Sudoku Ripeto is the first Sudoku variant with repeated numbers. It presents new challenges to players and requires new solving techniques
The first Sudoku variants with repeated symbols
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Showing posts with label latinPuzzles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label latinPuzzles. Show all posts
Saturday, 8 December 2018
Sudoku Ripeto: Power Mix (Volume 2)
Sudoku Ripeto: Power Mix (Volume 2) contains 60 Sudoku Ripeto puzzles with assorted difficulties and repetition patterns.
Tuesday, 20 November 2018
Custom Sudoku: Countries & Territories (Volume 1)
Custom Sudoku: Countries & Territories (Volume 1) contains 252 puzzles in assorted difficulties, each featuring the name of a country or territory.
Custom Sudoku is the first Sudoku variant with repeated letters. It
presents new challenges to players and requires new solving techniques
Monday, 19 November 2018
Tuesday, 2 September 2014
Definition of Latin Puzzles
The ideas regarding boards, regions, and sets of symbols are condensed in the Latin Puzzle definition:
1. A board has:
4. The Latin Puzzle (upper-case p) is the set of puzzles that results when we render variable the board, the set of symbols and the clues in a given puzzle.
With this definition, the Latin square Puzzle, classical Sudoku and other are all Latin Puzzles.
1. A board has:
- any set of placeholders called cells.
- any set of cells called regions, each with the same size.
- every cell at least in one region.
- a board
- a set of symbols with the same size as the regions
- the instruction: Write one symbol on each empty cell so that every region has all symbols in the set.
- a set of clues: a particular set of pairs (symbol, cell) for some cells
- a solution: the only set of pairs (symbol, cell), amongst those that fulfill the instruction, to have the clues as a subset.
4. The Latin Puzzle (upper-case p) is the set of puzzles that results when we render variable the board, the set of symbols and the clues in a given puzzle.
With this definition, the Latin square Puzzle, classical Sudoku and other are all Latin Puzzles.
Latin Puzzles are then a type of Frequency Puzzles.
Monday, 1 September 2014
The Origins of Sudoku Ripeto
Both Sudoku Ripeto and Custom Sudoku are examples of Frequency Puzzles, which generalize classical Sudoku with different board shapes, repeated numbers and repeated letters.
The Latin Square Puzzle
A Latin square of order n is an arrangement of n x n cells in which every row and every column holds numbers 1 to n –other symbols may be used provided they are all different.Latin squares are well known objects and the base of Sudoku. They are so named because 18th century Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler used Latin letters as symbols in his paper De Quadratis Magicis. Latin squares have a long and rich history. They are mentioned in relation to magic squares as early as the 17th century, although they seem to have been used much earlier in amulets.
We can remove symbols from a Latin square to obtain a partial square that is completable to just the original one. The challenge to complete this partial square is an instance of the Latin Square Puzzle. There are many other puzzles with additional arithmetic or geometric constraints whose solutions are also Latin squares. French newspapers featured puzzles very similar to Sudoku in the 19th century.
Sudoku first became popular in Japan, after the company Nikoli started publishing it in the eighties. It spread later to the rest of the world after The Times of London featured it in 2004. It was later discovered by Will Shortz –the crossword puzzle editor for The New York Times– that the Puzzle's author was actually American architect Howard Garns, whose puzzles first appeared in the Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games magazine in 1979 with the name Number Place.
In his articles Latin Polytopes (2014) and Latin Puzzles (2016), Palomo formalized some ideas on board shape, and proposed a generalization for both Latin squares and the Latin square Puzzle. These articles contained new puzzles with tetrahedral, cubic, octahedral, dodecahedral and icosahedral boards among others, that were later presented in lectures about Latin polytopes and the evolution of Sudoku.
We can remove symbols from a Latin square to obtain a partial square that is completable to just the original one. The challenge to complete this partial square is an instance of the Latin Square Puzzle. There are many other puzzles with additional arithmetic or geometric constraints whose solutions are also Latin squares. French newspapers featured puzzles very similar to Sudoku in the 19th century.
The Sudoku Puzzle
Sudoku is played on a square board holding 81 cells and 27 regions (9 rows, 9 columns and 9 3x3 subsquares) with 9 cells each. A set of 9 different symbols (usually numbers 1 to 9) must be placed on every region. A completed Sudoku is clearly a Latin square.Sudoku first became popular in Japan, after the company Nikoli started publishing it in the eighties. It spread later to the rest of the world after The Times of London featured it in 2004. It was later discovered by Will Shortz –the crossword puzzle editor for The New York Times– that the Puzzle's author was actually American architect Howard Garns, whose puzzles first appeared in the Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games magazine in 1979 with the name Number Place.
