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Sudoku Day - LMI September Sudoku Test — 6th - 9th September57 posts • Page 1 of 3 • 1 2 3
@ 2014-09-04 1:03 PM (#16524 - in reply to #16482) (#16524) Top

mohanprashanth



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Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 1:03 PM

"Each number from the top row of the grid has its own diagonal way(at least one) throughout the same numbers to a couple in the bottom row." This is in the diagonal path sudoku. What does this mean?
@ 2014-09-04 1:12 PM (#16525 - in reply to #16524) (#16525) Top

Administrator



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Country : India

Administrator posted @ 2014-09-04 1:12 PM

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 1:03 PM

"Each number from the top row of the grid has its own diagonal way(at least one) throughout the same numbers to a couple in the bottom row." This is in the diagonal path sudoku. What does this mean?

In image below, see how the 3 in the top row can be connected to the 3 in the bottom row diagonally. Similarly 6 in the top row can be connected to 6 in the bottom row diagonally.

At least one such diagonal path must exist for each number in the top row.

@ 2014-09-04 1:22 PM (#16526 - in reply to #16482) (#16526) Top

mohanprashanth



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Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 1:22 PM

"to a couple in the bottom row",what does this mean? And in your reply, you mentioned "Similar diagonal path (at least one) must exist for each number in the top row." . Can you also illustrate this?
@ 2014-09-04 1:24 PM (#16527 - in reply to #16482) (#16527) Top

mohanprashanth



Posts: 14

Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 1:24 PM

Moreover, since in a sudoku one digit can appear only once in a column and row, the path will always be diagonal. Why do you keep mentioning it?
@ 2014-09-04 1:39 PM (#16528 - in reply to #16526) (#16528) Top

Administrator



20001000500202020
Country : India

Administrator posted @ 2014-09-04 1:39 PM

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 1:22 PM

"to a couple in the bottom row",what does this mean?
That probably needs to be phrased differently, but the rule means is the numbers in the top row has to be connected with the corresponding number in bottom row.

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 1:22 PM

And in your reply, you mentioned "Similar diagonal path (at least one) must exist for each number in the top row." . Can you also illustrate this?

In image below, 2 different paths exist for 6, one in red, other in blue. This is valid. More than 1 path may exist for a number, but there should at least be one.
@ 2014-09-04 1:42 PM (#16529 - in reply to #16482) (#16529) Top

Administrator



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Country : India

Administrator posted @ 2014-09-04 1:42 PM

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 1:24 PM

Moreover, since in a sudoku one digit can appear only once in a column and row, the path will always be diagonal. Why do you keep mentioning it?
No particular reason why I mentioned it so many times (Possibly because in most puzzles involving paths/loops, paths always consists of vertical/horizontal segments)
@ 2014-09-04 1:47 PM (#16530 - in reply to #16482) (#16530) Top

mohanprashanth



Posts: 14

Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 1:47 PM

OK :). I have two more questions. In the aspirator sudoku, what do you mean when you say the aspirator sucks up cells? That is, how do the aspirator and the sucked cells change after the aspirator sucks them?
@ 2014-09-04 1:59 PM (#16531 - in reply to #16530) (#16531) Top

Administrator



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Country : India

Administrator posted @ 2014-09-04 1:59 PM

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 1:47 PM

OK :). I have two more questions. In the aspirator sudoku, what do you mean when you say the aspirator sucks up cells? That is, how do the aspirator and the sucked cells change after the aspirator sucks them?

Nothing changes actually. Numbers in aspirator or sucked cells do NOT change.

It just means number in "the aspirator cell" is greater than numbers in all the "sucked cells". Also, all possible sucked cells in 8 directions are given. "Suction" stops when they hit the wall or a number >= the aspirator cell.

@ 2014-09-04 2:08 PM (#16532 - in reply to #16482) (#16532) Top

mohanprashanth



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Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 2:08 PM

Thank you very much. All this was very useful. But, don't certain instructions seem misleading or far-fetched or is it just me?
@ 2014-09-04 2:10 PM (#16533 - in reply to #16532) (#16533) Top

Administrator



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Country : India

Administrator posted @ 2014-09-04 2:10 PM

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 2:08 PM

But, don't certain instructions seem misleading or far-fetched or is it just me?
None of the above.
These are 9 never seen variants, and we expected many more questions about the rules than what we have seen so far.
@ 2014-09-04 2:40 PM (#16534 - in reply to #16482) (#16534) Top

mohanprashanth



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Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 2:40 PM

