15-05-2014 06:57 PM - edited 15-05-2014 06:58 PM
Hope you dont mind Sig.
I have something that needs a solution
Here is a shape that has to have each segment passed through buy ONE CONTINUOUS line ONCE and once only
You may start anywhere you wish inside the shape or outside..
Not as easy as it looks 🙂
Good luck
I have also shown an example
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 16-05-2014 06:06 PM
"Here is a shape that has to have each segment passed through buy ONE CONTINUOUS line ONCE and once only You may start
anywhere you wish inside the shape or outside.."
These are the instructions and shape given in the OP........ no dots, doors or letters......
on 16-05-2014 06:06 PM
Congrats.
on 16-05-2014 06:10 PM
@joz*garage wrote:
@freakiness wrote:
@joz*garage wrote:which side of a box was missed freaki?
One of the lines on the top of the bottom 3 boxes was missed.
The original puzzle had gaps like doors in it I think.
you mean the middle box on the bottom?
the top of that box the line has been crossed over which would count
(in poddy's poorly explained instructions, lol)
That's why the "doors" help. The third bit of line is not crossed. He didn't mention crossing lines anyway. He said put a line through the segments, not segment lines.
on 16-05-2014 06:13 PM
Here is a shape that has to have each segment passed through buy ONE CONTINUOUS line ONCE and once only
Maybe we're supposed to go buy a line.
16-05-2014 06:14 PM - edited 16-05-2014 06:16 PM
@freakiness wrote:
@joz*garage wrote:
@freakiness wrote:
@joz*garage wrote:which side of a box was missed freaki?
One of the lines on the top of the bottom 3 boxes was missed.
The original puzzle had gaps like doors in it I think.
you mean the middle box on the bottom?
the top of that box the line has been crossed over which would count
(in poddy's poorly explained instructions, lol)
That's why the "doors" help. The third bit of line is not crossed. He didn't mention crossing lines anyway. He said put a line through the segments, not segment lines.
oh, if your going by poddy's rules opposed to the "original" puzzle instructions then i suppose so. Lol
and the puzzle has been solved with many variations presented
on 16-05-2014 06:24 PM
Anyone have the original with instructions?......
on 16-05-2014 06:34 PM
This old popular puzzle, called “Five Room House puzzle” (also known as “Walls and Lines puzzle”, or “Cross the Network puzzle”), is canonically represented as a rectangular diagram divided into five rooms, as shown opposite.
The object of the puzzle is to draw a continuous path through the walls of all 5 rooms, without going through any wall twice, and without crossing any path. The path can, of course, end in any room, not necessarily in the room from where it started.
Some puzzle diagrams represent the rooms with openings supposed to be doors. In this instance, the challenge is to visit every room of the apartment by walking through every door exactly once.
if you click on my Solution link in post 62 it has the question and the solutions
on 16-05-2014 06:34 PM
@siggie-reported-by-alarmists wrote:Anyone have the original with instructions?......
No, but it rates a mention on wiki
on 16-05-2014 06:42 PM
Maybe poddy will think twice next time about jumping on siggie's puzzles
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
on 16-05-2014 06:50 PM
@1966kelso wrote:This old popular puzzle, called “Five Room House puzzle” (also known as “Walls and Lines puzzle”, or “Cross the Network puzzle”), is canonically represented as a rectangular diagram divided into five rooms, as shown
opposite.The object of the puzzle is to draw a continuous path through the walls of all 5 rooms, without going through any wall twice, and without crossing any path. The path can, of course, end in any room, not necessarily in the room from where it started.
Some puzzle diagrams represent the rooms with openings supposed to be doors. In this instance, the challenge is to visit every room of the apartment by walking through every door exactly once.
if you click on my Solution link in post 62 it has the question and the solutions
Haha, I don't know how I missed that 😄