The world-wide Sudoku craze is starting to ebb off – unfortunately, Mr. Lee’s book has been laying around in our labs for quite some time. So far so good: is it still worth buying?
front Programming Sudoku   the review back Programming Sudoku   the review

Programming Sudoku is divided into seven chapters. The first looks at the rules of the game and can serve as an excellent introduction to the game for beginners and people who never cared about Sudoku puzzles(e.g. yours truly).

The second chapter looks at Visual Basic.NET and at designing applications for Windows. A nice load of basics are transported in the process: people who can program in C or VB6 will be able to pick the ball with ease.

The next three chapters look at various algorithmic tricks that can be used to tackle Sudoku puzzles. Even though Sudoku itself is straightforward, solving “difficult” puzzles can require extremely sophisticated and interesting algorithms…

Chapter six is especially interesting: it looks at methods for generating puzzles. Toppling around solving algorithms generally is a very interesting approach: this tome takes it to the max.

Finally, an appendix looks at a soduku derivative called Kakuro…

Wei-Meng Lee did an excellent job clarifying key concepts. The sample code is easy to understand, images are deployed wherever they are useful:
page Programming Sudoku   the review

In the end, Programming Sudoku is an excellent read for people who feel like reading up on methods for solving puzzles with a PC. The methods learned here probably can be applied to other games easily… However, the book has an additional positive effect: it serves as a quick introduction into Visual Basic.NET. If you currently develop Palm apps and plan to move over to .NET CF, getting this book will pay out. As for the price: at 17$@Amazon’s , it’s a total bargain!

Related posts:

  1. Programming Collective Intelligence – the review
  2. Astraware Sudoku Review
  3. AI for Game Developers review
  4. Event Based Programming review
  5. Mastering algorithms in C review

2 Responses to “Programming Sudoku – the review”

  1. Can I put in a plug for my favorite Palm Sudoku?

    Andrew Gregory’s Sudoku. Works well, generates puzzles, lots of solving tools available but not required.

  2. Hi,
    as I am a non-Sudoku-player, I rate these games only by their tech.

    Resco Sudoku IMHO has the best puzzle generator of them all:
    http://www.resco.net/palm/sudoku/default.asp

    All the best
    Tam Hanna

Leave a Reply

(required)

(required)

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Subscribe without commenting

© 2012 TamsPalm - the Palm OS / web OS Blog Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha