@ 2011-05-30 7:53 PM (#4614 - in reply to #4613) (#4614) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2011-05-30 7:53 PM There is no restriction on the letters. They can be anything as long as the same letters are the same value and different letters are different values. So 2,3,4,6 would be possible. |
@ 2011-05-31 10:36 AM (#4623 - in reply to #4589) (#4623) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-05-31 10:36 AM The preview series has started - check Classic Fillomino and Shape Fillomino After Classic Sudoku, and then Classic Tapa, and now Classic Fillomino, I wonder how many types will be prefixed by Classic in the future!! |
@ 2011-05-31 10:43 PM (#4644 - in reply to #4579) (#4644) Top | |
Posts: 668 Country : India | swaroop2011 posted @ 2011-05-31 10:43 PM hey in EVEN ODD i think it can have multiple solution.. the 8 at r2c3 and 1 at r2c4 can be interchanged. |
@ 2011-05-31 10:45 PM (#4645 - in reply to #4644) (#4645) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2011-05-31 10:45 PM If that switch were made it would violate the even-odd constraint. The 1 on R2C3 would not be connected to the other odd numbers (touching at a corner does not count). |
@ 2011-05-31 10:51 PM (#4646 - in reply to #4645) (#4646) Top | |
Posts: 668 Country : India | swaroop2011 posted @ 2011-05-31 10:51 PM MellowMelon - 2011-05-31 10:45 PM If that switch were made it would violate the even-odd constraint. The 1 on R2C3 would not be connected to the other odd numbers (touching at a corner does not count). ok , that's what i didnt understood the rule properly. now its clear after reading this. thank you. Can anybody help out how to start the cipher fillomino.? |
@ 2011-05-31 10:58 PM (#4647 - in reply to #4646) (#4647) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2011-05-31 10:58 PM Walkthrough for the Cipher example: -- From the top left A, you can determine that A is at most 2. -- From the pair of As in the third column, you know A is at least 2. So A = 2. All of the given As can be finished easily. -- From the bottom right D, you know D is at most 2. Since A is already 2, we have D = 1. -- R5C4 is adjacent to completed 1 and 2 polyominoes, so it is at least 3. Hence it is C (whatever value that is). -- Both B and C is at least 3 since we already have 1 or 2. So the Cs in R4-5C4 must extend up to R3C4 and connect to the C on R3C3. The B on R2C2 also extends down and traps the four Cs. Hence C = 4. -- From the top right corner, we know B is at most 4. 1,2,4 are all taken, so B = 3. -- The rest of the puzzle finishes like a simple classic would. mathgrant has posted several full-size Cipher Fillominoes on his blog already, so you might consider doing some of them for practice on full-size ones, not to mention the Cipher in the preview series that will be posted later. |
@ 2011-06-01 11:07 AM (#4648 - in reply to #4579) (#4648) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-06-01 11:07 AM Preview series part 2 - Odd Even and Greater Than |
@ 2011-06-02 12:59 AM (#4653 - in reply to #4579) (#4653) Top | |
Posts: 315 Country : The Netherlands | Para posted @ 2011-06-02 12:59 AM Okay, I might be the only one, but I didn't understand what you meant with enter the units digits per square until I saw the answer keys for the practise puzzles. I think you might want to clarify that a little, because it isn't explained anywhere in the booklet and the practise puzzles don't have multi-digit numbers. I haven't ever heard this term before to mean the last digit of a number. Maybe it's some mathematical term, but as I'm not an English native speaker or done any mathematics after highschool, it's not something I have ever come across. |
@ 2011-06-02 1:07 AM (#4654 - in reply to #4579) (#4654) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2011-06-02 1:07 AM Sorry about that. Would it help to refer to it as the last digit as well? The edited text would read "Enter the units digit (last digit) of each square's number..." |
@ 2011-06-02 11:20 AM (#4661 - in reply to #4579) (#4661) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-06-02 11:20 AM |
@ 2011-06-02 7:31 PM (#4666 - in reply to #4661) (#4666) Top | |
Posts: 774 Country : India | rakesh_rai posted @ 2011-06-02 7:31 PM |
@ 2011-06-03 10:13 AM (#4667 - in reply to #4579) (#4667) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-06-03 10:13 AM |
@ 2011-06-03 6:56 PM (#4670 - in reply to #4579) (#4670) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2011-06-03 6:56 PM Instructions in Chinese is available here - http://www.sudokufans.org.cn/forums/index.php?showtopic=265 |
@ 2011-06-03 8:02 PM (#4672 - in reply to #4670) (#4672) Top | |
Posts: 28 Country : Austria | euklid posted @ 2011-06-03 8:02 PM Only at the classic fillomino you have given the explanation of the answer entry. Namely, that only the unit digits (=last digits) of each square's content has to be entered. Is this specification of the answer entry valid for all puzzles? Or do you want to imply that only the classic fillomino can have numbers greater than 9? I don't believe so but I better ask... For Cipher Fillomino the numbers can be greater than 9 also, I assume. But the numbers 2 and 12 are denoted by different letters (even when both numbers are given by a 2 at the answer entry). Correct? Actually for checking the answer the letter denoting the 2 and the letter denoting the 12 should be interpreted the same. Otherwise it is "unfair": If the correct entry would be ABBB (A=2, B=12) for some row/column, then a competitor typing 2222 would be awarded points while a competitor typing AAAB wouldn't. Have fun, thanks for the test, Stefan |
