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		| Pat 
 
 
 Joined: 23 Feb 2010
 Posts: 207
 
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 8:35 am    Post subject: gsf # 176 # 108 |   |  
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..7...1...6...3.5.5.....9.4.....9.8.....8.....9.7.1...4.9.....5.8.2...4...1...7..
 
 [ play ]
 
 -- graded "too hard"
but only needs "basic" moves
  	  | Code: |  	  | . . 7 | . . . | 1 . .
 . 6 . | . . 3 | . 5 .
 5 . . | . . . | 9 . 4
 -------+-------+------
 . . . | . . 9 | . 8 .
 . . . | . 8 . | . . .
 . 9 . | 7 . 1 | . . .
 -------+-------+------
 4 . 9 | . . . | . . 5
 . 8 . | 2 . . | . 4 .
 . . 1 | . . . | 7 . .
 
 
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		| arkietech 
 
 
 Joined: 31 Jul 2008
 Posts: 1834
 Location: Northwest Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 12:52 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Good puzzle   After a hidden pair in row 8 there is a SDC that reduces it to one naked pair and singles.
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | *-----------------------------------------------------------------------------*
 | 2389    234     7       | 45689   24569   24568   | 1       236     2368    |
 | 1289    6       248     | 1489    12479   3       | 28      5       28-7    |
 | 5       123     238     | 168     1267    2678    | 9       2367    4       |
 |-------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------|
 | 12367   123457  23456   | 3456    23456   9       |b23456   8      c12367   |
 | 12367   123457  23456   | 3456    8       2456    |b23456  19-2367 c123679  |
 | 2368    9       234568  | 7       23456   1       |b23456  b236    c236     |
 |-------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------|
 | 4       237     9       | 1368    1367    678     | 2368    1236    5       |
 | 367     8       356     | 2       19      567     | 36      4      a19      |
 | 236     235     1       | 345689  34569   4568    | 7       2369    23689   |
 *-----------------------------------------------------------------------------*
 Sue De Coq
 (19)r8c9, (23456)r6c78,r45c7, (123679)r456c9 => r5c8<>2367, r2c9<>7
 
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		| tlanglet 
 
 
 Joined: 17 Oct 2007
 Posts: 2468
 Location: Northern California Foothills
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 1:28 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Excellent SdC   
 I do not normally look for such big, involved SdCs but this one is definitely a winner.
 
 Although it is not needed to complete the puzzle, I believe that you could also delete (9) from r9c9.
 
 Ted
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		| tlanglet 
 
 
 Joined: 17 Oct 2007
 Posts: 2468
 Location: Northern California Foothills
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 1:39 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Instead of a hidden pair in r8c59, I found the naked quad in r81367. However it was not until I reviewed the great SdQ that I found the naked 5-cell pattern in b6: r456c7|r6c89, which also corresponds to the naked triple in r4c9|r5c89. I just do not normally check for such "big" patterns. 
 Ted
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		| ronk 
 
 
 Joined: 07 May 2006
 Posts: 398
 
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 2:11 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | arkietech wrote: |  	  | Good puzzle   After a hidden pair in row 8 there is a SDC that reduces it to one naked pair and singles.
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | *-----------------------------------------------------------------------------*
 | 2389    234     7       | 45689   24569   24568   | 1       236     2368    |
 | 1289    6       248     | 1489    12479   3       | 28      5       28-7    |
 | 5       123     238     | 168     1267    2678    | 9       2367    4       |
 |-------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------|
 | 12367   123457  23456   | 3456    23456   9       |b23456   8      c12367   |
 | 12367   123457  23456   | 3456    8       2456    |b23456  19-2367 c123679  |
 | 2368    9       234568  | 7       23456   1       |b23456  b236    c236     |
 |-------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------|
 | 4       237     9       | 1368    1367    678     | 2368    1236    5       |
 | 367     8       356     | 2       19      567     | 36      4      a19      |
 | 236     235     1       | 345689  34569   4568    | 7       2369    23689   |
 *-----------------------------------------------------------------------------*
 Sue De Coq
 (19)r8c9, (23456)r6c78,r45c7, (123679)r456c9 => r5c8<>2367, r2c9<>7
 
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 This SDC may also be viewed as an m-ring: (1=9)r8c9 - (9)r5c9 = (9-1)r5c8 = (1)r45c9 - continuous loop
 
