A super new pattern discovered by shye over at the New Sudoku Players Forum and posted in November 2021. The full write up is on this thread.
To quote shye it is "built around a very simple idea, that being when a candidate in an intersecting row and column is limited to the same box, it must be placed in the intersecting cell".
Take row A and column 1 and consider candidate 9. Clearly the cell marked with X would satisfy 9 for both the row and the column. Both the row and the column have one remaining cell outside box 1 - cells marked Y and Z. A 9 in Y would exclude X and necessitate another 9 in Z or maybe in the cells marked a. Same goes for 9 in Z.
The conclusion is that 9 must appear at least once in the three cells X, Y or Z.
Knowing one candidate fits in X, Y and Z at least once doesn't get us very far since "there is no common seen cell to eliminate a candidate" but the pattern - a 'firework' - can explode outwards from the intersection if multiple candidates share the intersection. In the diagram above candidate 8 also works on the same logic as 9.
That gives us an interesting weak link between 8 and 9 in X that obliges at least one of Y and Z to be 8 or 9. We could include this link in AICs and other chaining strategies.
Triple Firework
The magic starts when there are three candidates exhibiting the same firework pattern. Following Shye's thread I'll reproduce "Triple Laser", the puzzle formulated by forum contributor Qinlux and then one of my own next.
A1, A9 and J9 exhibit the firework pattern with candidates 1, 2 and 3. We know that each candidate must appear at least once in these three cells and we have three firework candidates so that makes a classic Locked Set. We can't be certain which cells will ultimately be 1, 2 or 3 (except 3 is already excluded from J9) but a locked set excludes other candidates, so we can remove them. This greatly simplifies the rest of the puzzle which would otherwise require laborious chains.
Note that 1, 2 and 3 are absent from the blue shaded cells. This is how to spot the pattern. Also note that like triples in other strategies, it is not required that {1,2,3} be present in both wing cells, merely that they are present across the three cells. The pattern does require {1,2,3} in the intersection cell.
This Triple runs off {3,7,8} from the intersection cell F4. I've marked the cells which lack these candidates in light blue to highlight how outside box 5 there is only one cell in each of row F and column 4 where {3,7,8} can fit. The eliminations are in yellow.
Triple Fireworks: The three cells [F1|F4|C4] are a locked set that must contain {3/7/8} therefore 4/5/6 removed from C4
Out of some 45,000 hard puzzles in one test set I found just over 300 examples, comparable to Naked Quads.
Quadruple Firework
Taking the idea to the next level - a quadruple firework display. Now, I've searched through thousands of difficult puzzles and not found another example beyond the demonstration puzzle "Cobra Roll" created by jovi_al, so I am using that puzzle to illustrate.
Actually, this is two double fireworks that happen to align on four cells. Down in the bottom left corner on J1 we have two fireworks on candidates {1,2}. I've drawn the cells that don't contain 1 or 2 in light brown. The second double firework hangs on D6 and the candidates {3,4}. The wings of both these patterns are the same two cells: D1 and J6.
While we have exactly four numbers in four cells the eliminations are a little bit more complicated than the triple. The intersection cells eliminate everything that is not a firework candidate, so J1 will keep only {1,2} and D6 will keep only {3,4}. While D1 and J6 will keep all four candidates {1,2,3,4}, if not already removed.
This pattern is rare because it not only requires four fireworks, they must be aligned just so, too many coincidences. But the logic is enjoyable.
There are a good many novel uses of this pattern in more advanced ways that I don't need to duplicate here, the thread is clear. For this release of the solver I've included the two types above and will further document when or if I can code up more variants.
Fireworks Exemplars
These puzzles require Fireworks strategies at some point but are otherwise mostly basic strategies such as Pointing Pairs
They make good practice puzzles.
Discovered by Klaus Brenner
I don't understand how in Stuart's example of a triple firework (3,7,8) this can be an example of a hidden triple when there's a 7 in E4 and an 8 in D4.
