This post originated from an RSS feed registered with Python Buzz
by Ben Last.
Original Post: Those Sodding Puzzles
Feed Title: The Law Of Unintended Consequences
Feed URL: http://benlast.livejournal.com/data/rss
Feed Description: The Law Of Unintended Consequences
The perceptive Tom Hume posts about getting puzzles onto mobile phones. Our own mobile project(s) are beginning to ramp up heavily (we're even recruiting, so if you know a ZPT-literate web designer who might want a job, let me know), but not in the direction of puzzles. I think it'll be interesting to see how someone approaches the problem of making a phone interface do anything as nice as a piece of paper with a puzzle on.
Like many other Brits, I've been caught up to some extent in the frenzy of Sudoku. And being, at the very core of my head, a programmer, I've been pondering algorithms for solving them. I'm not about to post any Python or Java to help here (not yet, at any rate), but what might be useful to others is this worksheet. The idea's very simple; the bottom sheet has all the possible numbers for every square shown. Cross them out with a pen/pencil as they become evidently impossible. As Sherlock Holmes said, when you eliminate the impossible, whatever's left must be true. Although he was a sociopathic junkie, really. And didn't do sudoku.