 Last edited by ronk on Fri Jun 15, 2012 10:22 pm; edited 1 time in total
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		| arkietech 
 
 
 Joined: 31 Jul 2008
 Posts: 1834
 Location: Northwest Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 2:35 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | tlanglet wrote: |  	  | I believe that you could also delete (9) from r9c9. | 
 
 Thanks
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		| Pat 
 
 
 Joined: 23 Feb 2010
 Posts: 207
 
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2012 7:17 am    Post subject: |   |  
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glad to see you all had such fun with this puzzle
 
 however, it only needs "basic" moves -- did nobody try that ?
 
 
  	  | tlanglet wrote: |  	  | Instead of a hidden pair in r8, I found the naked quad.
 
 ---I found the naked 5-cell in b6, which also corresponds to the triple in r4c9+r5c89
 
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 yes, r8 and b6 are the first 2 moves in my solution-path;
 what's the 3rd move ?
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		| arkietech 
 
 
 Joined: 31 Jul 2008
 Posts: 1834
 Location: Northwest Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2012 12:10 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | Pat wrote: |  	  | however, it only needs "basic" moves -- did nobody try that ? what's the 3rd move ?
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 Of course. But that is not any fun.
  The hidden triple in box 6 uncovers another triple in col 8 and leads to spotting the SDC. |  |  
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		| keith 
 
 
 Joined: 19 Sep 2005
 Posts: 3355
 Location: near Detroit, Michigan, USA
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2012 4:31 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | arkietech wrote: |  	  | Of course. But that is not any fun.   | 
   I do these on paper with no pencil marks.
 
 I stared at it for about a day to see the pair 19 in R8.  Then, another day to see the triple 179 in B6.  Then, a pair 28 in B3 and you are done.
 
 Pat, thank you.
 
 And, by the way, I much more enjoy doing this site's Hard puzzles (with no pencil marks) than the usual Very Hard one-step XY-wing puzzles.
 
 Keith
 
 Last edited by keith on Sun Jun 10, 2012 4:41 pm; edited 1 time in total
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		| arkietech 
 
 
 Joined: 31 Jul 2008
 Posts: 1834
 Location: Northwest Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Jun 10, 2012 4:39 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | keith wrote: |  	  |  	  | arkietech wrote: |  	  | Of course. But that is not any fun.   | 
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 Correction: unless done without pencil marks
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		| aran 
 
 
 Joined: 19 Apr 2010
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				|  Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2012 5:29 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | ronk wrote: |  	  | This is probably ancient news, but I think all SDCs are also HSR (hub, spoke, rim) patterns, a pattern rarely used any more.
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 HSR imo suffered from lack of clear definition, and ended up being neither a clear concept nor a clear pattern.
 SDC is at any rate a specific example of DL-ALS.
 And suffers from a cumbersome definition (bivalue in a box, ALS in a row intersecting the box with the bivalue candidates also occurring in the ALS but not outside the box-line intersection, in which case any outside candidate, not being a bivalue candidate, seeing all occurences in the ALS....etc) mainly because it is not seen as a specific case of DL-ALS.
 DL-ALS being a powerful concept with a clear and simple definition.
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		| arkietech 
 
 
 Joined: 31 Jul 2008
 Posts: 1834
 Location: Northwest Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2012 6:45 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | aran wrote: |  	  | HSR imo suffered from lack of clear definition, and ended up being neither a clear concept nor a clear pattern. SDC is at any rate a specific example of DL-ALS.
 And suffers from a cumbersome definition (bivalue in a box, ALS in a row intersecting the box with the bivalue candidates also occurring in the ALS but not outside the box-line intersection, in which case any outside candidate, not being a bivalue candidate, seeing all occurences in the ALS....etc) mainly because it is not seen as a specific case of DL-ALS.
 DL-ALS being a powerful concept with a clear and simple definition.
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 HSR means Hub Spoke Rim.
 What does the DL of DL-ALS mean? Are they the same thing?
 Can you give an example of where a DL-ALS would not be an SDC?
   