@ 2011-06-03 8:03 PM (#4673 - in reply to #4579) (#4673) Top | |
Posts: 63 Country : United Kingdom | David McNeill posted @ 2011-06-03 8:03 PM In the Cipher variation, is it possible that there will be additional areas of a size not represented by a letter? I am not sure that I will be able to compete this weekend as I am in Dallas and haven't found an internet cafe yet. |
@ 2011-06-03 8:10 PM (#4674 - in reply to #4579) (#4674) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2011-06-03 8:10 PM Re: euklid The answer entry for Classic is intended to apply for all puzzles. For Cipher, it is true that a 2 and a 12 would be denoted by a different letter but have the same last digit. So your answer would look a bit different if you entered letters than if you entered units digits. This is okay. I do not consider it unfair that AAAB would not be accepted if it is wrong. If you want the advantages of being able to entering an answer that can't distinguish between 2 or 12, you have to enter the numbers. That the letters could be entered at all was a concession by us in the first place. Re: David McNeill It would cause problems for entering answers by letters if hidden polyominoes whose size is not equal to any of the givens were allowed. I will go ahead and say that it won't happen, and that knowing that almost certainly won't help you solve any of the actual test's puzzles. Edited by MellowMelon 2011-06-05 5:22 AM |
@ 2011-06-03 9:47 PM (#4676 - in reply to #4654) (#4676) Top | |
Posts: 315 Country : The Netherlands | Para posted @ 2011-06-03 9:47 PM MellowMelon - 2011-06-02 1:07 AM Sorry about that. Would it help to refer to it as the last digit as well? The edited text would read "Enter the units digit (last digit) of each square's number..." I would have just suggested an example in the instruction booklet would have suffised: (e.g. If a square says 15 or 25, you enter a 5). Don't think anything more would be necessary. |
@ 2011-06-03 10:44 PM (#4677 - in reply to #4674) (#4677) Top | |
Posts: 15 Country : United States | mathgrant posted @ 2011-06-03 10:44 PM For Cipher, it is true that a 2 and a 12 would be denoted by the same letter but have the same last digit. So your answer would look a bit different if you entered letters than if you entered units digits. This is okay. I think you mean that a 2 and a 12 would be denoted by different letters. But what do I know? I'm only your co-author. :)Edited by mathgrant 2011-06-03 10:48 PM |
@ 2011-06-03 11:15 PM (#4678 - in reply to #4677) (#4678) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2011-06-03 11:15 PM Puzzle booklet is uploaded. It has 9 pages. Each page has 2 puzzles. There is no cover page / points table. |
@ 2011-06-04 6:10 AM (#4679 - in reply to #4678) (#4679) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2011-06-04 6:10 AM All the answer keys are simple and consistent this time. So we don't expect much manual overrides, but if anyone feels they didn't get points because of a formatting problem, they should post here or send a message to Grant. While posting here, please don't post the answer, fully or partially - just the puzzle id is enough. |
@ 2011-06-04 7:59 AM (#4680 - in reply to #4579) (#4680) Top | |
Posts: 4 Country : United States | gpagano posted @ 2011-06-04 7:59 AM Alright, finished the test a little while ago with a score of 8/18 correct. Not a terrible performance, but of course I hope to improve in the future. As for the puzzles, I'll leave specific comments to after everyone has competed, but the ones I solved were Classic 1-3, Easy Shikaku, Easy Even-Odd, Easy and Hard Cipher (Hard Cipher was quite good) and Easy Sum. I'm looking forward to doing the rest though, including the Hard Star Fillomino, which looks to be worth every one of those 20 points. Thanks for the test Grant and Palmer. One question though: will you eventually say who authored which puzzles? I want to see if my guesses as to which was which are accurate. |
@ 2011-06-04 11:13 AM (#4681 - in reply to #4579) (#4681) Top | |
Posts: 1 Country : Poland | Psyho posted @ 2011-06-04 11:13 AM Hi, I've made a really stupid and costly numpad-style mistake. I'm not sure whether you can do a "manual override" on such thing :) PS. It's funny how nikoli made me to dislike several puzzle types. I never really thought that fillomino can be so entertaining/interesting, especially since in general I dislike puzzles with numbers/digits. |
@ 2011-06-04 11:15 AM (#4682 - in reply to #4579) (#4682) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2011-06-04 11:15 AM Yep, we figured it was a Numpad typo. You should already have those (hard-earned) points. |
@ 2011-06-04 2:36 PM (#4683 - in reply to #4579) (#4683) Top | |
Posts: 668 Country : India | swaroop2011 posted @ 2011-06-04 2:36 PM hey i think in the test the shape filimino is wrong...please check the top one |
@ 2011-06-04 2:40 PM (#4685 - in reply to #4683) (#4685) Top | |
Posts: 668 Country : India | swaroop2011 posted @ 2011-06-04 2:40 PM ok srry i dont no then. thank u. |