EasyAI (full documentation here) is a pure-Python artificial intelligence framework for two-players abstract games such as Tic Tac Toe, Connect 4, Reversi, etc. It makes it easy to define the mechanisms of a game, and play against the computer or solve the game. Under the hood, the AI is a Negamax algorithm with alpha-beta pruning and transposition tables as described on Wikipedia.
If you have pip
installed, type this in a terminal
sudo pip install easyAI
Otherwise, dowload the source code (for instance on Github), unzip everything into one folder and in this folder, in a terminal, type
sudo python setup.py install
Additionnally you will need to install Numpy to be able to run some of the examples.
Let us define the rules of a game and start a match against the AI:
from easyAI import TwoPlayersGame, Human_Player, AI_Player, Negamax
class GameOfBones( TwoPlayersGame ):
""" In turn, the players remove one, two or three bones from a
pile of bones. The player who removes the last bone loses. """
def __init__(self, players):
self.players = players
self.pile = 20 # start with 20 bones in the pile
self.nplayer = 1 # player 1 starts
def possible_moves(self): return ['1','2','3']
def make_move(self,move): self.pile -= int(move) # remove bones.
def win(self): return self.pile<=0 # opponent took the last bone ?
def is_over(self): return self.win() # Game stops when someone wins.
def show(self): print ("%d bones left in the pile" % self.pile)
def scoring(self): return 100 if game.win() else 0 # For the AI
# Start a match (and store the history of moves when it ends)
ai = Negamax(13) # The AI will think 13 moves in advance
game = GameOfBones( [ Human_Player(), AI_Player(ai) ] )
history = game.play()
Result:
20 bones left in the pile Player 1 what do you play ? 3 Move #1: player 1 plays 3 : 17 bones left in the pile Move #2: player 2 plays 1 : 16 bones left in the pile Player 1 what do you play ?
Let us now solve the game:
from easyAI import id_solve
r,d,m = id_solve(GameOfBones, ai_depths=range(2,20), win_score=100)
We obtain r=1
, meaning that if both players play perfectly, the first player to play can always win (-1 would have meant always lose), d=10
, which means that the wins will be in ten moves (i.e. 5 moves per player) or less, and m='3'
, which indicates that the first player's first move should be '3'
.
These computations can be sped up using a transposition table which will store the situations encountered and the best moves for each:
tt = TT()
GameOfBones.ttentry = lambda game : game.pile # key for the table
r,d,m = id_solve(GameOfBones, range(2,20), win_score=100, tt=tt)
After these lines are run the variable tt
contains a transposition table storing the possible situations (here, the possible sizes of the pile) and the optimal moves to perform. With tt
you can play perfectly without thinking:
.. code:: python
game = GameOfBones( [ AI_Player( tt ), Human_Player() ] ) game.play() # you will always lose this game :)
EasyAI is an open source software originally written by Zulko and released under the MIT licence. It could do with some improvements, so if your are a Python/AI guru maybe you can contribute through Github . Some ideas: AI algos for incomplete information games, better game solving strategies, (efficient) use of databases to store moves, AI algorithms using parallelisation.
For troubleshooting and bug reports, the best for now is to ask on Github.