Chess and dominoes II

Chess and dominoes II

Posers and Puzzles

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.

a

Fichtekränzi

Joined
28 Mar 07
Moves
20555
15 May 10

There must be a simpler way to prove that like in "chess and domino"
where simple coloring does the thing.
But I have not found it yet

F

Joined
11 Nov 05
Moves
43938
15 May 10

Originally posted by afx
There must be a simpler way to prove that like in "chess and domino"
where simple coloring does the thing.
But I have not found it yet
I think rather an inductive method will solve the problem.
Start with the trivial case, a chess board with 2x2 squares and prove it.
Then show that when if nxn chess board does the trick, then (n+2)x(n+2) also does the trick.
Hence 8x8 also does the trick, and the problem is solved.

Joined
26 Apr 03
Moves
26771
15 May 10

Colour alternate columns black / white in vertical stripes.

There are 32 black squares.

A horizontal domino covers one black square.

A vertical domino covers 0 or 2 black squares.

To cover an even number of black squares there must be an even number of horizontal dominoes.

s

Joined
23 Jun 05
Moves
3583
16 May 10

Originally posted by iamatiger
Colour alternate columns black / white in vertical stripes.

There are 32 black squares.

A horizontal domino covers one black square.

A vertical domino covers 0 or 2 black squares.

To cover an even number of black squares there must be an even number of horizontal dominoes.
How can a vertical domino cover 0 or 2 black squares?

BK

Joined
24 Jan 09
Moves
5514
16 May 10

thats wat im thinking too...

f
Defend the Universe

127.0.0.1

Joined
18 Dec 03
Moves
16687
16 May 10

Originally posted by skims
How can a vertical domino cover 0 or 2 black squares?
If every other vertical column is black, then a vertical domino will either be on a black column or a white one. Hence: 0 or 2

Joined
26 Apr 03
Moves
26771
17 May 10

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
Two dominoes side by side make a square. You can rotate that square 90 degrees without affecting anything outside of it. You can't do that with one domino. Thus, you have to have pairs of dominoes that are offset from the rest.
This is is a very good one in its own right!

Is it possible to cover a chessboard with dominoes, such that there are no two dominoes which are exactly side-by-side, i.e. no internal 2*2 squares as described by AThousandYoung?

m

Joined
07 Sep 05
Moves
35068
17 May 10
1 edit

Originally posted by iamatiger
Is it possible to cover a chessboard with dominoes, such that there are no two dominoes which are exactly side-by-side, i.e. no internal 2*2 squares as described by AThousandYoung?
Interesting...no, it isn't. I used the following argument.

Place a domino in a corner. Let's say a1/b1. Then there must be one at a2/a3 (because if it was at a2/b2 we'd have a square).

We can keep using similar arguments to force lots of other placements. There must be dominoes at: b2/c2, c1/d1, b3/b4, a4/a5, c3/d3, d2/e2, e1/f1, c4/c5, b5/b6, a6/a7, a8/b8, b7/c7, c6/d6...

But now, either we place a domino at d4/d5 (making a square with c4/c5), or at both d4/e4 and d5/e5 (making a square between them). So it's not possible.

(You can continue and fill the board with only 1 such square, though).

Joined
26 Apr 03
Moves
26771
17 May 10

Good one, is there an easy way to decide whether any given set of squares can be covered with dominoes, without any 2x2 subsquares?