Combinations Summary
· Section: Combinations
Explanation
Quick rundown of what the drawings below the explanations mean:
Light gray cells = “air” cells, or mines
Dark gray cells = covered a.k.a unknown cells
Yellow lines = cells connected form a region that contains one mine
Orange lines = cells connected form a region that contains two mines
Red lines = cells connected form a region that contains three mines
Blue lines = air lines. Is used to mark cells that are not part of the region, but where the initial line still goes trough
Maroon cells = Elimination Cell, reaches a contradiction if a mine
Green cells = Reverse Elimination Cell, reaches a contradiction if safe
Orange cells = Inverted Elimination Cell, reaches the opposite contradiction if a mine
Yellow cells = Inverted Reverse Elimination Cell, reaches the opposite contradiction if safe
Black cells = only when there are too many elimination cells, the non-elimination cells are marked instead.
Other terms:
Elimination cell = Cell that is considered a mine that creates a contradiction
Reverse Elimination cell = Cell that is considered safe, which creates a contradiction
Inverted Elimination cell = Cell that unlike the other elimination cells, is the opposite bound, lower bound vs upper bound or upper bound vs lower bound
“>” = Too many mines are needed, creating the contradiction
“<” = Not enough room to put down all of the mines, creating the contradiction, rarer.
Combo Box αβ
A structure found in a lot of combinations examples:
A few observations:
-The elimination cell seems to be in this box when the box is present, as seen in “Combinations #3”, there is no combo box, so the elimination cell is somewhere else
-The elimination cell seems to touch the triangle that is part of the structure, any combinations example that has this will be named “alpha”.
I feel like based on the fact that a good number of combinations patterns have these boxes, looking for these is a good idea. Keep in mind that these are not required for a combinations pattern, as seen in i.e. “Combinations #3”
< Combinations #8, this is somewhat similar to the box, but not completely. I will call this a broken box, type beta.
Factory Shape Γ
A shape found in quite a lot (mostly easier) combinations, examples (Comb. #3, Comb. #6):
A few observations:
-If there is a factory shape, there is not always a combination cell inside of it, but it still seems relevant.
-The base can vary, 3 mines (ex1) and 2 mines (ex2)
-There seems to be a yellow region next to it. This should be part of the shape.
( )
For now, I will name any combinations with the factory shape “gamma”, due to lack of sample
Other Types φ
φ = lacks sample, has some similarity to Γ