Quote
The player is entitled to know about calls actually made, about relevant alternative calls available that were not made, and about inferences from the choice of action where these are matters of partnership understanding.
My emphasis, those words matter.
Here, "partner wants to know whether I'm 12 or bad 13, or 14 or 13 that looks like 14. My experience tells me, whether to be in game or slam I would guess depends on that."
I have to admit it would be hard to keep the response that polite, but I'd succeed. I'm the last person to trot out GBK (in fact, I try to stamp out uses of it), but if "25ish flat is game in NT, 33ish is slam, 37ish is grand. How do I find out whether we meet those numbers?" isn't "inferences drawn from knowledge and experience of matters generally known to bridge players" (40B5a) I'm not sure what is.
If you want information about other options she has, sure, that's (clearly, in my Keri case) "matters of partnership understanding". "We can invite with 4 or more cards in a major, 6 cards in a minor; we can show single-suited, three-suited, 5M-4m, 5M-5+m, 5m-4M, and 5-4 majors or minors, or ask for a 4 or 5 card Major, all Game Forcing. Some auctions are clearly slam invitational, some are just game unless partner continues. We play 1NT-4NT as straight-ace Blackwood."
All of which (except the last), I would again expect "bridge players" to assume we have a way of doing - but likely not be able to guess how, in many cases.
The issue I have with Psychic Ogust (or "inviting" with clubs and a poor hand here, hoping to steal the hand from the opponents) is that the "inferences drawn [by] bridge players" to "I want to know if partner's suit or outside cards are good" is "because I'm interested in game if they are sufficiently good"; and hiding the information that "well, especially when partner opens 2
♠, I might instead have 3 spades and 3 high" for as long as possible, just in case these opponents can't work it out, is deliberately ignoring "generally".
The fact that my agreements sometimes don't tell specific things about the asker's hand has caused issues in the past, such as when 1
♠-3
♣ meant "4 spades, go on a Goren opener" and 1
♠-3
♦ meant "4 spades, go only if, had you konwn of the spade fit, you would have opened (Precision) 1
♣". "How many points?" "Enough that he thinks we can make game if I have a decent 13/a supermax". That's our agreement, sorry. If you want to ask "how aggressive do you push to game, counting Meckwell as a 10 and the intro to bridge students as a 1?", okay, I can answer that. But I can't tell you how many points that shows, because I don't know and I don't need to know.
Now puppets, that's a whole different story. There's a defined set of hand types that will make the puppet, and you *should* be able to itemize them. Of course, Keri 2
♣ even I summarize, because itemizing them is about 6 lines of dense text, so: "wants to play 2
♦ or various invitational or better hands, with or without diamonds." Has been sufficient in the past; I've got across the crucial nature of "partner might pass my [forced] 2
♦ call; if she doesn't have that hand, we have the balance of power" that is needed to make your calls this round. But I can do it, if someone asks.
I do notice that nobody's expecting the same level of detail over everyone else's (absolutely equivalent 95% of the time) 1NT-2NT (and the other 5% of the time, it's a slam-try auction and you won't have a hand that wants to get in anyway), and in fact, would look at you funny if you asked "so what do you know about her hand?" despite the fact that we know she doesn't have a 4-card major or a 6-card minor or a 10 count or a 2 count or...
Or Stayman (despite the fact that there are many more hands that are possible in a Stayman auction than in a "range ask" 2
♠ call)! If they answer "asking whether I have a 4 card major", are they in the same boat (could they not have a 4-card major? Is 2M after 2
♦ to play or invitational? Can you respond 2NT or higher with specific hands (and therefore 2
♣ promises invitational values at least)? What's a 3m (or a 3M) rebid - does it guaranteee a (both) major(s)? Does it deny a game-forcing hand? I'm sure I'm missing some oddities of versions of Stayman I've played before).
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)