Keyboard control patch for Solo, from James H.
[sgt/puzzles] / puzzles.but
CommitLineData
e91825f8 1\title Simon Tatham's Portable Puzzle Collection
2
3\cfg{winhelp-filename}{puzzles.hlp}
4\cfg{winhelp-contents-titlepage}{Contents}
5
6\cfg{text-filename}{puzzles.txt}
7
fccfd04d 8\cfg{html-contents-filename}{index.html}
8709d5d9 9\cfg{html-template-filename}{%k.html}
10\cfg{html-index-filename}{docindex.html}
fccfd04d 11\cfg{html-leaf-level}{1}
12\cfg{html-contents-depth-0}{1}
13\cfg{html-contents-depth-1}{2}
14\cfg{html-leaf-contains-contents}{true}
15
e91825f8 16\cfg{info-filename}{puzzles.info}
17
18\cfg{ps-filename}{puzzles.ps}
19\cfg{pdf-filename}{puzzles.pdf}
20
1d8e8ad8 21\define{by} \u00D7{x}
22
f1010613 23\define{dash} \u2013{-}
24
e91825f8 25This is a collection of small one-player puzzle games.
26
07a54e52 27\copyright This manual is copyright 2004-2008 Simon Tatham. All rights
e91825f8 28reserved. You may distribute this documentation under the MIT licence.
29See \k{licence} for the licence text in full.
30
8709d5d9 31\cfg{html-local-head}{<meta name="AppleTitle" content="Puzzles Help">}
e91825f8 32
8709d5d9 33\versionid $Id$
e91825f8 34
35\C{intro} Introduction
36
37I wrote this collection because I thought there should be more small
38desktop toys available: little games you can pop up in a window and
39play for two or three minutes while you take a break from whatever
8a771ea7 40else you were doing. And I was also annoyed that every time I found
41a good game on (say) \i{Unix}, it wasn't available the next time I
42was sitting at a \i{Windows} machine, or vice versa; so I arranged
43that everything in my personal puzzle collection will happily run on
bb219ea1 44both, and have more recently done a port to \i{Mac OS X} as well. When I
8a771ea7 45find (or perhaps invent) further puzzle games that I like, they'll
46be added to this collection and will immediately be available on
47both platforms. And if anyone feels like writing any other front
f1010613 48ends \dash PocketPC, Mac OS pre-10, or whatever it might be \dash
49then all the games in this framework will immediately become
50available on another platform as well.
e91825f8 51
aafaa7fb 52The actual games in this collection were mostly not my invention; they
53are re-implementations of existing game concepts within my portable
54puzzle framework. I do not claim credit, in general, for inventing the
55rules of any of these puzzles. (I don't even claim authorship of all
56the code; some of the puzzles have been submitted by other authors.)
e91825f8 57
58This collection is distributed under the \i{MIT licence} (see
59\k{licence}). This means that you can do pretty much anything you like
60with the game binaries or the code, except pretending you wrote them
61yourself, or suing me if anything goes wrong.
62
63The most recent versions, and \i{source code}, can be found at
64\I{website}\W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/puzzles/}\cw{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/puzzles/}.
65
66Please report \I{feedback}\i{bugs} to
67\W{mailto:anakin@pobox.com}\cw{anakin@pobox.com}.
68You might find it helpful to read this article before reporting a bug:
69
70\W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html}\cw{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html}
71
72\ii{Patches} are welcome. Especially if they provide a new front end
73(to make all these games run on another platform), or a new game.
74
75
76\C{common} \ii{Common features}
77
78This chapter describes features that are common to all the games.
79
80\H{common-actions} \I{controls}Common actions
81
82These actions are all available from the \I{Game menu}\q{Game} menu
83and via \I{keys}keyboard shortcuts, in addition to any game-specific
84actions.
85
bb219ea1 86(On \i{Mac OS X}, to conform with local user interface standards, these
3101ae26 87actions are situated on the \I{File menu}\q{File} and \I{Edit
bacaa96e 88menu}\q{Edit} menus instead.)
89
e91825f8 90\dt \ii\e{New game} (\q{N}, Ctrl+\q{N})
91
92\dd Starts a new game, with a random initial state.
93
2b06373b 94\dt \ii\e{Restart game}
e91825f8 95
2b06373b 96\dd Resets the current game to its initial state. (This can be undone.)
e91825f8 97
668be019 98\dt \ii\e{Load}
99
100\dd Loads a saved game from a file on disk.
101
102\dt \ii\e{Save}
103
104\dd Saves the current state of your game to a file on disk.
105
106\lcont{
107
ff359b8a 108The Load and Save operations preserve your entire game
668be019 109history (so you can save, reload, and still Undo and Redo things you
110had done before saving).
111
112}
113
3c9388ef 114\dt \I{printing, on Windows}\e{Print}
e28d0584 115
116\dd Where supported (currently only on Windows), brings up a dialog
117allowing you to print an arbitrary number of puzzles randomly
118generated from the current parameters, optionally including the
3c9388ef 119current puzzle. (Only for puzzles which make sense to print, of
120course - it's hard to think of a sensible printable representation
121of Fifteen!)
e28d0584 122
e91825f8 123\dt \ii\e{Undo} (\q{U}, Ctrl+\q{Z}, Ctrl+\q{_})
124
125\dd Undoes a single move. (You can undo moves back to the start of the
2b06373b 126session.)
e91825f8 127
2b06373b 128\dt \ii\e{Redo} (\q{R}, Ctrl+\q{R})
e91825f8 129
2b06373b 130\dd Redoes a previously undone move.
e91825f8 131
bacaa96e 132\dt \ii\e{Copy}
133
134\dd Copies the current state of your game to the clipboard in text
135format, so that you can paste it into (say) an e-mail client or a
136web message board if you're discussing the game with someone else.
137(Not all games support this feature.)
138
2ac6d24e 139\dt \ii\e{Solve}
140
141\dd Transforms the puzzle instantly into its solved state. For some
142games (Cube) this feature is not supported at all because it is of
143no particular use. For other games (such as Pattern), the solved
144state can be used to give you information, if you can't see how a
145solution can exist at all or you want to know where you made a
146mistake. For still other games (such as Sixteen), automatic solution
147tells you nothing about how to \e{get} to the solution, but it does
148provide a useful way to get there quickly so that you can experiment
149with set-piece moves and transformations.
150
151\lcont{
152
153Some games (such as Solo) are capable of solving a game ID you have
154typed in from elsewhere. Other games (such as Rectangles) cannot
155solve a game ID they didn't invent themself, but when they did
156invent the game ID they know what the solution is already. Still
157other games (Pattern) can solve \e{some} external game IDs, but only
158if they aren't too difficult.
159
e8124727 160The \q{Solve} command adds the solved state to the end of the undo
161chain for the puzzle. In other words, if you want to go back to
162solving it yourself after seeing the answer, you can just press Undo.
163
2ac6d24e 164}
165
e91825f8 166\dt \I{exit}\ii\e{Quit} (\q{Q}, Ctrl+\q{Q})
167
168\dd Closes the application entirely.
169
1185e3c5 170\H{common-id} Specifying games with the \ii{game ID}
171
172There are two ways to save a game specification out of a puzzle and
173recreate it later, or recreate it in somebody else's copy of the
174same puzzle.
175
176The \q{\i{Specific}} and \q{\i{Random Seed}} options from the
bb219ea1 177\I{Game menu}\q{Game} menu (or the \q{File} menu, on \i{Mac OS X}) each
1185e3c5 178show a piece of text (a \q{game ID}) which is sufficient to
179reconstruct precisely the same game at a later date.
180
181You can enter either of these pieces of text back into the program
182(via the same \q{Specific} or \q{Random Seed} menu options) at a
183later point, and it will recreate the same game. You can also use
184either one as a \i{command line} argument (on Windows or Unix); see
185\k{common-cmdline} for more detail.
186
187The difference between the two forms is that a descriptive game ID
188is a literal \e{description} of the \i{initial state} of the game,
189whereas a random seed is just a piece of arbitrary text which was
190provided as input to the random number generator used to create the
191puzzle. This means that:
192
193\b Descriptive game IDs tend to be longer in many puzzles (although
194some, such as Cube (\k{cube}), only need very short descriptions).
195So a random seed is often a \e{quicker} way to note down the puzzle
196you're currently playing, or to tell it to somebody else so they can
197play the same one as you.
198
199\b Any text at all is a valid random seed. The automatically
200generated ones are fifteen-digit numbers, but anything will do; you
201can type in your full name, or a word you just made up, and a valid
202puzzle will be generated from it. This provides a way for two or
203more people to race to complete the same puzzle: you think of a
204random seed, then everybody types it in at the same time, and nobody
205has an advantage due to having seen the generated puzzle before
206anybody else.
207
208\b It is often possible to convert puzzles from other sources (such
209as \q{nonograms} or \q{sudoku} from newspapers) into descriptive
210game IDs suitable for use with these programs.
211
212\b Random seeds are not guaranteed to produce the same result if you
213use them with a different \i\e{version} of the puzzle program. This
214is because the generation algorithm might have been improved or
215modified in later versions of the code, and will therefore produce a
216different result when given the same sequence of random numbers. Use
217a descriptive game ID if you aren't sure that it will be used on the
218same version of the program as yours.
219
220\lcont{(Use the \q{About} menu option to find out the version number
221of the program. Programs with the same version number running on
222different platforms should still be random-seed compatible.)}
223
224\I{ID format}A descriptive game ID starts with a piece of text which
225encodes the \i\e{parameters} of the current game (such as grid
226size). Then there is a colon, and after that is the description of
227the game's initial state. A random seed starts with a similar string
228of parameters, but then it contains a hash sign followed by
229arbitrary data.
230
231If you enter a descriptive game ID, the program will not be able to
232show you the random seed which generated it, since it wasn't
233generated \e{from} a random seed. If you \e{enter} a random seed,
234however, the program will be able to show you the descriptive game
235ID derived from that random seed.
236
237Note that the game parameter strings are not always identical
238between the two forms. For some games, there will be parameter data
239provided with the random seed which is not included in the
240descriptive game ID. This is because that parameter information is
241only relevant when \e{generating} puzzle grids, and is not important
242when playing them. Thus, for example, the difficulty level in Solo
243(\k{solo}) is not mentioned in the descriptive game ID.
244
245These additional parameters are also not set permanently if you type
246in a game ID. For example, suppose you have Solo set to \q{Advanced}
247difficulty level, and then a friend wants your help with a
248\q{Trivial} puzzle; so the friend reads out a random seed specifying
249\q{Trivial} difficulty, and you type it in. The program will
250generate you the same \q{Trivial} grid which your friend was having
251trouble with, but once you have finished playing it, when you ask
252for a new game it will automatically go back to the \q{Advanced}
253difficulty which it was previously set on.
e91825f8 254
255\H{common-type} The \q{Type} menu
256
257The \I{Type menu}\q{Type} menu, if present, may contain a list of
258\i{preset} game settings. Selecting one of these will start a new
259random game with the parameters specified.
260
1185e3c5 261The \q{Type} menu may also contain a \q{\i{Custom}} option which
262allows you to fine-tune game \i{parameters}. The parameters
263available are specific to each game and are described in the
264following sections.
e91825f8 265
266\H{common-cmdline} Specifying game parameters on the \i{command line}
267
bb219ea1 268(This section does not apply to the \i{Mac OS X} version.)
8a771ea7 269
e91825f8 270The games in this collection deliberately do not ever save
271information on to the computer they run on: they have no high score
272tables and no saved preferences. (This is because I expect at least
273some people to play them at work, and those people will probably
274appreciate leaving as little evidence as possible!)
