@ 2011-07-07 10:49 AM (#5054 - in reply to #5048) (#5054) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-07-07 10:49 AM Anything better? |
@ 2011-07-07 4:07 PM (#5056 - in reply to #5048) (#5056) Top | |
Posts: 83 Country : Czech Republic | Gotroch posted @ 2011-07-07 4:07 PM Method 2: For marked thermometers write number of parts with mercury. |
@ 2011-07-07 4:40 PM (#5057 - in reply to #5056) (#5057) Top | |
Posts: 774 Country : India | rakesh_rai posted @ 2011-07-07 4:40 PM Gotroch - 2011-07-07 4:07 PM Method 2: For marked thermometers write number of parts with mercury. This looks interesting. Edited by rakesh_rai 2011-07-07 4:40 PM |
@ 2011-07-07 7:05 PM (#5058 - in reply to #5057) (#5058) Top | |
Posts: 89 Country : India | utkaarsh posted @ 2011-07-07 7:05 PM Also an option, number of empty thermometers or completely filled ones Edited by utkaarsh 2011-07-07 7:06 PM |
@ 2011-07-08 5:09 AM (#5061 - in reply to #5058) (#5061) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2011-07-08 5:09 AM utkaarsh - 2011-07-07 7:05 PM That doesn't work in general because in most cases you don't need to solve the puzzle completely to know #of empty/full thermos. Also an option, number of empty thermometers or completely filled ones Secondly, global counting is something error-prone (e.g. #of horizontal bridges in Hashi). I think we should avoid answer keys like this. |