Thank you for an explanation in advance.
REPLY TO THIS POST
... by: Maik
Sunday 17-Dec-2023
Wait, in Triple Firework, you can also remove candidates from the four cells in the intersection box which are not on the intersecting lines, right? In Triple Firework example 1, candidate 2 in B7 can be removed, because if B7 were 2, both A1 and J9 would have to be 2, which obviously can't be the case. Also candidate 1 in C8 can be removed. And in the next example, candidate 7 from E6.
REPLY TO THIS POST
... by: David Harkness
Thursday 9-Nov-2023
Peter,
I suspect the pattern holds for any candidate in the triple that isn't in the intersection as long as it only appears in one or both of the wing cells (Y and/or Z) and not in any of the other cells in the row/column being examined. If not, it won't be locked to XYZ.
If I find an example of such a case, I'll post again.
David
REPLY TO THIS POST
... by: JRTRCT
Sunday 9-Jan-2022
The puzzle Tulip by Piatato (link at the end of the comment) has a quadruple firework on F1J1F4J4 (which chains into a triple firework) that your sudoku solver cannot spot. The solver is forced to use an alternating inference chain to break open the puzzle. Manually entering the deductions allows the solver to finish the puzzle using only basic strategies.
Andrew, a strategy will never require a candidate. It's like saying the more information we have, the worse. (Avoidable Rectangles and similar strategies are an exception [kinda], but even then they only ask if the candidate could've existed in the cells in question. That is why givens aren't considered there)
The pattern will still work even if certain candidates are missing from the intersection, like normal hidden triples. Speaking of hidden triples...
How I understand this pattern
Triple fireworks are just hidden triples, with the three cells in very different places however. In a hidden triple, the three candidates must exist at least one in the three cells of the pattern. A firework is a way of establishing that statement.
However, there are other ways to establish that, like a simple strong link between two of the cells, or maybe a chain starting and ending with a strong link with the ends being the two wing cells.
Same goes for 4-fireworks, they're hidden quads.
Sudoku X Addendum
I see massive potential with Fireworks in Sudoku X. Diagonals can replace one or both row or column, and when there is a single firework in regular Sudoku there are no common peers so there are no useful eliminations, but in Sudoku X even a single firework can provide oppurtunities for eliminations because of the diagonals.
(Variants don't get much love by the community, even though they provide objectively more interesting solving techniques... Sad...)
tebo replies:
Sunday 31-Jul-2022
Anonymous: You state that a firework is a way of establishing another pattern, and "there are other ways". Neither Andrew nor shye deny there are other ways. Andrew states the "three firework candidates ... make a classic Locked Set". As I see it, the Triple Firework pattern creates a new "House" within which the Locked Set exists. Patterns like Fireworks create a framework within which a pattern is humanly recognizable. The question is, are *all* the "other ways" simpler than Fireworks?
Anonymous replies:
Sunday 28-Aug-2022
tebo: My point was that some of these could be implemented in to the solver. There are complicated ways, but a simple strong link between two cells is simple enough to implement.
Add to this Thread
... by: Steven
Saturday 8-Jan-2022
For the triple firework example, is it necessary for the intersection cell to have {1,2,3}?
Since each candidate in {1,2,3} (by the original pattern at the top) must appear at least once in X, Y, and Z (in this case, A1, A9, and J9)... I don't think it's necessary, just like any other triple.
Of course, I don't see a way for 3 to be eliminated from the intersection cell without ruining the pattern, but it still counts
REPLY TO THIS POST
... by: jovi_al
Sunday 19-Dec-2021
Fantastic to see a page on this! Just want to add, the triple firework example was set by user Qinlux (the puzzle title being "Triple Laser"), and the quadruple firework example was created by myself (the puzzle title being "Cobra Roll")! This is something we've all been working on for many months, so it's very exciting to see a page on it here :)
Andrew Stuart writes:
I am very happy to include that in the main article text, good have clarity, especially as far as credits go. Cheers!
