First do the easy ones, i.e. the 1 in the bottom-right box and then the 3s, which seem fairly straightforward.
That leaves you with only place where 5 can go in the bottom-left box.
The 7s are a bit trickier, but if you mentally shade the cells in the top-right and middle-right boxes where a 7 can't go, you see that they must be on the top row in each box, so in the top-left and centre boxes, they must be on the bottom row.
Full series here.
Thursday, 11 March 2010
Solving Sudoku puzzles made easy (part 1)
My latest blogpost: Solving Sudoku puzzles made easy (part 1)Tweet this! Posted by Mark Wadsworth at 12:30
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3 comments:
And a 7 in the top LH of the bottom middle square (slice and dice).
McH, see part 5.
How many of these will there be? :)
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