News0 min ago
Listener 4334 By Brimstone
52 Answers
Much easier than it first appears, if you know where to start.
Thanks Brimstone.
Thanks Brimstone.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The first 3 rows in the grid refer to the top layer of the cuboid, the next 3 rows the middle layer and the last 3 rows the bottom layer. They are then stacked on top of each other to make a 3x3x7 cuboid.
Some entries are unclued as you have to work them out once you've solved all the clues using the 'magic' criterion.
Hope that doesn't give too much away.
Some entries are unclued as you have to work them out once you've solved all the clues using the 'magic' criterion.
Hope that doesn't give too much away.
Atherun - i will start a separate Hints thread, to try and answer your points.
Cloverjo - It is not a question of being allowed to, it is just that the people who participate in this thread see it as a place for discussing a Listener without too much being disclosed, and ask people who participate in the thread to go along with this. And I don't think you exceeded this with your post.
Cloverjo - It is not a question of being allowed to, it is just that the people who participate in this thread see it as a place for discussing a Listener without too much being disclosed, and ask people who participate in the thread to go along with this. And I don't think you exceeded this with your post.
You can think of the 3x3x7 cuboid as an elongated Rubik cube.
There is no need to search through all 4096 possibilities with a spreadsheet or program. The preamble sees to that. If you had to do this then the puzzle wouldn't follow the rules that the setters are required to follow. Essentially the puzzle has to be able to be solved using a standard scientific calculator and no more. If you had to search through all 4096 possibilities by hand and doing 1 a minute this would take 68 hours which is far too long to spend. So if a spreadsheet considerably reduces the solving time then the puzzle won't appear.
Of course that doesn't stop solvers from using spreadsheets and the like and throwing everything including the kitchen sink in an attempt to solve the puzzle but those aren't going to be necessary in a Listener numerical.
There is no need to search through all 4096 possibilities with a spreadsheet or program. The preamble sees to that. If you had to do this then the puzzle wouldn't follow the rules that the setters are required to follow. Essentially the puzzle has to be able to be solved using a standard scientific calculator and no more. If you had to search through all 4096 possibilities by hand and doing 1 a minute this would take 68 hours which is far too long to spend. So if a spreadsheet considerably reduces the solving time then the puzzle won't appear.
Of course that doesn't stop solvers from using spreadsheets and the like and throwing everything including the kitchen sink in an attempt to solve the puzzle but those aren't going to be necessary in a Listener numerical.
One of the best Listener numericals for some time - thanks Brimstone.
Rickyjohn200 if you lift off the top layer you can see the middle.
Oyler - interested in your statement that Listener numericals should be solvable by calculator and without spreadsheets etc. Last year's Boxes by Radix would no doubt meet your criteria but how long would it have taken? I did ask Radix that very question but didn't get a response. I hadn't realised how ill he was at that time.
Rickyjohn200 if you lift off the top layer you can see the middle.
Oyler - interested in your statement that Listener numericals should be solvable by calculator and without spreadsheets etc. Last year's Boxes by Radix would no doubt meet your criteria but how long would it have taken? I did ask Radix that very question but didn't get a response. I hadn't realised how ill he was at that time.
I wonder how this was set, is there some clever way to work out 7 similar magic squares where you can align them to have each row give the same number or does this need computing power - I suspect the latter but would like to know either way. I was probably in retrospect rather too bland in my comment on the puzzle, the more I think about the magic squares, linkage between the 7 squares, square nature of clues and simple elegant finish but which requires some thought the more I think the puzzle was closer to a real masterpiece.
Its good to see positive comments outnumbering the negative ones at last. This was a truly impressive construction. It seems to me that most contributors to this thread each week should have passed the stage where solving the Listener is a matter of self-congratulation. For experienced solvers, arriving at the solution is almost a certainty. What keeps us doing it week after week is the pleasure we find in original and pleasing clues or in a beautifully constructed puzzle. Here we have a really remarkable example of the numerical kind, and I feel comments expressing dislike of the methods needed to solve it are just as inappropriate as comments expressing a dislike of cryptic clues would be. If you don't like numericals, don't do them!
Thank you Brimstone.
Thank you Brimstone.
A most enjoyable puzzle: thank-you Brimstone. I don't see any reason for not using Excel. It's a good way of recording what I've deduced s that I can easily go back if I reach a contradiction, and at the same time it allows quick and error free evaluation of lengthy expressions, like those in the clues.
I didn't find any dual solutions, but then I followed the constraints in the preamble so presumably I avoided anything that wasn't going to work.
I didn't find any dual solutions, but then I followed the constraints in the preamble so presumably I avoided anything that wasn't going to work.
nice puzzle - Excel definitely not required*. Would have been a quicker solve if i had not got confused with my (different from usual) calculator which resulted in some of my 'squares' being 2x rather than x^2!
*except that I use excel for just about all of my Listener solving to keep track of clues, grid, answers and whatever the week's thematic information is!
*except that I use excel for just about all of my Listener solving to keep track of clues, grid, answers and whatever the week's thematic information is!
Don't think you've gone wrong AHearer. The sum of the numbers in the first 2 cells of rows 1 and 9 of the final grid are the same, and this is also true for rows 2 and 8, 3 and 7, 4 and 6. Therefore rotating slices/columns 3 to 7 by 180 degrees would have given a valid alternative solution without the "It may help to note ..." (which as you say really should read "to distinguish between the 2 possible solutions, solvers should note ..."). In this case, however, the total of the numbers in the cells originally occupied by single-digit numbers is only 150 and 4 of these cells remain unchanged.
A really clever construction - I am in awe that anyone can set puzzles like this. Daunting preamble, to be sure, but not such a bad solve in the end. Like Andrew G-S, I preferred the endgame to the gridfill, but it all came together satisfyingly. I'm not sure I took the most efficient route - I'll be interested to see the published solution.
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