While using the solver on this puzzle I discovered that there was a new addition to the solver, and a very exciting one. This pattern is very clever.
I'd also like to propose a strategy for Sudoku X: Since 9 is locked to A1, A9 and J1, if the puzzle were a Sudoku X, 9 can be eliminated from E5 and J9.
Comments
... by: blortch1
Thank you for an explanation in advance.
... by: Maik
... by: David Harkness
I suspect the pattern holds for any candidate in the triple that isn't in the intersection as long as it only appears in one or both of the wing cells (Y and/or Z) and not in any of the other cells in the row/column being examined. If not, it won't be locked to XYZ.
If I find an example of such a case, I'll post again.
David
... by: JRTRCT
https://app.crackingthecryptic.com/sudoku/fpuzzlesN4IgzglgXgpiBcBOANCALhNAbO8QBUBXLCABxFQENC0ALAewCcEQAFCStT+ikR4mGBhoWAOSYBbSlgAEYQgBN6Aa0Iz+OMDMqlSWAJ4A6XgHNGEBQgDaV4AF9k9xw6egAbtMK4ALKhMQ3GAA7BDR+GBcQDywvBAA2PwDg0PCXNOcAXWRbdPdPXAAmRMCQ+DCvSOjY+ABmYuSy1Odm1yj8hAB2etLyiMzs1qrcAEZulIqW3Mr2+ABWMcaJ1zss2zaY3C6QfxLxvuXHderR7aSepoPLo58F3pWB64R5093F/anDoYQUF4a7yZaj3gCV+5wqq0GMwAHLcLkCfjs/hdckCiqC9iivrVYUt7jlAVjnoiwfsgTD0W8PpCNggTsSMf18XkacCce9PjMEWcGVcsWj6ZTJhCqdMWVsBf9mdUidzBZcVhk7EA=
... by: Anonymous
(Avoidable Rectangles and similar strategies are an exception [kinda], but even then they only ask if the candidate could've existed in the cells in question. That is why givens aren't considered there)
The pattern will still work even if certain candidates are missing from the intersection, like normal hidden triples. Speaking of hidden triples...
How I understand this pattern
Triple fireworks are just hidden triples, with the three cells in very different places however.
In a hidden triple, the three candidates must exist at least one in the three cells of the pattern. A firework is a way of establishing that statement.
However, there are other ways to establish that, like a simple strong link between two of the cells, or maybe a chain starting and ending with a strong link with the ends being the two wing cells.
Same goes for 4-fireworks, they're hidden quads.
Sudoku X Addendum
I see massive potential with Fireworks in Sudoku X. Diagonals can replace one or both row or column, and when there is a single firework in regular Sudoku there are no common peers so there are no useful eliminations, but in Sudoku X even a single firework can provide oppurtunities for eliminations because of the diagonals.
(Variants don't get much love by the community, even though they provide objectively more interesting solving techniques... Sad...)
... by: Steven
Since each candidate in {1,2,3} (by the original pattern at the top) must appear at least once in X, Y, and Z (in this case, A1, A9, and J9)... I don't think it's necessary, just like any other triple.
Of course, I don't see a way for 3 to be eliminated from the intersection cell without ruining the pattern, but it still counts
... by: jovi_al
Just want to add, the triple firework example was set by user Qinlux (the puzzle title being "Triple Laser"), and the quadruple firework example was created by myself (the puzzle title being "Cobra Roll")! This is something we've all been working on for many months, so it's very exciting to see a page on it here :)
... by: Anonymous
While using the solver on this puzzle I discovered that there was a new addition to the solver, and a very exciting one. This pattern is very clever.
I'd also like to propose a strategy for Sudoku X: Since 9 is locked to A1, A9 and J1, if the puzzle were a Sudoku X, 9 can be eliminated from E5 and J9.
Also, creative name.