@ 2011-07-11 2:56 PM (#5114 - in reply to #5112) (#5114) Top | |
Posts: 199 Country : United States | motris posted @ 2011-07-11 2:56 PM I thought I'd add some puzzle specific comments now - specifically the oddities that made me laugh a bit: For the second straight test, Tom actually wrote a LIT puzzle, not a LITS puzzle. But I was happy that the answer entry this time used the tetromino shape Tom is deathly afraid of (must have eliminated it from memory after bad Tetris experiences?). I also appreciated the "not 2-9" row of the Kakuro which riffed on my 1-9 complaint from the last Kakuro Marathon. I did sort of expect the change though so had no problem resolving that corner which certainly just feeds as Melon points out one digit to the upper-left. For most Kakuro I like diagonal entries as the USPC does, but I'm not sure with the strong lower-left to upper-right diagonal if this would be an improvement on this puzzle. Probably two long rows and/or two long columns that target both isolated sides as opposed to a mix of rows/columns that only hits one. After breezing through the actual test, I got caught with a small mistake on a huge puzzle of a type I don't enjoy solving. And tweaking a mistake in a large puzzle is a whole different challenge from just erasing and restarting as in a small one. While the small Yajilin used some nice loop properties, the big one in my opinion was just long albeit with a nice symmetric pattern. I couldn't recover enough to finish it within 90 minutes (100 minutes is a different story). Fortunately I switched to completing the Heyawake in time to not completely botch the second contest. Still, if there are to be marathons next time, I'd prefer more balanced scoring so solvers can go after them at any time. It is odd that deu and I both competed in some other test after the first one ended in 45 minutes. Congrats to H.Jo for his marathon solving ability; I'd obviously used up too much energy expecting the contest to be a sprint and lost in the last miles of some different race. Edited by motris 2011-07-11 3:04 PM |
@ 2011-07-11 4:49 PM (#5115 - in reply to #5114) (#5115) Top | |
Posts: 103 Country : Serbia | Nikola posted @ 2011-07-11 4:49 PM This obviously wasn't Nikola Selection . Great performance of top two players, I haven't even got to see a marathon puzzles. Time was up in front of my eyes when I try to enter last "regular" puzzle. However, I will keep this test in my memory because here was one beautiful puzzle - suraromu. Nikola |
@ 2011-07-11 8:25 PM (#5116 - in reply to #4980) (#5116) Top | |
Posts: 69 Country : Japan | deu posted @ 2011-07-11 8:25 PM Thanks for a great contest! In Nikoli magazine and Nikoli.com puzzles, some difficult techniques are not used. So, at least for me, this contest was a good chance to solve Nikoli puzzles which never appears on Nikoli (Yajilin (small) and Fillomino are typical examples). As for my performance, I feel very satisfied to achieve what author did not expect. After entering and checking my 16 answers, I had 40 minutes to solve three marathon puzzles. When I solved Heyawake in 12 minutes, I became convinced that there was enough possibility of finishing all puzzles if I made no mistakes. |
@ 2011-07-11 8:36 PM (#5117 - in reply to #5116) (#5117) Top | |
Posts: 774 Country : India | rakesh_rai posted @ 2011-07-11 8:36 PM It was a nice contest, and there was something for everyone. And this one turned out much better than the first edition. I hope Nikoli Selection 2012 will be even grander. Congratulations to everyone who finished all 16 from the main section. They are all winners of this contest. And special congratulations to those who managed to solve even one marathon !!! From the main section, I liked Nurikabe, Hitori, Shikaku, and, of course, Suraromu. |
@ 2011-07-12 1:40 PM (#5123 - in reply to #4980) (#5123) Top | |
Posts: 148 Country : France | Ours brun posted @ 2011-07-12 1:40 PM Very fun test, with some really good puzzles. Nice sudoku, excellent suramoru, ripple effect and LIT(s), amongst others. I made some stupid tactical choices, like wasting the last 10' on the Hashi, a puzzle I dislike, instead of solving the Numberlink and checking my Fillomino on which I was almost sure of having done something bad - and indeed, I had. But all in all, a satisfying performance for me. Thanks Tom, and big congrats to Hideaki for such an impressive performance. |
@ 2011-07-13 2:47 AM (#5134 - in reply to #4980) (#5134) Top | |
Posts: 170 Country : Germany | rob posted @ 2011-07-13 2:47 AM I agree, very fun puzzles. During the contest I had to rely a little bit on intuition on some puzzles (the Yajilin which I've solved properly afterwards, the Fillomino where I should probably have summed up the clues at some point, and also the Nurikabe. I still need to revisit that one. Just now I looked at the marathon Heyawake, and was wondering if anyone else is having trouble with uniqueness? I solved it properly until just a patch in the bottom right and the top right are not filled in. Aside from room 'B' which is still open, my solution agrees with the correct code. It looks like the bottom right should close up so that connectivity forces a path along the right edge, forcing the top right including B=1, but I think I have a valid solution with B=2… Most likely I'm missing some wrong room count or three-room violation, but I really can't find any at the moment. (A uniqueness argument forces B=1, so there's a very small chance an ambiguity would have been missed in the tournament.) Edited by rob 2011-07-13 2:47 AM |
@ 2011-07-13 3:50 AM (#5135 - in reply to #5134) (#5135) Top | |
Posts: 152 Country : United Kingdom | detuned posted @ 2011-07-13 3:50 AM I shall post a solution...give me a sec to do it in paint :) |
@ 2011-07-13 4:06 AM (#5136 - in reply to #4980) (#5136) Top | |
Posts: 152 Country : United Kingdom | detuned posted @ 2011-07-13 4:06 AM Here we go - not quite in Hideaki's time, but I did have to faff around uploading and stuff! http://www.warwick.ac.uk/~marear/36x20_heyawake_abc_solution.PNG |
@ 2011-07-13 4:23 AM (#5137 - in reply to #4980) (#5137) Top | |
Posts: 170 Country : Germany | rob posted @ 2011-07-13 4:23 AM Thanks, that helped! A 4-room some distance away had just three black cells… I'll give it a fresh try tomorrow. |