A Lesson For Life As Well As Puzzling
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Python designed by DDK
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It's been a tough week with long working days and yet another Saturday working
too (rota writing this time). I sometimes think I am getting too old for all
this. I had saved the Python puzzle bought from
Aaron Wang until fairly late. I had heard that it was relatively easy to solve
despite the level 10 assigned to it. I figured that when I reach a time where
I have only a few hours to play, solve and write about something then I will
be able to use this one.
I was sort of correct but also did not figure in a bit of a hiccough in the
path. This puzzle teaches a good lesson to plan ahead and think about the
direction you want to travel in. My! That's very deep for me...I am usually
a pretty shallow person.
The first thing that threw me when I picked this puzzle up was that my
copy had been sent to me with an incorrect start position. Compare the
picture at the top with the diagram to the left. The shuttle is in the
wrong place. Will this make it easier or harder?
I suspected that the puzzle had not been solved all the way back to the
start position and that it would have a lower number of steps to separate
the shuttle than it should. An alternative horrible thought did occur to
me that to save time the maker had assembled the shuttle from open wire
into the start position and had done it in the wrong place. If this was
the case, had he placed it in an unsolvable position? Only time would
tell. I set to work this morning.
This is clearly going to be an N-ary type puzzle but made interesting by
the maze pathway to be navigated. This requires the choices of direction
for the shuttle to be placed through the rings to be chosen carefully. At
each point the ring can be fed through from either direction and only one
is the correct one. Needless to say, I got lost a few times and ended up
having to backtrack to where I made the mistake. After doing this a few
times, I realised that trial and error was time consuming and less than
fun. Time to think© yet again. I fed through a few times and watched the
response as it moved and finally managed to see how the shuttle and ring
interacted in a predictable way. At last I could choose my path
deliberately and know where I was going. All I needed to do was decide
which way through the maze. After about 20 minutes I had the shuttle:
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First part of the solve
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Having taken my photo, it was time to reassemble it and to aim for the
correct start position. Easier said than done. I had no idea how that final stage of the reassembly was done because I had never navigated it. I would have to work out where I wanted to be and work out a way through the last part of the maze. It looks like a simple maze but is quite well blocked by this 3 rings on the left hand side. I managed to get almost there quite easily:
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Close, but no cigar! |
Getting that last step proved quite a challenge. I tried something and found myself inadvertently heading back to the beginning and then had to backtrack and think© yet again. Twice in one day for me gives me a bit of a headache! Eventually I managed it and we have a correctly assembled puzzle.
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Got there in the end |
This is a really delightful puzzle, it is N-ary but unlike the simple Chinese ring style, there are numerous decisions to make and positive choices are essential to simultaneously navigate the maze to where you need to be. My personal journey was actually made better by having to solve it differently as an assembly than as a disassembly. I would suggest that something like this might be a good step up after a beginner has solved the Chinese ring puzzle. If you live in North America then you should have a look at Aaron's other challenges currently available in
PuzzleMaster. They may end up stocking some of these in the future as well.
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