Hi, I try to answer your questions :
- I know that b3 and f7 are on the same diagonal (I think I know c4-f7 as one chunk, and b3-c4 as another) - no visualization here
- For the second one, I had to recreate the Knight's way in my head : b3-d4 - to go to f7 I need to go to e5, so d4-f3-e5 - here I kind of visualized the Knight's squares (e5 even got highlighted for some reason
) but not the remainder of the board.
1. Determine mentally (without looking at a board) if a bishop on b3 can move to f7 in one move.
Did you see the whole board in your mind, and then quickly move the bishop along the diagonal in your mind to see if f7 is on that diagonal? Or did you slowly move square by square (e.g., Bb3-c4-d5-e6-f7)? Or did you rely on memory that b3 and f7 are on the same diagonal? Or did you do it by some other means?
2. How would you determine mentally how many knight moves it takes to get from b3 to f7? Do you see the entire board as you're working, or just the area around the knight's current location?
3. When you visualize a piece on a square, does the square always have a color for you, or does the color not occur to you when it isn't relevant to the task?
I'm curious about how different people visualize while calculating, and how many see basically a physically accurate representation of the board in their mind (with all the squares always having a color) versus other more abstract ways of visualizing.