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| kyriako
| Joined: 12 Jun 2008 | Posts: 16 | : | Location: Germany | Items |
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Posted: Sat Jun 14, 2008 6:41 pm Post subject: Nice Loop: use cell twice? |
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Hello Sudoku Friends,
when snaking around a Sudoku, it may happen that you hit a cell which is already being used by the loop. Is it allowed to use it a second time and continue?
Does it make sense at all?
Guenter(Kyriakos). |
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| Steve
| Joined: 12 Apr 2006 | Posts: 12 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sat Jun 14, 2008 7:28 pm Post subject: |
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Yiasou!
As far as the logic is concerned, no difficulty arises if a nice chain crosses itself, using a node (or nodes) several times. If you think about it, you can go round a continuous nice loop as often as you like without disturbing its meaning.
Whether it is helpful is another matter: I do not think any fresh elimination will arise as opposed to dealing with each sub-loop separately.
Steve |
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| hobiwan
| Joined: 11 Feb 2008 | Posts: 83 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 1:22 pm Post subject: |
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I just posted possible examples here. They provide additional eliminations and seem to be valid (to me at least). Whether they are sensible (or useful) is another question. |
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| kyriako
| Joined: 12 Jun 2008 | Posts: 16 | : | Location: Germany | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 6:31 pm Post subject: one more question |
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Yassu and thank you Steve for the explanation.
Would you suggest to examine the continuous sub-loop first before going ahead?
I have still another question, which you have probably already answered with your comment:
in the samples that I have seen so far, the traces form either kind of a "loop" or they
cross each other. Is it allowed to use a unit(like a row) several times?
Hello hobiwan and thank you for the samples.
I'm not familiar with this kind of code: what is the meaning of a character
in a cell, e.g. "b34" ?
Guenter(Kyriakos). |
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| Steve
| Joined: 12 Apr 2006 | Posts: 12 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 6:53 pm Post subject: |
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The three I checked are valid right enough. However, I doubt if, properly speaking, they made any additional elimination.
Take the second loop marked with two asterisks for the third grid. It runs:
r3c9 =4= r3c5 -4- r6c5 =4= r5c6 =6= r5c7 -6- r1c7 =6= r1c2 =7= r7c2 =8= r7c1 =6= r7c5 -6- r4c5 =6= r5c6 =4= r1c6 -4- r1c8 =4= r3c9
You rightly conclude that r3c9 contains 4.
Now extract its middle loop
r5c6 =6= r5c7 -6- r1c7 =6= r1c2 =7= r7c2 =8= r7c1 =6= r7c5 -6- r4c5 =6= r5c6
This places 6 in r5c6. As for the rest of the loop, whether you use the head
r3c9 =4= r3c5 -4- r6c5 =4= r5c6
or the tail
r5c6 =4= r1c6 -4- r1c8 =4= r3c9
6 in r5c6 places 4 in r3c9.
There is a sort of equation, I suppose: long loop + singles = short loop + singles.
Steve |
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| hobiwan
| Joined: 11 Feb 2008 | Posts: 83 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 8:30 pm Post subject: Re: one more question |
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kyriako wrote: | I'm not familiar with this kind of code: what is the meaning of a character
in a cell, e.g. "b34" ? |
I think you refer to the original post by daj95376. The letters only mark the cells affected by the chain writen underneath so you can follow it more easily.
Steve wrote: | There is a sort of equation, I suppose: long loop + singles = short loop + singles. |
You have a point there |
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| Steve
| Joined: 12 Apr 2006 | Posts: 12 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 10:07 pm Post subject: |
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Günter
I spent so long transferring my previous note from the word processing program to the text box that your last post beat me to it and I have only just noticed it.
I am not certain I understand your fears but I’m pretty sure they’re groundless. Perhaps it will help to go back to basics. Take a small part of a chain, say
-1- r1c1 -2- r1c9 when written in nice loop notation.
This is just shorthand for two statements:
(1) If r1c1 does not contain 1, r1c9 does not contain 2:
(2) If r1c9 contains 2, r1c1 does not.
The fact that these statements can be made depends entirely on the grid. They are not affected by anything else. In particular, they are unaltered whether or not r1c1 appears elsewhere in the chain you build up around it. As far as I am concerned there is only one rule for chains: join the links logically and nothing else matters.