 I assume the bivalue is the hub, and the line(row/col) is the spoke. What is the rim?
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		| DonM 
 
 
 Joined: 15 Sep 2009
 Posts: 51
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2012 10:00 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | aran wrote: |  	  |  	  | ronk wrote: |  	  | This is probably ancient news, but I think all SDCs are also HSR (hub, spoke, rim) patterns, a pattern rarely used any more.
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 HSR imo suffered from lack of clear definition, and ended up being neither a clear concept nor a clear pattern.
 | 
 Hi Aran! I agree and I don't see the connection with SDCs, but that's probably because I never delved into HSR as a pattern to look for.
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | SDC is at any rate a specific example of DL-ALS.
 And suffers from a cumbersome definition (bivalue in a box, ALS in a row intersecting the box with the bivalue candidates also occurring in the ALS but not outside the box-line intersection, in which case any outside candidate, not being a bivalue candidate, seeing all occurences in the ALS....etc) mainly because it is not seen as a specific case of DL-ALS.
 DL-ALS being a powerful concept with a clear and simple definition.
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 Yes, the SDC definition can be combersome and confusing as compared to DL-ALS, but even so and ironically (as I've mentioned in the past) once the SDC pattern concept is understood, IMO it is much easier to find than looking for a corresponding DL-ALS pattern. It's pretty rare to see a manual solution that describes a DL-ALS.
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		| keith 
 
 
 Joined: 19 Sep 2005
 Posts: 3355
 Location: near Detroit, Michigan, USA
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2012 9:22 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | arkietech wrote: |  	  |  	  | aran wrote: |  	  | HSR imo suffered from lack of clear definition, and ended up being neither a clear concept nor a clear pattern. SDC is at any rate a specific example of DL-ALS.
 And suffers from a cumbersome definition (bivalue in a box, ALS in a row intersecting the box with the bivalue candidates also occurring in the ALS but not outside the box-line intersection, in which case any outside candidate, not being a bivalue candidate, seeing all occurences in the ALS....etc) mainly because it is not seen as a specific case of DL-ALS.
 DL-ALS being a powerful concept with a clear and simple definition.
 | 
 HSR means Hub Spoke Rim.
 What does the DL of DL-ALS mean? Are they the same thing?
 Can you give an example of where a DL-ALS would not be an SDC?
   
 I assume the bivalue is the hub, and the line(row/col) is the spoke. What is the rim?
 | 
 http://www.dailysudoku.com/sudoku/forums/viewtopic.php?p=26009&sid=52db1fef6fe172ec93871735298d3469#26009
 Keith
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		| aran 
 
 
 Joined: 19 Apr 2010
 Posts: 70
 
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2012 11:26 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | arkietech wrote: |  	  | What does the DL of DL-ALS mean? Are they the same thing?
 Can you give an example of where a DL-ALS would not be an SDC?
   I assume the bivalue is the hub, and the line(row/col) is the spoke. What is the rim?
 | 
 DL means doubly-linked or as preferred by some dual-linked.
 The concept HSR lacks as mentioned imo clear definition by which I mean clear definition of Hub, of Spoke, of Rim, and very importantly where and why fall the eliminations.
 
 Example of non-SDC DL-ALS (taken from post by ronk, as followed up by Allan Barker [http://forum.enjoysudoku.com/almost-locked-sets-xz-rule-doubly-linked-t3979.html]
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 458      1        9        | 258      458       6        | 3        2478     247      |
 | 458      7        2        | 589      34589     34589    | 168      14689    469      |
 | 348      348      6        | 289      1         7        | 28       2489     5        |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 1        245      457      | 3        5678      258      | 9        2467     2467     |
 | 2347     23459    457      | 15679    5679      1259     | 2567     23467    8        |
 | 6        2359     8        | 4        579       259      | 257      237      1        |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 2478     6        457      | 5789     345789    34589    | 1278     12789    2379     |
 | 478      458      1        | 56789    2         34589    | 678      6789     3679     |
 | 9        28       3        | 1678     678       18       | 4        5        267      |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 
 | 
 ALS1 = 2589r123c4
 ALS2 = 156789r789c4+r9c56
 double links on 5 and 9
 ie just to be clear : 5ALS1-5ALS2 and 9ALS1-9ALS2
 
 write as {2859} {591678} ie highlighting the double-links and having them face each other
 then one can immediately write-out all the eliminations almost without thinking (hence to my mind the beauty of this structure : simple logic, powerful, eliminations facile)
 starting with ALS1
 any peer of 2 : none
 any peer of 8 : <8>r1c5 <8>r2c5 <8>r2c6 <8>r7c4 <8>r8c4 <8>r9c4
 moving on to ALS2
 any peer of 1 : none
 any peer of 6 : none
 any peer of 7 : <7>r7c5
 any peer of 8 : <8>r7c5 <8>r7c6 <8>r8c6
 moving on to the double-links
 any peer of BOTH 5s : <5>r5c4
 any peer of BOTH 9s : <9>r5c4
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		| arkietech 
 