OK, then let me add to the question count. This is in the T crossword sudoku:"Place the given list of words into the grid (across or down) to form an interlocking crossword, so only the words in the list are formed and no others." "only the words in the list are formed": does it mean the relative positions of the digits in the word must be preserved? And if the word is "451" ,are both "451" and "154" valid?
@ 2014-09-04 2:57 PM (#16535 - in reply to #16534) (#16535) Top

chaotic_iak




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chaotic_iak posted @ 2014-09-04 2:57 PM

I'm pretty sure that you cannot reverse the words, just like in regular word placing puzzles (and in particular T for Trees, the inspiration for this variant) you cannot reverse the words.
@ 2014-09-04 2:57 PM (#16536 - in reply to #16534) (#16536) Top

vopani



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vopani posted @ 2014-09-04 2:57 PM

mohanprashanth - 2014-09-04 2:40 PM

And if the word is "451" ,are both "451" and "154" valid?

No, '154' is not valid. The numbers should be formed either across (left-to-right) or down (top-to-bottom) in the standard crossword-style.
@ 2014-09-04 3:29 PM (#16537 - in reply to #16482) (#16537) Top

mohanprashanth



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Country : India

mohanprashanth posted @ 2014-09-04 3:29 PM

Thank you.
@ 2014-09-04 6:02 PM (#16538 - in reply to #16482) (#16538) Top

TiiT



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TiiT posted @ 2014-09-04 6:02 PM

This ""Suction" stops when they hit the wall or a number >= the aspirator cell." sentence is confusing for me.
So, as I understand, it starts sucking at some point and goes clockwise (anticlockwise) until it hits greater or equal numbers or the wall and then stops even if there would be more smaller numbers on the way? Do we have to figure out by ourselves in which way it must go and where it starts? Although the example is totally confusing to understand that sentence.

Also the quiestion about diagonal path. Can the path turn direction if it hits the wall?

Tiit
@ 2014-09-04 6:37 PM (#16539 - in reply to #16538) (#16539) Top

vopani



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vopani posted @ 2014-09-04 6:37 PM

TiiT - 2014-09-04 6:02 PM

Also the quiestion about diagonal path. Can the path turn direction if it hits the wall?

No, the path cannot turn if it hits a wall.

TiiT - 2014-09-04 6:02 PM

This ""Suction" stops when they hit the wall or a number >= the aspirator cell." sentence is confusing for me.
So, as I understand, it starts sucking at some point and goes clockwise (anticlockwise) until it hits greater or equal numbers or the wall and then stops even if there would be more smaller numbers on the way? Do we have to figure out by ourselves in which way it must go and where it starts? Although the example is totally confusing to understand that sentence.

There is no clockwise/anticlockwise. You need to look in the 8 directions from the marked cell.

Check these two examples below. See if you understand:



(Aspirator_sample.png)



Attachments
----------------
Attachments Aspirator_sample.png (36KB - 7 downloads)
@ 2014-09-04 8:39 PM (#16540 - in reply to #16482) (#16540) Top

TiiT



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TiiT posted @ 2014-09-04 8:39 PM

Oh, ok. Big thanks. I think I got it now. I was looking totally in the wrong direction. These images are good for explanation.

Tiit
@ 2014-09-04 8:49 PM (#16541 - in reply to #16496) (#16541) Top

TiiT



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TiiT posted @ 2014-09-04 8:49 PM

Nikola - 2014-09-03 1:47 AM

swaroop2011 - 2014-09-02 1:01 AM

In Rolling the Dice Sudoku: The two adjacent shaded digits should be such that they are adjacent on the dice is implied right ?


Correct.



For me it's still unclear. So does the dice needs to be rolled exactly according to the numbers on the dice and the next number must be exactly adjacent digit of the dice according to where I roll it? Or does the next digit just needs to be any adjacent digit?

I hope my question is clear. Sorry, if it's a stupid question.

Tiit
@ 2014-09-04 9:12 PM (#16543 - in reply to #16541) (#16543) Top

vopani



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Country : India

vopani posted @ 2014-09-04 9:12 PM

TiiT - 2014-09-04 8:49 PM

Nikola - 2014-09-03 1:47 AM

swaroop2011 - 2014-09-02 1:01 AM

In Rolling the Dice Sudoku: The two adjacent shaded digits should be such that they are adjacent on the dice is implied right ?


Correct.



For me it's still unclear. So does the dice needs to be rolled exactly according to the numbers on the dice and the next number must be exactly adjacent digit of the dice according to where I roll it? Or does the next digit just needs to be any adjacent digit?

I hope my question is clear. Sorry, if it's a stupid question.

