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		| Victor 
 
 
 Joined: 29 Sep 2005
 Posts: 207
 Location: NI
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 4:17 am    Post subject: MOTT |   |  
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				| M6124110 (45) 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
 | 7  236   4  | 136   5    26   | 9  123   8  |
 | 36 23569 25 | 13689 2379 2678 | 24 12347 17 |
 | 8  239   1  | 39    2379 4    | 6  237   5  |
 +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
 | 1  578   57 | 4     68   9    | 28 2568  3  |
 | 9  58    6  | 2     1    3    | 7  58    4  |
 | 2  4     3  | 7     68   5    | 1  68    9  |
 +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
 | 4  237   9  | 38    237  1    | 5  78    6  |
 | 36 12367 27 | 5     2379 2678 | 48 14789 17 |
 | 5  167   8  | 69    4    67   | 3  179   2  |
 +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
 
 | 
 Play this puzzle online
 There's a nice mix of techniques here in this middle-o-t-road puzzle, starting with a type 1.  (Mostly -wings of various kinds for me.)
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		| storm_norm 
 
 
 Joined: 18 Oct 2007
 Posts: 1741
 
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 4:44 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| the {6,8} UR sticks out at first glance. I xy-chain sawed it to death.
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		| nataraj 
 
 
 Joined: 03 Aug 2007
 Posts: 1048
 Location: near Vienna, Austria
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 7:02 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| After the UR, kite on 2:-r2c3=r8c3-r7c2=r7c5- ,
 kite on 7:-r8c9=r2c9-r3c8=r3c5- ,
 and ...
 
 
 edit: *********   ERRONEOUS GRID and conclusions removed *********
 
 Last edited by nataraj on Mon May 05, 2008 11:45 am; edited 1 time in total
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		| Victor 
 
 
 Joined: 29 Sep 2005
 Posts: 207
 Location: NI
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 9:30 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| I suppose I meant standard named techniques only.  I agree that quite a few are needed.  Mostly though, it's down to luck:  you must have used a different DP from the one that Norm & I used.  If you start with the 68 UR you get: 	  | Quote: |  	  | Middle-of-the-road? | 
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +-------------+-----------------+-------------+ | 7  236   4  | 136   5    26   | 9  123   8  |
 | 36 23569 25 | 13689 2379 2678 | 24 12347 17 |
 | 8  239   1  | 39    2379 4    | 6  237   5  |
 +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
 | 1  578   57 | 4     6    9    | 28 25    3  |
 | 9  58    6  | 2     1    3    | 7  58    4  |
 | 2  4     3  | 7     8    5    | 1  6     9  |
 +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
 | 4  237   9  | 38    237  1    | 5  78    6  |
 | 36 12367 27 | 5     2379 2678 | 48 14789 17 |
 | 5  167   8  | 69    4    67   | 3  179   2  |
 +-------------+-----------------+-------------+
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 And that has a 25 W-wing (in r2 & r4) to help things along.
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		| nataraj 
 
 
 Joined: 03 Aug 2007
 Posts: 1048
 Location: near Vienna, Austria
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 10:34 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Thank you, Victor - I used the same 68 DP but I made a stupid mistake. Instead of removing 6 and 8 from r4c8, giving 25 I somehow wrote 28 and worked from there. As it happens (because r4c8=2), that wrong "assumption" still yielded a valid solution, otherwise I might have realized the error myself.
 
 All my posted grids inherit the initial mistake.
 
 I'll start again.
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		| nataraj 
 
 
 Joined: 03 Aug 2007
 Posts: 1048
 Location: near Vienna, Austria
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 11:40 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Ah... this looks much different now. 
 I still used the kites. After the w-wing (25, linked by col 7) the road is rather smooth and I arrive at two xy-wings (36-39-69 and 37-38-78 in boxes 7 and 8 ), and finally here:
 
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 | 7       236     4        | 16      5       26       | 9       123     8        |
 | 36      2369    5        | 168     379     268      | 24      12347   17       |
 | 8       239     1        | 39      379     4        | 6       237     5        |
 +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 | 1       58      7        | 4       6       9        | 28      25      3        |
 | 9       58      6        | 2       1       3        | 7       58      4        |
 | 2       4       3        | 7       8       5        | 1       6       9        |
 +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 | 4       37      9        | 38      2       1        | 5       78      6        |
 | 36      136     2        | 5       39      78       | 48      14789   17       |
 | 5       17      8        | 69      4       67       | 3       179     2        |
 +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 
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 A w-wing (17 in r8c9 and r9c2, connected this time by row 7) kills 1 in r8c2 (and r9c8) and solves the puzzle.
 
