Login Register WSPC 2017 • Schedule • Participation • Location • WSC • WPC • Contact •Search •Recent





13 The Joker
   WSC and WPC 2017 -> WSC 2017 Instructions Booklet23 posts • Page 1 of 1 • 1
vopani
Subject: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-01 8:22 PM (#23338) (#23338) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
Round 13: The Joker

Please post your questions about this round here.

Corrections for v2:
* In Sequence, R3C8 should be '4' and R6C8 should be '2'. This will be corrected.
* In Clock-Faces, bottom-left corner is a black dot, not a white dot. This will be corrected.
detuned
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-01 10:40 PM (#23348 - in reply to #23338) (#23348) Top




Posts: 152
1002020
Location: United Kingdom
5. Sequences.

Perhaps I've misunderstood something, but there are no solutions solving the set X49, with X between 1 and 9, such that the three numbers form an arithmetic progression.
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-01 10:44 PM (#23349 - in reply to #23348) (#23349) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
detuned - 2017-10-01 10:40 PM

5. Sequences.

Perhaps I've misunderstood something, but there are no solutions solving the set X49, with X between 1 and 9, such that the three numbers form an arithmetic progression.

You're right. Will get the example fixed.
Thanks!
detuned
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-01 10:49 PM (#23350 - in reply to #23338) (#23350) Top




Posts: 152
1002020
Location: United Kingdom
8. Clock Faces

The wording is loose here - so could you please confirm that the cell where the numbers start to increase from can be any of the cells in the 2x2 area?
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-01 11:20 PM (#23359 - in reply to #23350) (#23359) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
detuned - 2017-10-01 10:49 PM

8. Clock Faces

The wording is loose here - so could you please confirm that the cell where the numbers start to increase from can be any of the cells in the 2x2 area?

Yes, any.
kishy72
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 5:41 PM (#23396 - in reply to #23338) (#23396) Top


SM 2020 (Math) Author

Posts: 419
100100100100
Location: India
5.Sequence Sudoku

Cells in R2C6,R3C7 and R4C8 form a sequence.But the value of the joker should be -1 to satisfy that sequence which is not permissible.So how is that a sequence then and marked with a line?
kishy72
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 5:43 PM (#23397 - in reply to #23338) (#23397) Top


SM 2020 (Math) Author

Posts: 419
100100100100
Location: India
This query has been sorted previously.Sorry missed that.
Hemant Kr Malani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 5:57 PM (#23398 - in reply to #23338) (#23398) Top




Posts: 63
202020
Location: India
2. Pencil Marks sudoku
The rule says that 'the joker may assume any of the given pencilmarks in the cell' but in r9c5 this is not true.
3. Non-Consecutive
Same here. The rule says that 'the joker may assume any value that is not consecutive to the digit in its adjacent cell' but this is not true in many cells for example 4 is consecutive to both 3&5 in box 4.

Can you please clarify which is correct--the rule or example?(I think the example)

Edited by Hemant Kr Malani 2017-10-02 5:58 PM
kishy72
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 5:58 PM (#23399 - in reply to #23338) (#23399) Top


SM 2020 (Math) Author

Posts: 419
100100100100
Location: India
9.Battenburg Sudoku

Rules state all possible symbols are marked.Does the joker digit take its actual value when the vice versa rule comes into play or it could be any other digit ? For example, consider the following case with 5 as the joker digit : R1C1 = 1 ,R2C2 = 2, R2C1=4, R2C2 = 5 . Will this be marked by a Battenburg symbol or not necessarily marked ?
Para
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 6:15 PM (#23400 - in reply to #23399) (#23400) Top




Posts: 315
100100100
Location: The Netherlands
kishy72 - 2017-10-02 5:58 PM

9.Battenburg Sudoku

Rules state all possible symbols are marked.Does the joker digit take its actual value when the vice versa rule comes into play or it could be any other digit ? For example, consider the following case with 5 as the joker digit : R1C1 = 1 ,R2C2 = 2, R2C1=4, R2C2 = 5 . Will this be marked by a Battenburg symbol or not necessarily marked ?


R8C23+R9C23 seems to confirm that it doesn't have to be marked.

Just to reiterate on this. If the Joker has to be a 4 to fulfil a Battenburg marking in one 2x2 square and a 4 in that cell would also fulfil a Battenburg square in another place, that second square does not have to be marked as that Joker can just assume a random other digit for this other 2x2 square that wouldn't fulfil that Battenburg square? (This is just how this round in general works, right? A Joker can be as many different digits to fulfil all possible constraints or missing constraints set in the puzzle.)

Edited by Para 2017-10-02 6:16 PM
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 6:25 PM (#23401 - in reply to #23398) (#23401) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
Hemant Kr Malani - 2017-10-02 5:57 PM

2. Pencil Marks sudoku
The rule says that 'the joker may assume any of the given pencilmarks in the cell' but in r9c5 this is not true.
3. Non-Consecutive
Same here. The rule says that 'the joker may assume any value that is not consecutive to the digit in its adjacent cell' but this is not true in many cells for example 4 is consecutive to both 3&5 in box 4.

Can you please clarify which is correct--the rule or example?(I think the example)

2. In Pencilmarks, the digit '7' is the joker. R9C5 is a '7', the joker, and it can assume the value of '4' (or '5') to satisfy the pencilmark clue.

3. In Non Consecutive, the digit '4' is the joker. R5C2 is a '4', the joker, and it can assume the value of, say, '8' to satisfy non-consecutive constraint with the '3' to the left and it can assume the value of, say '2' (or even '8' again) to satisfy non-consecutive constraint with the '5' to the right.

The rule and example are both correct as per these descriptions.
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 6:30 PM (#23402 - in reply to #23400) (#23402) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
Para - 2017-10-02 6:15 PM

kishy72 - 2017-10-02 5:58 PM

9.Battenburg Sudoku

Rules state all possible symbols are marked.Does the joker digit take its actual value when the vice versa rule comes into play or it could be any other digit ? For example, consider the following case with 5 as the joker digit : R1C1 = 1 ,R2C2 = 2, R2C1=4, R2C2 = 5 . Will this be marked by a Battenburg symbol or not necessarily marked ?


R8C23+R9C23 seems to confirm that it doesn't have to be marked.

Just to reiterate on this. If the Joker has to be a 4 to fulfil a Battenburg marking in one 2x2 square and a 4 in that cell would also fulfil a Battenburg square in another place, that second square does not have to be marked as that Joker can just assume a random other digit for this other 2x2 square that wouldn't fulfil that Battenburg square? (This is just how this round in general works, right? A Joker can be as many different digits to fulfil all possible constraints or missing constraints set in the puzzle.)

This is correct. The joker can assume a value to satisfy a 2x2 region not having a Battenburg.

@kishy72
Let me know if you still need help in understanding.
Hemant Kr Malani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-02 11:06 PM (#23405 - in reply to #23401) (#23405) Top




Posts: 63
202020
Location: India
vopani - 2017-10-02 6:25 PM

Hemant Kr Malani - 2017-10-02 5:57 PM

2. Pencil Marks sudoku
The rule says that 'the joker may assume any of the given pencilmarks in the cell' but in r9c5 this is not true.
3. Non-Consecutive
Same here. The rule says that 'the joker may assume any value that is not consecutive to the digit in its adjacent cell' but this is not true in many cells for example 4 is consecutive to both 3&5 in box 4.

Can you please clarify which is correct--the rule or example?(I think the example)

2. In Pencilmarks, the digit '7' is the joker. R9C5 is a '7', the joker, and it can assume the value of '4' (or '5') to satisfy the pencilmark clue.


3. In Non Consecutive, the digit '4' is the joker. R5C2 is a '4', the joker, and it can assume the value of, say, '8' to satisfy non-consecutive constraint with the '3' to the left and it can assume the value of, say '2' (or even '8' again) to satisfy non-consecutive constraint with the '5' to the right.

The rule and example are both correct as per these descriptions.

Sorry I had some misunderstanding. Thanks for the clarification
forcolin
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-03 4:25 AM (#23410 - in reply to #23338) (#23410) Top





Posts: 172
100202020
Location: ITALY
8 Clock faces sudoku. I believe that the dot in the bottom left corner is of the wrong colour. In no way the joker can originate a clockwise sequence with the 2,4,6 placed in that way.
Also, why there is not white dot in the intersection R89 C23? in this case the 5 could be replacing a 7. Or in the intersection R78 C23, in this case the 5 replaces a 9.
This applies also for many other intersection where the joker is involved. In which sense the statement "All such dots are marked" should be interpreted?
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-03 9:16 AM (#23415 - in reply to #23410) (#23415) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
forcolin - 2017-10-03 4:25 AM

8 Clock faces sudoku. I believe that the dot in the bottom left corner is of the wrong colour. In no way the joker can originate a clockwise sequence with the 2,4,6 placed in that way.

Yes, it should be a black dot. Will get this fixed.
Thanks!

Also, why there is not white dot in the intersection R89 C23? in this case the 5 could be replacing a 7. Or in the intersection R78 C23, in this case the 5 replaces a 9.
This applies also for many other intersection where the joker is involved. In which sense the statement "All such dots are marked" should be interpreted?

