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		| PoppaPoppa 
 
 
 Joined: 06 Nov 2005
 Posts: 21
 Location: Arkansas USA
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 9:35 pm    Post subject: Stumped - again! |   |  
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				| After reading Glassman's "Stickler" message about the March 17 puzzle I thought I'd give it a try - and gave up, finally resorting to pencil. I am completely humbled; cannot get past the following: 000 910 000
 300 020 010
 175 008 629
 052 000 496
 601 509 237
 000 060 185
 506 800 940
 080 050 002
 000 094 000
 The Draw program hint puts the 1 at position (5,3) but I cannot see why (it seems to me there is no reason to exclude the 1 from (5,2) or (9,3))
 Help!?
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		| David Bryant 
 
 
 Joined: 29 Jul 2005
 Posts: 559
 Location: Denver, Colorado
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 10:03 pm    Post subject: Why there's a "1" at r5c3 |   |  
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				| Hi, Poppa-Poppa! 
 The short answer is that there's a triplet {4, 8, 9} in column 3, making "1" the sole candidate at r5c3. Let me explain.
 
 Concentrate on the lower left 3x3 box. You will notice the pair of values {4, 9} appearing in row 7 and in row 9 outside of that lower left box. Since the cell r8c2 is already occupied, this implies a "hidden pair" {4, 9} in r8c1 & r8c3 -- those two values can't fit anywhere else in row 8.
 
 Now if you just count up possibilities at r1c3 & r2c3 you will obtain {4, 8} and {4, 8, 9}, respectively. So the triplet {4, 8, 9} must lie in r1c3, r2c3, & r8c3, leaving "1" as the sole candidate at r5c3.  dcb
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