 
 Joined: 31 Jul 2008
 Posts: 1834
 Location: Northwest Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2012 11:51 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | aran wrote: |  	  | write as {2859} {591678} ie highlighting the double-links and having them face each other then one can immediately write-out all the eliminations almost without thinking (hence to my mind the beauty of this structure : simple logic, powerful, eliminations facile)
 
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 Thanks
  Most helpful and POWERFUL. |  |  
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		| ronk 
 
 
 Joined: 07 May 2006
 Posts: 398
 
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2012 1:50 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| [edit: deleted] 
 Last edited by ronk on Fri Jun 15, 2012 10:25 pm; edited 2 times in total
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		| daj95376 
 
 
 Joined: 23 Aug 2008
 Posts: 3854
 
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 15, 2012 3:51 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| My solver doesn't handle DL-ALS. However,, it did manage to find most of the DL-ALS eliminations; but through different ALS sets. 
 Note: my solver doesn't (necessarily) find all eliminations when an ALS loop is involved.
 
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |  458     1       9       |  258     458     6       |  3       2478    247     |
 |  458     7       2       |  589     34589   34589   |  168     14689   469     |
 |  348     348     6       |  289     1       7       |  28      2489    5       |
 |--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------|
 |  1       245     457     |  3       5678    258     |  9       2467    2467    |
 |  2347    23459   457     |  15679   5679    1259    |  2567    23467   8       |
 |  6       2359    8       |  4       579     259     |  257     237     1       |
 |--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------|
 |  2478    6       457     |  5789    345789  34589   |  1278    12789   2379    |
 |  478     458     1       |  56789   2       34589   |  678     6789    3679    |
 |  9       28      3       |  1678    678     18      |  4       5       267     |
 +--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 # 149 eliminations remain
 
 (6789=5) r4569c5 - (5=ALS=9)r4569c6 - (9=5678)r4569c5  =>  r7c5<>78; r12c5<>8
 (1289=5) r4569c6 - (5=ALS=9)r4569c5 - (9=1258)r4569c6  =>  r278c6<>8
 (5=ALS=9)r4569c5 - (9=ALS=5)r4569c6 - loop             =>  r5c4<>59
 (168=7)  r9c456  - (7=2589) r1237c4                    =>  r8c4<>8
 
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		| aran 
 
 
 Joined: 19 Apr 2010
 Posts: 70
 
 
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				|  Posted: Fri Jun 15, 2012 12:32 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | ronk wrote: |  	  | 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 458      1        9        | 258      458       6        | 3        2478     247      |
 | 458      7        2        | 589      34589     34589    | 168      14689    469      |
 | 348      348      6        | 289      1         7        | 28       2489     5        |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 1        245      457      | 3        5678      258      | 9        2467     2467     |
 | 2347     23459    457      |H15679    5679      1259     | 2567     23467    8        |
 | 6        2359     8        | 4        579       259      | 257      237      1        |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 2478     6        457      | 5789     345789    34589    | 1278     12789    2379     |
 | 478      458      1        | 56789    2         34589    | 678      6789     3679     |
 | 9        28       3        | 1678    R678      R18       | 4        5        267      |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 | 
 Consider the AHS complement in c4 instead, i.e., 167c4, and you have an HSR. The AALS r9c56 is the rim, where three of the four digits each see a strong link terminating in one cell r5c4, which is the hub. Whichever two digits are ultimately true in the rim, one of them must be true in the hub. Each inference path from the rim to the hub is considered a spoke.
 
