suit encoding order, so setting trumpFilter to {FALSE, FALSE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE} means that values will only be calculated for the trump suits spades and hearts.

The maximum number of DD tables in a CalcAllTables call depends on the number of strains required, see the following table:

Number of strains Maximum number of DD tables
5 32
4 40
3 53
2 80
1 160
SolveAllBoards SolveAllChunksBin SolveAllChunksPBN
struct boards *bop struct boards *bop struct boardsPBN *bop
struct solvedBoards *solvedp struct solvedBoards *solvedp struct solvedBoards *solvedp
int chunkSize int chunkSize

SolveAllChunks is an alias for SolveAllChunksPBN; don’t use it.

SolveAllBoards used to be an alias for SolveAllChunksPBN with a chunkSize of 1; however this has been changed in v2.8, and we now recommend only to use SolveAllBoards and not the chunk functions any more; explanation follows.

The SolveAll* functions invoke SolveBoard several times in parallel in multiple threads, rather than sequentially in a single thread. This increases execution speed. Up to 200 boards are permitted per call.

It is important to understand the parallelism and the concept of a chunk.

If the chunk size is 1, then each of the threads starts out with a single board. If there are four threads, then boards 0, 1, 2 and 3 are initially solved. If thread 2 is finished first, it gets the next available board, in this case board 4. Perhaps this is a particularly easy board, so thread 2 also finishes this board before any other thread completes. Thread 2 then also gets board 5, and so on. This continues until all boards have been solved. In the end, three of the threads will be waiting for the last thread to finish, which causes a bit of inefficiency.

The transposition table in a given thread (see SolveBoard) is generally not reused between board 2, 4 and 5 in thread 2. This only happens if SolveBoard itself determines that the boards are suspiciously similar. If the chunk size is 2, then initially thread 0 gets boards 0 and 1, thread 1 gets boards 2 and 3, thread 2 gets boards 4 and 5, and thread 3 gets boards 6 and 7. When a thread is finished, it gets two new boards in one go, for instance boards 8 and 9. The transposition table in a given thread is reused within a chunk.

No matter what the chunk size is, the boards are solved in parallel. If the user knows that boards are grouped in chunks of 2 or 10, it is possible to force the DD solver to use this knowledge. However, this is rather limiting on the user, as the alignment must remain perfect throughout the batch.

SolveAllBoards now detects repetitions automatically within a batch, whether or not the hands are evenly arranged and whether or not the duplicates are next to each other. This is more flexible and transparent to the user, and the overhead is negligible. Therefore, use SolveAllBoards!

Par DealerPar
struct ddTableResults *tablep struct ddTableResults *tablep
struct parResults *presp struct parResultsDealer *presp
int vulnerable int dealer
  int vulnerable
 
SidesPar  
struct ddTableResults *tablep  
struct parResultsDealer *sidesRes[2]  
int vulnerable  
 
DealerParBin SidesParBin
struct ddTableResults *tablep struct ddTableResults *tablep
struct parResultsMaster *presp struct parResultsMaster *presp
int vulnerable int dealer
  int vulnerable
 
ConvertToDealerTextForamat ConvertToSidesTextFormat
struct parResultsMaster *pres struct parResultsMaster *pres
char *resp struct parTextResults *resp

The functions Par, DealerPar, SidesPar, DealerParBin and SidesParBin calculate the par score and par contracts of a given double-dummy solution matrix *tablep which would often be the solution of a call to CalcDDtable. Since the input is a table, there is no PBN and non-PBN version of these functions.

Before the functions can be called, a structure of the type “parResults” , parResultsDealer or parResultsMaster must already have been defined.

The vulnerable parameter is given using Vulnerable encoding.

The Par() function uses knowledge of the vulnerability, but not of the dealer. It attempts to return results for both declaring sides. These results can be different in some rare cases, for instance when both sides can make 1NT due to the opening lead.

The DealerPar() function also uses knowledge of the dealer using Hand encoding. The rgument is that in all practical cases, the dealer is known when the vulnerability is known. Therefore all results returned will be for the same side.

The SidesPar() function is similar to the Par() function, the only difference is that the par results are given in the same format as for DealerPar().

In Par() and SidesPar() there may be more than one par score; in DealerPar() that is not the case. Par() returns the scores as a text string, for instance “NS -460”, while DealerPar() and SidesPar() use an integer, -460.

There may be several par contracts, for instance 3NT just making and 5C just making. Each par contract is returned as a text string. The formats are a bit different betweeen the two output format alternatives.

Par() returns the par contracts separated by commas. Possible different trick levels of par score contracts are enumerated in the contract description, e.g the possible trick levels 3, 4 and 5 in no trump are given as 345N. Examples:

DealerPar() and SidesPar() give each par contract as a separate text string:

DealerParBin and SidesParBin are similar to DealerPar and SidesPar, respectively, except that both functions give the output results in binary using the parResultsMaster structure. This simplifies the writing of a conversion program to get an own result output format. Examples of such programs are ConvertToDealerTextFormat and ConvertToSidesTextFormat.

