pran, on 2015-January-02, 12:58, said:
Any respectable scoring program will automatically score the boards within each group of identical boards according to Law 87B once the specific group to which each individual result belongs is marked by the Director.
And that is all the Director shall need to do. He should not be bothered by calculating each score no more than he has to calculate all scores for boards where there is no irregularity.
You seemed to be indicating it. My response was a "I can't believe you're saying what you appear to be saying" because I'm pretty sure you know better.
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So either there is a regulation, or there isn't. If there is, and if the scoring program is provided by the Regulating Authority, then I suppose the provisions of the regulation could be built into the program. If there is no regulation, the program(mer) cannot know in advance what method the director will choose. One might argue in this case that a program-provided default is only a suggestion, and the director can do something else if he wishes, but that IMO only encourages the director to be lazy. And the same applies in the case where there is a regulation, but one of the fields has only one table in it. If the regulation specifies that the pairs at the single table shall get Average Plus, then so be it. But no reasonable regulator would say that, because it does not account for the possibility that the pair in question is in some way partly or directly at fault for the problem.
In any case, this seems more a question of the philosophy of program design than a question on the rules of bridge.