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i'm only scratching the surface with the title, i'm not really going to state the orthodoxy behind a mathematical matrix, i.e. e.g.              [ 2  3  1 ]          uttered 'one by three'... if i had a two-line bracket i could write it as                [ 2 3 1                  1 2 3 ]      uttered 'two by three'...                  but i'm still fascinated by sudoku, and i can't get my teeth into it, well **** & proper...                                 to my tally... only one fiendish solution... but also: sometimes the difficult tier is easier than a mild tier puzzle.                       anyway... i just wanted to stress that sudoku, is an irregular matrix...          one explanation is: it's a 2 dimensional object, but it's a 3 dimensional subject,            in that yes, it's on a piece of paper...      but as a 3 dimensional subject,            the concept includes the 2 dimensional object, but the added dimension, which makes it 3 dimensional is time... the time it takes to complete such a puzzle.                     and while you're doing one of these, and getting a buzz off some **** fine *** (all spice infused) -     you hit a point where you either (a) become slightly cross-eyed       or (b) you're looking at the puzzle as if under water and           it's all blurry                 thus (c) a blind-spot emerges, and suddenly a few       squares disappear for what could be as much as a second...                and then you make mistakes...              plus, if you're doing it at night? all the worse for wear. so why do i mean a sudoku is an irregular matrix...   well... i should say "matrix" since i'll include χ (chi) / multiplication in the notation:         9 x 9 = 81       that's already suspicious        it's an uneven number, but the puzzle is a square...   anyway, the matrix:            [ 9 x 9              3 x 3              3 x 3 x 9 ]                                    nine squares, in each of the nine squares                   another nine squares,                                  but then there a need to do the following to see the optics of the puzzle... i.e.:                   9 x 9 = 81    +     3 x 3 = 9       +     3 x 3 x 9 = 81    = 171                           but then there's the second eye (and the above       stated whims of doing one drunk):                                                [ 9 x 9                                                  3 x 3                                            9 x 3 x 3 ]          and as above          171 + 171 =      342...                   and to my ability to understand the puzzle,         there are this many variations of inserting a single number into a sukodu - in the fiendish tier... or at least that was what i was conjuring when i was stuck    on no. 9019 - and it allowed me to insert a tiny addition (a 3)    into the puzzle. obviously the number of variations decreases in the lower tiers.
0
May 10, 2017
May 10, 2017 at 12:27 PM UTC
sudoku, as an irregular matrix
i'm only scratching the surface with the title, i'm not really going to state the orthodoxy behind a mathematical matrix, i.e. e.g.              [ 2  3  1 ]          uttered 'one by three'... if i had a two-line bracket i could write it as                [ 2 3 1                  1 2 3 ]      uttered 'two by three'...                  but i'm still fascinated by sudoku, and i can't get my teeth into it, well **** & proper...                                 to my tally... only one fiendish solution... but also: sometimes the difficult tier is easier than a mild tier puzzle.                       anyway... i just wanted to stress that sudoku, is an irregular matrix...          one explanation is: it's a 2 dimensional object, but it's a 3 dimensional subject,            in that yes, it's on a piece of paper...      but as a 3 dimensional subject,            the concept includes the 2 dimensional object, but the added dimension, which makes it 3 dimensional is time... the time it takes to complete such a puzzle.                     and while you're doing one of these, and getting a buzz off some **** fine *** (all spice infused) -     you hit a point where you either (a) become slightly cross-eyed       or (b) you're looking at the puzzle as if under water and           it's all blurry                 thus (c) a blind-spot emerges, and suddenly a few       squares disappear for what could be as much as a second...                and then you make mistakes...              plus, if you're doing it at night? all the worse for wear. so why do i mean a sudoku is an irregular matrix...   well... i should say "matrix" since i'll include χ (chi) / multiplication in the notation:         9 x 9 = 81       that's already suspicious        it's an uneven number, but the puzzle is a square...   anyway, the matrix:            [ 9 x 9              3 x 3              3 x 3 x 9 ]                                    nine squares, in each of the nine squares                   another nine squares,                                  but then there a need to do the following to see the optics of the puzzle... i.e.:                   9 x 9 = 81    +     3 x 3 = 9       +     3 x 3 x 9 = 81    = 171                           but then there's the second eye (and the above       stated whims of doing one drunk):                                                [ 9 x 9                                                  3 x 3                                            9 x 3 x 3 ]          and as above          171 + 171 =      342...                   and to my ability to understand the puzzle,         there are this many variations of inserting a single number into a sukodu - in the fiendish tier... or at least that was what i was conjuring when i was stuck    on no. 9019 - and it allowed me to insert a tiny addition (a 3)    into the puzzle. obviously the number of variations decreases in the lower tiers.
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May 10, 2017
May 10, 2017 at 12:27 PM UTC
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