A Sudoku question for the experts: Suppose I generate a random Sudoku puzzle: Select a completed sudoku at random from the gazillion or so distinct sudokus. Then delete entries at random, stopping when nothing further can be removed without making the problem ambiguous. [This is a poor man's substitute for selecting a truly random minimal puzzle, which I suspect is much harder to do.] How hard, on average, is the resulting Sudoku? Are there very difficult Sudokus? Everything I've seen can be solved with at worst "single guessing", where a branch is tried and one of the possibilities leads to a quick contradiction without sub-guessing, or both branches lead to a same-forced- value. I.e., if the correct "cell to branch on" is selected, one of the branches dies and no recursion is necessary. ---- A challenge for numerical topology: Most materials -- cloth, paper, tape, plastic sheet, wood, metal, can stretch or shrink a bit in order to fit together. Even glass is slightly flexible. People who work with these materials for a living -- tailors, carpenters, ... -- have an intuitive feeling for how much their medium can stretch, bend, or twist, and what manipulations are required to make the pieces fit. Here's the challenge: Come up with a theory of making things fit -- a theory of wrinkles, shims, pleats, and all the other myriad tricks, fiddles, and adjustments that the subject experts know. Rich
On 11 Nov 2005 at 23:21, Schroeppel, Richard wrote:
A Sudoku question for the experts:
Suppose I generate a random Sudoku puzzle: Select a completed sudoku at random from the gazillion or so distinct sudokus. Then delete entries at random, stopping when nothing further can be removed without making the problem ambiguous....
How hard, on average, is the resulting Sudoku?
A related question is what the prob is that the resulting Sudoku is solvable without guessing. /Bernie\ -- Bernie Cosell Fantasy Farm Fibers mailto:bernie@fantasyfarm.com Pearisburg, VA --> Too many people, too few sheep <--
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Schroeppel, Richard