 All in all, one UR, two w-wings, two xy-wings (and two - possibly optional - kites) ... quite a nice showcase for advanced solving methods.
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		| tlanglet 
 
 
 Joined: 17 Oct 2007
 Posts: 2468
 Location: Northern California Foothills
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 3:37 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| I am exhausted!   
 I thought that this puzzle was over several times only to have to find another advanced technique to make further progress. I seemed to find the same set of techniques already mentioned including the UR, w-wings and xy-wings, but I started off with a finned x-wing on 2 plus multi-coloring on 7, both of which did not seem to provide any real help.
 
 Ted
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		| nataraj 
 
 
 Joined: 03 Aug 2007
 Posts: 1048
 Location: near Vienna, Austria
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 3:37 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Almost one-step solution: 
 I kept thinking about the UR mix-up all afternoon.
 
 Finally I went back to the original grid. There are actually TWO URs:
 a) Type 1 68 r46c58, removes 6 and 8 from r4c8 (and it destroys the other UR!)
 b) Type ? 58 r45c28 with strong link on 5 in col 8 removes 8 from r4c2 (and it destroys the other UR!)
 
 But if we know we can remove 6,8 from r4c8 and that we can remove 8 from r4c2, why not remove them at the same time?
 
 The resulting grid has all singles almost to the end:
 
 
  	  | Code: |  	  | +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 | 7       36      4        | 16      5       2        | 9       13      8        |
 | 36      9       5        | 168     37      68       | 2       4       17       |
 | 8       2       1        | 39      379     4        | 6       37      5        |
 +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 | 1       5       7        | 4       6       9        | 8       2       3        |
 | 9       8       6        | 2       1       3        | 7       5       4        |
 | 2       4       3        | 7       8       5        | 1       6       9        |
 +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 | 4       37      9        | 38      2       1        | 5       78      6        |
 | 36      1367    2        | 5       39      678      | 4       1789    17       |
 | 5       167     8        | 69      4       67       | 3       179     2        |
 +--------------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------+
 
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 A single xy-wing 37-78-38 removes 3 from r3c4 and solves the puzzle.
 
 I did read in one of the UR reference posts (I think it was keith's, not sure) that some UR eliminations destroy other URs. This is the first time I actually saw this in action...
 
 
 Lesson learnt: if there is more than one UR type elimination possible in a grid, don't do them in sequence but in parallel.
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		| Victor 
 
 
 Joined: 29 Sep 2005
 Posts: 207
 Location: NI
 
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				|  Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 8:58 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| Nice idea.  Definitely OK, is it, I mean to do two URs simultaneously? 	  | Quote: |  	  | Lesson learnt: if there is more than one UR type elimination possible in a grid, don't do them in sequence but in parallel. | 
 
 Sorry, Ted!  If it's any comfort, which it probably isn't, it took me quite some time to do as well.
 
 (PS.  You don't need it, but there's an M-wing as well towards the end.  Look at the two 78s in Nataraj's second last grid, in r78.  They're connected by the 8s, and you can extend the 7 in r8c6 down to r9c6.  That removes the 7 from r9c8.)
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		| Asellus 
 
 
 Joined: 05 Jun 2007
 Posts: 865
 Location: Sonoma County, CA, USA
 
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				|  Posted: Tue May 06, 2008 7:09 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				|  	  | Victor wrote: |  	  | Definitely OK, is it, I mean to do two URs simultaneously? | 
 Yes.
 
 All Deadly Pattern-based eliminations that are present in a grid are valid, even if performing any of those eliminations appears to destroy one or more of the other Deadly Patterns.
 
 Even a single DP might have two different eliminations possible.  For instance, a Type 4 UR might also have a Type 3 elimination.  It is easy to overlook one of these if you spot the other one first.
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