After DealerParBin or SidesParBin is called, the results in parResultsMaster are used when calling ConvertToDealerTextFormat resp. ConvertToSidesTextFormat.

Output example from ConvertToDealerTextFormat:
“Par 110: NS 2S NS 2H”

Output examples from ConvertToSidesTextFormat:
“NS Par 130: NS 2D+2 NS 2C+2” when it does not matter who starts the bidding.
”NS Par -120: W 2NT
EW Par 120: W 1NT+1” when it matters who starts the bidding.

CalcPar CalcParPBN
struct ddTableDeal dl struct ddTableDealPBN dlN
int vulnerable struct ddTableResults *tp
struct ddTableResults *tp int vulnerable
struct parResults *presp struct parResults *presp

CalcParPBN is just like CalcPar, except for the input format.

Each of these functions calculates both the double-dummy table solution and the par solution to a given deal.

Both functions are deprecated. Instead use one of the CalcDDtable functions followed by Par().

AnalysePlayBin AnalysePlayPBN
struct deal dl struct dealPBN dlPBN
struct playTraceBin play struct playTracePBN playPBN
struct solvedPlay *solvedp struct solvedPlay *solvedp
int thrId int thrId

AnalysePlayPBN is just like AnalysePlayBin, except for the input format.

The function returns a list of double-dummy values after each specific played card in a hand. Since the function uses SolveBoard, the same comments apply concerning the thread number thrId and the transposition tables.

As an example, let us say the DD result in a given contract is 9 tricks for declarer. The play consists of the first trick, two cards from the second trick, and then declarer claims. The lead and declarer’s play to the second trick (he wins the first trick) are sub-optimal. Then the trace would look like this, assuming each sub-optimal costs 1 trick:

9 10 10 10 10 9 9

The number of tricks are always seen from declarer’s viewpoint (he is the one to the right of the opening leader). There is one more result in the trace than there are cards played, because there is a DD value before any card is played, and one DD value after each card played.

AnalyseAllPlaysBin AnalyseAllPlaysPBN
struct boards *bop struct boardsPBN *bopPBN
struct playTracesBin *plp struct playTracesPBN *plpPBN
struct solvedPlays *solvedp struct solvedPlays *solvedp
int chunkSize int chunkSize

AnalyseAllPlaysPBN is just like AnalyseAllPlaysBin, except for the input format.

The AnalyseAllPlays* functions invoke SolveBoard several times in parallel in multiple threads, rather than sequentially in a single thread. This increases execution speed. Up to 20 boards are permitted per call.

Concerning chunkSize, exactly the 21 same remarks apply as with SolveAllChunksBin.

SetMaxThreads FreeMemory
int userThreads void

SetMaxThreads returns the actual number of threads.

DDS has a preferred memory size per thread, currently about 95 MB, and a maximum memory size per thread, currently about 160 MB. It will also not use more than 70% of the available memory. It will not create more threads than there are processor cores, as this will only require more memory and will not improve performance. Within these constraints, DDS auto-configures the number of threads.

DDS first detects the number of cores and the available memory. If this doesn’t work for some reason, it defaults to 1 thread which is allowed to use the maximum memory size per thread.

DDS then checks whether a number of threads equal to the number of cores will fit within the available memory when each thread may use the maximum memory per thread. If there is not enough memory for this, DDS scales back its ambition. If there is enough memory for the preferred memory size, then DDS still creates a number of threads equal to the number of cores. If there is not even enough memory for this, DDS scales back the number of threads to fit within the memory.

The user can suggest to DDS a number of threads by calling SetMaxThreads. DDS will never create more threads than requested, but it may create fewer if there is not enough memory, calculated as above. Calling SetMaxThreads is optional, not mandatory. DDS will always select a suitable number of threads on its own.

It may be possible, especially on non-Windows systems, to call SetMaxThreads() actively, even though the user does not want to influence the default values. In this case, use a 0 argument.

SetMaxThreads can be called multiple times even within the same session. So it is theoretically possible to change the number of threads dynamically.

