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00:38
@GarethMcCaughan ahh I am not as au fait on my drugs
00:51
0
Q: Cube Connect Challenges

BubblerCube Connect is a Flow-like mobile puzzle game on the surface of a cube. Rules of Flow (which is simply Numberlink with colors instead of numbers; copied from Nikoli rules with small modification): Connect pairs of the same colored dots with a continuous line. Lines go through the center of the ...

01:02
White powder company sings "CANE" (7)
Playing a bit with indicators today
 
7 hours later…
07:33
@AncientSwordRage not my intention
@msh210 no worries, I'll keep thinking on it
10 hours ago, by msh210
Well, gameN. This C4 I do not expect to fall quickly. (But I've been wrong before.)
I definitely felt like taking this statement on as a challenge, but so far it's proven true
08:26
Pretty sure the C4 ends in DIA (A line in DA(wn))
08:47
My thinking all revolves around it ending just in 'D' (the 'crack of dawn' implying its first letter). This would fit the general ending of words that are synonyms of 'tormented' also...
Something like HARASSED, where you have HARE (speed) 'inhaling' A+SS, all followed by D(-awn). If SS=line (e.g. via shipping, somehow) then this might work
(I've also been working with RATE and PACE and similar short word for 'speed' that end in an 'E' to give us the useful 'ED' ending...)
BOTHERED could maybe work if everything after "Speed" could clue THERE inside BO_D, maybe "At" inside (inhaling) "a line" and D as you said
How does 'speed'=BO though?
Shrugs
09:16
@Stiv harried for tormented?
Not enough letters unfortunately
09:34
@Stiv I mean as fodder in some way?
although I realise in my haste, that's the wrong part to fodderise based on your thinking
My thinking, as I don't think I'll get any further on my own, it was COCKCROW and line -> ROW (although, first issue not inhaled) leaving one of the C for speed( of light) and the rest... no idea
Maybe 'speed inhaling' is a slightly cryptic description of gasping?
 
1 hour later…
10:52
line is abbreviated l. so "xxxx inhaling a line" could be "AL inside xxxx"
11:17
@Jafe that's the normal wordplay, sure
11:27
@msh210 HARROWED: HARE inhaling ROW + D(awn)
That looks good!
@Stiv you did a lot of the hard work, getting me HERE~HARE
:p
11:59
(I'll wait for confirmation)
@AncientSwordRage yes!
CCCC: Army Ration: remove/squeeze end, before second mouthful, swallow (and in France, it comes in a tube?) (5)
@msh210 that's awesome, I loved the misdirection (that I thoroughly fell for) :D
@AncientSwordRage thanks
@AncientSwordRage METRO (it comes in a tube) = MRE remove squeezE before mOuthful; swallow ET
Dangit
12:11
argh that's exactly what i was trying to make work
didn't know about MRE
@msh210 thats it
@Jafe it's a slightly niche acronym (Meal Ready to Eat)
CCCC: Perhaps some hens and does caught victims at the start (5)
hen can be a female bird other than chicken too, right? i think this is V_ in DOES = DOVES
12:27
@Jafe nice!
1
Q: Ripple Effect ... with Inequality Sign

NusiI was making ripple effect but failed on uniqueness. That lead me thinking of putting inequality sign to fix the puzzle. Then, I'm wondering, what if I make a new one with intentional inequality sign? So, here we are! Rules (from Nikoli): The areas divided by bold lines are called "Rooms". Fill ...

ooh, a ripple effect!
@Jafe yep!
CCCC: There's oil spilt all over New England footballers (5,5)
"spilt" still looks weird but i'm forcing myself to use it
@Jafe recoils in BrE
12:32
spilt's spelt weird
@msh210 Rye would you say that?
@AncientSwordRage because I barley ever have seen it spelt that way
@msh210 not using the right suffix 'ere gets my 'oat
@Anonymus25 yes, whea try
12:37
Very apeeling
Oh no, what have you done
@msh210 it's teff to think of anymore
@Jafe three lio(n)s*
@msh210 that's right
(had to Google English national team to learn it was called that)
@msh210 New England REALLY through me
12:38
CCCC: TV (a/k/a telly) I played loudly (11)
ahhhh I mean threw
@msh210 TALKATIVELY*
Dangit I just found that
@ChrisCudmore yep!
CCCC: Banner makes strange rat do more. (9)
12:44
MODERATOR*
hehe
heh nice
I should do some more work-word before I get to involved in making more cryptic-word
This catacomb, I care initially (7)
Best clue so far that I have made
12:53
@Anonymus25 CRYPT+I+C_
Took a look at the thesaurus
Yep! Not a C4, but fun
Maybe "cemented" instead of "care"
"this catacomb, I care initially" is not something anyone would ever say, I don't think, whereas "this catacomb, I cemented initially" is
or closed
yeah
Takes notes
13:00
@ChrisCudmore cf.
13:13
@msh210 Cool!
Gonna do 4 edits for [rubiks-cube] today since two of the ones at the top of the list are dupes.
Does anyone think we should create a tag?
I've seen a few examples of where it would be useful, though it's not very common from my understanding.
When would it be used?
For example, this question I'm currently editing asks if a specific algorithm has a name which fits that type of tag.
Can you picture an occasion when someone might wish to see lots of puzzles requesting correct terminology?
(Since tagging is for filtering purposes, largely...)
Yes, though they'd be quite infrequent (in my opinion).
13:26
The closest thing we have is , which asks for a specific type of terminology: puzzle names
Have to say, I'm not really seeing it... If someone wants to ask about Rubik's cube terminology, for example, they are probably most likely to get an answer by tagging it with [rubiks-cube] rather than [terminology]. Ditto for cryptic crosswords, or grid deduction puzzles. I can't think of a situation where you would ever use it on its own, without already having another tagged puzzle type for reference.
[terminology] seems more of a meta-tag than a topic tag
@Stiv I'm thinking of it from the perspective of looking for questions that are requesting terminology, no specific puzzle type, just terminology requests.
However, I will say I don't see a lot of benefit; but since I thought of it, I wanted to get the opinion of others. :)
Would anyone here add to this question?
I'm on the fence
It's looking for detecting solvability, not if a specific configuration is solvable so my instinct says no.
But it deals with the solvability of a cube, so I'm on the fence.
That's all this is, of course - my opinion (I can't speak for others) - and I agree with what Chris says above: it does feel a bit of a 'meta tag' rather than a topic in its own right. [puzzle-identification] I get, because in those instances you don't have a lot to go on; but [terminology] as described above really sits inside another more pertinent tag that you could use, depending on the type of puzzle you're inquiring about.
(And if you don't know the type of puzzle itself, we're back to [puzzle-identification] instead!)
Anyway, never any harm in asking!
@Stiv nope, I'd prefer to get the idea out there at least :) doesn't hurt if the answer is no.
I can't think of a single day where I said to myself (I wonder how many questions we have requesting terminology). :)
13:51
I gotta head out for now, back later!
14:49
CCCC: Backstab Gin Rummy pal, missing the opening to call for help when, perhaps, a joker is spotted? (3-6)
15:21
@AncientSwordRage BAT-SIGNAL = STAB< + GIN* + (-p)AL (def=call for help when, perhaps, a joker is spotted?)
15:48
@Stiv exactly
Cool. I played with (-sta)B for a while, before eventually realising what 'back' was meant to imply here :)
@Stiv I'm hoping it wasn't too unfair
No, not at all.
I've seen wordplay used like that before
(plenty of times)
It's probably not Ximenean, but...
Good to know, I have less Ximenean things ... Planned. Best to test the waters first.
CCCC: Try one's hardest to assist crook past stern guards (4,4,9)
Avi
Avi
16:13
Was browsing dad jokes when I came across this gem:
"My wife always complains that I have no sense of direction, so I packed up my stuff left away and right!"
2
16:36
How is this not opinion-based? It's literally asking for an opinion on best scramble method. Answers end up being recommendations for methods/software the answerer personally likes.
@bobble in theory "most random way" might be if enforced ?
As the answers show, people are interpreting it to mean "share your favorite scramble method!" and everyone provides why they like their method and why it's random "enough"
@bobble I voted that as P.O.B as soon as I saw it yesterday.
@Avi Oh, I really wish he had packed down his stuff...
16:50
Leave Open reviews?
@Stiv BEND (assist crook?) + OVER (past) + BACK (stern) + WARDS (guards); (def: try one's hardest)
@ChrisCudmore 3. I don't understand. Was hoping someone in chat could illuminate possible reasoning.
@samm82 "assist" is part of the definition methinks. bend=crook
Oooh that tracks
I'm of the opinion that the question is only on topic if it asked for an authoritative scrambling method from the ANSI standard on Rubik's Cube Scrambling or other competent body. And even then, it's a LMGTFY question
16:56
I wasn't sure if "to assist" was a valid connector and I was pretty sure it wasn't, but being part of the def makes a lot more sense
and merriam-webster.com/dictionary/crook gives BEND first up.
Have we accepted any particular Dictionary/Thesaurus as canon for the CCCC?
I don't think so - I think as long as it seems like a reasonable definition/synonym
@Stiv So I guess this becomes BEND (crook) + OVER (past) + BACK (stern) + WARDS (guards); (def: try one's hardest to assist)
17:26
@samm82 That's correct :)
Alright, let's see how fair this next one is....
CCCC: Greek character is modest and a little sentimental (5 or 5)
with (5 or 5) meaning that there are two solutions - I think that's the right syntax for that
Avi
Avi
@Stiv brilliant!
"My wife always complains that I have no sense of direction, so I went up the staircase, packed down my stuff left away and right!"
trying to fit in "up" but not sure it worked as well
maybe just stick to "My wife always complains that I have no sense of direction, so I packed down my stuff left away and right!"
what about "after I calmed up"?
"I caught my wife doing food colouring shots. I think she died a little inside"
Avi
Avi
"I couldn't calm up after my wife complained that I have no sense of direction, so I packed down my stuff left away and right!"
@samm82 nice one
@ChrisCudmore I dyed laughing at this
17:32
There it is! Love it
@Avi It's better spoken.
Avi
Avi
of course
@ChrisCudmore made a pun on "Cudmore" but not sure if you're okay with people punning on parts of your name. would you like to hear it?
Go ahead.
Avi
Avi
One of Chris' friends: "His last name is Cudmore, but he wants to be your bud more."
fairly harmless but I just wanted to check beforehand
I've heard worse.
Avi
Avi
17:41
good to hear I'm not the worst of the batch :P
@bobble you just get it sometimes where people do bad reviews because it's something they 'like'
Avi
Avi
For which question
Maybe worth going to meta?
@samm82 MU + SHY is one solution.
Avi
Avi
ooh nice
17:44
The same construction gives nushy, xishy, pishy as possibilities, but none are words
Avi
Avi
somehow I always forget what pithy means x.x
@ChrisCudmore Yup! Now if someone else gets the other solution I'm going to have to decide who goes next in the chain lol
@Avi if you follow the chat chain there's a link somewhere
@bobble @avi -- this is the start of the discussion.
Avi
Avi
fair
feels like it should be locked, not closed
like, it has historical significance
but it shouldn't have new answers because it doesn't fit the format of the site
17:56
A "historical significance" lock is applied only to off-topic questions, so saying it should get that also means you're saying it should be closed
It's meant to apply when a question is off-topic but deletion should be prevented due to useful answers
Avi
Avi
86
Q: What is a historical lock, and what is it used for?

user102937Historical locks are sometimes applied to questions. What is a historical lock? What is the purpose of a historical lock? How are questions affected by historical locking? When is it appropriate to lock a question for historical reasons? When is it not appropriate? How do I request a historica...

this to be precise
@Avi locked questions are closed more or less
Also, it should be "The post is stellar, in spite of its off-topic nature"" which I'd argue it's not
 
1 hour later…
19:07
0
Q: What is the missing term in this numerical sequence?

Daniel AsimovThe missing term in this sequence has been replaced by the placeholder "—". What is the missing term, and why? 10000 121 100 — 24 22 20 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10

@samm82 PAR = average sort of means modest, in the "a modest apartment" sense. "a" = one = I. "little sentimental" = its first letter, S. So you get PARIS, a Greek character. I suspect this is not the intended solution.
A lovely idea, but I think the PAR part is too much of a stretch.
Can confirm, this is not the intended solution
@GarethMcCaughan Yeah, me too.
 
1 hour later…
20:19
i think one solution is MU+SHY (a little sentimental)
3 hours ago, by Chris Cudmore
@samm82 MU + SHY is one solution.
(Sorry Jafe - that one's gone!) :)
oops sorry, missed that!
The other one is really stumping me.
Whoever gets it deserves the win.
It could maybe be MIDAS = MID (modest) + A + S(-entimental)?
Looks good.
@Stiv @samm82
20:25
(if MID=modest is considered fair)
If not, then the AS ending might be something to work with
If he's doing a Schroedinger, we have to allow a little latitude.
Not quite what I was going for, although it fits rather well
Fair enough :)
20:42
dry can mean "lacking embellishment", so maybe DRY+ A + S_?
a lot of options for greeks ending in S
i wonder if the "is" is important since it's not used in the first solution
21:00
@Jafe Once again, not quite what I had in mind....

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