The second in the 'Nine congruent rectangles with the octominoes' series. Last time the rectangles were closer to square and had less holes. but this time I decided to tackle 9x37 rectangles with 5-hole configurations in the centre, which would make it even harder than the last batch. And that last batch was hardly a walk in the cake.
The First Eight
The more skinny a rectangle is, the harder it gets to tile with polyominoes. Because thin rectangles favour pieces with a long flat side, and these pieces run out fast. Then, every time you get to the end of a rectangle, the two corners there usually demand a piece with a clear right angle. And there aren't too many of those either. Well, there are a few, but they're generally the simpler more cooperative pieces, the kind you want to save for the dreaded final rectangle. It was painful: when I'd put all but two pieces into a rectangle I'd then mentally dissect the remaining 16-omino shaped hole, trying to partition it in such a way that both halves were awkward wiggly pieces. But it pretty much never happens that way - it's either one nice, practically rectangular, piece and a wiggly piece, or two wigglies, one of which has been already used elsewhere in the construction. So inevitably, each completion of a rectangle left the pool of nice endgame pieces a little emptier than before. And that means when you get to the final rectangle, you get problems.
Fig. 1: Getting the easy bit out of the way with. |
The Last Rectangle
I'm sure I've said before on here that for solutions like these 20% of the pieces take 80% of the time. In this case it was more that 10% of the pieces take 90% of the time, or possibly more.
The pieces I was left with after tackling the first eight were... less than ideal, let's just say. Some were the kind of pieces it's easy enough to use up in a large, wide rectangle, but that don't play so nicely in a construction like this where it's all edges. Some were just hideous. Check out numbers 2, 6, 7 and 41 in the image below.
Fig. 2: The remaining pieces, and the shape to fit them into. |
Fig. 3: The full construction, with the rectangle solved by Patrick Hamlyn shown in orange. |
Apparently his software hit upon 866,000 almost-solutions with 40 of the 41 pieces placed before finding this, so I would have had to have been very patient with mops.exe to even have a hope of turning this up.
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