 With only three possibilities for the hub, r5c4=167. Weak links within the spokes become conjugate links for r7c5<>7, and the AALS becomes locked for r7c456, r8c46, r9c4<>8. Follow-on locked candidate moves cause r1c5, r2c56, r9c2<>8.
 | 
 
 On HSR, the presentation serves I think to illustrate the point made at the conclusion of this post, which begins with a preamble :
 the most general form for the logic behind DL-ALS, Nice Loops, Fish and others is Rank 0 logic.
 This term being (very useful) jargon won't meaning anything to those not familiar with the concept, so a brief illustration may help, using as an example the familiar Swordfish eg 5c147r258 :
 - there are exactly 3 truths in 5c147 (ie 5 must occur once in each column)
 - there are exactly 3 truths in 5r258.(ie 5 must occur once in each row)
 - what happens if any truth in 5r258 occurs outside of r2c147 r5c147 r8c147 ?
 - eg suppose 5r2c9 is true : then none of 5r2c147 can be true.
 - consequently the 3 truths in c147 are now restricted to rows 5 and 8 at  r5c147 and r8c147.
 - but there can be only 2 truths in rows 5 and 8. So impossible, contradiction.
 - hence any candidate 5 in rows 258 outside of c147 must be false
 (all of that is well-known, but it's to prepare the ground for the jargon).
 Proceeding now to terminology :
 Call the object (ie some set of cells and certain or all of their candidates) under consideration a structure (above : structure=swordfish)
 Determine number of truths within the structure (above : 3 truths in 5c147). Call that the BASE SET of truths. Suppose it consists of N truths
 Find a way to (minimally) cover those truths with some other set of truths (above : 3 truths in 5r258). That is, regardless of where the truths in the base lie, they also definitely lie in the cover. Call that the COVER SET of truths. Suppose it consists of M truths.
 Then the RANK of the structure is defined as M-N ie the excess of cover over base.
 
 With that in find, then :
 - RANK 0 structures are in themselves pleasing objects
 - AND anything which would reduce the number of truths in the cover set must be false (for there would be N truths "covered" by N-1 truths : impossible) : leading often to a large number of eliminations.
 - which could be formulated informally as : anything in the cover outside of the base is false.
 
 With all that in mind, the point is now this :
 most rank 0 structures cannot be visualised in any simple way; they are constructed from the ground up, and usually any attempt to express them in AIC style would be madness leading to virtually unfollowable hugely-bracketed mega-indigestible chains as against the compelling simple logic of Rank 0.
 
 There are certain exceptions to all that and most notably DL-ALS where the logic is clear, and easy (visualisation of the double links).
 As against that, HSR is NOT imo an exception. In other words it is a form of Rank 0 which does not have an easy logic, and represents in its own way a minor example of the complexity of Rank 0 logic when NOT EXPRESSED IN BASE/COVER form.
 
 Lastly, taking the HSR example to which ronk points :
 it can be seen in the following way as a rank 0 structure :
 base of 5 truths
 1c4
 6c4
 7c4
 cell r9c5
 cell r9c6
 ie there must be exactly 5 truths there
 cover of 5 truths
 cell r5c5
 6b8
 7b8
 8b8
 1r9 (or 1b8)
 ie there must be 5 truths there, with all of the truths in the base being covered ie lie somewhere in the cover.
 
 Consequently anything in the base outside the cover can be eliminated ie
 cell r5c5 : <59>r5c5
 6b8 : none
 7b8  : <7>r7c5
 8b8 : <8>r7c5 <8>r7c6 <8>r8c6 <8>r7c4 <8>r8c4 <8>r9c4
 1r9 (or 1b8) : none
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		| aran 
 
 
 Joined: 19 Apr 2010
 Posts: 70
 
 
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				|  Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2012 1:43 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | DonM wrote: |  	  | Yes, the SDC definition can be combersome and confusing as compared to DL-ALS, but even so and ironically (as I've mentioned in the past) once the SDC pattern concept is understood, IMO it is much easier to find than looking for a corresponding DL-ALS pattern. It's pretty rare to see a manual solution that describes a DL-ALS.
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 Hi Don !
 One way of perserving the pattern, whilst simplifying the definition would be to extend the range in a symmetrical way (see below).
 Define an SDC quite simply as a DL-ALS in which one ALS is a bivalue.
 Looking for the pattern would then involve taking a bivalue and seeing whether in its box, row or column it double-links to another ALS.
 In this way, the historic name remains, the scope increased, symmetry emphasised and the definition simplified.
 
 At present SDCs  :
 - begin in a box (bivalue double-linking in box to second ALS)
 - end in a row or column (remaining cells of second ALS).
 Just complete the symmetry and include those which
 - begin in a row or column
 - end in a box (note if beginning in a row or column, then by virtue of the double-links, the second ALS is necessarily in a box, so no other configuration is possible)
 
 That would, as you say, require definition of DL-ALS, but then unlike any other advanced concept, DL-ALS could be explained to a novice in 10 minutes including a coffee break !
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