@ 2010-11-16 3:22 PM (#2523 - in reply to #2465) (#2523) Top | |
Posts: 83 Country : Czech Republic | Gotroch posted @ 2010-11-16 3:22 PM FLIP 'n' Fill Sequence - Is it allowed to use non-flipped numbers with zero at first place ( 09 ) or we have to use ( 9 )? (There is 09 in the example, but this number is reversed 90). |
@ 2010-11-16 3:32 PM (#2524 - in reply to #2465) (#2524) Top | |
Posts: 63 Country : United Kingdom | David McNeill posted @ 2010-11-16 3:32 PM In Shape Sudoku, one of the givens in the upper diagram is incorrect. I guess from the symmetry that the 5 in the bottom row should have been given instead of the 3 in the right-hand column. David McNeill. |
@ 2010-11-16 9:12 PM (#2527 - in reply to #2465) (#2527) Top | |
Posts: 44 Country : United States | davmillar posted @ 2010-11-16 9:12 PM @ronald and Deb: In the FLIP and Fill Sequence, the value of each letter is fixed. That value may need to be entered backwards to create the sequence, but the original value is still fixed. So if E is 27, E + 2 is 29, not 74. @Deb (and Rohan): Yes, the puzzle is designed so that all strips must be used in some way. A strip should not be flipped twice. @Gotroch: You may use additional zeroes to pad an answer (e.g. 9 becomes 09 or 009) @David: I'll fix that immediately - thank you for catching it. The 3 in the right-most column should have been a 1. |
@ 2010-11-17 5:00 AM (#2530 - in reply to #2465) (#2530) Top | |
Posts: 315 Country : The Netherlands | Para posted @ 2010-11-17 5:00 AM Hi I was a bit confused for a while at K in flip the sequence. I read it as (Square root of J) + 3, except it actually is square root of (J+3). Mathematically my way is correct. Is this intentional to be able to be read 2 ways? If not, i just hope the clues will be unambiguous in the test. Would be kinda annoying to get stuck on something like that. |
@ 2010-11-17 5:02 AM (#2531 - in reply to #2465) (#2531) Top | |
Posts: 44 Country : United States | davmillar posted @ 2010-11-17 5:02 AM @Para It shouldn't be ambiguous. I'll double check to see if the test has any ambiguous clues like that and fix them immediately, and will update the IB very soon as well. Sorry! Edit: There was one similar problem in the PB that I found and fixed, and I've sent the revised IB and PB to Deb. Thanks again for the questions and finding these problems! Edited by davmillar 2010-11-17 5:07 AM |
@ 2010-11-18 12:10 AM (#2539 - in reply to #2531) (#2539) Top | |
Posts: 739 Country : India | vopani posted @ 2010-11-18 12:10 AM Can '0' be used as a perfect square? |
@ 2010-11-18 1:20 AM (#2540 - in reply to #2539) (#2540) Top | |
Posts: 44 Country : United States | davmillar posted @ 2010-11-18 1:20 AM @Rohan: Yes, it can. |
@ 2010-11-19 8:25 AM (#2555 - in reply to #2465) (#2555) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2010-11-19 8:25 AM |
@ 2010-11-20 12:48 AM (#2571 - in reply to #2465) (#2571) Top | |
Posts: 44 Country : United States | davmillar posted @ 2010-11-20 12:48 AM I just want to say thanks again to Deb for facilitating the test and Grant for test solving, and best of luck to everyone who will be taking the test. I hope you all enjoy the puzzles a bunch! Edited by davmillar 2010-11-20 12:53 AM |
@ 2010-11-20 7:19 AM (#2572 - in reply to #2465) (#2572) Top | |
Posts: 63 Country : United Kingdom | David McNeill posted @ 2010-11-20 7:19 AM Enjoyed the test. Don't know why, but I had trouble entering the solution code for puzzle 7. Please check my answer manually. David McNeill. |
@ 2010-11-20 7:23 AM (#2573 - in reply to #2572) (#2573) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2010-11-20 7:23 AM David McNeill - 2010-11-20 7:19 AM David, It is already marked as correct for you. Enjoyed the test. Don't know why, but I had trouble entering the solution code for puzzle 7. Please check my answer manually. David McNeill. Was not expecting that one will enter 13 commas along with 20 digits :-) |
@ 2010-11-20 9:32 AM (#2576 - in reply to #2465) (#2576) Top | |
Posts: 30 Country : Canada | figonometry posted @ 2010-11-20 9:32 AM Nice test, thanks! That went really quickly. I wasn't expecting so much math, but that's just me not paying attention to the IB. I screwed up my answer to #2, entering the wrong end of the consecutive chain. Is that a minor enough screw-up that it could be overlooked? |
@ 2010-11-20 9:34 AM (#2577 - in reply to #2465) (#2577) Top | |
Posts: 199 Country : United States | motris posted @ 2010-11-20 9:34 AM That went rather fast, but every moment was enjoyable. I particularly liked the mirror puzzles with 0/2/5. Thanks for these puzzles. |
@ 2010-11-20 10:57 AM (#2578 - in reply to #2465) (#2578) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2010-11-20 10:57 AM Unlike Renban, you can see everyone's total score after you complete the test. Note that you can refresh the score page only once in 30 minutes. |
@ 2010-11-20 11:03 AM (#2579 - in reply to #2465) (#2579) Top | |
Posts: 199 Country : United States | motris posted @ 2010-11-20 11:03 AM I actually found I could check the score before my clock ran out. This had two bad problems: first I had to wait 30 minutes to actually see my score due to the refresh penalty, but more importantly it seems this is not info someone should have anytime the test is running. So maybe a lock until clock has run out is best? Edited by motris 2010-11-20 11:04 AM |
@ 2010-11-20 11:08 AM (#2580 - in reply to #2579) (#2580) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2010-11-20 11:08 AM motris - 2010-11-20 11:03 AM I actually found I could check the score before my clock ran out. This had two bad problems: first I had to wait 30 minutes to actually see my score due to the refresh penalty, but more importantly it seems this is not info someone should have anytime the test is running. So maybe a lock until clock has run out is best? Disabled the score page completely until this problem is fixed. |
@ 2010-11-20 11:11 AM (#2581 - in reply to #2577) (#2581) Top | |
Posts: 739 Country : India | vopani posted @ 2010-11-20 11:11 AM Puzzles were good and enjoyable. I liked ESB, Slitherlink and Mirror 0-2-5 the best. I feel 50 minutes is too short for a test. By the time you get into the groove of solving, before you know its over. And if someone has a problem like a jammed printer (like me), then there's absolutely no time to coverup. Also, if players finish the test within 50 minutes (or maybe 40 after seeing Thomas's 'rather fast'), then there should have been more puzzles. The concept of FLIP is fantastic and I dont see why there couldn't have been more puzzles. Did anyone have trouble with the '1's and '7's? or '0's and '9's? or '5's and '6's? I had to strain a bit to solve (especially the sudoku) some of them. The font was a little disturbing, or maybe it was just my sleepy eye :| @David The concept of FLIP was brilliant and I would rate it as one of the best concepts of LMI tests after Mastermind Twins. |
@ 2010-11-20 11:46 AM (#2584 - in reply to #2579) (#2584) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2010-11-20 11:46 AM motris - 2010-11-20 11:03 AM I actually found I could check the score before my clock ran out. This had two bad problems: first I had to wait 30 minutes to actually see my score due to the refresh penalty, but more importantly it seems this is not info someone should have anytime the test is running. So maybe a lock until clock has run out is best? Fixed. Thanks for reporting. The score page was always designed to display score only after the clock has run out. But with some changes yesterday (especially the 30 minutes penalty which we added to reduce load on server / database), a 'bug' crept in. We store all the times (time for submission, time of checking score etc) in the database. A quick check revealed that no one else had visited the score page before completing. And you visited 'long time' after you submitted your last answer :-) |
@ 2010-11-20 1:36 PM (#2585 - in reply to #2581) (#2585) Top | |
Posts: 774 Country : India | rakesh_rai posted @ 2010-11-20 1:36 PM Rohan Rao - 2010-11-20 11:11 AM I also think 50 minutes is more of a warm up than a test, especially in an online scenario. I think this was one puzzle test where you did not need a printer and the puzzles could be solved equally well online (paint). I feel 50 minutes is too short for a test. By the time you get into the groove of solving, before you know its over. And if someone has a problem like a jammed printer (like me), then there's absolutely no time to coverup. The idea of a puzzle test on a 'FLIP' theme is a good one, but it could have perhaps been a 100+ minute test. |
@ 2010-11-20 4:49 PM (#2586 - in reply to #2465) (#2586) Top | |
Posts: 329 Country : India | neerajmehrotra posted @ 2010-11-20 4:49 PM GUYS 50 MINS IS TOO LESS.. You have to be Thomas to play in such a short time..... I wasted 10 mins (20% of the total time) as the printer gave way..... but nevertheless puzzles are nice... enjoyed doing them............. |
@ 2010-11-20 10:41 PM (#2587 - in reply to #2465) (#2587) Top | |
