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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
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| aman
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2007 7:21 pm Post subject: |
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NRICH has created a beautiful graphic called the "Advent Calendar" on the web page http://nrich.maths.org/content/id/5905/calendar.swf for easy access to some of my past monthly Sudoku puzzles in the run-up to Christmas. |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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Posted: Sat Dec 29, 2007 11:36 am Post subject: |
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I have created the first ever sudoku that requires an additional clue from a story for obtaining the solution to the puzzle. I have named my new sudoku variant "Story Sudoku".
I have posted it together with my fairy tale entitled "Fictusia" on Dr Sam Guo's website http://www.chinasudoku.com/
For those readers who like stories and sudoku variants, they will find something new and refreshing in "Story Sudoku". |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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Posted: Sun Dec 30, 2007 5:23 pm Post subject: |
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My new sudoku variant, "Colour Islands Sudoku", is posted on the website http://www.ageofpuzzles.com/Collections/ColorIslandsSudoku/ColorIslandsSudoku.htm
The variant is based in part on the rules of my two board games "Henry's Houses" and "Pseudo-Go" that are sold on-line by Kadon Enterprise http://www.gamepuzzles.com/pseudocoup.htm
The rule of both board games: "No two pieces of the same colour (or number) may be next to each other in any direction -- horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Each piece must be next to all-different colours (or numbers), different from itself and different from each other. Every fully filled 3x3 area will contain 9 different colours (or numbers)." |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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Posted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 9:07 pm Post subject: |
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Since my "Story Sudoku" is related to the difference sudoku, I take the opportunity here to make a few comments on this special variant.
As the difference sudoku has the peculiar characteristic of having two sets of solution, I jokingly called it "Blindfold Sudoku" in my article on "Corresponding Sudokus" on the NRICH website http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=5439
I published my first difference sudoku, called Duplex Difference Sudoku (Duplex-Differenzen-Sudoku in German), in March 2006 in the issue No 38 of Plus magazine http://plus.maths.org/issue38/puzzle/index.html
The answer of that puzzle was "fixed" by the symbols 1> and 1<.
The former symbol means the answer in the cell on the left is 1 greater in value than the answer in the cell on the right. Similarly, the symbol 1< indicates that the answer in the cell on the left is 1 less than the answer in the cell on the right.
I could not find any other differerence sudoku on the web until somebody came out with another variation five months later -- in August 2006.
Later on -- in October 2007 -- I "fixed" the answer of the difference sudoku with a single inequality sign instead of multiple inequality signs. This was what I had done with another variant called Minimal Difference Sudoku in October 2007 NRICH http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=5798
The answer of a difference sudoku can also be "fixed" with a single digit in a cell, as what I had done with a variant called "Pole Star Sudoku". There are two such examples on the NRICH website:
http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=5433&part=index&refpage=monthindex.php
http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=5724
Another way to "fix" the answer, as what I had done in a variant called "Constellation Sudoku", is to use a set of starting numbers (a number per star) to fill up some cells containing stars. My first example of such variant was published on the May 2007 NRICH website http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?rss=1&obj_id=5630&part=index
The same variant was first published as one of the "Puzzles to be solved in Prague -- Good practise" for the Second World Sudoku Championship 2007 on the website http://www.sudoku07.com/main/Puzzles.pdf
My second "Constellation Sudoku" was withdrawn from the Second World Sudoku Championship 2007 at Prague due to longer time required to solve it. It was later published on the website http://www.ageofpuzzles.com/Collections/ConstellationSudoku/ConstellationSudoku.htm
And finally in the "Story Sudoku", I used a clue in a fairy tale to fix the answer of the difference sudoku. |
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| aman
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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| aman
| Joined: 19 Nov 2006 | Posts: 43 | : | Location: Singapore | Items |
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