275
bb219ea1 276However, if you do want to arrange for one of these games to
277\I{default parameters, specifying}default to a particular set of
278parameters, you can specify them on the command line.
e91825f8 279
280The easiest way to do this is to set up the parameters you want
281using the \q{Type} menu (see \k{common-type}), and then to select
1185e3c5 282\q{Random Seed} from the \q{Game} or \q{File} menu (see
283\k{common-id}). The text in the \q{Game ID} box will be composed of
284two parts, separated by a hash. The first of these parts represents
285the game parameters (the size of the playing area, for example, and
286anything else you set using the \q{Type} menu).
e91825f8 287
288If you run the game with just that parameter text on the command
289line, it will start up with the settings you specified.
290
291For example: if you run Cube (see \k{cube}), select \q{Octahedron}
292from the \q{Type} menu, and then go to the game ID selection, you
1185e3c5 293will see a string of the form \cq{o2x2#338686542711620}. Take only
294the part before the hash (\cq{o2x2}), and start Cube with that text
295on the command line: \cq{cube o2x2}.
e91825f8 296
297If you copy the \e{entire} game ID on to the command line, the game
298will start up in the specific game that was described. This is
299occasionally a more convenient way to start a particular game ID
300than by pasting it into the game ID selection box.
301
1185e3c5 302(You could also retrieve the encoded game parameters using the
303\q{Specific} menu option instead of \q{Random Seed}, but if you do
304then some options, such as the difficulty level in Solo, will be
305missing. See \k{common-id} for more details on this.)
306
bb219ea1 307\H{common-unix-cmdline} \i{Unix} \i{command-line} options
3c9388ef 308
309(This section only applies to the Unix port.)
310
ff359b8a 311In addition to being able to specify game parameters on the command
312line (see \k{common-cmdline}), there are various other options:
313
314\dt \cw{--game}
315
316\dt \cw{--load}
317
318\dd These options respectively determine whether the command-line
319argument is treated as specifying game parameters or a \i{save} file
320to \i{load}. Only one should be specified. If neither of these options
321is specified, a guess is made based on the format of the argument.
3c9388ef 322
323\dt \cw{--generate }\e{n}
324
325\dd If this option is specified, instead of a puzzle being displayed,
bb219ea1 326a number of descriptive game IDs will be \I{generating game IDs}invented
327and printed on standard output. This is useful for gaining access to
328the game generation algorithms without necessarily using the frontend.
3c9388ef 329
330\lcont{
331
332If game parameters are specified on the command-line, they will be
333used to generate the game IDs; otherwise a default set of parameters
334will be used.
335
336The most common use of this option is in conjunction with \c{--print},
337in which case its behaviour is slightly different; see below.
338
339}
340
341\dt \I{printing, on Unix}\cw{--print }\e{w}\cw{x}\e{h}
342
343\dd If this option is specified, instead of a puzzle being displayed,
344a printed representation of one or more unsolved puzzles is sent to
345standard output, in \i{PostScript} format.
346
347\lcont{
348
349On each page of puzzles, there will be \e{w} across and \e{h} down. If
350there are more puzzles than \e{w}\by\e{h}, more than one page will be
351printed.
352
353If \c{--generate} has also been specified, the invented game IDs will
354be used to generate the printed output. Otherwise, a list of game IDs
355is expected on standard input (which can be descriptive or random
356seeds; see \k{common-id}), in the same format produced by
357\c{--generate}.
358
359For example:
360
361\c net --generate 12 --print 2x3 7x7w | lpr
362
363will generate two pages of printed Net puzzles (each of which will
364have a 7\by\.7 wrapping grid), and pipe the output to the \c{lpr}
365command, which on many systems will send them to an actual printer.
366
367There are various other options which affect printing; see below.
368
369}
370
8b5625f5 371\dt \cw{--save }\e{file-prefix} [ \cw{--save-suffix }\e{file-suffix} ]
372
373\dd If this option is specified, instead of a puzzle being
374displayed, saved-game files for one or more unsolved puzzles are
375written to files constructed from the supplied prefix and/or suffix.
376
377\lcont{
378
379If \c{--generate} has also been specified, the invented game IDs will
380be used to generate the printed output. Otherwise, a list of game IDs
381is expected on standard input (which can be descriptive or random
382seeds; see \k{common-id}), in the same format produced by
383\c{--generate}.
384
385For example:
386
387\c net --generate 12 --save game --save-suffix .sav
388
389will generate twelve Net saved-game files with the names
390\cw{game0.sav} to \cw{game11.sav}.
391
392}
393
3c9388ef 394\dt \cw{--version}
395
396\dd Prints version information about the game, and then quits.
397
398The following options are only meaningful if \c{--print} is also
399specified:
400
401\dt \cw{--with-solutions}
402
403\dd The set of pages filled with unsolved puzzles will be followed by
404the solutions to those puzzles.
405
406\dt \cw{--scale }\e{n}
407
408\dd Adjusts how big each puzzle is when printed. Larger numbers make
409puzzles bigger; the default is 1.0.
410
411\dt \cw{--colour}
412
413\dd Puzzles will be printed in colour, rather than in black and white
414(if supported by the puzzle).
415
e28d0584 416
e91825f8 417\C{net} \i{Net}
418
419\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.net}
420
421(\e{Note:} the \i{Windows} version of this game is called
422\i\cw{NETGAME.EXE} to avoid clashing with Windows's own \cw{NET.EXE}.)
423
424I originally saw this in the form of a Flash game called \i{FreeNet}
6e8e5c51 425\k{FreeNet}, written by Pavils Jurjans; there are several other
426implementations under the name \i{NetWalk}. The computer prepares a
e91825f8 427network by connecting up the centres of squares in a grid, and then
428shuffles the network by rotating every tile randomly. Your job is to
429rotate it all back into place. The successful solution will be an
6e8e5c51 430entirely connected network, with no closed loops. \#{The latter
431clause means that there are no closed paths within the network.
432Could this be clearer? "No closed paths"?} As a visual aid,
e91825f8 433all tiles which are connected to the one in the middle are
434highlighted.
435
436\B{FreeNet} \W{http://www.jurjans.lv/stuff/net/FreeNet.htm}\cw{http://www.jurjans.lv/stuff/net/FreeNet.htm}
437
438\H{net-controls} \i{Net controls}
439
440\IM{Net controls} controls, for Net
441\IM{Net controls} keys, for Net
442\IM{Net controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Net
443
444This game can be played with either the keyboard or the mouse. The
445controls are:
446
447\dt \e{Select tile}: mouse pointer, arrow keys
448
449\dt \e{Rotate tile anticlockwise}: left mouse button, \q{A} key
450
451\dt \e{Rotate tile clockwise}: right mouse button, \q{D} key
452
118473f5 453\dt \e{Rotate tile by 180 degrees}: \q{F} key
454
e91825f8 455\dt \e{Lock (or unlock) tile}: middle mouse button, shift-click, \q{S} key
456
457\dd You can lock a tile once you're sure of its orientation. You can
458also unlock it again, but while it's locked you can't accidentally
459turn it.
460
f0ee053c 461The following controls are not necessary to complete the game, but may
462be useful:
463
464\dt \e{Shift grid}: Shift + arrow keys
465
466\dd On grids that wrap, you can move the origin of the grid, so that
467tiles that were on opposite sides of the grid can be seen together.
468
469\dt \e{Move centre}: Ctrl + arrow keys
470
471\dd You can change which tile is used as the source of highlighting.
472(It doesn't ultimately matter which tile this is, as every tile will
473be connected to every other tile in a correct solution, but it may be
474helpful in the intermediate stages of solving the puzzle.)
475
cbb5549e 476\dt \e{Jumble tiles}: \q{J} key
477
478\dd This key turns all tiles that are not locked to random
479orientations.
480
e91825f8 481(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
482
483\H{net-params} \I{parameters, for Net}Net parameters
484
485These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
486\q{Type} menu.
487
488\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
489
490\dd Size of grid in tiles.
491
492\dt \e{Walls wrap around}
493
494\dd If checked, flow can pass from the left edge to the right edge,
495and from top to bottom, and vice versa.
496
497\dt \e{Barrier probability}
498
499\dd A number between 0.0 and 1.0 controlling whether an immovable
500barrier is placed between two tiles to prevent flow between them (a
501higher number gives more barriers). Since barriers are immovable, they
502act as constraints on the solution (i.e., hints).
503
504\lcont{
505
506The grid generation in Net has been carefully arranged so that the
507barriers are independent of the rest of the grid. This means that if
1185e3c5 508you note down the random seed used to generate the current puzzle
509(see \k{common-id}), change the \e{Barrier probability} parameter,
510and then re-enter the same random seed, you should see exactly the
511same starting grid, with the only change being the number of
512barriers. So if you're stuck on a particular grid and need a hint,
513you could start up another instance of Net, set up the same
514parameters but a higher barrier probability, and enter the game seed
515from the original Net window.
e91825f8 516
517}
518
40fde884 519\dt \e{Ensure unique solution}
520
521\dd Normally, Net will make sure that the puzzles it presents have
522only one solution. Puzzles with ambiguous sections can be more
523difficult and more subtle, so if you like you can turn off this
524feature and risk having ambiguous puzzles. (Also, finding \e{all}
525the possible solutions can be an additional challenge for an
526advanced player.)
527
e28d0584 528
e91825f8 529\C{cube} \i{Cube}
530
531\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.cube}
532
533This is another one I originally saw as a web game. This one was a
534Java game \k{cube-java-game}, by Paul Scott. You have a grid of 16
535squares, six of which are blue; on one square rests a cube. Your move
536is to use the arrow keys to roll the cube through 90 degrees so that
537it moves to an adjacent square. If you roll the cube on to a blue
538square, the blue square is picked up on one face of the cube; if you
539roll a blue face of the cube on to a non-blue square, the blueness is
540put down again. (In general, whenever you roll the cube, the two faces
541that come into contact swap colours.) Your job is to get all six blue
542squares on to the six faces of the cube at the same time. Count your
543moves and try to do it in as few as possible.
544
545Unlike the original Java game, my version has an additional feature:
546once you've mastered the game with a cube rolling on a square grid,
547you can change to a triangular grid and roll any of a tetrahedron, an
548octahedron or an icosahedron.
549
550\B{cube-java-game} \W{http://www3.sympatico.ca/paulscott/cube/cube.htm}\cw{http://www3.sympatico.ca/paulscott/cube/cube.htm}
551
552\H{cube-controls} \i{Cube controls}
553
554\IM{Cube controls} controls, for Cube
555\IM{Cube controls} keys, for Cube
556\IM{Cube controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Cube
557
a1d5acff 558This game can be played with either the keyboard or the mouse.
e91825f8 559
a1d5acff 560Left-clicking anywhere on the window will move the cube (or other
561solid) towards the mouse pointer.
562
563The arrow keys can also used to roll the cube on its square grid in
564the four cardinal directions.
e91825f8 565On the triangular grids, the mapping of arrow keys to directions is
566more approximate. Vertical movement is disallowed where it doesn't
567make sense. The four keys surrounding the arrow keys on the numeric
568keypad (\q{7}, \q{9}, \q{1}, \q{3}) can be used for diagonal movement.
569
570(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
571
572\H{cube-params} \I{parameters, for Cube}Cube parameters
573
574These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
575\q{Type} menu.
576
577\dt \e{Type of solid}
578
579\dd Selects the solid to roll (and hence the shape of the grid):
580tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, or icosahedron.
581
582\dt \e{Width / top}, \e{Height / bottom}
583
584\dd On a square grid, horizontal and vertical dimensions. On a
585triangular grid, the number of triangles on the top and bottom rows
586respectively.
587
588
589\C{fifteen} \i{Fifteen}
590
591\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.fifteen}
592
1d8e8ad8 593The old ones are the best: this is the good old \q{\i{15-puzzle}}
594with sliding tiles. You have a 4\by\.4 square grid; 15 squares
595contain numbered tiles, and the sixteenth is empty. Your move is to
596choose a tile next to the empty space, and slide it into the space.
