ChatterBank2 mins ago
Listener 4425
23 Answers
Apologies if I've missed the thread ...
but I'm hoping there's a misprint in 5 down.
Surely it should be ZJTT?
but I'm hoping there's a misprint in 5 down.
Surely it should be ZJTT?
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What a delightful puzzle, thanks gwizardry. Shame about the typo.
Fans of this genre should check out www.crossnumbersquarterly.com if they have not already done so. The launch issue is free and contains 10 puzzles by Oyler, Zag, Nod, Elap, Arden.... There is also a book of 62 puzzles by Oyler and Zag which makes a great Christmas present.
Fans of this genre should check out www.crossnumbersquarterly.com if they have not already done so. The launch issue is free and contains 10 puzzles by Oyler, Zag, Nod, Elap, Arden.... There is also a book of 62 puzzles by Oyler and Zag which makes a great Christmas present.
I'm not a great fan of the numericals (largely because they take me too long!) but I did enjoy this one. As usual, I had to back-track once or twice because I had made too hasty an assumption -- the sort of thing that is quickly sorted out in verbal crosswords but tends to take longer to unravel in numericals. Perhaps I'm becoming a convert, though, as I love the odd corners of number theory that the setters exploit. It was a shame about the misprint, but to me at least 5 down came up so late in the logical sequence that I couldn't believe I could have got that far only to be proved wrong, and I looked at this site, The Site That Must Not Be Named, and the official Listener site for confirmation. So thanks, gwizardry.
One thing I would love to see, perhaps in a setter's blog, is how the setter ensures that there really is a unique solution. Given the intricacy of the procedures I can see that the probability of an alternative is minuscule, but is that what setters rely on? An exhaustive check would be a challenge for Deep Thought.
One thing I would love to see, perhaps in a setter's blog, is how the setter ensures that there really is a unique solution. Given the intricacy of the procedures I can see that the probability of an alternative is minuscule, but is that what setters rely on? An exhaustive check would be a challenge for Deep Thought.
In echo of starwalker, Grrr. Five printouts, five crumpled papers. So confident that I had made a wrong assumption, I even tried redesigning the grid. Sigh.
Lovely numerical, in the end. No calulator or spreadsheet needed, just pencil, paper and logic. Thanks, setter, but may fires of coal be ever heaped on the typesetter...
Lovely numerical, in the end. No calulator or spreadsheet needed, just pencil, paper and logic. Thanks, setter, but may fires of coal be ever heaped on the typesetter...
It turned out to be far more straightforward than I had feared. I didn't even have to make copious notes, so thanks to gwizardry from a numerophobe.
I see that there have been some recent additions to the forum on Listener 4422. I'll repeat here what I've just added there since I doubt that anyone is checking that thread now.
I wonder what darkenergy had in mind when he said that a bit of persistence and logic would lead to the solution that is "completely valid, fair and unequivocal."
At the time I assumed he meant a solution other than the one that people were complaining about, but perhaps not. I certainly wouldn't describe the published solution as "completely fair and unequivocal."
I see that there have been some recent additions to the forum on Listener 4422. I'll repeat here what I've just added there since I doubt that anyone is checking that thread now.
I wonder what darkenergy had in mind when he said that a bit of persistence and logic would lead to the solution that is "completely valid, fair and unequivocal."
At the time I assumed he meant a solution other than the one that people were complaining about, but perhaps not. I certainly wouldn't describe the published solution as "completely fair and unequivocal."
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