If this doesn’t set your mind at ease, perhaps you could provide an example of a chain with which you feel uncomfortable and I shall try to do better.
Steve |
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| daj95376
| Joined: 05 Feb 2006 | Posts: 349 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 10:58 pm Post subject: Re: one more question |
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kyriako wrote: | I'm not familiar with this kind of code: what is the meaning of a character
in a cell, e.g. "b34" ?
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It's not uncommon for someone to post a pencil mark (PM) grid and then mark the cells used. Sometimes the cells are marked with asterisks (*), and sometimes the cells are marked as groups (no example), and sometimes the cells are marked in the order they are processed (abcd) -- as in my grid. |
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| kyriako
| Joined: 12 Jun 2008 | Posts: 16 | : | Location: Germany | Items |
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Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 6:34 pm Post subject: Thank you |
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Hello Steve and hobiwan,
Thank you for your hints. I will study the samples thoroughly. This will sure give me more certainty on the subject. In any case, I find the nice loop strategy fascinating.
Regards,
Guenter(Kyriakos) |
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| Henk
| Joined: 13 Nov 2005 | Posts: 105 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Fri Jun 20, 2008 9:23 pm Post subject: |
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Hi,
If you are really interrested in nice loops (and other forcing chains) you should try this puzzle. Just try to find as many as you can, its has lots of them.
..1...5..8..4.5..32.......6..6.9.4..4..231..8..8.4.3..6.......99..1.3..4..2...1..
Code: |
. . 1 | . . . | 5 . .
8 . . | 4 . 5 | . . 3
2 . . | . . . | . . 6
-------+-------+------
. . 6 | . 9 . | 4 . .
4 . . | 2 3 1 | . . 8
. . 8 | . 4 . | 3 . .
-------+-------+------
6 . . | . . . | . . 9
9 . . | 1 . 3 | . . 4
. . 2 | . . . | 1 . .
37 34679 1 | 36789 2678 26789 | 5 24789 27
8 679 79 | 4 1267 5 | 279 1279 3
2 34579 34579 | 3789 178 789 | 789 14789 6
----------------------+----------------------+----------------------
1357 12357 6 | 578 9 78 | 4 1257 1257
4 579 579 | 2 3 1 | 679 5679 8
157 12579 8 | 567 4 67 | 3 125679 1257
----------------------+----------------------+----------------------
6 134578 3457 | 578 2578 2478 | 278 23578 9
9 578 57 | 1 25678 3 | 2678 25678 4
357 34578 2 | 56789 5678 46789 | 1 35678 57
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To be more specific; there is a chain you need that runs through 1 cell three times at this point!
Code: |
. . 1 | . . . | 5 . .
8 . . | 4 . 5 | . . 3
2 5 . | . . . | . . 6
-------+-------+------
. . 6 | . 9 . | 4 . .
4 . . | 2 3 1 | . . 8
. . 8 | . 4 . | 3 . .
-------+-------+------
6 1 . | . 5 . | . . 9
9 . . | 1 . 3 | . . 4
. . 2 | . . . | 1 . .
37 469 1 | 3689 68 2689 | 5 489 27
8 679 79 | 4 1267 5 | 279 12 3
2 5 34 | 3789 178 789 | 789 1478 6
-------------------+-------------------+-------------------
135 237 6 | 578 9 78 | 4 27 1257
4 79 579 | 2 3 1 | 679 5679 8
157 29 8 | 567 4 67 | 3 29 157
-------------------+-------------------+-------------------
6 1 34 | 78 5 24 | 278 238 9
9 78 57 | 1 267 3 | 2678 25678 4
357 3478 2 | 689 678 46789 | 1 3678 57
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Henk _________________ Generate and solve Sudoku puzzles with Into Sudoku! |
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| hobiwan
| Joined: 11 Feb 2008 | Posts: 83 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sat Jun 21, 2008 6:06 pm Post subject: |
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Henk wrote: | To be more specific; there is a chain you need that runs through 1 cell three times at this point! |
I can't check your triple crossing loop (I just changed my code to disable crossings ) but that grid solves nicely without:
My solver needs two finned fish, two nice loops, an UR1 and an xy-chain. |
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| kyriako
| Joined: 12 Jun 2008 | Posts: 16 | : | Location: Germany | Items |
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Posted: Sat Jun 21, 2008 7:02 pm Post subject: Nice Loop implementation |
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Thank you Friends,
Henk, I will have a look at your puzzle. Thank you.
hobiwan, what kind of solver do you use?
