Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Adjacent (a.k.a Consecutive Latin Square)

(Published on 6. June 2020, 07:00 by athin)

Rules of Adjacent:
  • Each row and column contains one occurrence of each digit from one to the size of the grid.
  • If two cells are adjacent and their digits are numerically adjacent (i.e. one higher or one lower), then there will be a white dot between them.
  • All white dots are given, thus two cells that are adjacent and not having a border between them means their digits are not numerically adjacent.

The standard Adjacent rules apply.

Solution code: Row 3 and Row 4 (left-right).

Last changed on on 13. June 2020, 01:13

Solved by flaemmchen, cdwg2000, marcmees, skywalker, zhergan, zorant, pirx, lutzreimer, Julianl, ch1983, moss, rimodech, Zzzyxas, Rollo, CHalb, HaSe, saskia-daniela, derwolf23, pippilotta, Rollie, dm_litv, ... Matt, Uhu, Mathi, Thomster, Ours brun, Toastbrot, Greg, misko, Raistlen, CJK, uvo, Dugong, Zenryo, nmk1218, Mark Sweep, abadx, Jordan Timm, Nadav, yusuf17, Javier Rebottaro, Drawoon, drf93, BILIIII
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Comments

on 12. August 2020, 19:03 by uvo
To be honest, I never liked the name "Pünktchen-Sudoku", since "Pünktchen" is just the German translation of the Polish "Kropki", which denotes a different puzzle type.

Therefore I prefer "Consecutive", which is a name that is internationally used.

on 12. August 2020, 18:39 by pin7guin
Usually this type is called "Pünktchen". First one is Richard's puzzle 00000I. Currently there are 73 "Pünktchen"-puzzles in the Rätselportal.

on 13. June 2020, 01:13 by athin
Renaming the puzzle "Kropki (No Black Given)" -> "Consecutive Latin Square".

@amitsowani Thanks for the suggestion, and sorry for making some solvers confused. ><

on 12. June 2020, 13:21 by amitsowani
Instead of Kropki without Black Circles you can call it a Consecutive Latin Square.

Difficulty:1
Rating:70 %
Solved:78 times
Observed:4 times
ID:0003KP

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