It is possible to ask DDS to give up its dynamically allocated memory by calling FreeMemory. This could be useful for instance if there is a long pause where DDS is not used within a session. DDS will free its memory when the DLL detaches from the user program, so there is no need for the user to call this function before detaching. ## Return codes

Value Code Comment
1 RETURN_NO_FAULT  
-1 RETURN_UNKNOWN_FAULT Currently happens when fopen() returns an error or when AnalyseAllPlaysBin() gets a different number of boards in its first two arguments.
-2 RETURN_ZERO_CARDS SolveBoard(), self-explanatory.
-3 RETURN_TARGET_TOO_HIGH SolveBoard(), target is higher than the number of tricks remaining.
-4 RETURN_DUPLICATE_CARDS SolveBoard(), self-explanatory.
-5 RETURN_TARGET_WRONG_LO SolveBoard(), target is less than -1.
-7 RETURN_TARGET_WRONG_HI SolveBoard(), target is higher than 13.
-8 RETURN_SOLNS_WRONG_LO SolveBoard(), solutions is less than 1.
-10 RETURN_SOLNS_WRONG_HI SolveBoard(), solutions is higher than 3.
-11 RETURN_TOO_MANY_CARDS SolveBoard(), self-explanatory.
-12 RETURN_SUIT_OR_RANK SolveBoard(), either currentTrickSuit or currentTrickRank have wrong data.
-13 RETURN_PLAYED_CARD SolveBoard(), card already played is also a card still remaining to play.
-14 RETURN_CARD_COUNT SolveBoard(), wrong number of remaining cards for a hand.
-15 RETURN_THREAD_INDEX SolveBoard(), thread number is less than 0 or higher than the maximum permitted.
-16 RETURN_MODE_WRONG_LO SolveBoard(), mode is less than 0
-17 RETURN_MODE_WRONG_HI SolveBoard(), mode is greater than 2
-18 RETURN_TRUMP_WRONG SolveBoard(), trump is not one or 0, 1, 2, 3, 4
-19 RETURN_FIRST_WRONG SolveBoard(), first is not one or 0, 1, 2
-98 RETURN_PLAY_FAULT AnalysePlay*() family of functions. (a) Less than 0 or more than 52 cards supplied. (b) Invalid suit or rank supplied. (c) A played card is not held by the right player.
-99 RETURN_PBN_FAULT Returned from a number of places if a PBN string is faulty.
-101 RETURN_TOO_MANY_THREADS Currently never returned.
-102 RETURN_THREAD_CREATE Returned from multi-threading functions.
-103 RETURN_THREAD_WAIT Returned from multi-threading functions when something went wrong while waiting for all threads to complete.
-201 RETURN_NO_SUIT CalcAllTables*(), returned when the denomination filter vector has no entries.
-202 RETURN_TOO_MANY_TABLES CalcAllTables*(), returned when too many tables are requested.
-301 RETURN_CHUNK_SIZE SolveAllChunks*(), returned when the chunk size is < 1.
Revision History
Rev A 2006‑02‑25 First issue
Rev B 2006‑03‑20 Updated issue
Rev C 2006‑03‑28 Updated issue. Addition of the SolveBoard parameter ”mode”
Rev D 2006‑04‑05 Updated issue. Usage of target=0 to list all cards that are legal to play
Rev E 2006‑05‑29 Updated issue. New error code –10 for number of cards > 52
Rev F 2006‑08‑09 Updated issue. New mode parameter value = 2. New error code –11 for calling SolveBoard with mode = 2 and forbidden values of other parameters
Rev F1 2006‑08‑14 Clarifications on conditions for returning scores for the different combinations of the values for target and solutions
Rev F2 2006‑08‑26 New error code –12 for wrongly set values of deal.currentTrickSuit and deal.currentTrickRank
Rev G 2007‑01‑04 New DDS release 1.1, otherwise no change compared to isse F2
Rev H 2007‑04‑23 DDS release 1.4, changes for parameter mode=2.
Rev I 2010‑04‑10 DDS release 2.0, multi-thread support
Rev J 2010‑05‑29 DDS release 2.1, OpenMP support, reuse of previous DD transposition table results of similar deals
Rev K 2010‑10‑27 Correction of fault in the description: 2nd index in resTable of the structure ddTableResults is declarer hand
Rev L 2011‑10‑14 Added SolveBoardPBN and CalcDDtablePBN
Rev M 2012‑07‑06 Added SolveAllBoards. Rev N, 2012‑07‑16 Max number of threads is 8
Rev O 2012‑10‑21 Max number of threads is configured at initial start-up, but never exceeds 16
Rev P 2013‑03‑16 Added functions CalcPar and CalcParPBN
Rev Q 2014‑01‑09 Added functions CalcAllTables/CalcAllTablesPBN
Rev R 2014‑01‑13 Updated functions CalcAllTables/CalcAllTablesPBN
Rev S 2014‑01‑13 Updated functions CalcAllTables/CalcAllTablesPBN
Rev T 2014‑03‑01 Added function SolveAllChunks
Rev U 2014‑09‑15 Added functions DealerPar, SidesPar, AnalysePlayBin, AnalysePlayPBN, AnalyseAllPlaysBin, AnalyseAllPlaysPBN
Rev V 2014‑10‑14 Added functions SetMaxThreads, FreeMemory, DealerParBin, SidesParBin, ConvertToDealerTextFormat, ConvertToSidesTextFormat
Rev X 2014‑11‑16 Extended maximum number of tables when calling CalcAllTables.