Latin Puzzles: puzzles with symbols that do not repeat
After creating puzzles Moshaiku (2010) and Konseku (2011) Spanish engineer and songwriter Miguel G. Palomo investigated the possibility of using triangular and hexagonal boards for puzzles similar to Sudoku. This first such puzzles were Canario (2012) –inspired by the Pintaderas found in the Spanish Canary Islands–, Monthai (2013) –inspired by the namesake Thai pillow– and Douze France (2013). The puzzles had split regions, a characteristic shared by Tartan (2013) on a square board. Helios (2013) on the other hand had a star-shaped board. The main characteristic shared by these puzzles was that their solutions were not Latin squares.In his articles Latin Polytopes (2014) and Latin Puzzles (2016), Palomo formalized some ideas on board shape, and proposed a generalization for both Latin squares and the Latin square Puzzle. These articles contained new puzzles with tetrahedral, cubic, octahedral, dodecahedral and icosahedral boards among others, that were later presented in lectures about Latin polytopes and the evolution of Sudoku.
Frequency Puzzles: puzzles with repeated symbols
Frequency squares generalize Latin squares in the sense that numbers may repeat in each row and column. Inspired by them, later experiments in 2014 produced puzzles with symbols repeated, like Sudoku Ripeto (played with numbers) and Custom Sudoku (with letters that may form words in the board). They marked yet another departure from Sudoku.Las Matemáticas del Sudoku Ripeto, Semana de la Ciencia y la Innovación 2021
Sudoku Ripeto: A variant of Sudoku with repeated symbols, ICGA Journal, vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 26-49, 2021
The Sudoku Ripeto Family, 13th Gathering for Gardner Conference, Atlanta, 2018
Sudoku Ripeto and Custom Sudoku, MOVES Conference, New York, 2017
Tuesday, 1 July 2014
The Custom Sky Puzzle
Custom Sky is a Latin Puzzle played on a square board with ten rows, ten columns, and ten 2 x 5 rectangles as regions.
Wednesday, 1 January 2014
The Latino Puzzle
The Latino Puzzle is a Latin Puzzle based on Latin squares. Latin squares were studied by XVIIIth century Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler,
who used latin letters instead of numbers, hence the name. In a Latin
square puzzle every row and every column must contain all numbers from 1
to 9.
The Latino Puzzle is kindly dedicated to Prof. Raúl M. Falcón Ganfornina, Spanish expert in Latin squares.
Friday, 1 March 2013
Le Puzzle Douze France
Le Puzzle Douze France est un Puzzle Latin inspiré par les sentiments évoqués dans la chanson Douce France
(Charles Trenet, 1945): la nostalgie de l'enfance, le charme de la
France rurale, la joie de vivre, l’insouciance, les souvenirs d'une
époque de plénitude...
Dans un puzzle Douze France les triangles se regroupent dans les bandes indiquées par les flèches, et deux bandes avec la même lettre forment un couple. Chaque couple doit contenir tous les numéros de 1 à 12 et les lettres F, R, A, N, C et E.
Dans un puzzle Douze France les triangles se regroupent dans les bandes indiquées par les flèches, et deux bandes avec la même lettre forment un couple. Chaque couple doit contenir tous les numéros de 1 à 12 et les lettres F, R, A, N, C et E.
Saturday, 2 February 2013
The Tartan Puzzle
The Tartan Puzzle is a Latin Puzzle inspired by the tartan fabric, “...a pattern consisting of criss-crossed horizontal and vertical bands in multiple colours. Tartan is particularly associated with Scotland: scottish kilts almost always feature tartan patterns.” (wikipedia).
In a Tartan puzzle two rows or two columns with the same letter make up a pair. Each pair of rows, eacg pair of columns and each 4x4 sub-square must contain all numbers 1 to 16.
Friday, 1 February 2013
The Monthai Puzzle
The Monthai Puzzle is a Latin Puzzle inspired by the namesake Thai pillow. In a Monthai puzzle small triangles are grouped into the strips pointed to by the arrows. Two strips with the same letter make up a pair. Each pair of stripes must contain all the numbers from 1 to 12.
Tuesday, 1 January 2013
The Helios Puzzle
The Helios Puzzle is a Latin Puzzle in which all lines must contain the letters H E L I O S.
Friday, 1 June 2012
The Canario Puzzle
The Canario Puzzle is a Latin Puzzle inspired by the pintaderas, seals used by Canary Islands aboriginals in prehispanic times. In a Canario puzzle small triangles are grouped into the strips pointed to by the arrows. Two strips with the same letter make up a pair. Each pair of stripes must contain all the numbers from 1 to 16.
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Custom Sudoku: Countries & Territories (Volume 1)
Custom Sudoku: Countries & Territories (Volume 1) contains 252 puzzles in assorted difficulties, each featuring the name of a country or...
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Sudoku Ripeto and Custom Sudoku are featured in the Gift Exchange Book following the Gathering for Gardner 13th Conference, that was held ...
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Dentro de las actividades de la Semana de la Ciencia y la Innovación 2021, el próximo 11 de Noviembre a las 7 de la tarde, en la Escuela Sup...