H. G. Muller wrote on Tue, Nov 29, 2016 04:23 PM UTC:
What do you mean by "game analysis indicates"? The result of the game is an objective measure, but any reported score merely reflects what you put in, in terms of piece values.
Note that WinBoard reports the score per player, and that in a match the players alternate color. So you cannot associate the reported number of wins with a particular color. There are two ways to get what you want: one is make sure the games of a particular test are automatically saved in a separate file, not containing anything else, and then opening that game file with WinBoard (Load Game). In the header of the game list WinBoard then reports the statistics of the game sets, wins, losses and draws for white. (As in general multi-game files can have many players.) The second method would be to start WinBoard with the 'Additional option' -sameColorGames 100 (or any other number of games you desire). This suppresses the color alteration, so that you can associate the scoreof the first player with white. (It also overrules the games per pairing).
What do you mean by "game analysis indicates"? The result of the game is an objective measure, but any reported score merely reflects what you put in, in terms of piece values.
Note that WinBoard reports the score per player, and that in a match the players alternate color. So you cannot associate the reported number of wins with a particular color. There are two ways to get what you want: one is make sure the games of a particular test are automatically saved in a separate file, not containing anything else, and then opening that game file with WinBoard (Load Game). In the header of the game list WinBoard then reports the statistics of the game sets, wins, losses and draws for white. (As in general multi-game files can have many players.) The second method would be to start WinBoard with the 'Additional option' -sameColorGames 100 (or any other number of games you desire). This suppresses the color alteration, so that you can associate the scoreof the first player with white. (It also overrules the games per pairing).