I want to do a chess program that record the move and make sure no check was forgotten (it recently happened and we had to restart the game :( ). I think ECMAScript would be a good option. Each pieces would be assigned its color and type and when moved verify if an attack pattern arrived to the opposite color king. Instead of making function for all of this, I wonder if there would be some grid library or perhaps simply bitmaps that could do the trick.
There would be a group A with 3 grids, past pieces positions for each color and new positions, right away the display would show the new positions; then there would group B with the grids for each move, like + for rook and × for bishop.
Then the grid for the new move would be put on top of its opposing color past positions then going from its center would check if it reaches/touches something, either the border or a non-king piece and if so stop verifying further that path ; but if the king is reached, right away it the display would highlight the king and stop the verification process. Along with the missed check eye-candy/visuals, there would an alert asking to revert the previous move, and if yes the corresponding grids would be replaced then the highlight dropped.
So... do I need to do all of this programmatically,
or are there grid function with verification from its center? By programmatically I mean for knight go from new move position 2 positions up then right, is it outside the board limits then is it a king then 2 positions left, etc. By grid function I mean for the same move to be fed
_O_O_
O___O
__x__
O___O
_O_O_
for knight possible attacks along with the new position of the knight along the grid of the opposite positions along with a filter options so it only consider kings (although there should only be 1), so it will start from the "x" and check for all what's under the "O"s ; implying its placed over the filtered kings from the opposite positions.
I hope I'm being clear but please let me know which section need clarification (please be precise) and I'll be glad to oblige. Please consider the title. :)
Thank you kindly for your help