When time runs out an audible alarm will sounds. The scoreboard displays current turn, current break, players points for the current frame and a clock showing the minutes remaining to play before the end of the game.
The scoreboard displays current turn, overall rack score for the match, which balls have been potted by each player and the balls remaining to finish the rack. The scoreboard displays current turn, overall match score and which balls have been potted by each player and the balls remaining for each player before the rack can finish. Scoring from a PC If using a PC with a large monitor you can sit off to side and score without blocking the audience's vision.
To use an extension monitor on a PC as well as your usual monitor your PC will most likely need to have two graphics cards. Scoring from a laptop notebook The ideal solution! Every laptop has its own built in LCD screen for your view while scoring and it should also already have a monitor port on the back to plug in a large monitor for the audience's scoreboard display.
Monitor displays All sized monitors can be used and no adjustment is necessary as the scoreboard display will automatically detect the usable screen size and adjust size proportionally. All graphics for number and ball displays are high quality PNG images and of adequate size to look good even on the largest monitors which can be up to 4 metres wide. Any program that is already running can be accessed. Starting a new match Before selecting players and format you will first need to add some ingredients: - Add the event details to the tournament list.
In most cases you may have a timetable but until the lead up matches finish and winners have been decided you may not know the players for each round.
Setting player to break At the start of a match the player to break needs to be set. This only needs to be done once for snooker and billiards.
For billiards there is only one break, and for snooker the break alternates on the next frame - handled by the score control automatically. For pool the break needs to set for each frame rack because the rules may be different for each tournament and rule set. Adding points Once a match has been set up in your match index, all of the score control functions that you will now need can be controlled by keyboard or number pad only.
In fact by using a wireless number pad you can score the game remotely while playing or refereeing. App Privacy. Information Seller MySnookerStats. Com Limited. Size 1. Category Sports. Compatibility iPhone Requires iOS 7. Mac Requires macOS Languages English. Com Ltd. Price Free. Family Sharing With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app. You put together runs of points by potting a red and leaving the cue ball in a good spot to pot a color. Then you pot the color while putting the cue ball in a good place to score another red, and so on.
The Black Ball - The black is the highest scoring ball in snooker, worth seven points. A lot of the strategy in snooker is in managing to pot red balls while setting up an angle to then pot the black. The only way to score maximum points in a frame is to pot all 15 reds followed every time by the black and then clear up all six remaining balls without missing once.
Fouls - If you commit a foul in snooker, it awards four points to your opponent. Potting the white ball, hitting a color without first potting a red, failing to hit anything with the cue ball and hitting balls off the table are all fouls that would award your opponent four points.
A player who needs to make up points to catch his opponent can try to hide the cue ball behind colored balls, so that his opponent is likely to miss the reds and foul. This is known as a "snooker. When a player finds themselves in a position where they can't directly hit the desired object ball, then this is called being snookered.
Snooker User Guide Scoring functions While using your own screen for scoreboard display should suffice for practice matches, at an event where you want the audience to see the scoreboard, the screen needs to face the audience and also be much larger. Scoring from a PC If using a PC with a large monitor you can sit off to side and score without blocking the audience's vision. To use an extension monitor on a PC as well as your usual monitor your PC will most likely need to have two graphics cards.
Scoring from a laptop notebook The ideal solution! Every laptop has its own built in LCD screen for your view while scoring and it should also already have a monitor port on the back to plug in a large monitor for the audience's scoreboard display.
0コメント