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We all love a good puzzle. They keep our mind sharp and sometimes we even find ourselves competing with friends and other people around the world to try and beat each other's times. However, not everyone is up to the challenge of cracking this one: Crack Photograv 3 1 589 This is a short puzzle that was created by Jerry Slocum in 1986, designed as part of his promotional materials for "Virtual Reality Based Technology." It consists of only two lines: "How many 4s are there in 42?" and "How many 19s are there in 321?". The original puzzle is the only "official" version of this type. There are many variants of it, all of which have at least one property in common: they all have two grids. The purpose of these puzzles is to determine if there are "too few" or "too many" 4s or 19s in the grid. The original 6x6 puzzle is trivial to solve, although it's possible to beat Slocum's record by only allowing every other number possible for each grid.. However, once you get to smaller sizes some puzzles become significantly more difficult, and some become quite impossible unless you use a brute-force method of calculating the answer. That's where this version comes in. Since the original is so trivially easy, I decided to take it upon myself to create a better version of the puzzle. I used the Java programming language, along with some library classes for creating permutations for this project. This new version lets you create arbitrary puzzles of any size. I've written up a tutorial with example source code to help you understand how it works here: http://www.topcoder.com/forums/showthread.php?t=296746 . If you're interested in solving these types of puzzles in your spare time, I highly recommend checking out that link and giving it a go with my free source code. The best part is, if you're the first person to solve the puzzle, you can have it posted here on this website. Or if you can't wait for someone else to find it, you make make up your own challenges and post them here yourself. Steve Cole (2010-10-01). Crack Photograv 3 1 589 . Retrieved 2010-10-01 from http://www.topcoder.com/tc?module=Static&d1=tutorials&d2=CreateAPuzzler&d3=TutorialDetailed&tdid=2945 Slocum, J. S., & Slocum Technologies (1989). Crack Photograv 3 1.5 89: The first 3D puzzle. Retrieved from http://www.slocumtech.com/crack/ Slocum, J., & Slocum Technologies (1986). Crack Photograv 3 1 5 89: The first 3D puzzle!. Retrieved from http://www.slocumtech.com/crack/index2_html Steve Cole (2010-10-01). Crack Photograv 3 1 589 . Retrieved 2010-10-01 from http://www.topcoder. cfa1e77820
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