Coelacanth, on 2013-January-14, 15:25, said:
but you know that both of them are experienced enough to know that support doubles, Rosenkranz doubles, or other conventional doubles would be alertable
I'm not sure how they would know that.
The
ACBL General CoC say that "the Alert pamphlet is the final authority in cases of disputes on the Alertability of any conventional call". The
Alert Pamphlet says that "Except for those doubles with highly unusual or unexpected meanings, doubles do not require an Alert." Then it gives five examples of alertable doubles: four very unusual penalty doubles and one artificial double of a splinter.
I don't think that a Rosenkranz double, which is basically a takeout double in the context of the bidding, falls into the same category as these examples. Hence I interpret the regulations as making a Rosenkranz double not alertable, though I see that others have a different interpretation.
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(4) If you are considering bidding here, would you ask about the meaning of the double,
If I were uncertain of its meaning, I'd ask what it meant. That's why the laws allow us to ask questions.
In this case, the uncertainty about the meaning of the alert regulations naturally leads to uncertainty about the meaning of the double, so I would usually ask.
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or would you be concerned about clarifying the auction for your opponents?
It's undesirable to inflict a UI problem on the opponents, but it's hard to avoid when we're playing without screens. If I act without finding out what it means, I may make an inferior bid, or I may convey to my partner the UI that I didn't care what the auction meant. So in general I ask.
If the opponents are in the middle of a misunderstanding, they may suffer as a result of being constrained by the UI, but it's not my fault that they haven't discussed their methods. I'm not going to disadvantage myself in order to save the opponents from a hypothetical UI problem.
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(5) If you did decide to bid here, and the double turned out not to be what you thought it was, would you feel entitled to an adjustment:
(5a) if you didn't ask about the double?
No, unless the double had a clearly alertable meaning (eg support). If I assume a particular meaning and it actually has some other non-alertable meaning, that's my own misunderstanding rather than misinformation.
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(5b) if you asked about the double and were told "undiscussed"?
If they didn't have an agreement and they told me that they didn't have an agreement, what grounds would there be for an adjustment?
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2013-January-15, 06:20