For R89C23 and other similar 2x2 areas with the joker, the '5' at R8C2 assumes a value, of, say, '4' for that 2x2 area, and hence there is no dot, because it can neither be white nor black. So, the joker digit forces the digits to not be clockwise or anticlockwise, just like in other areas where it can fit clockwise or anticlockwise.
detuned
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-03 6:40 PM (#23434 - in reply to #23338) (#23434) Top




Posts: 152
1002020
Location: United Kingdom
Ok, so there might be two equally valid interpretations of the joker, the one which forcolin outlines and the one which Rohan has outlined. So it becomes a question of which interpretation takes precedence.

Perhaps we need a statement along the lines of “there exists a value the joker can take so that the dot or lack of dot works” whilst making clear that is also possible to choose other values which break the rule. Rereading this entire round, it strikes me that this definition of what a joker is has not been adequately described to remove the ambiguities in the rules. Could I suggest this is added as a round note please?
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-03 7:43 PM (#23436 - in reply to #23434) (#23436) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
detuned - 2017-10-03 6:40 PM

Ok, so there might be two equally valid interpretations of the joker, the one which forcolin outlines and the one which Rohan has outlined. So it becomes a question of which interpretation takes precedence.

Perhaps we need a statement along the lines of “there exists a value the joker can take so that the dot or lack of dot works” whilst making clear that is also possible to choose other values which break the rule. Rereading this entire round, it strikes me that this definition of what a joker is has not been adequately described to remove the ambiguities in the rules. Could I suggest this is added as a round note please?

We will review and get back on this.
jzverina
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-04 2:23 AM (#23444 - in reply to #23338) (#23444) Top


Outside & Math (SM 16/17) Author

Posts: 4

Location: Czech Republic
Hi,
must be the joker always uniquely determinable? Example: in non-consecutive, if only numbers 4 and 5 break non-consecutivity (i.e. only consecutive pairs 45 appear in the grid), you can´t determine which of the digits is the joker. You need either 4 to touch 3 or 5 to touch 6 to uniquely identify the joker.
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-04 8:46 AM (#23449 - in reply to #23444) (#23449) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
jzverina - 2017-10-04 2:23 AM

Hi,
must be the joker always uniquely determinable? Example: in non-consecutive, if only numbers 4 and 5 break non-consecutivity (i.e. only consecutive pairs 45 appear in the grid), you can´t determine which of the digits is the joker. You need either 4 to touch 3 or 5 to touch 6 to uniquely identify the joker.

In all puzzles, the joker digit will be uniquely determinable, just like the IB examples.
So, the example you give will not happen.
vopani
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-06 10:27 AM (#23540 - in reply to #23436) (#23540) Top


WSPC Organizer

Posts: 739
50010010020
Location: India
vopani - 2017-10-03 7:43 PM

detuned - 2017-10-03 6:40 PM

Ok, so there might be two equally valid interpretations of the joker, the one which forcolin outlines and the one which Rohan has outlined. So it becomes a question of which interpretation takes precedence.

Perhaps we need a statement along the lines of “there exists a value the joker can take so that the dot or lack of dot works” whilst making clear that is also possible to choose other values which break the rule. Rereading this entire round, it strikes me that this definition of what a joker is has not been adequately described to remove the ambiguities in the rules. Could I suggest this is added as a round note please?

We will review and get back on this.

We have added clarification in Clock Faces and Battenburg "The joker may also assume a value such that it satisfies the constraint of a dot / battenburg not being marked."

I hope that helps and makes it easier to understand.
TiiT
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-07 12:58 PM (#23556 - in reply to #23338) (#23556) Top




Posts: 139
10020
Location: Estonia
Maybe it's easyer to understand if you think that a Joker can break any rules. If there is no battenburg sign and you know there is Joker in that 2x2 area, then it doesn't matter what the other digits are.
forcolin
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-08 10:17 PM (#23591 - in reply to #23556) (#23591) Top





Posts: 172
100202020
Location: ITALY
TiiT - 2017-10-07 12:58 PM

Maybe it's easyer to understand if you think that a Joker can break any rules. If there is no battenburg sign and you know there is Joker in that 2x2 area, then it doesn't matter what the other digits are.


this is not completely correct. At least half of the battenburg should be respected. In the example, it is obvious that the Battenburg is either 3 or 5 from the top corner. Hovever, R2C1 and R2C2 should still be one even number and one odd number, with the even number located below the joker.
forcolin
Subject: Re: 13 The Joker @ 2017-10-09 12:02 AM (#23595 - in reply to #23591) (#23595) Top





Posts: 172
100202020
Location: ITALY
forcolin - 2017-10-08 10:17 PM
......, with the even number located below the joker.


sorry, it's the other way round. the ODD number should be located under the joker
23 posts • Page 1 of 1 • 1
Jump to forum :
Search this forum
Printer friendly version