Academic Snake Pit












5














One day, you get lost in the corridors of your new school and accidentally wander into a pit full of venomous snakes. Unfortunately, the pit is deep and you have hurt your leg in the fall, so there is no climbing out. Fortunately, since you're in a school, all of the snakes are educated and would much rather force you to do a puzzle than eat you.



The snakes give you the following puzzle on a crumpled sheet of paper, under threat of death by poison should you fail to solve it. The front of the paper looks like this:



enter image description here



If you flip the paper over, the back looks like this:



enter image description here



Better not waste time! Although these snakes are academic, it certainly isn't above them to kill and eat a human.



HINT:




The tape is there for a reason.











share|improve this question
























  • was the flip horizontal or vertical?
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    @JonMarkPerry Horizontal. I had a feeling someone would ask that. :)
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • yeah, coz the paper itself doesn't look flipped.,.
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago










  • NOTE: Minor tweak made to first image.
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • Meaning the axis of rotation is horizontal?
    – Dr Xorile
    4 hours ago
















5














One day, you get lost in the corridors of your new school and accidentally wander into a pit full of venomous snakes. Unfortunately, the pit is deep and you have hurt your leg in the fall, so there is no climbing out. Fortunately, since you're in a school, all of the snakes are educated and would much rather force you to do a puzzle than eat you.



The snakes give you the following puzzle on a crumpled sheet of paper, under threat of death by poison should you fail to solve it. The front of the paper looks like this:



enter image description here



If you flip the paper over, the back looks like this:



enter image description here



Better not waste time! Although these snakes are academic, it certainly isn't above them to kill and eat a human.



HINT:




The tape is there for a reason.











share|improve this question
























  • was the flip horizontal or vertical?
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    @JonMarkPerry Horizontal. I had a feeling someone would ask that. :)
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • yeah, coz the paper itself doesn't look flipped.,.
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago










  • NOTE: Minor tweak made to first image.
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • Meaning the axis of rotation is horizontal?
    – Dr Xorile
    4 hours ago














5












5








5







One day, you get lost in the corridors of your new school and accidentally wander into a pit full of venomous snakes. Unfortunately, the pit is deep and you have hurt your leg in the fall, so there is no climbing out. Fortunately, since you're in a school, all of the snakes are educated and would much rather force you to do a puzzle than eat you.



The snakes give you the following puzzle on a crumpled sheet of paper, under threat of death by poison should you fail to solve it. The front of the paper looks like this:



enter image description here



If you flip the paper over, the back looks like this:



enter image description here



Better not waste time! Although these snakes are academic, it certainly isn't above them to kill and eat a human.



HINT:




The tape is there for a reason.











share|improve this question















One day, you get lost in the corridors of your new school and accidentally wander into a pit full of venomous snakes. Unfortunately, the pit is deep and you have hurt your leg in the fall, so there is no climbing out. Fortunately, since you're in a school, all of the snakes are educated and would much rather force you to do a puzzle than eat you.



The snakes give you the following puzzle on a crumpled sheet of paper, under threat of death by poison should you fail to solve it. The front of the paper looks like this:



enter image description here



If you flip the paper over, the back looks like this:



enter image description here



Better not waste time! Although these snakes are academic, it certainly isn't above them to kill and eat a human.



HINT:




The tape is there for a reason.








grid-deduction






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago

























asked 5 hours ago









Frpzzd

632119




632119












  • was the flip horizontal or vertical?
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    @JonMarkPerry Horizontal. I had a feeling someone would ask that. :)
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • yeah, coz the paper itself doesn't look flipped.,.
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago










  • NOTE: Minor tweak made to first image.
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • Meaning the axis of rotation is horizontal?
    – Dr Xorile
    4 hours ago


















  • was the flip horizontal or vertical?
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    @JonMarkPerry Horizontal. I had a feeling someone would ask that. :)
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • yeah, coz the paper itself doesn't look flipped.,.
    – JonMark Perry
    5 hours ago










  • NOTE: Minor tweak made to first image.
    – Frpzzd
    5 hours ago










  • Meaning the axis of rotation is horizontal?
    – Dr Xorile
    4 hours ago
















was the flip horizontal or vertical?
– JonMark Perry
5 hours ago




was the flip horizontal or vertical?
– JonMark Perry
5 hours ago




1




1




@JonMarkPerry Horizontal. I had a feeling someone would ask that. :)
– Frpzzd
5 hours ago




@JonMarkPerry Horizontal. I had a feeling someone would ask that. :)
– Frpzzd
5 hours ago












yeah, coz the paper itself doesn't look flipped.,.
– JonMark Perry
5 hours ago




yeah, coz the paper itself doesn't look flipped.,.
– JonMark Perry
5 hours ago












NOTE: Minor tweak made to first image.
– Frpzzd
5 hours ago




NOTE: Minor tweak made to first image.
– Frpzzd
5 hours ago












Meaning the axis of rotation is horizontal?
– Dr Xorile
4 hours ago




Meaning the axis of rotation is horizontal?
– Dr Xorile
4 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














The puzzle is a




slitherlink




but played on a




torus board, i.e. one where the edges wrap around.


From the snake on the back you can see that the left/right edges map exactly onto one another (regardless of how the rectangular paper is turned over, the snake shows short sides match). The top/bottom edges however don't map directly, but are slightly shifted. There are two ways they could connect, because there are two grid points directly on the top/bottom edges. After filling in the walls of the lower 3 square, the partial square below it has two walls. It therefore becomes clear that this square cannot be the 1 in the top row. The square below the bottom 3 must therefore be the 3 in the top row.


Once this mapping is known, it is just a matter of solving the slitherlink puzzle. It is straightforward, but slightly confusing due to the wrapping. Here is the solution, copied a few times to show the edge mapping.

enter image description here







share|improve this answer























  • Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
    – Frpzzd
    3 hours ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














The puzzle is a




slitherlink




but played on a




torus board, i.e. one where the edges wrap around.


From the snake on the back you can see that the left/right edges map exactly onto one another (regardless of how the rectangular paper is turned over, the snake shows short sides match). The top/bottom edges however don't map directly, but are slightly shifted. There are two ways they could connect, because there are two grid points directly on the top/bottom edges. After filling in the walls of the lower 3 square, the partial square below it has two walls. It therefore becomes clear that this square cannot be the 1 in the top row. The square below the bottom 3 must therefore be the 3 in the top row.


Once this mapping is known, it is just a matter of solving the slitherlink puzzle. It is straightforward, but slightly confusing due to the wrapping. Here is the solution, copied a few times to show the edge mapping.

enter image description here







share|improve this answer























  • Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
    – Frpzzd
    3 hours ago
















2














The puzzle is a




slitherlink




but played on a




torus board, i.e. one where the edges wrap around.


From the snake on the back you can see that the left/right edges map exactly onto one another (regardless of how the rectangular paper is turned over, the snake shows short sides match). The top/bottom edges however don't map directly, but are slightly shifted. There are two ways they could connect, because there are two grid points directly on the top/bottom edges. After filling in the walls of the lower 3 square, the partial square below it has two walls. It therefore becomes clear that this square cannot be the 1 in the top row. The square below the bottom 3 must therefore be the 3 in the top row.


Once this mapping is known, it is just a matter of solving the slitherlink puzzle. It is straightforward, but slightly confusing due to the wrapping. Here is the solution, copied a few times to show the edge mapping.

enter image description here







share|improve this answer























  • Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
    – Frpzzd
    3 hours ago














2












2








2






The puzzle is a




slitherlink




but played on a




torus board, i.e. one where the edges wrap around.


From the snake on the back you can see that the left/right edges map exactly onto one another (regardless of how the rectangular paper is turned over, the snake shows short sides match). The top/bottom edges however don't map directly, but are slightly shifted. There are two ways they could connect, because there are two grid points directly on the top/bottom edges. After filling in the walls of the lower 3 square, the partial square below it has two walls. It therefore becomes clear that this square cannot be the 1 in the top row. The square below the bottom 3 must therefore be the 3 in the top row.


Once this mapping is known, it is just a matter of solving the slitherlink puzzle. It is straightforward, but slightly confusing due to the wrapping. Here is the solution, copied a few times to show the edge mapping.

enter image description here







share|improve this answer














The puzzle is a




slitherlink




but played on a




torus board, i.e. one where the edges wrap around.


From the snake on the back you can see that the left/right edges map exactly onto one another (regardless of how the rectangular paper is turned over, the snake shows short sides match). The top/bottom edges however don't map directly, but are slightly shifted. There are two ways they could connect, because there are two grid points directly on the top/bottom edges. After filling in the walls of the lower 3 square, the partial square below it has two walls. It therefore becomes clear that this square cannot be the 1 in the top row. The square below the bottom 3 must therefore be the 3 in the top row.


Once this mapping is known, it is just a matter of solving the slitherlink puzzle. It is straightforward, but slightly confusing due to the wrapping. Here is the solution, copied a few times to show the edge mapping.

enter image description here








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 4 hours ago

























answered 4 hours ago









Jaap Scherphuis

14.6k12565




14.6k12565












  • Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
    – Frpzzd
    3 hours ago


















  • Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
    – Frpzzd
    3 hours ago
















Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
– Frpzzd
3 hours ago




Interesting, but not the solution I had in mind. I have added a hint to the question that gives a little bit more information.
– Frpzzd
3 hours ago


















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