Walk along the streets of most major cities worldwide and you'll be hard-pressed not to see at least a single person bent over sudoku puzzles. The puzzles are instant hits especially in Britain and the United States. Usually misconstrued as a Japanese creation, sudoku puzzles actually trace their origins from the Western world.
Sudoku puzzles are commonly associated with Leonhard Euler, a Swiss mathematical genius of the 18th century. He is credited to be the inventor of the magic squares, an atrocious 81-cell grid that can be filled with almost infinite varieties so that every column and every row contain the digits one to nine. Though the more popular and recent sudokus sport the same 1-9 rule and the 81-cell grid, the magic squares are not presented as puzzles. They are merely expressions of Euler's mathematical genius.
In the late 19th century, the French daily, Le Siecle, came up with something almost like sudokus. But, rather than using the single digits 1-9, the puzzle uses double-digit numbers to complete the puzzles. Following Le Siecle's footsteps, another French daily, La France, came up with its own puzzle version which uses the numbers 1-9. But despite the same rules, La France's puzzles did not divide the 81 cells into grids of nine boxes each. Notably, much like the sudoku puzzles, the solutions to La France's puzzles always had the numbers 1-9 in the areas where the sub-grids were supposed to be. However, unlike the daily sudokus, these puzzles were printed on a weekly basis until the strat of World War I.
Following the thread of its development, the present-day sudoku puzzles first gained audience in 1979. They were printed anonymously in Dell Magazines as puzzles in the collection "Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games". But instead of labeling the puzzles as sudokus, Dell put the puzzles under the heading, Number Place. Though the puzzles have an audience, they are not as popular nor widespread as today because of limited circulation. Recent investigation identified the author to be Howard Garns, a retired architect. Though the puzzles did not bear his name, a puzzle history investigator noted that publications that listed Garns's name as contributor always had a sudoku inside; meanwhile, issues without sudoku did not list Garns's name. The puzzle of the author's identity was finally solved.
From the West, the development of sudokus shifted to the East when Nikoli first brought the puzzles to Japan in 1984. The tag sudoku actually stands for the basic puzzle rule: single digits only. Innovations were introduced to Garns's invention such as 32-digit clue restriction, and the rotational symmetry of the clues' positions. Sudoku puzzles received wide circulation in Japan with a number of dailies and magazines producing the puzzles. However, these puzzles were under a different name since the sudoku monicker was trademarked by Nikoli.
After extensive rounds among the world's leading dailies and magazines, the sudoku puzzles jumped onboard the computer ship. Programmers such as Loadstar Publishing published the first computer based sudoku game named DigiHunt. Soon, other programmers and devoted sudoku puzzle enthusiasts developed other programs such as sudoku puzzle generators, sudoku solvers, and now, in the era of cyberspace, online sudoku games. Truly, nothing can stop sudoku puzzles when it comes to expanding its audience.
Print Out Sudoku Puzzles
I searched the Internet for information about my newfound passion. From the information I have been able to gather it appears the sudoku game has it origins in the 1700s by a Swiss mathematician named Leonhard Euler. There was a game called "Number Place" in puzzle books put out by Dell in the 1970s that can be traced back to Leonhard Euler. In Japanese, sudoku means, "numbers singly". As you discover the rules you will see why this important.
The Sudoku puzzle was discovered in the late 90s in Japan and was pitched to various newspapers and finally the New York Post started publishing the sudoku puzzle in 2005.
The rules to solve a sudoku are very simple. The puzzle consists of 3 by 3 blocks with 9 squares in each block. You have to put the numbers 1 through 9 in each block without repeating any numbers.
Here are some things to remember.
You must put the numbers 1 through 9 in each horizontal row. Each number can only be used once.
You must put the numbers 1 through 9 in each vertical row. Each number can only be used once.
Each block of 9 must only have the numbers 1 through 9 and once again you cannot repeat numbers.
You get somewhat of a head start because some of the numbers are filled in for you. The puzzles usually come in three versions easy, moderate, and challenging. The easier the puzzle is the more numbers you are provided with already filled in.
There are lots of schools of thoughts on the best way to solve your sudoku puzzle but I like to start with the obvious. I will look for any numbers I can pin down immediately. I will always start with these freebies.
The next thing I try to do is go row by row and fill in any numbers I can. I then look at the square and fill in what I see that is missing. Lastly I look at the big picture and fill in the remaining numbers. If I am lucky before I know it all the blocks are filled with the correct numbers.
Even though Sudoku puzzles often seem simple a new craze is upon us. More newspapers and magazines all over the world are printing the puzzles all the time.
Try out one of the sudoku puzzles you finding your local paper and see what you think. Your local newsstand should be full of paperback sudoku books. Sudoku puzzles can help keep your mind sharp and that is one of the most important things you can do for yourself.
Both Terry Solomon & Douglas Taylor are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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