Enumerating Cryptarithms Using Deterministic Finite Automata

07/27/2018
by   Yuki Nozaki, et al.
0

A cryptarithm is a mathematical puzzle where given an arithmetic equation written with letters rather than numerals, a player must discover an assignment of numerals on letters that makes the equation hold true. In this paper, we propose a method to construct a DFA that accepts cryptarithms that admit (unique) solutions for each base. We implemented the method and constructed a DFA for bases k < 7. Those DFAs can be used as complete catalogues of cryptarithms,whose applications include enumeration of and counting the exact numbers G_k(n) of cryptarithm instances with n digits that admit base-k solutions. Moreover, explicit formulas for G_2(n) and G_3(n) are given.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
10/24/2020

On the Expressiveness of Büchi Arithmetic

We show that the existential fragment of Büchi arithmetic is strictly le...
research
08/02/2021

Convergence of a finite difference scheme for the Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation defined on an expanding circle

This paper presents a finite difference method combined with the Crank–N...
research
02/21/2023

Rewriting rules for arithmetics in alternate base systems

For alternate Cantor real base numeration systems we generalize the resu...
research
02/07/2020

Computational Aspects of Sturdy and Flimsy Numbers

Following Stolarsky, we say that a natural number n is flimsy in base b ...
research
06/07/2023

First-Order Quantification over Automata

Deciding formulas mixing arithmetic and uninterpreted predicates is of p...
research
07/04/2018

A complete system of deduction for Sigma formulas

The Sigma formulas of the language of arithmetic express semidecidable r...
research
06/01/2021

Insertion in constructed normal numbers

Defined by Borel, a real number is normal to an integer base b, greater ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset