HIARCS Chess Explorer for Apple Mac OS. A new version 1.9.5 of HIARCS Chess Explorer is now available for you to download and install. It is compatible with any Mac OS 10.13 (High Sierra) or later including the new Big Sur (macOS 11). I tried to remove Chess.app from my Mac: Moving to Trash: “Chess.app” can’t be modified or deleted because it’s required by macOS. Trying to change permissions for everyone in Get Info: The operation can’t be completed because you don’t have the necessary permission. Home. Software. Mac OS. Mac OS, is a series of GUI based operating systems developed, marketed and sold by Apple Inc. For their Macintosh line of computer systems since 1984, with its range of processors from 68000, PowerPC, x86 and x86-64. Mac OS X, released in 2002, developed from Mac OS classic family, and NeXTSTEP, was UNIX-based.
Not everyone knows that all Macs come with a full-featured chess game. Even fewer know that this game is completely accessible, and can even pull some nice tricks to make the experience better for the visually impaired. Below, I will explain the different ways to move around the board, make moves, get help, and set up the game to speak hints and moves. Please note that you do not need to know how to play chess to read this article. In fact, once you know how to use the app, you can use the hints feature to help learn the game.
This article is a companion to the podcast I did on Chess.If you prefer to listen instead of read, there you go.
Once you open Chess, press command-comma to open it's preferences. This is a simple window, with no tabs, toolbars, or anything else to worry about. Use control-option-right arrow to move through the different items here:
Now that your preferences are set up, let's start playing a game. Chess games are just documents, so you can have multiple ones open at once, you can save them for later, you can open saved ones, or you can erase them. For now, just press command-n to make a new game. You will find several options in the resulting dialog:
Once your game begins, you should land on what VoiceOver will call 'Board Group'. This is the grid of squares that make up the chess board; interact with it to begin exploring the board. If you were not placed there automatically, go to the bottom of the window, or use vo-right arrow until you find it.
Each square in the grid is labeled according to the piece it contains, that piece's color, and the square's coordinates. For instance, the white rook in the lower left is at A1, so the square is labeled as 'White Rook, A1 button'. Each square is a button, because that is how you move pieces (more on that in a moment).
The board is navigated just like a grid; vo-right moves you right, vo-down moves you down, and so on. If you have enabled cursor wrapping in the VoiceOver Utility, moving beyond the end of a row or column will cause you to loop around the board and land on the next row or column, just like in a table. If you have not enabled that option, you will simply go nowhere if you try to move outside the board.
To move around more quickly, you can enable Quick Nav by pressing the left and right arrows together. This lets you use only the arrow keys, instead of having to hold down the VoiceOver keys as well, when moving around the board. If up or down arrows are not moving you up and down the columns, use the up and right arrows together, or up and left together, to move through the rotor options until you hear 'navigation'.
The other way to navigate is by using the Trackpad Commander. This is available on all MacBooks with a multi-touch trackpad (in other words, pretty much all of them built within last five or so years) or any Mac with a Magic Trackpad connected to it. Enable this by holding down the VoiceOver keys and rotating two fingers clockwise on the trackpad. Once turned on, this Commander lets you flick one finger left, right, up, or down to move through the squares on the board (as with Quick Nav, if up and down flick are not working, turn your rotor to 'navigation').
The other advantage to using the Trackpad Commander is that you can explore the board by touch. The squares are rather small, even if you make the Chess app full screen, but it is no worse than doing this on an Phone screen. There is nothing to enable to get this working; so long as Trackpad Commander is on, and you are interacting with the board group, simply touch near the center of the trackpad and start moving your finger around. VoiceOver tracks your focus, so if you wanted to, you could use a finger to examine the board, the navigate with the arrow keys, and your arrows will start moving you from whichever square you last touched on the trackpad.
To move a piece, focus VoiceOver on the piece's square in whichever way you like. Select it by activating it (squares are just buttons, after all). Now move to the square to which you want the piece to move, and select again. If the move is legal, you will hear the name of the target square spoken and nothing else; if it is an illegal move, the name of the target square is spoken, but the Mac will play an error tone (sorry, there is no indication for braille users; move to an adjacent square and then back to the target square to see if it now contains your piece or not).
If you try to make an illegal move, the piece you selected will be deselected. That is, you cannot try to move a pawn three squares, realize your mistake, and then try to activate a square one ahead of the pawn. You have to go back to the pawn, select it again, and then try the move again. Also note that there is no indication of the status of a piece. That is, if you select a pawn for moving, there is no way to tell it is selected by using that square's label.
To hear the last move played, press command-left bracket, and to get a hint, use command-right bracket. Note the speech used; if you are playing the computer, the last move played will be spoken using the primary voice, while hints (or your moves in a human versus human or Game Center game) are spoken using the alternate voice, as are hints. This is why it is a good idea to set each voice to something different.
There are other options available as well, all in the drop down menus (vo-m). These menus let you manage saved games, end matches, view a full log of past moves, open the help file for Chess, and more.
The only other tip I can provide is to use a physical chess board, if possible. Keep it in sync with the moves on the Mac, so that you can easily see where the pieces are. Some people can play using only the computer, but I prefer to have an actual board I can feel - it makes things a lot easier. If I forgot anything, or you have questions, leave a comment.
Home * Software * Mac OS
Mac OS,
is a series of GUI based operating systems developed, marketed and sold by Apple Inc. for their Macintosh line of computer systems since 1984, with its range of processors from 68000, PowerPC, x86 and x86-64[1]. Mac OS X, released in 2002, developed from Mac OS classic family, and NeXTSTEP, was UNIX-based.
MacintoshSigma Chess 6.2 with HIARCS[2]
XBoard port with native Quarz interface, so that X11/XQuartz is no longer needed [3][4]