Ok, so you mean that there by no means can be more than 2 groups of digits in a row, col or box and that there never is just one group (like in this example: 123,234,345,456,567,678,789,891,912)
sorry, this is what that m thing says...
Bjorn wrote:Ok, so you mean that there by no means can be more than 2 groups of digits in a row, col or box never is just one group (like in this example: 123,234,345,456,567,678,789,891,912)
Animator wrote:you never need a subset of 6 numbers/cells.
the maximum you'll ever need is 4 numbers/cells.
Why? The answer is simple, there are always two groups.
Either n cells share the same numbers (and only these numbers),
or there are m cells that are the only valid candidates for m numbers.
A little example of that: in column 9 of this puzzles there are two groups, one of 2 numbers, and one of 4 numbers.
The 'n'-example: the group: 1, 3, 6, 7. 4 numbers, 4 cells. All of these four cells have share (only) these numbers.
The 'm' example: the group 5, 8. There are only two cells that can have these as candidate. Ofcourse these cells has extra candidates aswell, but they are just irrelevant.
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