Category Archives: Arithmetic

1-8


The Dutch reformed-christian ‘Reformatorisch Dagblad’ twice a year publishes an extra puzzle issue for its subscribers. This weeks puzzle type is 1-8, invented by Marijke Balmaekers, and published in the childrens section of the ‘Vakantie Doe Boek’ of the reformatorisch Dagblad.

The numbers one to eight have been arranged in a 5×5 grid in such a way that:


  1. Each of the numbers one to eight is used exactly once

  2. There are always one or two numbers in every row, column or diagonal

  3. the sum of the numbers is listed as a clue at the end of the row/column/diagonal

Example:
1-8 example

number 1
1-8 2016-02-14 nr 1 exercise

number 2
1-8 2016-02-14 nr 2 exercise

number 3
1-8 2016-02-14 nr 3 exercise

You can check your solutions here, here and here

The online exam


certificate illustration
This week I’ve got a quickie for you.
Last week I took an online certification exam. It was an open book certifiction, and I was free to consult the website and course map as often and as long as I wanted. Some types of questions scored 3 points, others scored 5 points.

My result was:
You scored 201 points out of 223 total possible points.
You answered 45 out of 51 questions correctly.

How many 5-point questions and how many 3 point questions did I miss?

You can check your solutions here

A new puzzle is posted every friday. You are welcome to comment on the puzzles. Solutions are added at the bottom of a puzzle after one or more weeks.

A couple of oldies


1) The windmills
The Jones family was en route to their holiday home. ‘Look Johnny,’ Dad said, ‘There is a row of 4 windmills, all evenly paced apart’. Johnny took his Dads smart phone and activated the stopwatch as they passed the first one.
‘Look Dad,’ he said. It took us 10 seconds to pass these 4 windmills!
‘Well done, son’ his Dad complimented him. ‘Now there is a row of 7 windmills coming up. They seem to be the same type, so they will have the same distance between them. How long will it take us to pass them?’

You can check your solutions here

This is one of what I call a class of puzzles, of which over the ages there has developed a large number of variations. The puzzle above is often presented with trees along a road. Here is another variation which I came across several times:

2) The clock
clock
The tower clock at Backditch is rightly famous for both its artwork decorations and its accuracy. Earlier this week we were able to visit it and the church warden was willing to show us the centuries old woodwork driving the clock.
Just when we were on top the clock struck 6 o clock and I noticed that it took exactly 12 seconds.
The warden asked me: How long will it take to strike 11 o clock?

You can check your solutions here

The commons element in these puzzles is of course that the important item in not the moments, but the intervals in between. A variation can be found in nearly every puzzle collection.

Now many of the puzzles we have seen around for a long time were first published by someone called Alquin of York in a booklet called Propositiones ad acuendos iuvenes (“Problems to sharpen the young”), probably written around 800AD. This one, however, was not. There is however a related problem, which is totally unknown, that does appear in this antique puzzle collection:

3) The farmer
How many furrows might a farmer have in his field if the ploughman makes three turns at each end of the field?

You can check your solutions here
(solve the puzzle above before reading on!)

(solve the puzzle above before reading on!)

(solve the puzzle above before reading on!)

(solve the puzzle above before reading on!)
The important elements in Alquins puzzle are:
– it’s not the turns, but the furrows in between the turns that count
– the first or last furrow, depending on the view, does not need a turn.

That the end deserves a special treatment, is also the subject of another puzzle:
4) The snail
A snake is at the bottom of a pit with 3 meter high walls. Every day the snail climbs 1 meter, but when he sleeps he slides back 60 cm. How many days does he need to crawl out?

You can check your solutions here

5) The Adventurous Snail
In his “The Canterbury puzzles”, Henry Dudeney publishes a small variation:
adventurous snail 152

A simple version of the puzzle of the climbing snail is familiar to everybody. We were all taught it in the nursery, and it was apparently intended to inculcate the simple moral that we should never slip if we can help it. This is the popular story. A snail crawls up a pole 12 feet high, ascending 3 feet every day and slipping back 2 feet every night. How long does it take to get to the top? Of course, we are expected to say the answer is twelve days, because the creature makes an actual advance of 1 foot in every twenty-four hours. But the modern infant in arms is not taken in in this way. He says, correctly enough, that at the end of the[Pg 153] ninth day the snail is 3 feet from the top, and therefore reaches the summit of its ambition on the tenth day, for it would cease to slip when it had got to the top.

Let us, however, consider the original story. Once upon a time two philosophers were walking in their garden, when one of them espied a highly respectable member of the Helix Aspersa family, a pioneer in mountaineering, in the act of making the perilous ascent of a wall 20 feet high. Judging by the trail, the gentleman calculated that the snail ascended 3 feet each day, sleeping and slipping back 2 feet every night.

“Pray tell me,” said the philosopher to his friend, who was in the same line of business, “how long will it take Sir Snail to climb to the top of the wall and descend the other side? The top of the wall, as you know, has a sharp edge, so that when he gets there he will instantly begin to descend, putting precisely the same exertion into his daily climbing down as he did in his climbing up, and sleeping and slipping at night as before.”

This is the true version of the puzzle, and my readers will perhaps be interested in working out the exact number of days. Of course, in a puzzle of this kind the day is always supposed to be equally divided into twelve hours’ daytime and twelve hours’ night.

