The mathematics of Septoku
- Published in 2008
- Added on
In the collections
Septoku is a Sudoku variant invented by Bruce Oberg, played on a hexagonal grid of 37 cells. We show that up to rotations, reflections, and symbol permutations, there are only six valid Septoku boards. In order to have a unique solution, we show that the minimum number of given values is six. We generalize the puzzle to other board shapes, and devise a puzzle on a star-shaped board with 73 cells with six givens which has a unique solution. We show how this puzzle relates to the unsolved Hadwiger-Nelson problem in combinatorial geometry.
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- key
- Bell2008
- type
- article
- date_added
- 2013-12-22
- date_published
- 2008-01-01
- pages
- 11
BibTeX entry
@article{Bell2008, key = {Bell2008}, type = {article}, title = {The mathematics of Septoku}, author = {Bell, George I.}, abstract = {Septoku is a Sudoku variant invented by Bruce Oberg, played on a hexagonal grid of 37 cells. We show that up to rotations, reflections, and symbol permutations, there are only six valid Septoku boards. In order to have a unique solution, we show that the minimum number of given values is six. We generalize the puzzle to other board shapes, and devise a puzzle on a star-shaped board with 73 cells with six givens which has a unique solution. We show how this puzzle relates to the unsolved Hadwiger-Nelson problem in combinatorial geometry.}, comment = {}, date_added = {2013-12-22}, date_published = {2008-01-01}, urls = {http://arxiv.org/abs/0801.3697,http://arxiv.org/pdf/0801.3697v4}, collections = {Puzzles,Easily explained}, month = {jan}, pages = 11, url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/0801.3697 http://arxiv.org/pdf/0801.3697v4}, year = 2008, archivePrefix = {arXiv}, eprint = {0801.3697}, primaryClass = {math.CO}, urldate = {2013-12-22} }