597The aim is to end up with the tiles in numerical order, with the
598space in the bottom right (so that the top row reads 1,2,3,4 and the
599bottom row reads 13,14,15,\e{space}).
e91825f8 600
601\H{fifteen-controls} \i{Fifteen controls}
602
603\IM{Fifteen controls} controls, for Fifteen
604\IM{Fifteen controls} keys, for Fifteen
605\IM{Fifteen controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Fifteen
606
607This game can be controlled with the mouse or the keyboard.
608
609A left-click with the mouse in the row or column containing the empty
610space will move as many tiles as necessary to move the space to the
611mouse pointer.
612
613The arrow keys will move a tile adjacent to the space in the direction
614indicated (moving the space in the \e{opposite} direction).
615
616(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
617
618\H{fifteen-params} \I{parameters, for Fifteen}Fifteen parameters
619
620The only options available from the \q{Custom...} option on the \q{Type}
621menu are \e{Width} and \e{Height}, which are self-explanatory. (Once
622you've changed these, it's not a \q{15-puzzle} any more, of course!)
623
624
625\C{sixteen} \i{Sixteen}
626
627\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.sixteen}
628
629Another sliding tile puzzle, visually similar to Fifteen (see
630\k{fifteen}) but with a different type of move. This time, there is no
631hole: all 16 squares on the grid contain numbered squares. Your move
632is to shift an entire row left or right, or shift an entire column up
633or down; every time you do that, the tile you shift off the grid
634re-appears at the other end of the same row, in the space you just
635vacated. To win, arrange the tiles into numerical order (1,2,3,4 on
636the top row, 13,14,15,16 on the bottom). When you've done that, try
637playing on different sizes of grid.
638
639I \e{might} have invented this game myself, though only by accident if
640so (and I'm sure other people have independently invented it). I
641thought I was imitating a screensaver I'd seen, but I have a feeling
642that the screensaver might actually have been a Fifteen-type puzzle
643rather than this slightly different kind. So this might be the one
644thing in my puzzle collection which represents creativity on my part
645rather than just engineering.
646
647\H{sixteen-controls} \I{controls, for Sixteen}Sixteen controls
648
649This game is played with the mouse. Left-clicking on an arrow will
650move the appropriate row or column in the direction indicated.
651Right-clicking will move it in the opposite direction.
652
653(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
654
655\H{sixteen-params} \I{parameters, for Sixteen}Sixteen parameters
656
81875211 657The parameters available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
658\q{Type} menu are:
659
660\b \e{Width} and \e{Height}, which are self-explanatory.
661
662\b You can ask for a limited shuffling operation to be performed on
663the grid. By default, Sixteen will shuffle the grid in such a way
664that any arrangement is about as probable as any other. You can
665override this by requesting a precise number of shuffling moves to
666be performed. Typically your aim is then to determine the precise
667set of shuffling moves and invert them exactly, so that you answer
668(say) a four-move shuffle with a four-move solution. Note that the
669more moves you ask for, the more likely it is that solutions shorter
670than the target length will turn out to be possible.
671
e91825f8 672
9038fd11 673\C{twiddle} \i{Twiddle}
674
675\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.twiddle}
676
677Twiddle is a tile-rearrangement puzzle, visually similar to Sixteen
678(see \k{sixteen}): you are given a grid of square tiles, each
679containing a number, and your aim is to arrange the numbers into
680ascending order.
681
682In basic Twiddle, your move is to rotate a square group of four
a3631c72 683tiles about their common centre. (Orientation is not significant in
684the basic puzzle, although you can select it.) On more advanced
685settings, you can rotate a larger square group of tiles.
9038fd11 686
687I first saw this type of puzzle in the GameCube game \q{Metroid
688Prime 2}. In the Main Gyro Chamber in that game, there is a puzzle
689you solve to unlock a door, which is a special case of Twiddle. I
690developed this game as a generalisation of that puzzle.
691
692\H{twiddle-controls} \I{controls, for Twiddle}Twiddle controls
693
694To play Twiddle, click the mouse in the centre of the square group
695you wish to rotate. In the basic mode, you rotate a 2\by\.2 square,
696which means you have to click at a corner point where four tiles
697meet.
698
699In more advanced modes you might be rotating 3\by\.3 or even more at
700a time; if the size of the square is odd then you simply click in
701the centre tile of the square you want to rotate.
702
703Clicking with the left mouse button rotates the group anticlockwise.
704Clicking with the right button rotates it clockwise.
705
706(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
707
708\H{twiddle-parameters} \I{parameters, for Twiddle}Twiddle parameters
709
710Twiddle provides several configuration options via the \q{Custom}
711option on the \q{Type} menu:
712
713\b You can configure the width and height of the puzzle grid.
714
715\b You can configure the size of square block that rotates at a time.
716
717\b You can ask for every square in the grid to be distinguishable
718(the default), or you can ask for a simplified puzzle in which there
719are groups of identical numbers. In the simplified puzzle your aim
720is just to arrange all the 1s into the first row, all the 2s into
721the second row, and so on.
722
a3631c72 723\b You can configure whether the orientation of tiles matters. If
d50832a3 724you ask for an orientable puzzle, each tile will have a triangle
725drawn in it. All the triangles must be pointing upwards to complete
726the puzzle.
a3631c72 727
81875211 728\b You can ask for a limited shuffling operation to be performed on
729the grid. By default, Twiddle will shuffle the grid so much that any
730arrangement is about as probable as any other. You can override this
731by requesting a precise number of shuffling moves to be performed.
732Typically your aim is then to determine the precise set of shuffling
733moves and invert them exactly, so that you answer (say) a four-move
734shuffle with a four-move solution. Note that the more moves you ask
735for, the more likely it is that solutions shorter than the target
736length will turn out to be possible.
737
9038fd11 738
e91825f8 739\C{rectangles} \i{Rectangles}
740
741\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.rectangles}
742
743You have a grid of squares, with numbers written in some (but not all)
744of the squares. Your task is to subdivide the grid into rectangles of
745various sizes, such that (a) every rectangle contains exactly one
746numbered square, and (b) the area of each rectangle is equal to the
747number written in its numbered square.
748
749Credit for this game goes to the Japanese puzzle magazine \i{Nikoli}
26801d29 750\k{nikoli-rect}; I've also seen a Palm implementation at \i{Puzzle
751Palace} \k{puzzle-palace-rect}. Unlike Puzzle Palace's
752implementation, my version automatically generates random grids of
753any size you like. The quality of puzzle design is therefore not
754quite as good as hand-crafted puzzles would be, but on the plus side
755you get an inexhaustible supply of puzzles tailored to your own
756specification.
e91825f8 757
6ae37301 758\B{nikoli-rect} \W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/7/index_text-e.htm}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/7/index_text-e.htm}
e91825f8 759
6ae37301 760\B{puzzle-palace-rect} \W{http://www.puzzle.gr.jp/puzzle/sikaku/palm/index.html.en}\cw{http://www.puzzle.gr.jp/puzzle/sikaku/palm/index.html.en}
e91825f8 761
762\H{rectangles-controls} \I{controls, for Rectangles}Rectangles controls
763
7b3481c8 764This game is played with the mouse or cursor keys.
765
766Left-click any edge to toggle it on or off, or left-click and drag to draw
767an entire rectangle (or line) on the grid in one go (removing any existing
768edges within that rectangle). Right-clicking and dragging will allow you
769to erase the contents of a rectangle without affecting its edges.
770
771Alternatively, use the cursor keys to move the position indicator
772around the board. Pressing the return key then allows you to use the
773cursor keys to drag a rectangle out from that position, and pressing
774the return key again completes the rectangle. Using the space bar
775instead of the return key allows you to erase the contents of a
776rectangle without affecting its edges, as above.
e91825f8 777
778When a rectangle of the correct size is completed, it will be shaded.
779
780(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
781
782\H{rectangles-params} \I{parameters, for Rectangles}Rectangles parameters
783
40fde884 784These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
785\q{Type} menu.
786
787\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
788
789\dd Size of grid, in squares.
790
791\dt \e{Expansion factor}
aea3ed9a 792
40fde884 793\dd This is a mechanism for changing the type of grids generated by
794the program. Some people prefer a grid containing a few large
795rectangles to one containing many small ones. So you can ask
aea3ed9a 796Rectangles to essentially generate a \e{smaller} grid than the size
797you specified, and then to expand it by adding rows and columns.
798
40fde884 799\lcont{
800
aea3ed9a 801The default expansion factor of zero means that Rectangles will
802simply generate a grid of the size you ask for, and do nothing
803further. If you set an expansion factor of (say) 0.5, it means that
804each dimension of the grid will be expanded to half again as big
805after generation. In other words, the initial grid will be 2/3 the
806size in each dimension, and will be expanded to its full size
807without adding any more rectangles.
808
4a03dbb4 809Setting an expansion factor of around 0.5 tends to make the game
810more difficult, and also (in my experience) rewards a less deductive
811and more intuitive playing style. If you set it \e{too} high,
812though, the game simply cannot generate more than a few rectangles
813to cover the entire grid, and the game becomes trivial.
aea3ed9a 814
40fde884 815}
816
817\dt \e{Ensure unique solution}
818
819\dd Normally, Rectangles will make sure that the puzzles it presents
820have only one solution. Puzzles with ambiguous sections can be more
821difficult and more subtle, so if you like you can turn off this
822feature and risk having ambiguous puzzles. Also, finding \e{all} the
823possible solutions can be an additional challenge for an advanced
824player. Turning off this option can also speed up puzzle generation.
825
6ae37301 826
e91825f8 827\C{netslide} \i{Netslide}
828
829\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.netslide}
830
6bbab0fe 831This game combines the grid generation of Net (see \k{net}) with the
832movement of Sixteen (see \k{sixteen}): you have a Net grid, but
833instead of rotating tiles back into place you have to slide them
834into place by moving a whole row at a time.
e91825f8 835
e91825f8 836As in Sixteen, \I{controls, for Netslide}control is with the mouse.
837See \k{sixteen-controls}.
838
aa27d493 839\I{parameters, for Netslide}The available game parameters have similar
840meanings to those in Net (see \k{net-params}) and Sixteen (see
841\k{sixteen-params}).
e91825f8 842
6bbab0fe 843Netslide was contributed to this collection by Richard Boulton.
6ae37301 844
e28d0584 845
b6b0369e 846\C{pattern} \i{Pattern}
847
848\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.pattern}
849
850You have a grid of squares, which must all be filled in either black
851or white. Beside each row of the grid are listed the lengths of the
852runs of black squares on that row; above each column are listed the
853lengths of the runs of black squares in that column. Your aim is to
854fill in the entire grid black or white.
855
856I first saw this puzzle form around 1995, under the name
2e1e03ff 857\q{\i{nonograms}}. I've seen it in various places since then, under
b6b0369e 858different names.
859
860Normally, puzzles of this type turn out to be a meaningful picture
861of something once you've solved them. However, since this version
862generates the puzzles automatically, they will just look like random
863groupings of squares. (One user has suggested that this is actually
864a \e{good} thing, since it prevents you from guessing the colour of
865squares based on the picture, and forces you to use logic instead.)
866The advantage, though, is that you never run out of them.
867
2e1e03ff 868\H{pattern-controls} \I{controls, for Pattern}Pattern controls
b6b0369e 869
870This game is played with the mouse.
871
872Left-click in a square to colour it black. Right-click to colour it
873white. If you make a mistake, you can middle-click, or hold down
874Shift while clicking with any button, to colour the square in the
875default grey (meaning \q{undecided}) again.
876
877You can click and drag with the left or right mouse button to colour
878a vertical or horizontal line of squares black or white at a time
879(respectively). If you click and drag with the middle button, or
880with Shift held down, you can colour a whole rectangle of squares
881grey.