Posts: 199 Country : United States | motris posted @ 2010-11-20 10:41 PM I think you all are being a bit harsh to say that this test is too short and needs more puzzles to be satisfying. I don't think this was a "warm up" at all. And if all authors are required to make 2 hour tests as a prerequisite in the future, you'll likely get fewer tests since writing good puzzles is tough!. The 12 puzzles in FLIP are a very good set and have a lot of novelty which is refreshing. I guess maybe what you are saying is you would have wanted more because they were good, and with this I certainly agree. This discussion brings up another point which is that we do set time limits on tests that don't necessarily need to be hard limits. 1h or 75 minutes could also be used on this test, and more solvers get an opportunity to finish, without compromising the quality of the puzzles. I wonder if I should experiment with a whole new scoring format on my next LMI test (many, many months away) where perhaps there isn't a set clock, but instead the value of the puzzles declines with time. So solvers that finish the whole test in 50 minutes will get more points than someone that spreads it out over the weekend and takes 6 hours, but everyone can enjoy the test at their own speed, within the two day window, and if things like printer errors or internet disconnections or phone calls come up, you can still continue the test after the interruption ends (but with a small sacrifice to your score). |
@ 2010-11-20 10:43 PM (#2588 - in reply to #2587) (#2588) Top | |
Posts: 460 Country : India | purifire posted @ 2010-11-20 10:43 PM @Motris I couldn't agree more..... :) Rishi |
@ 2010-11-20 11:00 PM (#2589 - in reply to #2587) (#2589) Top | |
Posts: 739 Country : India | vopani posted @ 2010-11-20 11:00 PM motris - 2010-11-20 10:41 PM This discussion brings up another point which is that we do set time limits on tests that don't necessarily need to be hard limits. 1h or 75 minutes could also be used on this test, and more solvers get an opportunity to finish, without compromising the quality of the puzzles. I wonder if I should experiment with a whole new scoring format on my next LMI test (many, many months away) where perhaps there isn't a set clock, but instead the value of the puzzles declines with time. So solvers that finish the whole test in 50 minutes will get more points than someone that spreads it out over the weekend and takes 6 hours, but everyone can enjoy the test at their own speed, within the two day window, and if things like printer errors or internet disconnections or phone calls come up, you can still continue the test after the interruption ends (but with a small sacrifice to your score). Ours Brun had organised a championship in May last year in which the scoring format reflects what you suggested. I quite liked the idea and it will be interesting to see if someone takes that up. More about the contest here: http://rohanrao.blogspot.com/2009/05/sudoku-tournament-by-ours-brun... |
@ 2010-11-20 11:03 PM (#2590 - in reply to #2587) (#2590) Top | |
Posts: 30 Country : Canada | figonometry posted @ 2010-11-20 11:03 PM It would be interesting to do a test with no time limit, because I'm curious how long it would take me to complete this (or any other test, for that matter). It would have to be a shorter test like the FLIP, because I'll never get more than two hours at a time to solve one, (much less the 10 hours it would take me to do something like the USPC). Maybe the points could be based entirely on how quickly someone finishes the test, with demerits based on how many puzzles remain unsolved (or wrong)? Of course then the solver would have to figure out if it's worth more to check for errors or to keep the points.What about having 10 different PDFs, with 10 different passwords, and a week to solve all 10 puzzles? |
@ 2010-11-20 11:16 PM (#2591 - in reply to #2590) (#2591) Top | |
Posts: 199 Country : United States | motris posted @ 2010-11-20 11:16 PM figonometry - 2010-11-20 11:03 PM What about having 10 different PDFs, with 10 different passwords, and a week to solve all 10 puzzles? Because of the disparity in printing out paper and such, fragmenting a test into so many pieces may not be such a good idea. But this would be an ideal option for a test that could be solved on an applet. Take a sudoku test that can be solved online; it would be an interesting format to set up 10 "start" buttons for 10 puzzles, so the individual time for each could then be recorded. Maybe scoring is based on finishing puzzles (so time doesn't matter) and top 20 solvers on each puzzle by time get small amount of bonus. So it is a race for the best solvers, and a slightly more relaxed competition that can be done over a weekend without needing 2 straight hours for everyone else. |