![]() ![]() Then making it work for photographs (ofcourse with the expectation that the quality of the picture is adequate, no pictures taken preferably out of an anngle, with the board rotated and the page of the book itself curled too much :p), where we'd try to idea the board and go from there with, an existing ofcourse, sub-image recognition library. ![]() In the first stage we'd stick to digital images (screenshots), this would probably be quite easy. In the beginning it would need user input, telling them what pieces are what on the board, the pieces would be extracted from the squares and saved as a set in a database. I don't think it will be necesarily "hard", it'll rather be tedious work to code it. I might give this project a try after my exames, already created the GIT repo for it with my buddy ^_^. (I think you will discover it's not quite as easy as you think.) There will always be an interest for something like this. Tens of thousands of webpages exist that are chess related, or have chess diagrams. ![]() Chess is played by millions of people, all over the globe. If there is still interest in this I could easily make it. ![]()
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