h a l f b a k e r y"Put it on a plate, son. You'll enjoy it more."
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You could make it "outcome based" for those who have trouble solving it...sorry couldn't resist. |
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For brainstorming, there could be free-form sudoku. 9x9, nothing filled in, simply come up with any 81 numbers that have no duplicates. |
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Coming soon: The One Cell Crossword!.
Across:
1)The first letter of the alphabet (1)
Down:
1) The indefinite article (1) |
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Binary Sudoku is pointless, but ternary Soduko might work. Cells A1, A2, and B1 are one part, cells A3, B2, and C1 would be another part, and cells B3, C2, and C3 would be the last part. I've spelled Sudoko three different ways. |
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Quaternary Sudoku is more aesthetically appealing than six-symbol Sudoku (using 2x3 sub-blocks) but even that isn't very interesting. There are 288 different arrangements of numbers on a 4x4 Sudoku board, and I would expect that they can all be produced from each other via isomorphic transformations (e.g. reflection, transposition, remapping, swapping rows and columns, etc.) |
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For an electronics class, I built a binary sudoku game, where each square in the grid contained two colored lights to represent the numbers 1-4. It was hard to play. |
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Beautiful in its pointlessness. |
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You could make a grid of say, 4x4, fill in a few 1s and 0s, then give a grand total that all the row and column totals added up has to equal. |
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As Humphrey said - enough of this
pseudoku. We want real ku. |
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