Tiit

Your statement "the dice needs to be rolled exactly according to the numbers on the dice and the next number must be exactly adjacent digit of the dice according to where I roll it" is CORRECT.

Try out these examples:




(Dice_sample.png)



Attachments
----------------
Attachments Dice_sample.png (16KB - 7 downloads)
@ 2014-09-04 9:42 PM (#16544 - in reply to #16482) (#16544) Top

devarajand



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devarajand posted @ 2014-09-04 9:42 PM

In rolling Dice Sudoku if the first letter is 6, then the adjacent letter should be

A. If on the same row can be 2,3,4,5 Except 1.

B . If the second letter was 4 then the row above must be 5.

Row below must be 2 if grayed.

Is it OK.
@ 2014-09-04 10:40 PM (#16546 - in reply to #16544) (#16546) Top

vopani



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vopani posted @ 2014-09-04 10:40 PM

devarajand - 2014-09-04 9:42 PM

In rolling Dice Sudoku if the first letter is 6, then the adjacent letter should be

A. If on the same row can be 2,3,4,5 Except 1.

B . If the second letter was 4 then the row above must be 5.

Row below must be 2 if grayed.


Correct.
@ 2014-09-05 1:51 AM (#16547 - in reply to #16482) (#16547) Top

RALehrer



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RALehrer posted @ 2014-09-05 1:51 AM

Some more questions:

1. Podium: will each square be in at most one podium?
2. Dice: "One dice with numbers 1 to 6 is rolled along the grid". How far along the grid? Is this exactly one die, or could it be more than 1? For example, is it ever legal to have a 4 to the right of a 1, outside of the "path"? Could this be the entire path?
3. T: No other words must be formed - what does this mean?
4. Is the black and white sudoku a full example (not having tried it yet)?

Sometimes unclarities with rules are only evident when one attempts the puzzle. Will there be a location where we can ask rules questions in real-time?

Also, usually I only look at the IB once the test has started & sometimes have found that the Q&As are restricted...

Edited by RALehrer 2014-09-05 2:04 AM
@ 2014-09-05 3:26 AM (#16548 - in reply to #16547) (#16548) Top

chaotic_iak




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chaotic_iak posted @ 2014-09-05 3:26 AM

2. I believe there will be a marked path of shaded squares, which will be your path; nothing is told about squares outside the path, and the path is not necessarily maximal (so the die can still be rolled outside the path and incidentally has the correct number). I'm not qualified to answer for the second, but if there are two separate paths then certainly there are two different dice.

3. Suppose you have two T's in adjacent boxes that are back-to-back, something like this:

..##..
######
..##..

Besides the horizontal 6-digit word and the two vertical 3-digit words, you also have two horizontal 2-digit words. If the word list doesn't specify any 2-digit words, you cannot have this formation, since you're making words not listed in the list.
@ 2014-09-05 5:06 AM (#16550 - in reply to #16547) (#16550) Top

Administrator



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Administrator posted @ 2014-09-05 5:06 AM

RALehrer - 2014-09-05 1:51 AM
1. Podium: will each square be in at most one podium?
Yes.

RALehrer - 2014-09-05 1:51 AM
4. Is the black and white sudoku a full example (not having tried it yet)?
No

RALehrer - 2014-09-05 1:51 AM
Sometimes unclarities with rules are only evident when one attempts the puzzle. Will there be a location where we can ask rules questions in real-time?
Well, you can always ask in this forum. The problem is the organizers or author or test solvers or other players may not be available to answer your questions at that point. There is no others location (e.g. real time chat or something like that) if you are thinking in that direction.

RALehrer - 2014-09-05 1:51 AM
Also, usually I only look at the IB once the test has started & sometimes have found that the Q&As are restricted...
The forum is restricted because sometimes, after finishing the test players post too much information/feedback that shouldn't be read by players who have not taken the test. We will decide if we need to keep it unrestricted this time.
@ 2014-09-05 5:21 AM (#16551 - in reply to #16548) (#16551) Top

Administrator



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Country : India

Administrator posted @ 2014-09-05 5:21 AM

chaotic_iak - 2014-09-05 3:26 AM

2. I believe there will be a marked path of shaded squares, which will be your path; nothing is told about squares outside the path, and the path is not necessarily maximal (so the die can still be rolled outside the path and incidentally has the correct number). I'm not qualified to answer for the second, but if there are two separate paths then certainly there are two different dice.
There will be exactly one path in the actual puzzle.
Sudoku Day - LMI September Sudoku Test — 6th - 9th September57 posts • Page 1 of 3 • 1 2 3
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