Meanwhile, I have included this strategy in my own solver.
Free download here:
http://homepages.compuserve.de/meinelg
Regards,
Kyriakos. |
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| hobiwan
| Joined: 11 Feb 2008 | Posts: 83 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 8:22 pm Post subject: Re: Nice Loop implementation |
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kyriako wrote: | hobiwan, what kind of solver do you use? |
My own (written in java, supports all the usual suspects except coloring, chains with grouped links or als and more sophisticated things like kraken). |
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| daj95376
| Joined: 05 Feb 2006 | Posts: 349 | : | | Items |
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Posted: Sat Jun 28, 2008 7:10 pm Post subject: |
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Henk wrote: | To be more specific; there is a chain you need that runs through 1 cell three times at this point!
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I must be missing your point about need. A combination of running my old/new solvers, and manually filtering the output in steps, produces this solution.
Code: | +-----------------------+
| . . 1 | . . . | 5 . . |
| 8 . . | 4 . 5 | . . 3 |
| 2 5 . | . . . | . . 6 |
|-------+-------+-------|
| . . 6 | . 9 . | 4 . . |
| 4 . . | 2 3 1 | . . 8 |
| . . 8 | . 4 . | 3 . . |
|-------+-------+-------|
| 6 1 . | . 5 . | . . 9 |
| 9 . . | 1 . 3 | . . 4 |
| . . 2 | . . . | 1 . . |
+-----------------------+
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Code: | c3 Naked Triple <> 579 [r3c3],[r7c3]
c8b3 Locked Candidate 1 <> 1 [r4c8],[r6c8]
r6 b5 Locked Candidate 1 <> 6 [r6c8]
r58 X-Wing <> 5 [r4c8],[r6c8],[r9c8]
XYZ-Wing [r2c7]/[r1c9]+[r2c3] <> 7 [r2c8]
c37 X-Wing finned <> 9 [r2c8] (optional)
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Code: | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 37 34679 1 | 36789 2678 26789 | 5 24789 27 |
| 8 679 79 | 4 1267 5 | 279 12 3 |
| 2 5 34 | 3789 178 789 | 789 14789 6 |
|-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------|
| 1357 237 6 | 578 9 78 | 4 27 1257 |
| 4 79 579 | 2 3 1 | 679 5679 8 |
| 157 279 8 | 567 4 67 | 3 279 1257 |
|-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------|
| 6 1 34 | 78 5 2478 | 278 2378 9 |
| 9 78 57 | 1 2678 3 | 2678 25678 4 |
| 357 3478 2 | 6789 678 46789 | 1 3678 57 |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
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Code: | 7r2c5 7r1c12 2r1c9 2r2c5 <> 7 [r2c5]
7r1c5 2r1c9 2r7c6 4r7c3 3r3c3 7r1c1 -7r1c5 <> 7 [r1c5]
-7r7c7 7r7c4 7r3c5 1r2c5 2r1c56 7r1c9 <> 7 [r2c7],[r9c9]
r2 b1 Locked Candidate 2 <> 7 [r1c12]
Singles
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Last edited by daj95376 on Sun Jun 29, 2008 10:30 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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| kyriako
| Joined: 12 Jun 2008 | Posts: 16 | : | Location: Germany | Items |
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Posted: Sun Jun 29, 2008 8:13 pm Post subject: Nice Loop: use cell twice? |
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Hello daj95376,
meanwhile I handle the situation of hitting an occupied cell by stepping back and branching elsewhere. If this doesn't end up successfully, the program would step further back, finally landing at the cell in question, from where it proceeds in a different direction.
This way, I believe, I cover all possibilities without too many unnecessary links.
Perhaps a silly question:
the code that you present here, have you typed it manually or is there a program producing this kind of code?
Guenter(Kyriakos). |
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