You can check your solutions here

6) The beggar and the cigarettes
A beggar needs 7 cigarette buts to make one new one. After digging through several garbage cans he collected 55 cigarette buds. How many cigarettes can he smoke?

You can check your solutions here

Five blouses


5 blousesIn the train I overheard calling a woman her friend: “I saw five blouses, but I had only money enough for four of them. I could have bought four of them for 65,80, or a combination of four of them for 61,80, or four others for 58,80, or another combination for 57,80, or still another combination for 54,80. But I was just 5 cents short of buying all of them. How much money did she have with her?

You can check your solutions here

The coffee stain, the archeologist and the reverend


1) The coffee stain

**
When I visited an old friend of mine, with his laptop out of order, he had just completed a simple multiplication with pencil and paper. Unfortunately, I spilled some coffee over it. Can you pelase help him to complete the multiplication again?
Incomplete multiplication exercise 1

2) The missing digits puzzle

**
In his “Cyclopedia of 5000 Puzzles, tricks and conumdrums” American puzzle master Sam Loyd presented the following puzzle:
Sam Loydd missing numbers puzzle

Sam Loyd tells a long story about Mormon rock, and in his reprint Martin Gardner skipps this part. I will not follow his example in order to preserve the history, but I do not want to offend anyone, and one should take notice that Sam Loyd was also a master in inventing stories, as can be illustrated with the example on the Swiss flag. Don’t take anything he tells seriously.

Once again discussion has been revived concerning the meaning of the hieroglyphic numbers engraved on Mormon Rock. Mormonism originated only so far back as 1830, so if these weather beaten figures have anything to do with the Latter Day Saints there should be thousands of persons qualified to tell all about them, unless, as some claim, they pertain to the hidden mysteries.
The Mormons migrated in 1838 From Kirtland, O., to Nauvoo, the “City of Beauty” in Illinois and to Salt Lake in 1848. When they left Nauvoo they boasted that their line of march would be twenty four miles long, and was te be headed by a printing press to issue the daily orders of the prophet. It was stated that they were divided up into numerous companies, each one headed by one of the prophet’s wives, and the mysterious fiugures on the Mormon Rock were supposed to give the number of pilgrims in each division.

The figures look like a sum in division engraved upon a sandstone rock. Most of the numbers are illegible, but as some are sharp and clear it is to be assumed that the others were erased maliciously or for a purpose. It is now claimed that either through accident or design the eight legible numbers furnish a key to the mystery, and that the whole is a sum in long division which tells just how many pilgrims marched with each division, and incidentally gave a clue to the number of the prophet’s patrimonial ventures.

It is a remarkable coincidence that the remaining numbers furnish a cluse which easily solves a most interesting historical puzzle, for if you write down the sum in long division, mixing stars with the legible figures as shown, you should speedily be able to guess the numbers which have been erased so that the sum will prove. It reaaly looks as if there should be scores of correct answers, and yet so far as I am aware, but one satisfactory restoration of the missing numbers has been suggested.

Just in case the illustration is not clear, here is a more abstract image of the problem:

Sam Loyd archeologist missing digits

3) Dudeney

**
In his “536 problems” British puzzle master Henry Dudeney presents the following problem:
incomplete division dudeney 144

He tells it was send to him by the reverend E.F.O. It is, he tells, the first example he has seen of one of those missing-figures puzzles.

You can find these and other puzzles like these in the second edition of my e-book with numbers puzzles.

Sojuko


A Sojuko can be considered as part of the Sudoku family in the sense that the 3×3 square contains each of the digits 1 to 9 exactly once. Some of the digits have been omitted, and the puzzle is to restore the missing digits. As clues four circles are given, holding the sum of the numbers in the squares around them. The solutipon techniques however are reminiscent of Kakuro.

Sojuko number 1
Sojuko 20141214 nr 1 exercise

Sojuko number 2
sojuko 20141215 nr 1 exercise
>

I found them in “Terdege”, a puzzle add-on of the newspaper “Reformatorisch dagblad”.

You can check your solution here and here

61 equals 28?


61 is 28

Make the equation in the picture above correct. To do so, you may freely move the digits around. You may not add other stuff such as plus signs, multiplication signs, and so on.

Recently I purchased “Logic Brain Teasers”, published by Mensa. There was a puzzle on the back cover and while attempting to solve it as a family during dinner, the idea for this puzzle was born.

You can check your solution here

You are welcome to remark on the puzzle: its wording, style, level of difficulty. I love to read your solution times. Please do not spoil the fun for others by listing the solution.

I do offer my apologies that the puzzle above does not carry a christmas theme, as I had intended. I had two puzzles in mind, but in one I made an error in my calculation and for the other I had insufficient infomation on its origin.

Christmas time is something special in many parts of the world. For some, these are happy days with the family. For others, it’s just a few days off. For me, as an orthodox christian, it is a time of celebration.
Celebration, because where we humans develop irritation, dislike and even hate, God has come to offer a possibility of peace.
Celebration, becuase where we suffer poverty, He has come to share his richness with us.
Celebration, because where we suffer bondage, He has come to set us free.
Celebration, because the God, who is greater than our imagination can comprehend, chose to be born as a small and vulnerable baby.
I wish that you may enjoy the Christmas days and may experience a little bit of the peace, freedom, and richness he wishes to give us.