Sliding Puzzle
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A sliding puzzle, sliding block puzzle, or sliding tile puzzle is a
combination puzzle In mathematics, a combination is a selection of items from a set (mathematics), set that has distinct members, such that the order of selection does not matter (unlike permutations). For example, given three fruits, say an apple, an orange and a ...
that challenges a player to slide (frequently flat) pieces along certain routes (usually on a board) to establish a certain end-configuration. The pieces to be moved may consist of simple shapes, or they may be imprinted with colours, patterns, sections of a larger picture (like a jigsaw puzzle), numbers, or letters. Sliding puzzles are essentially two-dimensional in nature, even if the sliding is facilitated by mechanically interlinked pieces (like partially encaged marbles) or three-dimensional tokens. In manufactured wood and plastic products, the linking and encaging is often achieved in combination, through
mortise-and-tenon A mortise and tenon (occasionally mortice and tenon) is a joint that connects two pieces of wood or other material. Woodworkers around the world have used it for thousands of years to join pieces of wood, mainly when the adjoining pieces connect ...
key channels along the edges of the pieces. In at least one vintage case of the popular Chinese cognate game Huarong Road, a wire screen prevents lifting of the pieces, which remain loose. As the illustration shows, some sliding puzzles are
mechanical puzzles A mechanical puzzle is a puzzle presented as a set of mechanically interlinked pieces in which the solution is to manipulate the whole object or parts of it. While puzzles of this type have been in use by humanity as early as the 3rd century BC ...
. However, the mechanical fixtures are usually not essential to these puzzles; the parts could as well be tokens on a flat board that are moved according to certain rules. Unlike
tour puzzle A tour puzzle is a puzzle in which the player travels around a board (usually but not necessarily two-dimensional) using a token which represents a character. Maze puzzles are often of this type. Sometimes the player has more than one token wit ...
s, a sliding block puzzle prohibits lifting any pieces off the board. This property separates sliding puzzles from rearrangement puzzles. Hence, finding moves and the paths opened up by each move within the two-dimensional confines of the board are important parts of solving sliding block puzzles. The oldest type of sliding puzzle is the
fifteen puzzle The 15 puzzle (also called Gem Puzzle, Boss Puzzle, Game of Fifteen, Mystic Square and more) is a sliding puzzle. It has 15 square tiles numbered 1 to 15 in a frame that is 4 tile positions high and 4 tile positions wide, with one unoccupied pos ...
, invented by Noyes Chapman in 1880;
Sam Loyd Samuel Loyd (January 30, 1841 – April 10, 1911) was an American chess player, chess composer, puzzle author, and recreational mathematics, recreational mathematician. Loyd was born in Philadelphia but raised in New York City. As a chess comp ...
is often wrongly credited with making sliding puzzles popular based on his false claim that he invented the fifteen puzzle. Chapman's invention initiated a puzzle craze in the early 1880s. From the 1950s through the 1980s sliding puzzles employing letters to form words were very popular. These sorts of puzzles have several possible solutions, as may be seen from examples such as Ro-Let (a letter-based fifteen puzzle), Scribe-o (4x8), and Lingo. The fifteen puzzle has been computerized (as
puzzle video game Puzzle video games make up a broad genre of video games that emphasize puzzle solving. The types of puzzles can test problem-solving skills, including logic, pattern recognition, Sequence, sequence solving, Spatial ability, spatial recognition, ...
s) and examples are available to play for free online from many Web pages. It is a descendant of the
jigsaw puzzle A jigsaw puzzle (with context, sometimes just jigsaw or just puzzle) is a tiling puzzle that requires the assembly of often irregularly shaped interlocking and mosaicked pieces. Typically each piece has a portion of a picture, which is comple ...
in that its point is to form a picture on-screen. The last square of the puzzle is then displayed automatically once the other pieces have been lined up.


Group theory

As a famous example of the sliding puzzle, it can be proved that the
15 puzzle The 15 puzzle (also called Gem Puzzle, Boss Puzzle, Game of Fifteen, Mystic Square and more) is a sliding puzzle. It has 15 square tiles numbered 1 to 15 in a frame that is 4 tile positions high and 4 tile positions wide, with one unoccupied pos ...
can be represented by the
alternating group In mathematics, an alternating group is the Group (mathematics), group of even permutations of a finite set. The alternating group on a set of elements is called the alternating group of degree , or the alternating group on letters and denoted ...
A_, because the combinations of the 15 puzzle can be generated by 3-cycles. In fact, any n \times m sliding puzzle with square tiles of equal size can be represented by A_.


