@ 2011-09-25 1:19 PM (#5682 - in reply to #5664) (#5682) Top | |
Posts: 329 Country : India | neerajmehrotra posted @ 2011-09-25 1:19 PM looks wonderful and challenging!!! |
@ 2011-09-25 2:07 PM (#5683 - in reply to #5664) (#5683) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-09-25 2:07 PM There are 12 examples, but around 20 rules. So, there are some 'unused' rules in the IB. Here are some links which can used for practice. Most of the Sudokus have appeared in LMI tests earlier. Rohan's blog has examples for many of them as well. If someone wants online solving, check argio-logic.net |
@ 2011-09-25 7:41 PM (#5684 - in reply to #5664) (#5684) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-09-25 7:41 PM Point changes for XV/Kropki, Consecutive/Fiver - Updated IB uploaded. |
@ 2011-09-25 8:17 PM (#5685 - in reply to #5664) (#5685) Top | |
Posts: 157 Country : India | akash.doulani posted @ 2011-09-25 8:17 PM JUST WANTED TO KNOW WHETHER WE CAN APPLY UNIQUENESS TEST FOR THE PUZZLES. IN THE 3RD EXAMPLE OF EVEN/SMALL NEIGHBOUR I CAME ACROSS SUCH SITUATION IN CELLS R2C1 R2C2 , R4C1 R4C2. I WASNT SURE WHETHER THE UNIQUENESS PRINCIPLE COULD BE APPLIED OR NOT. LATER AFTER SOLVING I FELT THAT IT COULD HAVE BEEN APPLIED. PLEASE CLARIFY |
@ 2011-09-25 8:56 PM (#5686 - in reply to #5664) (#5686) Top | |
Posts: 148 Country : France | Ours brun posted @ 2011-09-25 8:56 PM The general rule about uniqueness and variants is that you can apply it as long as no cell amongst the ones you are dealing with can be affected by the additional rule(s) of this variant. I can't say more about this particular puzzle but I advise you to be very careful when applying unicity to variants. |
@ 2011-09-25 9:20 PM (#5687 - in reply to #5664) (#5687) Top | |
Posts: 148 Country : France | Ours brun posted @ 2011-09-25 9:20 PM Well, I just solved the puzzle but never got in the situation you describe, so I will just examine an hypothetical case. Let's say (all this happening before you determine which is the correct rule) you have R2C1/R2C2=39 and R4C1/R4C2=359. It is tempting to say that either R4C1 or R4C2 contains a 5, but it is a wrong assertion. Indeed, there is one cell (R2C1) which can be affected by the "small neighbours" rule, so you could perfectly have a unique rectangle 39/39/39/39. If it happens that the rule is the one of "small neighbours", then there cannot be a 9 in R2C1 and the unique rectangle is broken. I hope I made it clear enough, I wrote this a bit in a hurry. |
@ 2011-09-25 9:29 PM (#5688 - in reply to #5687) (#5688) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-09-25 9:29 PM Thanks Bastien for clarifying. Even I didn't catch the situation Akash is describing. As-is, it is little dangerous to apply unique rectangle to variants. In this test with 2-rules, it is probably little early if you apply unique rectangle before 'determining' the correct rule. @Akash, to specifically answer if you can apply uniqueness rule, all I can say is all sudokus are designed to have unique solutions :-) One side note on examples : the difficulty of examples vary a lot, and has nothing to do with difficulty of actual puzzles |
@ 2011-09-25 10:39 PM (#5690 - in reply to #5664) (#5690) Top | |
Posts: 28 Country : Austria | euklid posted @ 2011-09-25 10:39 PM With Sum10/Multiple, are all black marks given? I.e., is it possible in Sum10 that two neighboring numbers sum up to 10 and have no black square between them? Is it possible for Multiple Sudoku that two neighboring numbers are a multiple of each others but have no black square between them? |
@ 2011-09-25 11:44 PM (#5692 - in reply to #5690) (#5692) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-09-25 11:44 PM euklid - 2011-09-25 10:39 PM With Sum10/Multiple, are all black marks given? I.e., is it possible in Sum10 that two neighboring numbers sum up to 10 and have no black square between them? Is it possible for Multiple Sudoku that two neighboring numbers are a multiple of each others but have no black square between them? All black marks are not given. So converse rule does not apply. Edited by debmohanty 2011-09-25 11:44 PM |
@ 2011-09-26 11:09 AM (#5706 - in reply to #5664) (#5706) Top | |
Posts: 157 Country : India | akash.doulani posted @ 2011-09-26 11:09 AM @deb and bastien. thanks a lot for clarifying my doubts. |
@ 2011-09-27 11:47 PM (#5707 - in reply to #5664) (#5707) Top | |
Posts: 139 Country : Estonia | TiiT posted @ 2011-09-27 11:47 PM Is there a double solution in Greater/Lesser sudoku in Instruction Booklet? 7's & 8's in Box 6, 8 and 9. |
@ 2011-09-28 1:01 AM (#5708 - in reply to #5707) (#5708) Top | |
Posts: 18 Country : France | caudmont posted @ 2011-09-28 1:01 AM TiiT - 2011-09-27 11:47 PM Is there a double solution in Greater/Lesser sudoku in Instruction Booklet? 7's & 8's in Box 6, 8 and 9. Not for me because of the 7 between L8C3 et L8C4. |
@ 2011-09-28 10:55 AM (#5709 - in reply to #5664) (#5709) Top | |
Posts: 139 Country : Estonia | TiiT posted @ 2011-09-28 10:55 AM OH ok, now I understand the rules. I think. I got it wrong first. I should always read all the rules more carefully. |
@ 2011-09-28 3:34 PM (#5711 - in reply to #5664) (#5711) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-09-28 3:34 PM All examples can now be solved online in the submission page ( http://logicmastersindia.com/M201110S/ ) |