882
2e1e03ff 883(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
884
b6b0369e 885\H{pattern-parameters} \I{parameters, for Pattern}Pattern parameters
886
887The only options available from the \q{Custom...} option on the \q{Type}
888menu are \e{Width} and \e{Height}, which are self-explanatory.
e91825f8 889
6ae37301 890
1d8e8ad8 891\C{solo} \i{Solo}
892
893\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.solo}
894
81b09746 895You have a square grid, which is divided into as many equally sized
896sub-blocks as the grid has rows. Each square must be filled in with
897a digit from 1 to the size of the grid, in such a way that
1d8e8ad8 898
899\b every row contains only one occurrence of each digit
900
901\b every column contains only one occurrence of each digit
902
903\b every block contains only one occurrence of each digit.
904
81b09746 905\b (optionally, by default off) each of the square's two main
906diagonals contains only one occurrence of each digit.
907
1d8e8ad8 908You are given some of the numbers as clues; your aim is to place the
909rest of the numbers correctly.
910
81b09746 911Under the default settings, the sub-blocks are square or
912rectangular. The default puzzle size is 3\by\.3 (a 9\by\.9 actual
913grid, divided into nine 3\by\.3 blocks). You can also select sizes
914with rectangular blocks instead of square ones, such as 2\by\.3 (a
9156\by\.6 grid divided into six 3\by\.2 blocks). Alternatively, you
916can select \q{jigsaw} mode, in which the sub-blocks are arbitrary
917shapes which differ between individual puzzles.
1d8e8ad8 918
919If you select a puzzle size which requires more than 9 digits, the
920additional digits will be letters of the alphabet. For example, if
921you select 3\by\.4 then the digits which go in your grid will be 1
922to 9, plus \cq{a}, \cq{b} and \cq{c}.
923
3012ffca 924I first saw this puzzle in \i{Nikoli} \k{nikoli-solo}, although it's
925also been popularised by various newspapers under the name
926\q{Sudoku} or \q{Su Doku}. Howard Garns is considered the inventor
927of the modern form of the puzzle, and it was first published in
928\e{Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games}. A more elaborate treatment
929of the history of the puzzle can be found on Wikipedia
930\k{wikipedia-solo}.
1d8e8ad8 931
6ae37301 932\B{nikoli-solo} \W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/1/index_text-e.htm}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/1/index_text-e.htm}
933
3012ffca 934\B{wikipedia-solo} \W{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudoku}\cw{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudoku}
935
1d8e8ad8 936\H{solo-controls} \I{controls, for Solo}Solo controls
937
938To play Solo, simply click the mouse in any empty square and then
939type a digit or letter on the keyboard to fill that square. If you
940make a mistake, click the mouse in the incorrect square and press
941Space to clear it again (or use the Undo feature).
942
c8266e03 943If you \e{right}-click in a square and then type a number, that
944number will be entered in the square as a \q{pencil mark}. You can
b63898fe 945have pencil marks for multiple numbers in the same square. Squares
946containing filled-in numbers cannot also contain pencil marks.
c8266e03 947
948The game pays no attention to pencil marks, so exactly what you use
949them for is up to you: you can use them as reminders that a
950particular square needs to be re-examined once you know more about a
951particular number, or you can use them as lists of the possible
952numbers in a given square, or anything else you feel like.
953
954To erase a single pencil mark, right-click in the square and type
955the same number again.
956
957All pencil marks in a square are erased when you left-click and type
958a number, or when you left-click and press space. Right-clicking and
959pressing space will also erase pencil marks.
960
b63898fe 961Alternatively, use the cursor keys to move the mark around the grid.
962Pressing the return key toggles the mark (from a normal mark to a
963pencil mark), and typing a number in is entered in the square in the
964appropriate way; typing in a 0 or using the space bar will clear a
965filled square.
966
1d8e8ad8 967(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
968
969\H{solo-parameters} \I{parameters, for Solo}Solo parameters
970
971Solo allows you to configure two separate dimensions of the puzzle
6ae37301 972grid on the \q{Type} menu: the number of columns, and the number of
973rows, into which the main grid is divided. (The size of a block is
974the inverse of this: for example, if you select 2 columns and 3 rows,
975each actual block will have 3 columns and 2 rows.)
1d8e8ad8 976
81b09746 977If you tick the \q{X} checkbox, Solo will apply the optional extra
978constraint that the two main diagonals of the grid also contain one
fbd0fc79 979of every digit. (This is sometimes known as \q{Sudoku-X} in
980newspapers.) In this mode, the squares on the two main diagonals
981will be shaded slightly so that you know it's enabled.
982
81b09746 983If you tick the \q{Jigsaw} checkbox, Solo will generate randomly
984shaped sub-blocks. In this mode, the actual grid size will be taken
985to be the product of the numbers entered in the \q{Columns} and
986\q{Rows} boxes. There is no reason why you have to enter a number
987greater than 1 in both boxes; Jigsaw mode has no constraint on the
988grid size, and it can even be a prime number if you feel like it.
989
ef57b17d 990You can also configure the type of symmetry shown in the generated
991puzzles. More symmetry makes the puzzles look prettier but may also
992make them easier, since the symmetry constraints can force more
993clues than necessary to be present. Completely asymmetric puzzles
994have the freedom to contain as few clues as possible.
995
7c568a48 996Finally, you can configure the difficulty of the generated puzzles.
997Difficulty levels are judged by the complexity of the techniques of
998deduction required to solve the puzzle: each level requires a mode
999of reasoning which was not necessary in the previous one. In
1000particular, on difficulty levels \q{Trivial} and \q{Basic} there
1001will be a square you can fill in with a single number at all times,
1002whereas at \q{Intermediate} level and beyond you will have to make
1003partial deductions about the \e{set} of squares a number could be in
e28d0584 1004(or the set of numbers that could be in a square).
1005\#{Advanced, Extreme?}
1006At \q{Unreasonable} level, even this is not enough, and you will
de60d8bd 1007eventually have to make a guess, and then backtrack if it turns out
1008to be wrong.
7c568a48 1009
c65d92ac 1010Generating difficult puzzles is itself difficult: if you select one
1011of the higher difficulty levels, Solo may have to make many attempts
1012at generating a puzzle before it finds one hard enough for you. Be
1013prepared to wait, especially if you have also configured a large
1014puzzle size.
7c568a48 1015
ef57b17d 1016
7959b517 1017\C{mines} \i{Mines}
1018
1019\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.mines}
1020
1021You have a grid of covered squares, some of which contain mines, but
1022you don't know which. Your job is to uncover every square which does
1023\e{not} contain a mine. If you uncover a square containing a mine,
1024you lose. If you uncover a square which does not contain a mine, you
1025are told how many mines are contained within the eight surrounding
1026squares.
1027
1028This game needs no introduction; popularised by Windows, it is
1029perhaps the single best known desktop puzzle game in existence.
1030
1031This version of it has an unusual property. By default, it will
1032generate its mine positions in such a way as to ensure that you
1033never need to \e{guess} where a mine is: you will always be able to
1034deduce it somehow. So you will never, as can happen in other
1035versions, get to the last four squares and discover that there are
1036two mines left but you have no way of knowing for sure where they
1037are.
1038
1039\H{mines-controls} \I{controls, for Mines}Mines controls
1040
1041This game is played with the mouse.
1042
1043If you left-click in a covered square, it will be uncovered.
1044
1045If you right-click in a covered square, it will place a flag which
1046indicates that the square is believed to be a mine. Left-clicking in
1047a marked square will not uncover it, for safety. You can right-click
1048again to remove a mark placed in error.
1049
1050If you left-click in an \e{uncovered} square, it will \q{clear
1051around} the square. This means: if the square has exactly as many
1052flags surrounding it as it should have mines, then all the covered
1053squares next to it which are \e{not} flagged will be uncovered. So
1054once you think you know the location of all the mines around a
1055square, you can use this function as a shortcut to avoid having to
1056click on each of the remaining squares one by one.
1057
1058If you uncover a square which has \e{no} mines in the surrounding
1059eight squares, then it is obviously safe to uncover those squares in
1060turn, and so on if any of them also has no surrounding mines. This
1061will be done for you automatically; so sometimes when you uncover a
1062square, a whole new area will open up to be explored.
1063
9c90045a 1064You can also use the cursor keys to move around the minefield.
1065Pressing the return key in a covered square uncovers it, and in an
1066uncovered square will clear around it (so it acts as the left button),
1067pressing the space bar in a covered square will place a flag
1068(similarly, it acts as the right button).
1069
11d31eb9 1070All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.
1071
7959b517 1072Even Undo is available, although you might consider it cheating to
11d31eb9 1073use it. If you step on a mine, the program will only reveal the mine
1074in question (unlike most other implementations, which reveal all of
1075them). You can then Undo your fatal move and continue playing if you
1076like. The program will track the number of times you died (and Undo
1077will not reduce that counter), so when you get to the end of the
1078game you know whether or not you did it without making any errors.
1079
1080(If you really want to know the full layout of the grid, which other
1081implementations will show you after you die, you can always use the
1082Solve menu option.)
7959b517 1083
1084\H{mines-parameters} \I{parameters, for Mines}Mines parameters
1085
1086The options available from the \q{Custom...} option on the \q{Type}
1087menu are:
1088
1089\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1090
1091\dd Size of grid in squares.
1092
1093\dt \e{Mines}
1094
08781119 1095\dd Number of mines in the grid. You can enter this as an absolute
1096mine count, or alternatively you can put a \cw{%} sign on the end in
1097which case the game will arrange for that proportion of the squares
1098in the grid to be mines.
1099
1100\lcont{
1101
1102Beware of setting the mine count too high. At very high densities,
1103the program may spend forever searching for a solvable grid.
1104
1105}
7959b517 1106
1107\dt \e{Ensure solubility}
1108
1109\dd When this option is enabled (as it is by default), Mines will
1110ensure that the entire grid can be fully deduced starting from the
1111initial open space. If you prefer the riskier grids generated by
1112other implementations, you can switch off this option.
1113
1114
6bbab0fe 1115\C{samegame} \i{Same Game}
1116
1117\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.samegame}
1118
1119You have a grid of coloured squares, which you have to clear by
209ab5a7 1120highlighting contiguous regions of more than one coloured square;
6bbab0fe 1121the larger the region you highlight, the more points you get (and
1122the faster you clear the arena).
1123
1124If you clear the grid you win. If you end up with nothing but
209ab5a7 1125single squares (i.e., there are no more clickable regions left) you
6bbab0fe 1126lose.
1127
1128Removing a region causes the rest of the grid to shuffle up:
1129blocks that are suspended will fall down (first), and then empty
1130columns are filled from the right.
1131
6bbab0fe 1132Same Game was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
1133
209ab5a7 1134\H{samegame-controls} \i{Same Game controls}
1135
1136\IM{Same Game controls} controls, for Same Game
1137\IM{Same Game controls} keys, for Same Game
1138\IM{Same Game controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Same Game
1139
1140This game can be played with either the keyboard or the mouse.
6bbab0fe 1141
1142If you left-click an unselected region, it becomes selected (possibly
1143clearing the current selection).
1144
1145If you left-click the selected region, it will be removed (and the
1146rest of the grid shuffled immediately).
1147
1148If you right-click the selected region, it will be unselected.
1149
209ab5a7 1150The cursor keys move a cursor around the grid. Pressing the Space or
1151Enter keys while the cursor is in an unselected region selects it;
1152pressing Space or Enter again removes it as above.
1153
e28d0584 1154(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
1155
6bbab0fe 1156\H{samegame-parameters} \I{parameters, for Same Game}Same Game parameters
1157
209ab5a7 1158These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1159\q{Type} menu.
1160
6bbab0fe 1161\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1162
1163\dd Size of grid in squares.
