Uses a convolutional neural network to recognize the positions of pieces on a chessboard image.
If you have an image of a chessboard in chessboard.png
Run the program like this
./recognize.py chessboard.png
To get the chessboard position in FEN notation
3rkb1r/1pp2ppp/2n1q1n1/p3Pb2/2Pp4/PN3NB1/1P1QPPPP/3RKB1R
Chess puzzle from a book:
Predicted: 2r2k1r/6bp/p3q3/4pp1Q/1p1n2P1/N7/PPP3BP/2KR1R2 (99.633% confidence)
Lichess analysis board diagram with arrows:
Predicted: 5r1k/2q1r1pp/2p4n/2P2B2/pPQ1pR2/P5P1/4R2P/7K (99.997% confidence)
You'll need python 3 and Tensorflow 2
Set up your virtualenv and install python dependencies
virtualenv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
You'll need a neural network model to use ./recognize.py
To use a pre-trained model, download nn.zip and unzip in the project root folder.
To train your own model, you'll first need lots of images of chessboards
- For the images used in the pre-trained model, download training-images.zip and unzip in the project root directory
- Or generate your own training images with this script:
./generate_chessboards.py
downloads a bunch of chessboard images with randomly-placed pieces
Then run this script to convert the chessboard images into 32x32 PNGs of each square of the board
./generate_tiles.py
converts these downloaded chessboard images into 32x32 PNGs used for training
Once you have tiles images ready for the training inputs, run this:
./train.py
creates a new neural network model
Once you have a neural network model ready, run ./recognize.py
with a path to a chessboard image:
./recognize.py ~/Desktop/chessboard.png
To verify that the generated 32x32 PNG tile images match the source chessboard image, use this script:
./view_images.py
for a convenient way to manually verify the generated images
Then open images.html
to view the chessboard and tile images with their corresponding pieces.
To debug the predicted outputs, open debug.html
after running ./recognize.py
to view the actual/predicted boards
Each prediction shows the actual board, the predicted board, the prediction confidence for each square, and a link to a board editor so you can edit the actual FEN in case the predicted FEN is wrong.
Incorrect or low-confidence predictions are a great source of training chessboard images.
For a convenient way to add a training image, use this script:
./save_chessboard.py chessboard.png <subdirectory> <actual fen>
Then you can generate more tiles and re-train the model for more-accurate future predictions.
- Original inspiration from tensorflow_chessbot by Elucidation
- Neural network architecture from https://www.tensorflow.org/tutorials/images/cnn