@ 2011-09-28 7:53 PM (#5712 - in reply to #5664) (#5712) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-09-28 7:53 PM While testing the sudokus, Rakesh asked me if it is allowed make 2 copies of the booklet. I didn't answer his question, but I think he printed only a single copy. There is discussion in sudokuvariante forum that one of the strategy could be printing 2 copies, and solving using different rules on separate copies. The reasons I'm bringing it up here is 1) I want to make sure that everyone knows that this is a strategy that some player might want to follow 2) More importantly, I feel, just like an offline competition where only one set of printout is allowed, one should use only one set of printout for this test. 3) Most importantly, without revealing much about what to expect in actual sudokus, I can say that printing two copies will not help one solving faster. Edited by debmohanty 2011-09-28 7:54 PM |
@ 2011-09-30 11:00 PM (#5715 - in reply to #5664) (#5715) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2011-09-30 11:00 PM Announcements 1) Bonus points
Players submitting all 12, but 1 incorrect with maximum 3 incorrect digits will get .6 points per minute saved. As usual, bonus points will be computed from the time "Claim Bonus" is clicked. So, click on "Claim Bonus" as soon as you think you are done. 2) Sudoku Booklet
It has 6 pages. Each page has 2 sudokus. There is no cover page / points table. 3) Read the instruction booklet carefully
Converse rules doesn't apply to all Sudokus. Please ask here in case of doubts 4) Score page
|
@ 2011-10-01 6:42 AM (#5717 - in reply to #5712) (#5717) Top | |
Posts: 337 Country : Switzerland | Fred76 posted @ 2011-10-01 6:42 AM debmohanty - 2011-09-28 7:53 PM While testing the sudokus, Rakesh asked me if it is allowed make 2 copies of the booklet. I didn't answer his question, but I think he printed only a single copy. There is discussion in sudokuvariante forum that one of the strategy could be printing 2 copies, and solving using different rules on separate copies. The reasons I'm bringing it up here is 1) I want to make sure that everyone knows that this is a strategy that some player might want to follow 2) More importantly, I feel, just like an offline competition where only one set of printout is allowed, one should use only one set of printout for this test. 3) Most importantly, without revealing much about what to expect in actual sudokus, I can say that printing two copies will not help one solving faster. I read this on Hideaki Jo's blog first. I'm not sure I understood well, because I'm not a specialist of japanese translation . I thought it was an interesting point, so I report this on my forum. Thanks for clarifying (and for reading sudokuvariante ) ! Fred |
@ 2011-10-01 6:46 AM (#5718 - in reply to #5717) (#5718) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-10-01 6:46 AM Fred76 - 2011-10-01 6:42 AM Precisely the same reason I posted in this forum :-) and my French is probably as good as your Japanese I thought it was an interesting point, so I report this on my forum. ! Edited by debmohanty 2011-10-01 6:47 AM |
@ 2011-10-01 12:52 PM (#5721 - in reply to #5664) (#5721) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-10-01 12:52 PM Attention : If you are solving online, you need not submit again using paper mode. It consumes time and error prone. |
@ 2011-10-02 2:39 AM (#5723 - in reply to #5664) (#5723) Top | |
Posts: 199 Country : United States | motris posted @ 2011-10-02 2:39 AM Excellent puzzles. Thanks for the fun test! |
@ 2011-10-02 12:10 PM (#5724 - in reply to #5675) (#5724) Top | |
Posts: 43 Country : United States | davep posted @ 2011-10-02 12:10 PM Deb - Really well done, nice set of puzzles. Enjoyed it! Cheers, Dave |
@ 2011-10-02 2:00 PM (#5725 - in reply to #5724) (#5725) Top | |
Posts: 191 Country : The Netherlands | Richard posted @ 2011-10-02 2:00 PM Really nice and very beautiful puzzles Deb! I enjoyed - the grids themselves and - the solving both very much! Thanks |
@ 2011-10-02 5:56 PM (#5726 - in reply to #5664) (#5726) Top | |
Posts: 329 Country : India | neerajmehrotra posted @ 2011-10-02 5:56 PM Wonderful as expected................Thanks a lot Deb for making me enjoy the weekend |
@ 2011-10-02 7:50 PM (#5727 - in reply to #5664) (#5727) Top | |
Posts: 1801 Country : India | prasanna16391 posted @ 2011-10-02 7:50 PM Really nice puzzles. Was just probably 10 seconds away from completing an LMI test for the first time. Ah well guess I'll have to wait longer :P But really enjoyed it. |
@ 2011-10-02 8:15 PM (#5730 - in reply to #5664) (#5730) Top | |
Posts: 23 Country : United States | thesubro posted @ 2011-10-02 8:15 PM Big fan of this variant test. Not a fan of killer sudokus, or non-9x9's in contests. When you stay within the constraints of the usual and just add little extra constraints you can rely on all your standard sudoku techniques and just look for the extra direction. First time I have ever bonused on LMI, so very happy about that as well. Love this site and appreciate all the time that you put in constantly to keep me and all the other world puzzlers entertained. Much thanks. TheSubro |