Can you solve it? The deductive decade – ten years of Monday puzzles

4 hours ago 3

Forgive me the indulgence of celebrating ten years of this column. Toot toot!

I began posting biweekly brainteasers at the end of May 2015, originally addressing you folk as “guzzlers” – Guardian puzzlers. The cringy coinage didn’t stick, but the column did, and here we are a decade and 260 columns later.

Some data. Total page views are now 38 million, which averages out at about 150,000 views per puzzle – a whopping number, I’d say. Thanks to everyone for the encouragement and support.

For today’s offerings I decided to go back through the archive and repost ten of my favourites. Some may be familiar, others not.

Please graze, maybe even guzzle – and here’s to the next ten years!

1. Bat and ball

Three friends (A, B and C) are playing ping pong. They play the usual way: the winner stays on, and the loser waits their turn again. At the end of the day, they summarise the number of games that each of them played:

A played 10

B played 15

C played 17.

Who lost the second game?

2. Tricky trams

tram

Why are the tram’s overhead cables positioned to make a zigzag, rather than straight line?

3. Read the question

3. What is never odd or even?

4. Catch the cat

doors

A straight corridor has 7 doors along one side. Behind one of the doors sits a cat. Your mission is to find the cat by opening the correct door. Each day you can open only one door. If the cat is there, you win. If the cat is not there, the door closes, and you must wait until the next day before you can open a door again.

If the cat was always to sit behind the same door, you would be able to find it in at most seven days, by opening each door in turn. But this mischievous moggy is restless. Every night it moves randomly either one door to the left or one to the right. Although if it is behind the first or last door, it has only one option for where it can move.

How many days do you now need to make sure you can catch the cat?

5. Mystery number

I have a ten digit number, abcdefghij. Each of the digits is different, and

  • a is divisible by 1

  • ab is divisible by 2

  • abc is divisible by 3

  • abcd is divisible by 4

  • abcde is divisible by 5

  • abcdef is divisible by 6

  • abcdefg is divisible by 7

  • abcdefgh is divisible by 8

  • abcdefghi is divisible by 9

  • abcdefghij is divisible by 10

What’s my number?

[To clarify: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, and j are all single digits. Each digit from 0 to 9 is represented by exactly one letter. The number abcdefghij is a ten-digit number whose first digit is a, second digit is b, and so on. It does not mean that you multiply a x b x c x…]

6. Disappearing cub

Matt Pritchard Puzzle
Photograph: Matt Pritchard

This picture has not been doctored. Explain why the reflection has a yellow lion cub.

7. Crazy triangle

Show that there is a triangle, the sum of whose three heights is less than 1mm, that has an area greater than the surface of the Earth (510m km2).

8. Deck dilemma

Your friend chooses at random a card from a standard deck of 52 cards, and keeps this card concealed. You have to guess which of the 52 cards it is.

Before your guess, you can ask your friend one of the following three questions:

  • is the card red?

  • is the card a face card? (Jack, Queen or King)

  • is the card the ace of spades?

Your friend will answer truthfully. What question would you ask that gives you the best chance of guessing the correct card?

9. The question with no question

(a) All of the following.

(b) None of the following.

(c) Some of the following.

(d) All of the above.

(e) None of the above.

[Just to reassure you, nothing has been omitted here.]

10. Triangle fold

Paper puzzle

Find a way to fold a square piece of paper into an equilateral triangle. The triangle can be of any size.

I’ll be back at 5pm UK with the solutions.

PLEASE NO SPOILERS Instead please recommend your favourites from the 260 you have read here over the years.

Sources: 1. Adrian Paenza, 2. Kvantik magaizine, 3. Des MacHale, 4. New York Times. 5. John Conway, 6. Matt Pritchard, 7. Trần Phương, 8. Henk Tijms, 9. Parabola, 10. The Paper Puzzle Book.

I’ve been setting a puzzle here on alternate Mondays since 2015. I’m always on the look-out for great puzzles. If you would like to suggest one, email me.

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