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Ema Nymton
Joined: 17 Apr 2009 Posts: 89
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 2:33 pm Post subject: 20110130 Hard |
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+--------------+---------+-----------------+
| 23 4 239* | 8 7 5 | 6 1 39 |
| 358 39 3589 | 1 4 6 | 359 2 7 |
| 7 6 1 | 3 9 2 | 8 45 45 |
+--------------+---------+-----------------+
| 9 8 24A | 26 5 1 | 7 3 46 |
| 1236 7 23B | 26 38 4 | 15 9 1568 |
| 136 5 34C | 7 38 9 | 14 468 2 |
+--------------+---------+-----------------+
| 58 1 7 | 59 2 3 | 459 4568 45689 |
| 4 2 3589 | 59 6 7 | 1359 58 13589 |
| 35 39 6 | 4 1 8 | 2 7 359 |
+--------------+---------+-----------------+
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Does the ABC alignment eliminating '2' at r1c3 qualify as a 'wing'?
Ema Nymton
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peterj
Joined: 26 Mar 2010 Posts: 974 Location: London, UK
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 2:46 pm Post subject: |
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Ema, more simply it is a "naked triple" i.e the three cells are constrained to contain only the digits 2,3,4 hence they may be removed from other cells in the same house. In this case they eliminate the 2 from r1c3 as you noted but also 3 from other cells in c3 and 23 from other cells in b4.
This triple made up of bivalues is the bulding block of a wing - but it needs to be "bent" so that the cells are in two different houses (row/column/block) with one cell (the pivot) being common to both houses. |
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ronk
Joined: 07 May 2006 Posts: 398
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 3:09 pm Post subject: |
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peterj wrote: | In this case they eliminate the 2 from r1c3 as you noted but also 3 from other cells in c3 and 23 from other cells in b4. |
In which case it is oft referred to as a locked triple.
peterj wrote: | This triple made up of bivalues is the bulding block of a wing - but it needs to be "bent" so that the cells are in two different houses (row/column/block) with one cell (the pivot) being common to both houses. |
Fair enough, but I think there must be a few programmed solvers where the xy-wing and xyz-wing techniques subsume the naked triple and locked triple techniques ... and IMO they should. |
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peterj
Joined: 26 Mar 2010 Posts: 974 Location: London, UK
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Posted: Sun Jan 30, 2011 5:00 pm Post subject: |
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ronk wrote: | Fair enough, but I think there must be a few programmed solvers where the xy-wing and xyz-wing techniques subsume the naked triple and locked triple techniques ... and IMO they should. |
I can see from a computer solver point of view why you would say that - but surely from a "soft squishy organic" solver point of view scanning a house for a triple is quite a different task to looking for an xy-wing? |
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