With some Sudoku puzzles being as frustrating as they can be it would be nice to be given some genuine valuable help. Not to out and out solve them for us, but instead put us on the right track so we know that we are not wasting valuable time sitting and staring at them for hours on end getting just a little further, while possibly following the wrong line of thought. Nowadays with the aid of all the technology to hand would it be easier for us to learn how to solve Sudoku's from a written or video format...
Analyzing the written side, Sudoku itself is normally a written format, in other words they are created in a similar format as that of a crossword in a newspaper or in a compilation of various Sudoku puzzles in a book. All we have to do then is fill in all the blank spaces with the correct sequence of numbers. Easier said than done sometimes.
Assuming the written format contained diagrams there would have to be a multitude of diagrams showing all the possible variations that are possible with certain types of puzzle. Not only that, but the Sudoku world contains many words depicting certain formulas and sequences that unless you knew exactly what each one means and stands for can lead to possible confusion.
Over the decades and centuries we have used written format to teach, learn, and be taught for countless subjects, but perhaps when it comes to things such as Sudoku solving and such like an alternative format could possibly serve us better.
Let us find out...
Looking at the video format for solving Sudoku it has to be said how straightforward and simple it all is. This step-by-step method makes it possible for us to learn how to solve even the very hardest of Sudoku puzzles. The difference between learning from text in comparison to video is like having the trainer actually sitting next to you as opposed to sifting through pages and pages of possibilities.
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