1164
1165\dt \e{No. of colours}
1166
1167\dd Number of different colours used to fill the grid; the more colours,
209ab5a7 1168the fewer large regions of colour and thus the more difficult it is to
1169successfully clear the grid.
1170
1171\dt \e{Scoring system}
1172
1173\dd Controls the precise mechanism used for scoring. With the default
1174system, \q{(n-2)^2}, only regions of three squares or more will score
1175any points at all. With the alternative \q{(n-1)^2} system, regions of
1176two squares score a point each, and larger regions score relatively
1177more points.
6bbab0fe 1178
e4a7ab56 1179\dt \e{Ensure solubility}
1180
1181\dd If this option is ticked (the default state), generated grids
1182will be guaranteed to have at least one solution.
1183
1184\lcont{
1185
1186If you turn it off, the game generator will not try to guarantee
1187soluble grids; it will, however, still ensure that there are at
1188least 2 squares of each colour on the grid at the start (since a
1189grid with exactly one square of a given colour is \e{definitely}
1190insoluble). Grids generated with this option disabled may contain
1191more large areas of contiguous colour, leading to opportunities for
1192higher scores; they can also take less time to generate.
1193
1194}
1195
f4afe206 1196
1197\C{flip} \i{Flip}
1198
1199\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.flip}
1200
1201You have a grid of squares, some light and some dark. Your aim is to
1202light all the squares up at the same time. You can choose any square
1203and flip its state from light to dark or dark to light, but when you
1204do so, other squares around it change state as well.
1205
1206Each square contains a small diagram showing which other squares
1207change when you flip it.
1208
d6acbe63 1209\H{flip-controls} \i{Flip controls}
f4afe206 1210
1211\IM{Flip controls} controls, for Flip
1212\IM{Flip controls} keys, for Flip
1213\IM{Flip controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Flip
1214
33317d37 1215This game can be played with either the keyboard or the mouse.
1216
1217Left-click in a square to flip it and its associated squares, or
1218use the cursor keys to choose a square and the space bar or Enter
1219key to flip.
79cb09e9 1220
5f6050b4 1221If you use the \q{Solve} function on this game, it will mark some of
1222the squares in red. If you click once in every square with a red
1223mark, the game should be solved. (If you click in a square
1224\e{without} a red mark, a red mark will appear in it to indicate
1225that you will need to reverse that operation to reach the solution.)
f4afe206 1226
e28d0584 1227(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
1228
f4afe206 1229\H{flip-parameters} \I{parameters, for flip}Flip parameters
1230
1231These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1232\q{Type} menu.
1233
1234\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1235
1236\dd Size of grid in squares.
1237
1238\dt \e{Shape type}
1239
1240\dd This control determines the shape of the region which is flipped
1241by clicking in any given square. The default setting, \q{Crosses},
1242causes every square to flip itself and its four immediate neighbours
1243(or three or two if it's at an edge or corner). The other setting,
1244\q{Random}, causes a random shape to be chosen for every square, so
1245the game is different every time.
1246
1247
c6203e43 1248\C{guess} \i{Guess}
1249
1250\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.guess}
1251
1252You have a set of coloured pegs, and have to reproduce a
1253predetermined sequence of them (chosen by the computer) within a
1254certain number of guesses.
1255
1256Each guess gets marked with the number of correctly-coloured pegs
9ffde3e8 1257in the correct places (in black), and also the number of
1258correctly-coloured pegs in the wrong places (in white).
c6203e43 1259
1260This game is also known (and marketed, by Hasbro, mainly) as
bb219ea1 1261a board game \q{\i{Mastermind}}, with 6 colours, 4 pegs per row,
1262and 10 guesses. However, this version allows custom settings of number
1263of colours (up to 10), number of pegs per row, and number of guesses.
c6203e43 1264
64455a5a 1265Guess was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
1266
c6203e43 1267\H{guess-controls} \i{Guess controls}
1268
1269\IM{Guess controls} controls, for Guess
1270\IM{Guess controls} keys, for Guess
1271\IM{Guess controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Guess
1272
9ffde3e8 1273This game can be played with either the keyboard or the mouse.
1274
9c63a011 1275With the mouse, drag a coloured peg from the tray on the left-hand
1276side to its required position in the current guess; pegs may also be
1277dragged from current and past guesses to copy them elsewhere. To
1278remove a peg, drag it off its current position to somewhere invalid.
c6203e43 1279
9ffde3e8 1280Right-clicking in the current guess adds a \q{hold} marker; pegs
c6203e43 1281that have hold markers will be automatically added to the next guess
1282after marking.
1283
9ffde3e8 1284Alternatively, with the keyboard, the up and down cursor keys can be
1285used to select a peg colour, the left and right keys to select a
9c63a011 1286peg position, and the space bar or Enter key to place a peg of the
59dae0db 1287selected colour in the chosen position. \q{D} or Backspace removes a
1288peg, and \q{H} adds a hold marker.
9ffde3e8 1289
9c63a011 1290When the guess is complete, the smaller feedback pegs will be highlighted;
9ffde3e8 1291clicking on these (or moving the peg cursor to them with the arrow keys
9c63a011 1292and pressing the space bar or Enter key) will mark the current guess,
1293copy any held pegs to the next guess, and move the \q{current guess}
1294marker.
c6203e43 1295
1296If you correctly position all the pegs the solution will be displayed
9ffde3e8 1297below; if you run out of guesses (or select \q{Solve...}) the solution
9c63a011 1298will also be revealed.
c6203e43 1299
e28d0584 1300(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
1301
13b443e3 1302\H{guess-parameters} \I{parameters, for Guess}Guess parameters
c6203e43 1303
1304These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1305\q{Type} menu. The default game matches the parameters for the
9ffde3e8 1306board game \q{Mastermind}.
c6203e43 1307
1308\dt \e{Colours}
1309
1310\dd Number of colours the solution is chosen from; from 2 to 10
1311(more is harder).
1312
1313\dt \e{Pegs per guess}
1314
1315\dd Number of pegs per guess (more is harder).
1316
1317\dt \e{Guesses}
1318
1319\dd Number of guesses you have to find the solution in (fewer is harder).
1320
1321\dt \e{Allow blanks}
1322
1323\dd Allows blank pegs to be given as part of a guess (makes it easier, because
1324you know that those will never be counted as part of the solution). This
1325is turned off by default.
1326
1327Note that this doesn't allow blank pegs in the solution; if you really wanted
1328that, use one extra colour.
1329
1330\dt \e{Allow duplicates}
1331
1332\dd Allows the solution (and the guesses) to contain colours more than once;
1333this increases the search space (making things harder), and is turned on by
1334default.
1335
1336
13b443e3 1337\C{pegs} \i{Pegs}
1338
1339\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.pegs}
1340
1341A number of pegs are placed in holes on a board. You can remove a
33a3deb2 1342peg by jumping an adjacent peg over it (horizontally or vertically)
1343to a vacant hole on the other side. Your aim is to remove all but one
1344of the pegs initially present.
13b443e3 1345
e28d0584 1346This game, best known as \I{Solitaire, Peg}\q{Peg Solitaire}, is
1347possibly one of the oldest puzzle games still commonly known.
13b443e3 1348
1349\H{pegs-controls} \i{Pegs controls}
1350
1351\IM{Pegs controls} controls, for Pegs
1352
1353To move a peg, drag it with the mouse from its current position to
1354its final position. If the final position is exactly two holes away
1355from the initial position, is currently unoccupied by a peg, and
1356there is a peg in the intervening square, the move will be permitted
1357and the intervening peg will be removed.
1358
1359Vacant spaces which you can move a peg into are marked with holes. A
1360space with no peg and no hole is not available for moving at all: it
1361is an obstacle which you must work around.
1362
e28d0584 1363(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
13b443e3 1364
1365\H{pegs-parameters} \I{parameters, for Pegs}Pegs parameters
1366
1367These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1368\q{Type} menu.
1369
1370\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1371
1372\dd Size of grid in holes.
1373
1374\dt \e{Board type}
1375
1376\dd Controls whether you are given a board of a standard shape or a
1377randomly generated shape. The two standard shapes currently
1378supported are \q{Cross} and \q{Octagon} (also commonly known as the
1379English and European traditional board layouts respectively).
1380Selecting \q{Random} will give you a different board shape every
1381time (but always one that is known to have a solution).
1382
1383
6c04c334 1384\C{dominosa} \i{Dominosa}
1385
1386\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.dominosa}
1387
f1010613 1388A normal set of dominoes \dash that is, one instance of every
1389(unordered) pair of numbers from 0 to 6 \dash has been arranged
1390irregularly into a rectangle; then the number in each square has
1391been written down and the dominoes themselves removed. Your task is
1392to reconstruct the pattern by arranging the set of dominoes to match
1393the provided array of numbers.
6c04c334 1394
1395This puzzle is widely credited to O. S. Adler, and takes part of its
1396name from those initials.
1397
1398\H{dominosa-controls} \i{Dominosa controls}
1399
1400\IM{Dominosa controls} controls, for Dominosa
1401
1402Left-clicking between any two adjacent numbers places a domino
1403covering them, or removes one if it is already present. Trying to
1404place a domino which overlaps existing dominoes will remove the ones
1405it overlaps.
1406
1407Right-clicking between two adjacent numbers draws a line between
1408them, which you can use to remind yourself that you know those two
1409numbers are \e{not} covered by a single domino. Right-clicking again
1410removes the line.
1411
e28d0584 1412(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
6c04c334 1413
1414\H{dominosa-parameters} \I{parameters, for Dominosa}Dominosa parameters
1415
1416These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1417\q{Type} menu.
1418
1419\dt \e{Maximum number on dominoes}
1420
1421\dd Controls the size of the puzzle, by controlling the size of the
1422set of dominoes used to make it. Dominoes with numbers going up to N
1423will give rise to an (N+2) \by (N+1) rectangle; so, in particular,
1424the default value of 6 gives an 8\by\.7 grid.
1425
1426\dt \e{Ensure unique solution}
1427
1428\dd Normally, Dominosa will make sure that the puzzles it presents
1429have only one solution. Puzzles with ambiguous sections can be more
1430difficult and sometimes more subtle, so if you like you can turn off
1431this feature. Also, finding \e{all} the possible solutions can be an
1432additional challenge for an advanced player. Turning off this option
1433can also speed up puzzle generation.
1434
1435
9d6c3859 1436\C{untangle} \i{Untangle}
1437
1438\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.untangle}
1439
1440You are given a number of points, some of which have lines drawn
1441between them. You can move the points about arbitrarily; your aim is
1442to position the points so that no line crosses another.
1443
1444I originally saw this in the form of a Flash game called \i{Planarity}
1445\k{Planarity}, written by John Tantalo.
1446
1447\B{Planarity} \W{http://home.cwru.edu/~jnt5/Planarity}\cw{http://home.cwru.edu/~jnt5/Planarity}
1448
1449\H{untangle-controls} \i{Untangle controls}
1450
1451\IM{Untangle controls} controls, for Untangle
1452
1453To move a point, click on it with the left mouse button and drag it
1454into a new position.
1455
e28d0584 1456(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
1457
9d6c3859 1458\H{untangle-parameters} \I{parameters, for Untangle}Untangle parameters
1459
1460There is only one parameter available from the \q{Custom...} option
1461on the \q{Type} menu:
1462
1463\dt \e{Number of points}
1464
1465\dd Controls the size of the puzzle, by specifying the number of
1466points in the generated graph.
1467
1468
bf7ebf5a 1469\C{blackbox} \i{Black Box}
1470
1471\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.blackbox}
1472
1473A number of balls are hidden in a rectangular arena. You have to
1474deduce the positions of the balls by firing lasers from positions
1475on the edge of the arena and observing how they are deflected.
1476
1477Lasers will fire straight until they hit the opposite side of the
1478arena (at which point they emerge), unless affected by balls in one of
1479the following ways:
1480
1481\b A laser that hits a ball head-on is absorbed and will never re-emerge.
1482 This includes lasers that meet a ball on the first rank of the arena.
1483
1484\b A laser with a ball to its front-left square gets deflected 90 degrees
1485 to the right.
1486
1487\b A laser with a ball to its front-right square gets similarly deflected
1488 to the left.
1489
1490\b A laser that would re-emerge from the entry location is considered to be
ebf54ec9 1491 \q{reflected}.
bf7ebf5a 1492
a4c9750f 1493\b A laser which would get deflected before entering the arena (down the
1494 \q{firing range}) by a ball to the front-left or front-right of its
1495 entry point is also considered to be \q{reflected}.
bf7ebf5a 1496
ebf54ec9 1497Lasers that are reflected appear as a \q{R}; lasers that hit balls
1498dead-on appear as \q{H}. Otherwise, a number appears at the firing point
bf7ebf5a 1499and the location where the laser emerges (this number is unique to
1500that shot).
1501
1502You can place guesses as to the location of the balls, based on the
1503entry and exit patterns of the lasers; once you have placed enough
1504balls a button appears enabling you to have your guesses checked.
1505
1506Here is a diagram showing how the positions of balls can create each
1507of the laser behaviours shown above:
1508
1509\c 1RHR----
1510\c |..O.O...|
1511\c 2........3
1512\c |........|
1513\c |........|
1514\c 3........|
1515\c |......O.|
1516\c H........|
1517\c |.....O..|
1518\c 12-RH---
1519
1520As shown, it is possible for a ball to receive multiple reflections
1521before re-emerging (see turn 3). Similarly, a ball may be reflected
ebf54ec9 1522(possibly more than once) before receiving a hit (the \q{H} on the
bf7ebf5a 1523left side of the example).
1524
1525Note that any layout with more that 4 balls may have a non-unique
1526solution. The following diagram illustrates this; if you know the
1527board contains 5 balls, it is impossible to determine where the fifth
1528ball is (possible positions marked with an x):
1529
1530\c --------
1531\c |........|
1532\c |........|
1533\c |..O..O..|
1534\c |...xx...|
1535\c |...xx...|
1536\c |..O..O..|
1537\c |........|
1538\c |........|
1539\c --------
1540
1541For this reason when you have your guesses checked the game will
1542check that your solution \e{produces the same results} as the
1543computer's, rather than that your solution is identical to the
1544computer's. So in the above example, you could put the fifth ball at
1545\e{any} of the locations marked with an x, and you would still win.
1546
1547Black Box was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
1548
1549\H{blackbox-controls} \i{Black Box controls}
1550
1551\IM{Black Box controls}controls, for Black Box
1552
1553To fire a laser, left-click in a square around the side of the arena.
1554The results will be displayed immediately. Lasers may not be fired
1555twice (because the results will never change). Holding down the left
1556button will highlight the current go (or a previous go) to confirm the
1557exit point for that laser, if applicable.
1558
1559To guess the location of a ball, left-click within the arena and a
1560black circle will appear marking the guess; to remove the guessed ball
1561click again.
1562
1563Locations in the arena may be locked against modification by
1564right-clicking; whole rows and columns may be similarly locked by
1565right-clicking in the laser firing range above/below that column, or
1566to the left/right of that row.
1567
1568When an appropriate number of balls have been guessed a button will
a4c9750f 1569appear at the top-left corner of the grid; clicking that will mark
bf7ebf5a 1570your guesses.
1571
27388471 1572If you click the \q{mark} button and your guesses are not correct,
1573the game will show you as little information as possible to
1574demonstrate this to you, so you can try again. If your ball
1575positions are not consistent with the laser paths you already know
1576about, one laser path will be circled to indicate that it proves you
1577wrong. If your positions match all the existing laser paths but are
1578still wrong, one new laser path will be revealed (written in red)
1579which is not consistent with your current guesses.
1580
1581If you decide to give up completely, you can select Solve to reveal
1582the actual ball positions. At this point, correctly-placed balls
1583will be displayed as filled black circles; incorrectly-placed balls
1584are displayed as filled black circles with red crosses, and missing
1585balls are filled red circles. In addition, a red circle marks any
1586laser you had already fired which is not consistent with your ball
1587layout (just as when you press the mark button), and red text marks
bf7ebf5a 1588any laser you \e{could} have fired in order to distinguish your ball
1589layout from the right one.
1590
1591(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
1592
1593\H{blackbox-parameters} \I{parameters, for Black Box}Black Box parameters
1594
1595These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1596\q{Type} menu.
1597
1598\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1599
ebf54ec9 1600\dd Size of grid in squares. There are 2 \by \e{Width} \by \e{Height} lasers
bf7ebf5a 1601per grid, two per row and two per column.
1602
1603\dt \e{No. of balls}
1604
1605\dd Number of balls to place in the grid. This can be a single number,
ebf54ec9 1606or a range (separated with a hyphen, like \q{2-6}), and determines the
1607number of balls to place on the grid. The \q{reveal} button is only
bf7ebf5a 1608enabled if you have guessed an appropriate number of balls; a guess
1609using a different number to the original solution is still acceptable,
1610if all the laser inputs and outputs match.
1611
1612
f1010613 1613\C{slant} \i{Slant}
1614
1615\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.slant}
1616
1617You have a grid of squares. Your aim is to draw a diagonal line
1618through each square, and choose which way each line slants so that
1619the following conditions are met:
1620
1621\b The diagonal lines never form a loop.
1622
1623\b Any point with a circled number has precisely that many lines
1624meeting at it. (Thus, a 4 is the centre of a cross shape, whereas a
1625zero is the centre of a diamond shape \dash or rather, a partial
1626diamond shape, because a zero can never appear in the middle of the
1627grid because that would immediately cause a loop.)
1628
1629Credit for this puzzle goes to \i{Nikoli} \k{nikoli-slant}.
1630
1631\B{nikoli-slant}
1632\W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/39/index.htm}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/39/index.htm}
1633(in Japanese)
1634
f1010613 1635\H{slant-controls} \i{Slant controls}
1636
1637\IM{Slant controls} controls, for Slant
f1010613 1638
1639Left-clicking in a blank square will place a \cw{\\} in it (a line
1640leaning to the left, i.e. running from the top left of the square to
1641the bottom right). Right-clicking in a blank square will place a
1642\cw{/} in it (leaning to the right, running from top right to bottom
1643left).
1644
1645Continuing to click either button will cycle between the three
1646possible square contents. Thus, if you left-click repeatedly in a
1647blank square it will change from blank to \cw{\\} to \cw{/} back to
1648blank, and if you right-click repeatedly the square will change from
1649blank to \cw{/} to \cw{\\} back to blank. (Therefore, you can play
1650the game entirely with one button if you need to.)
1651
6b8513c7 1652You can also use the cursor keys to move around the grid. Pressing the
1653return or space keys will place a \cw{\\} or a \cw{/}, respectively,
1654and will then cycle them as above.
1655
f1010613 1656(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
1657
e3478a4b 1658\H{slant-parameters} \I{parameters, for Slant}Slant parameters
f1010613 1659
1660These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1661\q{Type} menu.
1662
1663\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1664
1665\dd Size of grid in squares.
1666
15164c74 1667\dt \e{Difficulty}
1668
1669\dd Controls the difficulty of the generated puzzle. At Hard level,
1670you are required to do deductions based on knowledge of
1671\e{relationships} between squares rather than always being able to
1672deduce the exact contents of one square at a time. (For example, you
1673might know that two squares slant in the same direction, even if you
1674don't yet know what that direction is, and this might enable you to
1675deduce something about still other squares.) Even at Hard level,
1676guesswork and backtracking should never be necessary.
1677
f1010613 1678
e3478a4b 1679\C{lightup} \i{Light Up}
1680
1681\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.lightup}
1682
1683You have a grid of squares. Some are filled in black; some of the
1684black squares are numbered. Your aim is to \q{light up} all the
1685empty squares by placing light bulbs in some of them.
1686
1687Each light bulb illuminates the square it is on, plus all squares in
1688line with it horizontally or vertically unless a black square is
1689blocking the way.
1690
1691To win the game, you must satisfy the following conditions:
1692
1693\b All non-black squares are lit.
1694
1695\b No light is lit by another light.
1696
1697\b All numbered black squares have exactly that number of lights adjacent to
1698 them (in the four squares above, below, and to the side).
1699
1700Non-numbered black squares may have any number of lights adjacent to them.
1701
1702Credit for this puzzle goes to \i{Nikoli} \k{nikoli-lightup}.
1703
1704Light Up was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
1705
1706\B{nikoli-lightup}
1707\W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/32/index-e.htm}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/32/index-e.htm}
1708(beware of Flash)
1709
1710\H{lightup-controls} \i{Light Up controls}
1711
1712\IM{Light Up controls} controls, for Light Up
e3478a4b 1713
1714Left-clicking in a non-black square will toggle the presence of a light
1715in that square. Right-clicking in a non-black square toggles a mark there to aid
1716solving; it can be used to highlight squares that cannot be lit, for example.
1717
1718You may not place a light in a marked square, nor place a mark in a lit square.
1719
1720The game will highlight obvious errors in red. Lights lit by other
1721lights are highlighted in this way, as are numbered squares which
1722do not (or cannot) have the right number of lights next to them.
1723
1724Thus, the grid is solved when all non-black squares have yellow
1725highlights and there are no red lights.
1726
e28d0584 1727(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
e3478a4b 1728
1729\H{lightup-parameters} \I{parameters, for Light Up}Light Up parameters
1730
1731These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1732\q{Type} menu.
1733
1734\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1735
1736\dd Size of grid in squares.
1737
1738\dt \e{%age of black squares}
1739
1740\dd Rough percentage of black squares in the grid.
1741
1742\lcont{
1743
1744This is a hint rather than an instruction. If the grid generator is
1745unable to generate a puzzle to this precise specification, it will
1746increase the proportion of black squares until it can.
1747
1748}
1749
1750\dt \e{Symmetry}
1751
1752\dd Allows you to specify the required symmetry of the black squares
1753in the grid. (This does not affect the difficulty of the puzzles
1754noticeably.)
1755
1756\dt \e{Difficulty}
1757
1758\dd \q{Easy} means that the puzzles should be soluble without
1759backtracking or guessing, \q{Hard} means that some guesses will
1760probably be necessary.
1761
1762
c51c7de6 1763\C{map} \i{Map}
1764
1765\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.map}
1766
1767You are given a map consisting of a number of regions. Your task is
1768to colour each region with one of four colours, in such a way that
1769no two regions sharing a boundary have the same colour. You are
1770provided with some regions already coloured, sufficient to make the
1771remainder of the solution unique.
1772
1773Only regions which share a length of border are required to be
1774different colours. Two regions which meet at only one \e{point}
1775(i.e. are diagonally separated) may be the same colour.
1776
1777I believe this puzzle is original; I've never seen an implementation
bb219ea1 1778of it anywhere else. The concept of a \i{four-colouring} puzzle was
c51c7de6 1779suggested by Owen Dunn; credit must also go to Nikoli and to Verity
1780Allan for inspiring the train of thought that led to me realising
1781Owen's suggestion was a viable puzzle. Thanks also to Gareth Taylor
1782for many detailed suggestions.
1783
c51c7de6 1784\H{map-controls} \i{Map controls}
1785
1786\IM{Map controls} controls, for Map
c51c7de6 1787
1cdd1306 1788To colour a region, click the left mouse button on an existing
1789region of the desired colour and drag that colour into the new
1790region.
c51c7de6 1791
1792(The program will always ensure the starting puzzle has at least one
1793region of each colour, so that this is always possible!)
1794
1795If you need to clear a region, you can drag from an empty region, or
1796from the puzzle boundary if there are no empty regions left.
1797
1cdd1306 1798Dragging a colour using the \e{right} mouse button will stipple the
1799region in that colour, which you can use as a note to yourself that
1800you think the region \e{might} be that colour. A region can contain
1801stipples in multiple colours at once. (This is often useful at the
1802harder difficulty levels.)
1803
e857e161 1804If you press L during play, the game will toggle display of a number
1805in each region of the map. This is useful if you want to discuss a
1806particular puzzle instance with a friend \dash having an unambiguous
1807name for each region is much easier than trying to refer to them all
1808by names such as \q{the one down and right of the brown one on the
1809top border}.
1810
e28d0584 1811(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
c51c7de6 1812
1813\H{map-parameters} \I{parameters, for Map}Map parameters
1814
1815These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1816\q{Type} menu.
1817
1818\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1819
1820\dd Size of grid in squares.
1821
1822\dt \e{Regions}
1823
1824\dd Number of regions in the generated map.
1825
1826\dt \e{Difficulty}
1827
1828\dd In \q{Easy} mode, there should always be at least one region
1cdd1306 1829whose colour can be determined trivially. In \q{Normal} and \q{Hard}
1830modes, you will have to use increasingly complex logic to deduce the
1831colour of some regions. However, it will always be possible without
1832having to guess or backtrack.
c51c7de6 1833
b3728d72 1834\lcont{
1835
1836In \q{Unreasonable} mode, the program will feel free to generate
1837puzzles which are as hard as it can possibly make them: the only
1838constraint is that they should still have a unique solution. Solving
1839Unreasonable puzzles may require guessing and backtracking.
1840
1841}
1842
c51c7de6 1843
6193da8d 1844\C{loopy} \i{Loopy}
1845
1846\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.loopy}
1847
7c95608a 1848You are given a grid of dots, marked with yellow lines to indicate
1849which dots you are allowed to connect directly together. Your aim is
1850to use some subset of those yellow lines to draw a single unbroken
6193da8d 1851loop from dot to dot within the grid.
1852
7c95608a 1853Some of the spaces between the lines contain numbers. These numbers
1854indicate how many of the lines around that space form part of the
1855loop. The loop you draw must correctly satisfy all of these clues to
1856be considered a correct solution.
6193da8d 1857
7c95608a 1858In the default mode, the dots are arranged in a grid of squares;
1859however, you can also play on triangular or hexagonal grids, or even
1860more exotic ones.
6193da8d 1861
7c95608a 1862Credit for the basic puzzle idea goes to \i{Nikoli}
1863\k{nikoli-loopy}.
1864
1865Loopy was originally contributed to this collection by Mike Pinna,
1866and subsequently enhanced to handle various types of non-square grid
1867by Lambros Lambrou.
6193da8d 1868
1869\B{nikoli-loopy}
1870\W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/3/index-e.htm}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/3/index-e.htm}
1871(beware of Flash)
1872
6193da8d 1873\H{loopy-controls} \i{Loopy controls}
1874
1875\IM{Loopy controls} controls, for Loopy
6193da8d 1876
7c95608a 1877Click the left mouse button on a yellow line to turn it black,
1878indicating that you think it is part of the loop. Click again to
1879turn the line yellow again (meaning you aren't sure yet).
6193da8d 1880
1881If you are sure that a particular line segment is \e{not} part of
7c95608a 1882the loop, you can click the right mouse button to remove it
1883completely. Again, clicking a second time will turn the line back to
1884yellow.
6193da8d 1885
e28d0584 1886(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
6193da8d 1887
1888\H{loopy-parameters} \I{parameters, for Loopy}Loopy parameters
1889
1890These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1891\q{Type} menu.
1892
1893\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1894
7c95608a 1895\dd Size of grid, measured in number of regions across and down. For
1896square grids, it's clear how this is counted; for other types of
1897grid you may have to think a bit to see how the dimensions are
1898measured.
1899
1900\dt \e{Grid type}
1901
1902\dd Allows you to choose between a selection of types of tiling.
1903Some have all the faces the same but may have multiple different
1904types of vertex (e.g. the \e{Cairo} or \e{Kites} mode); others have
1905all the vertices the same but may have differnt types of face (e.g.
1906the \e{Great Hexagonal}). The square, triangular and honeycomb grids
1907are fully regular, and have all their vertices \e{and} faces the
1908same; this makes them the least confusing to play.
6193da8d 1909
550742c1 1910\dt \e{Difficulty}
6193da8d 1911
550742c1 1912\dd Controls the difficulty of the generated puzzle.
1913\#{FIXME: what distinguishes Easy, Medium, and Hard? In particular,
1914when are backtracking/guesswork required, if ever?}
6193da8d 1915
1916
81eef9aa 1917\C{inertia} \i{Inertia}
1918
1919\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.inertia}
1920
1921You are a small green ball sitting in a grid full of obstacles. Your
1922aim is to collect all the gems without running into any mines.
1923
1924You can move the ball in any orthogonal \e{or diagonal} direction.
1925Once the ball starts moving, it will continue until something stops
1926it. A wall directly in its path will stop it (but if it is moving
1927diagonally, it will move through a diagonal gap between two other
1928walls without stopping). Also, some of the squares are \q{stops};
1929when the ball moves on to a stop, it will stop moving no matter what
1930direction it was going in. Gems do \e{not} stop the ball; it picks
1931them up and keeps on going.
1932
1933Running into a mine is fatal. Even if you picked up the last gem in
1934the same move which then hit a mine, the game will count you as dead
1935rather than victorious.
1936
1937This game was originally implemented for Windows by Ben Olmstead
1938\k{bem}, who was kind enough to release his source code on request
1939so that it could be re-implemented for this collection.
1940
1941\B{bem} \W{http://xn13.com/}\cw{http://xn13.com/}
1942
1943\H{inertia-controls} \i{Inertia controls}
1944
1945\IM{Inertia controls} controls, for Inertia
1946\IM{Inertia controls} keys, for Inertia
1947\IM{Inertia controls} shortcuts (keyboard), for Inertia
1948
1949You can move the ball in any of the eight directions using the
1950numeric keypad. Alternatively, if you click the left mouse button on
1951the grid, the ball will begin a move in the general direction of
1952where you clicked.
1953
8b5b08f7 1954If you use the \q{Solve} function on this game, the program will
1955compute a path through the grid which collects all the remaining
1956gems and returns to the current position. A hint arrow will appear
1957on the ball indicating the direction in which you should move to
1958begin on this path. If you then move in that direction, the arrow
1959will update to indicate the next direction on the path. You can also
1960press Space to automatically move in the direction of the hint
1961arrow. If you move in a different direction from the one shown by
1962the arrow, the hint arrows will stop appearing because you have
1963strayed from the provided path; you can then use \q{Solve} again to
1964generate a new path if you want to.
1965
81eef9aa 1966All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.
1967In particular, if you do run into a mine and die, you can use the
1968Undo function and resume playing from before the fatal move. The
1969game will keep track of the number of times you have done this.
1970
1971\H{inertia-parameters} \I{parameters, for Inertia}Inertia parameters
1972
1973These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
1974\q{Type} menu.
1975
1976\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
1977
1978\dd Size of grid in squares.
1979
1980
86e60e3d 1981\C{tents} \i{Tents}
1982
1983\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.tents}
1984
1985You have a grid of squares, some of which contain trees. Your aim is
1986to place tents in some of the remaining squares, in such a way that
1987the following conditions are met:
1988
1989\b There are exactly as many tents as trees.
1990
1991\b The tents and trees can be matched up in such a way that each
1992tent is directly adjacent (horizontally or vertically, but not
1993diagonally) to its own tree. However, a tent may be adjacent to
1994other trees as well as its own.
1995
1996\b No two tents are adjacent horizontally, vertically \e{or
1997diagonally}.
1998
1999\b The number of tents in each row, and in each column, matches the
2000numbers given round the sides of the grid.
2001
2002This puzzle can be found in several places on the Internet, and was
2003brought to my attention by e-mail. I don't know who I should credit
2004for inventing it.
2005
2006\H{tents-controls} \i{Tents controls}
2007
2008\IM{Tents controls} controls, for Tents
2009
2010Left-clicking in a blank square will place a tent in it.
2011Right-clicking in a blank square will colour it green, indicating
2012that you are sure it \e{isn't} a tent. Clicking either button in an
2013occupied square will clear it.
2014
565394e7 2015If you \e{drag} with the right button along a row or column, every
2016blank square in the region you cover will be turned green, and no
2017other squares will be affected. (This is useful for clearing the
2018remainder of a row once you have placed all its tents.)
2019
505ea4e5 2020You can also use the cursor keys to move around the grid. Pressing the
2021return key over an empty square will place a tent, and pressing the
2022space bar over an empty square will colour it green; either key will
2023clear an occupied square.
2024
86e60e3d 2025(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
2026
2027\H{tents-parameters} \I{parameters, for Tents}Tents parameters
2028
2029These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
2030\q{Type} menu.
2031
2032\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
2033
2034\dd Size of grid in squares.
2035
2036\dt \e{Difficulty}
2037
2038\dd Controls the difficulty of the generated puzzle. More difficult
2039puzzles require more complex deductions, but at present none of the
2040available difficulty levels requires guesswork or backtracking.
2041
2042
e7c63b02 2043\C{bridges} \i{Bridges}
2044
2045\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.bridges}
2046
2047You have a set of islands distributed across the playing area. Each
2048island contains a number. Your aim is to connect the islands
2049together with bridges, in such a way that:
2050
2051\b Bridges run horizontally or vertically.
2052
2053\b The number of bridges terminating at any island is equal to the
2054number written in that island.
2055
2056\b Two bridges may run in parallel between the same two islands, but
2057no more than two may do so.
2058
2059\b No bridge crosses another bridge.
2060
2061\b All the islands are connected together.
2062
2063There are some configurable alternative modes, which involve
2064changing the parallel-bridge limit to something other than 2, and
2065introducing the additional constraint that no sequence of bridges
2066may form a loop from one island back to the same island. The rules
2067stated above are the default ones.
2068
2069Credit for this puzzle goes to \i{Nikoli} \k{nikoli-bridges}.
2070
2071Bridges was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
2072
2073\B{nikoli-bridges}
2074\W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/14/index-e.htm}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/puzzles/14/index-e.htm}
2075
2076\H{bridges-controls} \i{Bridges controls}
2077
2078\IM{Bridges controls} controls, for Bridges
2079
2080To place a bridge between two islands, click the mouse down on one
2081island and drag it towards the other. You do not need to drag all
2082the way to the other island; you only need to move the mouse far
2083enough for the intended bridge direction to be unambiguous. (So you
2084can keep the mouse near the starting island and conveniently throw
2085bridges out from it in many directions.)
2086
2087Doing this again when a bridge is already present will add another
2088parallel bridge. If there are already as many bridges between the
2089two islands as permitted by the current game rules (i.e. two by
2090default), the same dragging action will remove all of them.
2091
2092If you want to remind yourself that two islands definitely \e{do
2093not} have a bridge between them, you can right-drag between them in
2094the same way to draw a \q{non-bridge} marker.
2095
2096If you think you have finished with an island (i.e. you have placed
2097all its bridges and are confident that they are in the right
2098places), you can mark the island as finished by left-clicking on it.
2099This will highlight it and all the bridges connected to it, and you
2100will be prevented from accidentally modifying any of those bridges
2101in future. Left-clicking again on a highlighted island will unmark
2102it and restore your ability to modify it.
2103
2104Violations of the puzzle rules will be marked in red:
2105
2106\b An island with too many bridges will be highlighted in red.
2107
2108\b An island with too few bridges will be highlighted in red if it
2109is definitely an error (as opposed to merely not being finished
2110yet): if adding enough bridges would involve having to cross another
2111bridge or remove a non-bridge marker, or if the island has been
2112highlighted as complete.
2113
2114\b A group of islands and bridges may be highlighted in red if it is
2115a closed subset of the puzzle with no way to connect it to the rest
2116of the islands. For example, if you directly connect two 1s together
2117with a bridge and they are not the only two islands on the grid,
2118they will light up red to indicate that such a group cannot be
2119contained in any valid solution.
2120
2121\b If you have selected the (non-default) option to disallow loops
2122in the solution, a group of bridges which forms a loop will be
2123highlighted.
2124
2125(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
2126
2127\H{bridges-parameters} \I{parameters, for Bridges}Bridges parameters
2128
2129These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
2130\q{Type} menu.
2131
2132\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
2133
2134\dd Size of grid in squares.
2135
2136\dt \e{Difficulty}
2137
2138\dd Difficulty level of puzzle.
2139
2140\dt \e{Allow loops}
2141
2142\dd This is set by default. If cleared, puzzles will be generated in
2143such a way that they are always soluble without creating a loop, and
2144solutions which do involve a loop will be disallowed.
2145
2146\dt \e{Max. bridges per direction}
2147
2148\dd Maximum number of bridges in any particular direction. The
2149default is 2, but you can change it to 1, 3 or 4. In general, fewer
2150is easier.
2151
2152\dt \e{%age of island squares}
2153
2154\dd Gives a rough percentage of islands the generator will try and
2155lay before finishing the puzzle. Certain layouts will not manage to
2156lay enough islands; this is an upper bound.
2157
2158\dt \e{Expansion factor (%age)}
2159
2160\dd The grid generator works by picking an existing island at random
2161(after first creating an initial island somewhere). It then decides
2162on a direction (at random), and then works out how far it could
2163extend before creating another island. This parameter determines how
2164likely it is to extend as far as it can, rather than choosing
2165somewhere closer.
2166
2167High expansion factors usually mean easier puzzles with fewer
2168possible islands; low expansion factors can create lots of
2169tightly-packed islands.
2170
2171
149255d7 2172\C{unequal} \i{Unequal}
2173
2174\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.unequal}
2175
2176You have a square grid; each square may contain a digit from 1 to
055b9cd2 2177the size of the grid, and some squares have greater-than signs between
149255d7 2178them. Your aim is to fully populate the grid with numbers such that:
2179
2180\b Each row contains only one occurrence of each digit
2181
2182\b Each column contains only one occurrence of each digit
2183
2184\b All the greater-than signs are satisfied.
2185
feb306dc 2186In \q{Trivial} mode (available via the \q{Custom} game type
2187selector), there are no greater-than signs; the puzzle is to solve
2188the \i{Latin square} only.
149255d7 2189
2190At the time of writing, this puzzle is appearing in the Guardian
055b9cd2 2191weekly under the name \q{\i{Futoshiki}}.
149255d7 2192
2193Unequal was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
2194
2195\H{unequal-controls} \i{Unequal controls}
2196
2197\IM{Unequal controls} controls, for Unequal
2198
2199Unequal shares much of its control system with Solo.
2200
2201To play Unequal, simply click the mouse in any empty square and then
2202type a digit or letter on the keyboard to fill that square. If you
2203make a mistake, click the mouse in the incorrect square and press
2204Space to clear it again (or use the Undo feature).
2205
2206If you \e{right}-click in a square and then type a number, that
2207number will be entered in the square as a \q{pencil mark}. You can
2208have pencil marks for multiple numbers in the same square.
2209
2210The game pays no attention to pencil marks, so exactly what you use
2211them for is up to you: you can use them as reminders that a
2212particular square needs to be re-examined once you know more about a
2213particular number, or you can use them as lists of the possible
2214numbers in a given square, or anything else you feel like.
2215
2216To erase a single pencil mark, right-click in the square and type
2217the same number again.
2218
2219All pencil marks in a square are erased when you left-click and type
2220a number, or when you left-click and press space. Right-clicking and
2221pressing space will also erase pencil marks.
2222
9c90045a 2223As for Solo, the cursor keys can be used in conjunction with the digit
2224keys to set numbers or pencil marks. You can also use the 'M' key to
2225auto-fill every numeric hint, ready for removal as required.
2226
149255d7 2227(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
2228
2229\H{unequal-parameters} \I{parameters, for Unequal}Unequal parameters
2230
2231These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
2232\q{Type} menu.
2233
2234\dt \e{Size (s*s)}
2235
2236\dd Size of grid.
2237
2238\dt \e{Difficulty}
2239
845a3be0 2240\dd Controls the difficulty of the generated puzzle. At Trivial
feb306dc 2241level, there are no greater-than signs; the puzzle is to solve the
2242Latin square only. At Recursive level (only available via the
2243\q{Custom} game type selector) backtracking will be required, but
2244the solution should still be unique. The levels in between require
2245increasingly complex reasoning to avoid having to backtrack.
149255d7 2246
2247
ab3a1e43 2248
2249\C{galaxies} \i{Galaxies}
2250
2251\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.galaxies}
2252
2253You have a rectangular grid containing a number of dots. Your aim is
2254to draw edges along the grid lines which divide the rectangle into
2255regions in such a way that every region is 180\u00b0{-degree}
2256rotationally symmetric, and contains exactly one dot which is
2257located at its centre of symmetry.
2258
2259This puzzle was invented by \i{Nikoli} \k{nikoli-galaxies}, under
a799e87f 2260the name \q{Tentai Show}; its name is commonly translated into
2261English as \q{Spiral Galaxies}.
ab3a1e43 2262
f3ed4ec3 2263Galaxies was contributed to this collection by James Harvey.
2264
ab3a1e43 2265\B{nikoli-galaxies} \W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/en/puzzles/astronomical_show/}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/en/puzzles/astronomical_show/}
2266
2267\H{galaxies-controls} \i{Galaxies controls}
2268
2269\IM{Galaxies controls} controls, for Galaxies
2270
2271Left-click on any grid line to draw an edge if there isn't one
2272already, or to remove one if there is. When you create a valid
2273region (one which is closed, contains exactly one dot, is
2274180\u00b0{-degree} symmetric about that dot, and contains no
2275extraneous edges inside it) it will be highlighted automatically; so
2276your aim is to have the whole grid highlighted in that way.
2277
2278During solving, you might know that a particular grid square belongs
2279to a specific dot, but not be sure of where the edges go and which
2280other squares are connected to the dot. In order to mark this so you
2281don't forget, you can right-click on the dot and drag, which will
2282create an arrow marker pointing at the dot. Drop that in a square of
2283your choice and it will remind you which dot it's associated with.
2284You can also right-click on existing arrows to pick them up and move
2285them, or destroy them by dropping them off the edge of the grid.
2286(Also, if you're not sure which dot an arrow is pointing at, you can
2287pick it up and move it around to make it clearer. It will swivel
2288constantly as you drag it, to stay pointed at its parent dot.)
2289
2c580e64 2290You can also use the cursor keys to move around the grid squares and
2291lines. Pressing the return key when over a grid line will draw or
2292clear its edge, as above. Pressing the return key when over a dot will
2293pick up an arrow, to be dropped the nest time the return key is
2294pressed; this can also be used to move existing arrows around, removing
2295them by dropping them on a dot or another arrow.
2296
ab3a1e43 2297(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
2298
2299\H{galaxies-parameters} \I{parameters, for Galaxies}Galaxies parameters
2300
2301These parameters are available from the \q{Custom...} option on the
2302\q{Type} menu.
2303
2304\dt \e{Width}, \e{Height}
2305
2306\dd Size of grid in squares.
2307
2308\dt \e{Difficulty}
2309
2310\dd Controls the difficulty of the generated puzzle. More difficult
59206b9c 2311puzzles require more complex deductions, and the \q{Unreasonable}
a799e87f 2312difficulty level may require backtracking.
ab3a1e43 2313
2314
2315
8b3b3223 2316\C{filling} \i{Filling}
2317
2318\cfg{winhelp-topic}{games.filling}
2319
2320You have a grid of squares, some of which contain digits, and the
2321rest of which are empty. Your job is to fill in digits in the empty
2322squares, in such a way that each connected region of squares all
2323containing the same digit has an area equal to that digit.
2324
2325(\q{Connected region}, for the purposes of this game, does not count
2326diagonally separated squares as adjacent.)
2327
2328For example, it follows that no square can contain a zero, and that
2329two adjacent squares can not both contain a one. No region has an
2330area greater than 9 (because then its area would not be a single
2331digit).
2332
2333Credit for this puzzle goes to \i{Nikoli} \k{nikoli-fillomino}.
2334
2335Filling was contributed to this collection by Jonas K\u00F6{oe}lker.
2336
2337\B{nikoli-fillomino}
2338\W{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/en/puzzles/fillomino/}\cw{http://www.nikoli.co.jp/en/puzzles/fillomino/}
2339
2340\H{filling-controls} \I{controls, for Filling}Filling controls
2341
2342To play Filling, simply click the mouse in any empty square and then
b182e5d5 2343type a digit on the keyboard to fill that square. By dragging the
2344mouse, you can select multiple squares to fill with a single keypress.
2345If you make a mistake, click the mouse in the incorrect square and
2346press 0, Space, Backspace or Enter to clear it again (or use the Undo
2347feature).
8b3b3223 2348
eb05ad3b 2349You can also move around the grid with the cursor keys; typing a digit will
2350fill the square containing the cursor with that number, or typing 0, Space,
2351or Enter will clear it. You can also select multiple squares for numbering
2352or clearing by using the return key, before typing a digit to fill in the
2353highlighted squares (as above).
2354
8b3b3223 2355(All the actions described in \k{common-actions} are also available.)
2356
2357\H{filling-parameters} \I{parameters, for Filling}Filling parameters
2358
2359Filling allows you to configure the number of rows and columns of the
2360grid, through the \q{Type} menu.
2361
2362
ab3a1e43 2363
e91825f8 2364\A{licence} \I{MIT licence}\ii{Licence}
2365
07a54e52 2366This software is \i{copyright} 2004-2008 Simon Tatham.
e91825f8 2367
2c930807 2368Portions copyright Richard Boulton, James Harvey, Mike Pinna, Jonas
0477157e 2369K\u00F6{oe}lker, Dariusz Olszewski, Michael Schierl and Lambros
2370Lambrou.
e91825f8 2371
2372Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
2373obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files
a799e87f 2374(the \q{Software}), to deal in the Software without restriction,
e91825f8 2375including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge,
2376publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software,
2377and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
2378subject to the following conditions:
2379
2380The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
2381included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
2382
a799e87f 2383THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED \q{AS IS}, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
e91825f8 2384EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
2385MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
2386NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
2387BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
2388ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
2389CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
2390SOFTWARE.
2391
3c9388ef 2392\IM{command-line}{command line} command line
2393
bb219ea1 2394\IM{default parameters, specifying} default parameters, specifying
2395\IM{default parameters, specifying} preferences, specifying default
2396
2397\IM{Unix} Unix
2398\IM{Unix} Linux
2399
2400\IM{generating game IDs} generating game IDs
2401\IM{generating game IDs} game ID, generating
2402
1185e3c5 2403\IM{specific} \q{Specific}, menu option
2404\IM{custom} \q{Custom}, menu option
e91825f8 2405
2406\IM{game ID} game ID
2407\IM{game ID} ID, game
2408\IM{ID format} ID format
2409\IM{ID format} format, ID
2410\IM{ID format} game ID, format
2411
2412\IM{keys} keys
2413\IM{keys} shortcuts (keyboard)
2414
2415\IM{initial state} initial state
2416\IM{initial state} state, initial
2417
2418\IM{MIT licence} MIT licence
2419\IM{MIT licence} licence, MIT