Also the function of the Monroi is to create a score of the game. It is a substitute for a scoresheet. For instance I suspect strongly that a player would not be allowed to use both a normal scoresheet and a Monroi--this would somehow be looked upon as note taking, or using an additional external aid.
The only reason that the Monroi is legal is because it is an electronic substitute for a scoresheet. If you had some 2D analysis board that could also duplicate as a scoresheet, that might be approved as well, but I really don't think that you can just have another smaller set right there next to you
that you are inputting moves on. Let's take a similar example; what if you walked across the tournament hall to get water or something, and were too lazy to go all the way back to your board. You see a chess set that is not in use, and start to move the pieces to set up the position that is on your board. That is clearly against the rules. Of course if there is a demo board that someone else is operating that is in full view of the players that is legal to look at; is the director going to forbid players to look in that direction? Ridiculous. It's also legal to walk around the tournament hall and look at other players' boards, so if another game happened to have the same or similar position, it's legal to look at that board. It's even legal to copy the move that someone else at the tournament makes, but that's merely because it would be impossible to enforce otherwise.
Quote:Whether my opponent is disturbed or not is not my fault if this is within the rules. I am not being obnoxious or doing anything crazy. It's not like I showed up bathed in garlic and curry, nor am I mocking him in any way.
Moreover, if they say nothing then, YES it does mean it's OKAY. You have to speak up if something's bothering you instead of leaving others to make assumptions. In fact, if my opponent was annoyed by something like this and then complained after the game, I'd consider that passive-aggressive behavior. If you don't speak up, you have no right to different expectations.
Even if this practice does exist in some grey area of the rules, if an opponent were doing in a game against me I would immediately complain to the arbiter. How am I supposed to know that my opponent is not using this method to cheat or gain an advantage of some kind (trying out candidate moves or simply trying to distract me)? Do you really think that you would be allowed to continue this practice? I can't think of a single arbiter that would allow it, frankly, unless you had some sort of documented visual handicap or something similar, and then I presume that you'd need to have this approved beforehand.
This reminds me that years ago, before the USCF forbid the writing down moves before making them, I noticed a strong, promising young junior player (with a really sleazy coach) who would write two or three different moves on his scoresheet! Then when he actually made his move, he circled that particular one. Somehow none of his opponents complained. I brought it up to the arbiter, but was told at the time that he would only interfere if the kid's opponent complained.
By the way, the kid's coach would always stand near the board, and I thought that there was a strong chance that the coach was signalling some kind of "make the move that you wrote on the right" or "make the move to that you wrote on the left" to him.
So I was paired against he kid a few rounds later. He was already rated about 2000 or so, and maybe 10 or 11 years old. After a few moves I complained to the arbiter, who saw the scoresheet and told him that he could no longer do this. He proceeded to completely collapse in a dozen more moves against me, like any 1200-rated player (I was rated about the same as this kid at the time, maybe even below him).