As we all know, in algebraic notation, we usually suppress the notation for pawns. That is, unless they are capturing something. Then, for some reason, we must notate the file of that pawn. For all other moves, you only need to notate the file (or rank, or both) if multiple pieces of the same kind could move to the field in question, so that this extra information is necessary to avoid ambiguities.
For instance, the Scandinavian defense usually goes something like 1. e4 d5 2. exd5. Why not just 2. xd5?
1. e2-e4 d7-d5 2. e4xd5It is just a matter of convention or taste how much redundance you are willing to live with – Hagen von Eitzen Dec 14 '22 at 13:25ed. And it's shorter thanxd5! – TonyK Dec 14 '22 at 13:402. xand it's still unambiguous... but most shorthands have limitations. In this case if there were any capture in the position for White besides e4xd5, this would not work.2. edworks so long as no other White pawn on the e-file may capture into the d-file. '2. xd5' works only so long as no White c-pawn can take on d5. '2. exd5`, however, is always sufficient to describe e4xd5. – user45266 Dec 16 '22 at 02:24