hrothgar, on 2011-June-29, 10:06, said:
It's one thing if some yahoo doesn't know any better... (It screws things up, but at least it isn't deliberate)
But deliberately changing the meaning because you feel like it verges on the unethical...
Jacoby is not well defined anyway. I hope when you describe it as Jacoby you remember to mention whether or not you play splinters, strong jump shifts, or if your style is to 2/1 with hands with 4 card support and a strong side suit, since if you do any of these things your bid does not show "4+ spades and a GF" it shows "a subset of the hand which have 4 card support and are GF". Further, I'm pretty sure you should whack in a specific limit there, since some people would GF on 11 HCP, whereas some will want a solid 13. And you should probably mention how light you open.
Obviously in reality there is a cut off as to what is really relevant. IMO, when it comes to defending, the material information is that it shows a fit for spades and a goodly number of points. Saying you bid with 9HCP as INV+ is not materially different from calling it a "GF" when you GF on grotty 11's with 4 card support which may in reality not be much different from good looking nines.
Certainly, if the only difference is in your responses, then it is materially identical to the defence to call it jacoby, as rho bids are not going to vary depending on what you can find out about each others hands. Thus calling it "jacoby" is certainly full disclosure.
Are you you seriously suggesting that "a subset of hands, all of which have 4s, all of which will be invitational strength or above, but not all such hands" is materially better disclosure than "jacoby"?
Besides, while you might claim that "jacoby" has a specific definition. No such convention names are recognised by the WBF. Furthermore, when it comes to language, usuage is king, and in EBU land invitational+ is actually more common than GF, and everyone calls it jacoby, and the inevitable follow up question is "which kind".
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper