When did I make this puzzle?











up vote
14
down vote

favorite
1












I was flipping through some of my old puzzling notebooks, and I found an old puzzle of mine I don't quite remember.



I tried to find when I made it (I put the date I made all of my puzzles on them), but I couldn't.



After looking at the puzzle a bit more, I figured out... that's what I had to find.



enter image description here



I eventually figured out when I made the puzzle... but... can you?




Note: I believe my younger self might have missed something on the geometry part. The shape with all sides equal is a square.




Hint #1:




You need to be a mastermind to solve part one.











share|improve this question




























    up vote
    14
    down vote

    favorite
    1












    I was flipping through some of my old puzzling notebooks, and I found an old puzzle of mine I don't quite remember.



    I tried to find when I made it (I put the date I made all of my puzzles on them), but I couldn't.



    After looking at the puzzle a bit more, I figured out... that's what I had to find.



    enter image description here



    I eventually figured out when I made the puzzle... but... can you?




    Note: I believe my younger self might have missed something on the geometry part. The shape with all sides equal is a square.




    Hint #1:




    You need to be a mastermind to solve part one.











    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      14
      down vote

      favorite
      1









      up vote
      14
      down vote

      favorite
      1






      1





      I was flipping through some of my old puzzling notebooks, and I found an old puzzle of mine I don't quite remember.



      I tried to find when I made it (I put the date I made all of my puzzles on them), but I couldn't.



      After looking at the puzzle a bit more, I figured out... that's what I had to find.



      enter image description here



      I eventually figured out when I made the puzzle... but... can you?




      Note: I believe my younger self might have missed something on the geometry part. The shape with all sides equal is a square.




      Hint #1:




      You need to be a mastermind to solve part one.











      share|improve this question















      I was flipping through some of my old puzzling notebooks, and I found an old puzzle of mine I don't quite remember.



      I tried to find when I made it (I put the date I made all of my puzzles on them), but I couldn't.



      After looking at the puzzle a bit more, I figured out... that's what I had to find.



      enter image description here



      I eventually figured out when I made the puzzle... but... can you?




      Note: I believe my younger self might have missed something on the geometry part. The shape with all sides equal is a square.




      Hint #1:




      You need to be a mastermind to solve part one.








      mathematics enigmatic-puzzle geometry






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 20 at 17:36

























      asked Nov 20 at 15:15









      Excited Raichu

      4,552754




      4,552754






















          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          11
          down vote



          accepted










          The answer is




          17 May, 2016




          Building on the answer from Mohirl, they got parts 1, 3, and 4 correct, but their mistake was in part 2.




          Move the first digit to the end. So 534 becomes 345. From the comments, part 1 was presented in roman numerals, so 345 was represented as iiiivv, and splitting it up in the groups the way the x are represented, we get iii i v v, equal to 3 1 5 5, and adding 1 to each number we get 4266 = r. The following math is therefore 4266 = sqrt(2) * (x + 1000), so x = 2016.5175... From part 4, we match the pattern and see that the year is 2016, month is 5, and date is 17.







          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
            – Excited Raichu
            Nov 21 at 0:42










          • Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
            – Mohirl
            Nov 21 at 12:29


















          up vote
          10
          down vote













          Updated to complete answer



          Final answer:




          18th May, 2016




          Part 1



          I believe the answer to part 1 is




          534




          I suspect the hint is talking about




          the Mastermind board game




          which means that the numbers on the right for each line




          indicate how many of the number on the left of the row are 1) correct but in the wrong position or 2) correct and in the correct position. Analysing these should give the correct values for the last row




          So, starting with row 5:




          We have a 2 on the right hand side, so one number is in the correct position, and the other two are wrong. Either the first digit of the hidden code is 1, the second is 9, or the third is 4. Lets assume 4 is the correct one (since that's the one we have most other information about). That means neither 1 or 9 are in the code.




          Then based on row 1:




          4 is correct, but in the wrong position, and neither 2 or 7 are in the code.




          From row 3:




          we already know 4 is in the wrong position, but so is either 3 or 6. 6 is in the last position in both rows 2 and 3, but it can't be right in one but wrong in the other. So 6 is out, and 3 must be the other correct but misplaced digit.




          That means that row 4:




          is telling us that 3 is in the second position. Which we already knew, since it's not the third (that's 4) and not the first (it was in the wrong place on row 3). So 2 and 8 are out.




          And since we now know what the last two digits are, row 2




          must be telling us that 5 is correct in the first position. So we have 534 as the answer for the missing row 6.




          Part 2



          Take the answer from part 1, and




          This took a while, but think I finally have it based on @ExcitedRaichu's hints in the comments. The answer to part 1 isn't actually 534,but V III IV. Taking the first character and putting it at the end gives III IV V, but then formatting that as XXX X X X gives III I V V, or 3 1 5 5. Add 1 to each digit to get 4266.




          Part 3



          If that's a square, then




          The diagonal also equals the radius. So sqrt(2)*(x+1000) = r. So take r from Part 2, divide it by sqrt2, and subtract 1000.




          Part 4



          The result from part 3 should




          give us 4 digits before the decimal point as the year, the first after as the month, and the next two the day. 4266/sqrt(2) gives 3016.517529... Subtract 1000, and we get 2016.518 when rounded to 3 decimal places (or 2016.517 truncated). Which based gives us a date of 18th May, 2016.







          share|improve this answer























          • Correct so far. +1
            – Excited Raichu
            Nov 20 at 18:18










          • For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
            – Excited Raichu
            Nov 20 at 18:33










          • try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
            – Excited Raichu
            Nov 20 at 18:47


















          up vote
          3
          down vote













          Partial answer:




          1. I have no idea what 1 is, it could possibly be with roman numbers.

          2. the last entry of 1. (where the first is the last equals somehow xxx x x x = r)

          3. r = root( 2 * (x + 1000))

          4. probably: write x with 7 digits, 4 in front of the dot and 3 behind it. This should mean x is around 1000 to 9999 big







          share|improve this answer




























            up vote
            0
            down vote













            Partial:



            Step 1:




            Converting from Roman numerals to decimal, the diagram becomes:

            2 : 4 : 7 | 1 : :

            5 : 1 : 6 | 2 : :

            3 : 4 : 6 | 1 : 1 :

            8 : 3 : 2 | 2 : :

            1 : 9 : 4 | 2 : :

            ###### | 2 : 2 : 2

            I can not determine any noticeable pattern here...




            Step 2:




            Without step 1, I've idea what to do here...




            Step 3:




            The value of $x+1000$ is given by using Pythagoras. The diagonal of the square is the radius of the circle, $r$, and using the Pythagorean Theorem, we can determine that: $2 cdot (x+1000)^2 = r^2$.

            And therefore, $x = frac{r}{sqrt{2}} - 1000$.




            Step 4:




            I assume that step 3 will return a decimal number for x, and that the date of the puzzle creation can be determined by taking the first 4 digits as the year, the 1st decimal place as the month, and the 2nd and 3rd decimal places as the day of the month.







            share|improve this answer




























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              Very Partial Answer

              Here's my initial thinking:




              If step 1 is a matrix, it is unsolvable on its own because of the unknown third variable on the right side. If you attempt to solve the first five lines, there is only the trivial solution. Assuming, of course, that the symbols are literal roman numerals. I suspect that this is not the case.
              Step 2 seems to suggest that shifting the first character of the answer to step 1 to the end of the string becomes XXXXXX when one is added, or XXXXXX is a set of replacement characters for the string (suggesting it is 6 characters) that becomes the radius of the circle when 1 is added.
              Steps 3 and 4 appear to be self-explanatory







              share|improve this answer





















                Your Answer





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                5 Answers
                5






                active

                oldest

                votes








                5 Answers
                5






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes








                up vote
                11
                down vote



                accepted










                The answer is




                17 May, 2016




                Building on the answer from Mohirl, they got parts 1, 3, and 4 correct, but their mistake was in part 2.




                Move the first digit to the end. So 534 becomes 345. From the comments, part 1 was presented in roman numerals, so 345 was represented as iiiivv, and splitting it up in the groups the way the x are represented, we get iii i v v, equal to 3 1 5 5, and adding 1 to each number we get 4266 = r. The following math is therefore 4266 = sqrt(2) * (x + 1000), so x = 2016.5175... From part 4, we match the pattern and see that the year is 2016, month is 5, and date is 17.







                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 21 at 0:42










                • Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
                  – Mohirl
                  Nov 21 at 12:29















                up vote
                11
                down vote



                accepted










                The answer is




                17 May, 2016




                Building on the answer from Mohirl, they got parts 1, 3, and 4 correct, but their mistake was in part 2.




                Move the first digit to the end. So 534 becomes 345. From the comments, part 1 was presented in roman numerals, so 345 was represented as iiiivv, and splitting it up in the groups the way the x are represented, we get iii i v v, equal to 3 1 5 5, and adding 1 to each number we get 4266 = r. The following math is therefore 4266 = sqrt(2) * (x + 1000), so x = 2016.5175... From part 4, we match the pattern and see that the year is 2016, month is 5, and date is 17.







                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 21 at 0:42










                • Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
                  – Mohirl
                  Nov 21 at 12:29













                up vote
                11
                down vote



                accepted







                up vote
                11
                down vote



                accepted






                The answer is




                17 May, 2016




                Building on the answer from Mohirl, they got parts 1, 3, and 4 correct, but their mistake was in part 2.




                Move the first digit to the end. So 534 becomes 345. From the comments, part 1 was presented in roman numerals, so 345 was represented as iiiivv, and splitting it up in the groups the way the x are represented, we get iii i v v, equal to 3 1 5 5, and adding 1 to each number we get 4266 = r. The following math is therefore 4266 = sqrt(2) * (x + 1000), so x = 2016.5175... From part 4, we match the pattern and see that the year is 2016, month is 5, and date is 17.







                share|improve this answer














                The answer is




                17 May, 2016




                Building on the answer from Mohirl, they got parts 1, 3, and 4 correct, but their mistake was in part 2.




                Move the first digit to the end. So 534 becomes 345. From the comments, part 1 was presented in roman numerals, so 345 was represented as iiiivv, and splitting it up in the groups the way the x are represented, we get iii i v v, equal to 3 1 5 5, and adding 1 to each number we get 4266 = r. The following math is therefore 4266 = sqrt(2) * (x + 1000), so x = 2016.5175... From part 4, we match the pattern and see that the year is 2016, month is 5, and date is 17.








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 21 at 0:26

























                answered Nov 21 at 0:21









                Brad

                1364




                1364








                • 2




                  Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 21 at 0:42










                • Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
                  – Mohirl
                  Nov 21 at 12:29














                • 2




                  Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 21 at 0:42










                • Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
                  – Mohirl
                  Nov 21 at 12:29








                2




                2




                Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 21 at 0:42




                Er... this is correct, proper format and all. Why the downvotes?
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 21 at 0:42












                Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
                – Mohirl
                Nov 21 at 12:29




                Ha! I'd somehow missed this answer and just spent 20 minutes completing my own one! And I still got it wrong, because I rounded instead of truncating. Well done!
                – Mohirl
                Nov 21 at 12:29










                up vote
                10
                down vote













                Updated to complete answer



                Final answer:




                18th May, 2016




                Part 1



                I believe the answer to part 1 is




                534




                I suspect the hint is talking about




                the Mastermind board game




                which means that the numbers on the right for each line




                indicate how many of the number on the left of the row are 1) correct but in the wrong position or 2) correct and in the correct position. Analysing these should give the correct values for the last row




                So, starting with row 5:




                We have a 2 on the right hand side, so one number is in the correct position, and the other two are wrong. Either the first digit of the hidden code is 1, the second is 9, or the third is 4. Lets assume 4 is the correct one (since that's the one we have most other information about). That means neither 1 or 9 are in the code.




                Then based on row 1:




                4 is correct, but in the wrong position, and neither 2 or 7 are in the code.




                From row 3:




                we already know 4 is in the wrong position, but so is either 3 or 6. 6 is in the last position in both rows 2 and 3, but it can't be right in one but wrong in the other. So 6 is out, and 3 must be the other correct but misplaced digit.




                That means that row 4:




                is telling us that 3 is in the second position. Which we already knew, since it's not the third (that's 4) and not the first (it was in the wrong place on row 3). So 2 and 8 are out.




                And since we now know what the last two digits are, row 2




                must be telling us that 5 is correct in the first position. So we have 534 as the answer for the missing row 6.




                Part 2



                Take the answer from part 1, and




                This took a while, but think I finally have it based on @ExcitedRaichu's hints in the comments. The answer to part 1 isn't actually 534,but V III IV. Taking the first character and putting it at the end gives III IV V, but then formatting that as XXX X X X gives III I V V, or 3 1 5 5. Add 1 to each digit to get 4266.




                Part 3



                If that's a square, then




                The diagonal also equals the radius. So sqrt(2)*(x+1000) = r. So take r from Part 2, divide it by sqrt2, and subtract 1000.




                Part 4



                The result from part 3 should




                give us 4 digits before the decimal point as the year, the first after as the month, and the next two the day. 4266/sqrt(2) gives 3016.517529... Subtract 1000, and we get 2016.518 when rounded to 3 decimal places (or 2016.517 truncated). Which based gives us a date of 18th May, 2016.







                share|improve this answer























                • Correct so far. +1
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:18










                • For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:33










                • try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:47















                up vote
                10
                down vote













                Updated to complete answer



                Final answer:




                18th May, 2016




                Part 1



                I believe the answer to part 1 is




                534




                I suspect the hint is talking about




                the Mastermind board game




                which means that the numbers on the right for each line




                indicate how many of the number on the left of the row are 1) correct but in the wrong position or 2) correct and in the correct position. Analysing these should give the correct values for the last row




                So, starting with row 5:




                We have a 2 on the right hand side, so one number is in the correct position, and the other two are wrong. Either the first digit of the hidden code is 1, the second is 9, or the third is 4. Lets assume 4 is the correct one (since that's the one we have most other information about). That means neither 1 or 9 are in the code.




                Then based on row 1:




                4 is correct, but in the wrong position, and neither 2 or 7 are in the code.




                From row 3:




                we already know 4 is in the wrong position, but so is either 3 or 6. 6 is in the last position in both rows 2 and 3, but it can't be right in one but wrong in the other. So 6 is out, and 3 must be the other correct but misplaced digit.




                That means that row 4:




                is telling us that 3 is in the second position. Which we already knew, since it's not the third (that's 4) and not the first (it was in the wrong place on row 3). So 2 and 8 are out.




                And since we now know what the last two digits are, row 2




                must be telling us that 5 is correct in the first position. So we have 534 as the answer for the missing row 6.




                Part 2



                Take the answer from part 1, and




                This took a while, but think I finally have it based on @ExcitedRaichu's hints in the comments. The answer to part 1 isn't actually 534,but V III IV. Taking the first character and putting it at the end gives III IV V, but then formatting that as XXX X X X gives III I V V, or 3 1 5 5. Add 1 to each digit to get 4266.




                Part 3



                If that's a square, then




                The diagonal also equals the radius. So sqrt(2)*(x+1000) = r. So take r from Part 2, divide it by sqrt2, and subtract 1000.




                Part 4



                The result from part 3 should




                give us 4 digits before the decimal point as the year, the first after as the month, and the next two the day. 4266/sqrt(2) gives 3016.517529... Subtract 1000, and we get 2016.518 when rounded to 3 decimal places (or 2016.517 truncated). Which based gives us a date of 18th May, 2016.







                share|improve this answer























                • Correct so far. +1
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:18










                • For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:33










                • try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:47













                up vote
                10
                down vote










                up vote
                10
                down vote









                Updated to complete answer



                Final answer:




                18th May, 2016




                Part 1



                I believe the answer to part 1 is




                534




                I suspect the hint is talking about




                the Mastermind board game




                which means that the numbers on the right for each line




                indicate how many of the number on the left of the row are 1) correct but in the wrong position or 2) correct and in the correct position. Analysing these should give the correct values for the last row




                So, starting with row 5:




                We have a 2 on the right hand side, so one number is in the correct position, and the other two are wrong. Either the first digit of the hidden code is 1, the second is 9, or the third is 4. Lets assume 4 is the correct one (since that's the one we have most other information about). That means neither 1 or 9 are in the code.




                Then based on row 1:




                4 is correct, but in the wrong position, and neither 2 or 7 are in the code.




                From row 3:




                we already know 4 is in the wrong position, but so is either 3 or 6. 6 is in the last position in both rows 2 and 3, but it can't be right in one but wrong in the other. So 6 is out, and 3 must be the other correct but misplaced digit.




                That means that row 4:




                is telling us that 3 is in the second position. Which we already knew, since it's not the third (that's 4) and not the first (it was in the wrong place on row 3). So 2 and 8 are out.




                And since we now know what the last two digits are, row 2




                must be telling us that 5 is correct in the first position. So we have 534 as the answer for the missing row 6.




                Part 2



                Take the answer from part 1, and




                This took a while, but think I finally have it based on @ExcitedRaichu's hints in the comments. The answer to part 1 isn't actually 534,but V III IV. Taking the first character and putting it at the end gives III IV V, but then formatting that as XXX X X X gives III I V V, or 3 1 5 5. Add 1 to each digit to get 4266.




                Part 3



                If that's a square, then




                The diagonal also equals the radius. So sqrt(2)*(x+1000) = r. So take r from Part 2, divide it by sqrt2, and subtract 1000.




                Part 4



                The result from part 3 should




                give us 4 digits before the decimal point as the year, the first after as the month, and the next two the day. 4266/sqrt(2) gives 3016.517529... Subtract 1000, and we get 2016.518 when rounded to 3 decimal places (or 2016.517 truncated). Which based gives us a date of 18th May, 2016.







                share|improve this answer














                Updated to complete answer



                Final answer:




                18th May, 2016




                Part 1



                I believe the answer to part 1 is




                534




                I suspect the hint is talking about




                the Mastermind board game




                which means that the numbers on the right for each line




                indicate how many of the number on the left of the row are 1) correct but in the wrong position or 2) correct and in the correct position. Analysing these should give the correct values for the last row




                So, starting with row 5:




                We have a 2 on the right hand side, so one number is in the correct position, and the other two are wrong. Either the first digit of the hidden code is 1, the second is 9, or the third is 4. Lets assume 4 is the correct one (since that's the one we have most other information about). That means neither 1 or 9 are in the code.




                Then based on row 1:




                4 is correct, but in the wrong position, and neither 2 or 7 are in the code.




                From row 3:




                we already know 4 is in the wrong position, but so is either 3 or 6. 6 is in the last position in both rows 2 and 3, but it can't be right in one but wrong in the other. So 6 is out, and 3 must be the other correct but misplaced digit.




                That means that row 4:




                is telling us that 3 is in the second position. Which we already knew, since it's not the third (that's 4) and not the first (it was in the wrong place on row 3). So 2 and 8 are out.




                And since we now know what the last two digits are, row 2




                must be telling us that 5 is correct in the first position. So we have 534 as the answer for the missing row 6.




                Part 2



                Take the answer from part 1, and




                This took a while, but think I finally have it based on @ExcitedRaichu's hints in the comments. The answer to part 1 isn't actually 534,but V III IV. Taking the first character and putting it at the end gives III IV V, but then formatting that as XXX X X X gives III I V V, or 3 1 5 5. Add 1 to each digit to get 4266.




                Part 3



                If that's a square, then




                The diagonal also equals the radius. So sqrt(2)*(x+1000) = r. So take r from Part 2, divide it by sqrt2, and subtract 1000.




                Part 4



                The result from part 3 should




                give us 4 digits before the decimal point as the year, the first after as the month, and the next two the day. 4266/sqrt(2) gives 3016.517529... Subtract 1000, and we get 2016.518 when rounded to 3 decimal places (or 2016.517 truncated). Which based gives us a date of 18th May, 2016.








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 21 at 12:26

























                answered Nov 20 at 18:01









                Mohirl

                1,935717




                1,935717












                • Correct so far. +1
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:18










                • For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:33










                • try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:47


















                • Correct so far. +1
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:18










                • For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:33










                • try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
                  – Excited Raichu
                  Nov 20 at 18:47
















                Correct so far. +1
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 20 at 18:18




                Correct so far. +1
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 20 at 18:18












                For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 20 at 18:33




                For Part 2, consider how part 1 was presented
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 20 at 18:33












                try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 20 at 18:47




                try converting back into roman numerals, individually, then combining them together
                – Excited Raichu
                Nov 20 at 18:47










                up vote
                3
                down vote













                Partial answer:




                1. I have no idea what 1 is, it could possibly be with roman numbers.

                2. the last entry of 1. (where the first is the last equals somehow xxx x x x = r)

                3. r = root( 2 * (x + 1000))

                4. probably: write x with 7 digits, 4 in front of the dot and 3 behind it. This should mean x is around 1000 to 9999 big







                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  3
                  down vote













                  Partial answer:




                  1. I have no idea what 1 is, it could possibly be with roman numbers.

                  2. the last entry of 1. (where the first is the last equals somehow xxx x x x = r)

                  3. r = root( 2 * (x + 1000))

                  4. probably: write x with 7 digits, 4 in front of the dot and 3 behind it. This should mean x is around 1000 to 9999 big







                  share|improve this answer























                    up vote
                    3
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    3
                    down vote









                    Partial answer:




                    1. I have no idea what 1 is, it could possibly be with roman numbers.

                    2. the last entry of 1. (where the first is the last equals somehow xxx x x x = r)

                    3. r = root( 2 * (x + 1000))

                    4. probably: write x with 7 digits, 4 in front of the dot and 3 behind it. This should mean x is around 1000 to 9999 big







                    share|improve this answer












                    Partial answer:




                    1. I have no idea what 1 is, it could possibly be with roman numbers.

                    2. the last entry of 1. (where the first is the last equals somehow xxx x x x = r)

                    3. r = root( 2 * (x + 1000))

                    4. probably: write x with 7 digits, 4 in front of the dot and 3 behind it. This should mean x is around 1000 to 9999 big








                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Nov 20 at 15:57









                    Jannis

                    1,46419




                    1,46419






















                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        Partial:



                        Step 1:




                        Converting from Roman numerals to decimal, the diagram becomes:

                        2 : 4 : 7 | 1 : :

                        5 : 1 : 6 | 2 : :

                        3 : 4 : 6 | 1 : 1 :

                        8 : 3 : 2 | 2 : :

                        1 : 9 : 4 | 2 : :

                        ###### | 2 : 2 : 2

                        I can not determine any noticeable pattern here...




                        Step 2:




                        Without step 1, I've idea what to do here...




                        Step 3:




                        The value of $x+1000$ is given by using Pythagoras. The diagonal of the square is the radius of the circle, $r$, and using the Pythagorean Theorem, we can determine that: $2 cdot (x+1000)^2 = r^2$.

                        And therefore, $x = frac{r}{sqrt{2}} - 1000$.




                        Step 4:




                        I assume that step 3 will return a decimal number for x, and that the date of the puzzle creation can be determined by taking the first 4 digits as the year, the 1st decimal place as the month, and the 2nd and 3rd decimal places as the day of the month.







                        share|improve this answer

























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Partial:



                          Step 1:




                          Converting from Roman numerals to decimal, the diagram becomes:

                          2 : 4 : 7 | 1 : :

                          5 : 1 : 6 | 2 : :

                          3 : 4 : 6 | 1 : 1 :

                          8 : 3 : 2 | 2 : :

                          1 : 9 : 4 | 2 : :

                          ###### | 2 : 2 : 2

                          I can not determine any noticeable pattern here...




                          Step 2:




                          Without step 1, I've idea what to do here...




                          Step 3:




                          The value of $x+1000$ is given by using Pythagoras. The diagonal of the square is the radius of the circle, $r$, and using the Pythagorean Theorem, we can determine that: $2 cdot (x+1000)^2 = r^2$.

                          And therefore, $x = frac{r}{sqrt{2}} - 1000$.




                          Step 4:




                          I assume that step 3 will return a decimal number for x, and that the date of the puzzle creation can be determined by taking the first 4 digits as the year, the 1st decimal place as the month, and the 2nd and 3rd decimal places as the day of the month.







                          share|improve this answer























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            Partial:



                            Step 1:




                            Converting from Roman numerals to decimal, the diagram becomes:

                            2 : 4 : 7 | 1 : :

                            5 : 1 : 6 | 2 : :

                            3 : 4 : 6 | 1 : 1 :

                            8 : 3 : 2 | 2 : :

                            1 : 9 : 4 | 2 : :

                            ###### | 2 : 2 : 2

                            I can not determine any noticeable pattern here...




                            Step 2:




                            Without step 1, I've idea what to do here...




                            Step 3:




                            The value of $x+1000$ is given by using Pythagoras. The diagonal of the square is the radius of the circle, $r$, and using the Pythagorean Theorem, we can determine that: $2 cdot (x+1000)^2 = r^2$.

                            And therefore, $x = frac{r}{sqrt{2}} - 1000$.




                            Step 4:




                            I assume that step 3 will return a decimal number for x, and that the date of the puzzle creation can be determined by taking the first 4 digits as the year, the 1st decimal place as the month, and the 2nd and 3rd decimal places as the day of the month.







                            share|improve this answer












                            Partial:



                            Step 1:




                            Converting from Roman numerals to decimal, the diagram becomes:

                            2 : 4 : 7 | 1 : :

                            5 : 1 : 6 | 2 : :

                            3 : 4 : 6 | 1 : 1 :

                            8 : 3 : 2 | 2 : :

                            1 : 9 : 4 | 2 : :

                            ###### | 2 : 2 : 2

                            I can not determine any noticeable pattern here...




                            Step 2:




                            Without step 1, I've idea what to do here...




                            Step 3:




                            The value of $x+1000$ is given by using Pythagoras. The diagonal of the square is the radius of the circle, $r$, and using the Pythagorean Theorem, we can determine that: $2 cdot (x+1000)^2 = r^2$.

                            And therefore, $x = frac{r}{sqrt{2}} - 1000$.




                            Step 4:




                            I assume that step 3 will return a decimal number for x, and that the date of the puzzle creation can be determined by taking the first 4 digits as the year, the 1st decimal place as the month, and the 2nd and 3rd decimal places as the day of the month.








                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Nov 20 at 15:53









                            AHKieran

                            3,943633




                            3,943633






















                                up vote
                                0
                                down vote













                                Very Partial Answer

                                Here's my initial thinking:




                                If step 1 is a matrix, it is unsolvable on its own because of the unknown third variable on the right side. If you attempt to solve the first five lines, there is only the trivial solution. Assuming, of course, that the symbols are literal roman numerals. I suspect that this is not the case.
                                Step 2 seems to suggest that shifting the first character of the answer to step 1 to the end of the string becomes XXXXXX when one is added, or XXXXXX is a set of replacement characters for the string (suggesting it is 6 characters) that becomes the radius of the circle when 1 is added.
                                Steps 3 and 4 appear to be self-explanatory







                                share|improve this answer

























                                  up vote
                                  0
                                  down vote













                                  Very Partial Answer

                                  Here's my initial thinking:




                                  If step 1 is a matrix, it is unsolvable on its own because of the unknown third variable on the right side. If you attempt to solve the first five lines, there is only the trivial solution. Assuming, of course, that the symbols are literal roman numerals. I suspect that this is not the case.
                                  Step 2 seems to suggest that shifting the first character of the answer to step 1 to the end of the string becomes XXXXXX when one is added, or XXXXXX is a set of replacement characters for the string (suggesting it is 6 characters) that becomes the radius of the circle when 1 is added.
                                  Steps 3 and 4 appear to be self-explanatory







                                  share|improve this answer























                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote










                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote









                                    Very Partial Answer

                                    Here's my initial thinking:




                                    If step 1 is a matrix, it is unsolvable on its own because of the unknown third variable on the right side. If you attempt to solve the first five lines, there is only the trivial solution. Assuming, of course, that the symbols are literal roman numerals. I suspect that this is not the case.
                                    Step 2 seems to suggest that shifting the first character of the answer to step 1 to the end of the string becomes XXXXXX when one is added, or XXXXXX is a set of replacement characters for the string (suggesting it is 6 characters) that becomes the radius of the circle when 1 is added.
                                    Steps 3 and 4 appear to be self-explanatory







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    Very Partial Answer

                                    Here's my initial thinking:




                                    If step 1 is a matrix, it is unsolvable on its own because of the unknown third variable on the right side. If you attempt to solve the first five lines, there is only the trivial solution. Assuming, of course, that the symbols are literal roman numerals. I suspect that this is not the case.
                                    Step 2 seems to suggest that shifting the first character of the answer to step 1 to the end of the string becomes XXXXXX when one is added, or XXXXXX is a set of replacement characters for the string (suggesting it is 6 characters) that becomes the radius of the circle when 1 is added.
                                    Steps 3 and 4 appear to be self-explanatory








                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Nov 20 at 15:57









                                    kanoo

                                    1,824327




                                    1,824327






























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