Intrigued by KenKen? Novices can tie on their white belts and begin their puzzle-solving journey here. But be warned: once you begin, youll never want to stop!
Takes a page from karate - another Japanese art - each title is graded by colour: White for easy, Green for medium, Brown for hard &, Black Belt, for the super-tough. This title features a handy-sized format.
Math meets sudoku in this fun, challenging puzzle craze from Japan. KenKen is a grid-based numerical puzzle that uses basic math operations--addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division--while also challenging your logic and problem-solving skills. In a way, KenKen is like a game of pool or even chess: The more you think ahead to your next move and consider all the possible outcomes, the better you'll get . . . and the smarter you'll become! Need to learn more about KenKen, or hone your rusty solving skills? These easier white belt puzzles are great for those just beginning to navigate this fun type of puzzle.
Kakuro are language-free number puzzles that use pure logic and require just simple arithmetic to solve. This book contains 150 kakuros. It takes cue from the belt colors in martial arts: white is for novices, green for intermediates, brown for very accomplished players, and black for those consummate experts who crave a challenge.
Puzzle fans have fallen for KenKen and now crave more challenging puzzles. The puzzles in this edition range in size from 6x6 grids to 9x9 grids and for the first time there will also be grids without application symbols. It's the ultimate KenKen challenge! This edition will also include "How to Solve" instructions and an introduction by puzzlemaster Will Shortz. Includes: *100 very challenging KenKen puzzles *Puzzles range in size from 6x6 grids to mind-bending 9x9 grids * Introduction and solving instructions by puzzlemaster Will Shortz
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 7th International Conference, FUN 2014, held in July 2014 in Lipari Island, Sicily, Italy. The 29 revised full papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 49 submissions. They feature a large variety of topics in the field of the use, design and analysis of algorithms and data structures, focusing on results that provide amusing, witty but nonetheless original and scientifically profound contributions to the area. In particular, algorithmic questions rooted in biology, cryptography, game theory, graphs, the internet, robotics and mobility, combinatorics, geometry, stringology, as well as space-conscious, randomized, parallel, distributed algorithms and their visualization are addressed.