@ 2012-09-03 3:18 AM (#8485 - in reply to #8290) (#8485) Top | |
Posts: 315 Country : The Netherlands | Para posted @ 2012-09-03 3:18 AM I really suffered through this set breaking basically every puzzle. But solving them now afterwards they were all really nice. The ones I didn't solve in competition are actually the once I thought were the nicest. Edited by Para 2012-09-03 3:20 AM |
@ 2012-09-03 12:17 PM (#8488 - in reply to #8290) (#8488) Top | |
Posts: 136 Country : India | anurag posted @ 2012-09-03 12:17 PM Difficult,but great fun.I was enjoying every puzzle and broke almost all of those. |
@ 2012-09-04 3:11 AM (#8490 - in reply to #8290) (#8490) Top | |
Posts: 35 Country : United States | FoxFireX posted @ 2012-09-04 3:11 AM Nevermind. Now I feel silly. :) Edited by FoxFireX 2012-09-04 3:14 AM |
@ 2012-09-04 8:27 AM (#8491 - in reply to #8290) (#8491) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2012-09-04 8:27 AM Updated puzzle booklet (with 13 DIVISION fixed) uploaded. |
@ 2012-09-04 1:47 PM (#8492 - in reply to #8290) (#8492) Top | |
Posts: 234 Country : Russia | Riad Khanmagomedov posted @ 2012-09-04 1:47 PM Congratulations Palmer, Ulrich, Janka and Hideaki! Including bonus Palmer scored 265 points, and Ulrich 243. Thank you all for participating! In July, I learned that the WSC/WPC will be held October 1–7. By this time I had prepared my regular 8-day contest. If I had planned a contest on 7–15 September, it would distract everyone from preparation for WSC/WPC. So, I hastily came up with a new 2-hour contest. In a rush I was inattentive. I apologize for the fact that I was inaccurate. Thank you again, my friends! Riad |
@ 2012-09-04 4:18 PM (#8494 - in reply to #8491) (#8494) Top | |
Posts: 419 Country : India | kishy72 posted @ 2012-09-04 4:18 PM Administrator - 2012-09-04 8:27 AM Updated puzzle booklet (with 13 DIVISION fixed) uploaded. Hi ...answer booklet will be uploaded later? |
@ 2012-09-04 7:21 PM (#8495 - in reply to #8494) (#8495) Top | |
Country : India | debmohanty posted @ 2012-09-04 7:21 PM kishy72 - 2012-09-04 4:18 PM No plan to upload solution booklet. If you need solution to specific puzzle, please post hereHi ...answer booklet will be uploaded later? |
@ 2012-09-04 9:06 PM (#8496 - in reply to #8495) (#8496) Top | |
Posts: 419 Country : India | kishy72 posted @ 2012-09-04 9:06 PM debmohanty - 2012-09-04 7:21 PM kishy72 - 2012-09-04 4:18 PM No plan to upload solution booklet. If you need solution to specific puzzle, please post hereHi ...answer booklet will be uploaded later? without the solutions puzzles like digits rotation ,divergence,dioxides and so on will remain a mystery till eternity to patzers like me....because these are puzzles where u can easily see where u have gone wrong seeing the answer ..so if solutions are available it would be highly preferable to post it here........ |
@ 2012-09-04 11:12 PM (#8498 - in reply to #8496) (#8498) Top | |
Country : United States | MellowMelon posted @ 2012-09-04 11:12 PM Digits rotation: X666______X _66_6_5_5__ ______55_5_ 99_________ 9______88__ 99____8_8_7 9_9__8_8__7 99___88___7 ___4_____7_ ___44___777 X___4_____X The easiest way to start is to use the 26 diagonal clue. With some help from the 11 you can narrow it down to two choices: either 44-99, or 55-88 (in order from the 26's arrow). If you also keep in mind that there are few ways to obtain 18 and 28 on the top, you should eventually stumble on this way of packing the 4,5,6,9. Then it's just a matter of packing the 8 to avoid every clue, and having the 11 and 13 see exactly one 7. Divergence: Most Lasers solve in a similar way: find a really constrained clue, use it, cross it out, rinse and repeat. This one throws a few tricks in thanks to the Ys, but is still pretty similar. First do these clues in order: the 7 in C8, the 3 between C8 and C9 (a nice use of parity), the 5 in C7. In the process of this you can make the realization that the straight segments have to squeeze through the middle without joining too early, which then brings the 8 between C5 and C6 to bear. Then look at: the 6 in C5, the 5 in R1, the 5 in R2 (with the 3 in the last column you can finally finish the top right), the 7 in R7 (whole bottom left done), the 3 between R5 and R6 (combined with the finished 5 in R6), and then use the 6 between C2 and C3 to finish. Dioxides: _00S00S0S0_ _S_0_0__00S _0_S_S0S__0 _S000000_S0 _0_0S0S_000 S0S0____S_S 0000S0__000 0S___00S_S0 ___S0S00_0_ S0_00___0S_ 00S0S00S0__ Osmium marked as S. Should be easy to see what the molecules are from this. This was in my opinion the most straightforward solve of the bunch if you had a grip on the type. The bottom left is an easy start since it's a dead-end. As you work your way from there, the most helpful realization is that you can't have too many oxygens all in one place, which means any O surrounded by lots of others often can't be an osmium. |
@ 2012-09-05 10:19 AM (#8499 - in reply to #8498) (#8499) Top | |
Posts: 419 Country : India | kishy72 posted @ 2012-09-05 10:19 AM MellowMelon - 2012-09-04 11:12 PM couldn't have been explained better...what else to expect from the world champ.....never hit me once to place the 9 in that way..thats why could not solve was trying with 55 88 and trying to adjust the remaning pieces....thnk u melon.......... ... ... |
@ 2012-09-06 12:47 PM (#8500 - in reply to #8499) (#8500) Top | |
Country : India | Administrator posted @ 2012-09-06 12:47 PM Riad has now prepared the solution booklet : Link |