Gallery

File:15-puzzle.svg, A solved 15-puzzle File:15-puzzle-Rate-Your-Mind-Pal.svg, A solved 15-puzzle with letters forming a sentence File:15-puzzle_image.svg, A solved 15-puzzle with an image File:Combination Puzzle 7x7 sliding piece.jpg, A 7x7 sliding puzzle. The goal is for each image to appear only once horizontally, vertically, and diagonally. There is more than one solution to this puzzle. File:batgirl.gif, A 3x3 sliding puzzle featuring a comic book character File:Hakoiri3.jpg, An example of the
Klotski Klotski (from ) is a sliding block puzzle thought to have originated in the early 20th century. The name may refer to a specific layout of ten blocks, or in a more global sense to refer to a whole group of similar sliding-block puzzles where the ...
puzzle File:15-Puzzle.jpg, An unsolvable puzzle due to the pieces not being in an even permutation


Examples of sliding puzzles

*
Fifteen puzzle The 15 puzzle (also called Gem Puzzle, Boss Puzzle, Game of Fifteen, Mystic Square and more) is a sliding puzzle. It has 15 square tiles numbered 1 to 15 in a frame that is 4 tile positions high and 4 tile positions wide, with one unoccupied pos ...
*
Klotski Klotski (from ) is a sliding block puzzle thought to have originated in the early 20th century. The name may refer to a specific layout of ten blocks, or in a more global sense to refer to a whole group of similar sliding-block puzzles where the ...
* Minus Cube *
Rush Hour A rush hour (American English, British English) or peak hour (Australian English, Indian English) is a part of the day during which traffic congestion on roads and crowding on public transport is at its highest. Normally, this happens twice e ...
*
Sokoban is a puzzle video game in which the player pushes boxes around in a warehouse, trying to get them to storage locations. The game was designed in 1981 by Hiroyuki Imabayashi and first published in Japan in 1982 by his company Thinking Rabbit for ...
*
Rubik's Slide Rubik's Slide electronic puzzle game is a Rubik's-branded combination puzzle produced by TechnoSource in 2010. Players must manipulate the circuit to re-create a specified pattern, with 10,000 puzzles built into the device. Description The puz ...


See also

*
Ro (video game) ''Ro'' is a puzzle game first developed for the Qualcomm Brew development platform in 2006 and for the iPhone platform in 2008. History Ro was initially created as part of a larger unpublished FMV game titled, "Red Sky", which was proposed t ...
– A rotational variation * Rubik's Cube


References

* ''Sliding Piece Puzzles'' (by
Edward Hordern Lebbeus Edward A Hordern, known as Edward Hordern, (21 March 1941 - 2 May 2000 GRO Register of Deaths: MAY 2000 32B 271 HENLEY - Lebbeus Edward A Hordern, DoB = 21 Mar 1941, aged 59) was the world's leading authority on sliding block puzzles, ...
, 1986,
Oxford University Press Oxford University Press (OUP) is the publishing house of the University of Oxford. It is the largest university press in the world. Its first book was printed in Oxford in 1478, with the Press officially granted the legal right to print books ...
, {{ISBN, 0-19-853204-0) is said to be the definitive volume on this type of puzzle. * ''Winning Ways'' (by
Elwyn Ralph Berlekamp Elwyn Ralph Berlekamp (September 6, 1940 – April 9, 2019) was a professor of mathematics and computer science at the University of California, Berkeley.Academic Press Academic Press (AP) is an academic book publisher founded in 1941. It launched a British division in the 1950s. Academic Press was acquired by Harcourt, Brace & World in 1969. Reed Elsevier said in 2000 it would buy Harcourt, a deal complete ...
) * ''The 15 Puzzle'' (by
Jerry Slocum Jerry Slocum (born July 5, 1931) is an American historian, collector and author specializing on the field of mechanical puzzles. He worked as an engineer at Hughes Aircraft prior to retiring and dedicating his life to puzzles. His personal puzz ...
&
Dic Sonneveld DIC may refer to: Biology and chemistry * Diisopropylcarbodiimide, a reagent in organic chemistry * Disseminated intravascular coagulation, a pathological activation of coagulation (blood clotting) mechanisms * Dissolved inorganic carbon, the su ...
, 2006, Slocum Puzzle Foundation)
US Patent 4872682
- sliding puzzle wrapped on Rubik's Cube Mechanical puzzles Combination puzzles