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Eight queens puzzle

The eight queens puzzle is the problem of placing eight chess queens on an 8×8 chessboard so that no two queens threaten each other; thus, a solution requires that no two queens share the same row, column, or diagonal. There are 92 solutions. The problem was first posed in the mid-19th century. In the modern era, it is often used as an example problem for various computer programming techniques.

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8
8
77
66
55
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11
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The only symmetrical solution to the eight queens puzzle (up to rotation and reflection)

The eight queens puzzle is a special case of the more general n queens problem of placing n non-attacking queens on an n×n chessboard. Solutions exist for all natural numbers n with the exception of n = 2 and n = 3. Although the exact number of solutions is only known for n ≤ 27, the asymptotic growth rate of the number of solutions is (0.143 n)n.

History

Chess composer Max Bezzel published the eight queens puzzle in 1848. Franz Nauck published the first solutions in 1850.[1] Nauck also extended the puzzle to the n queens problem, with n queens on a chessboard of n×n squares.

Since then, many mathematicians, including Carl Friedrich Gauss, have worked on both the eight queens puzzle and its generalized n-queens version. In 1874, S. Gunther proposed a method using determinants to find solutions.[1] J.W.L. Glaisher refined Gunther's approach.

In 1972, Edsger Dijkstra used this problem to illustrate the power of what he called structured programming. He published a highly detailed description of a depth-first backtracking algorithm.[2]

Constructing and counting solutions when n = 8

The problem of finding all solutions to the 8-queens problem can be quite computationally expensive, as there are 4,426,165,368 possible arrangements of eight queens on an 8×8 board,[a] but only 92 solutions. It is possible to use shortcuts that reduce computational requirements or rules of thumb that avoids brute-force computational techniques. For example, by applying a simple rule that chooses one queen from each column, it is possible to reduce the number of possibilities to 16,777,216 (that is, 88) possible combinations. Generating permutations further reduces the possibilities to just 40,320 (that is, 8!), which can then be checked for diagonal attacks.

The eight queens puzzle has 92 distinct solutions. If solutions that differ only by the symmetry operations of rotation and reflection of the board are counted as one, the puzzle has 12 solutions. These are called fundamental solutions; representatives of each are shown below.

A fundamental solution usually has eight variants (including its original form) obtained by rotating 90, 180, or 270° and then reflecting each of the four rotational variants in a mirror in a fixed position. However, one of the 12 fundamental solutions (solution 12 below) is identical to its own 180° rotation, so has only four variants (itself and its reflection, its 90° rotation and the reflection of that).[b] Such solutions have only two variants (itself and its reflection). Thus, the total number of distinct solutions is 11×8 + 1×4 = 92.

All fundamental solutions are presented below:

Solution 10 has the additional property that no three queens are in a straight line. Solutions 1 and 8 have a 4-queen line.

Existence of solutions

Brute-force algorithms to count the number of solutions are computationally manageable for n = 8, but would be intractable for problems of n ≥ 20, as 20! = 2.433 × 1018. If the goal is to find a single solution, one can show solutions exist for all n ≥ 4 with no search whatsoever.[3][4] These solutions exhibit stair-stepped patterns, as in the following examples for n = 8, 9 and 10:

The examples above can be obtained with the following formulas.[3] Let (i, j) be the square in column i and row j on the n × n chessboard, k an integer.

One approach[3] is

  1. If the remainder from dividing n by 6 is not 2 or 3 then the list is simply all even numbers followed by all odd numbers not greater than n.
  2. Otherwise, write separate lists of even and odd numbers (2, 4, 6, 8 – 1, 3, 5, 7).
  3. If the remainder is 2, swap 1 and 3 in odd list and move 5 to the end (3, 1, 7, 5).
  4. If the remainder is 3, move 2 to the end of even list and 1,3 to the end of odd list (4, 6, 8, 2 – 5, 7, 1, 3).
  5. Append odd list to the even list and place queens in the rows given by these numbers, from left to right (a2, b4, c6, d8, e3, f1, g7, h5).

For n = 8 this results in fundamental solution 1 above. A few more examples follow.

  • 14 queens (remainder 2): 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 3, 1, 7, 9, 11, 13, 5.
  • 15 queens (remainder 3): 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 2, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 1, 3.
  • 20 queens (remainder 2): 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 3, 1, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 5.

Counting solutions for other sizes n

Exact enumeration

There is no known formula for the exact number of solutions for placing n queens on an n × n board i.e. the number of independent sets of size n in an n × n queen's graph. The 27×27 board is the highest-order board that has been completely enumerated.[5] The following tables give the number of solutions to the n queens problem, both fundamental (sequence A002562 in the OEIS) and all (sequence A000170 in the OEIS), for all known cases.

n fundamental all
1 1 1
2 0 0
3 0 0
4 1 2
5 2 10
6 1 4
7 6 40
8 12 92
9 46 352
10 92 724
11 341 2,680
12 1,787 14,200
13 9,233 73,712
14 45,752 365,596
15 285,053 2,279,184
16 1,846,955 14,772,512
17 11,977,939 95,815,104
18 83,263,591 666,090,624
19 621,012,754 4,968,057,848
20 4,878,666,808 39,029,188,884
21 39,333,324,973 314,666,222,712
22 336,376,244,042 2,691,008,701,644
23 3,029,242,658,210 24,233,937,684,440
24 28,439,272,956,934 227,514,171,973,736
25 275,986,683,743,434 2,207,893,435,808,352
26 2,789,712,466,510,289 22,317,699,616,364,044
27 29,363,495,934,315,694 234,907,967,154,122,528

Asymptotic enumeration

In 2021, Michael Simkin proved that for large numbers n, the number of solutions of the n queens problem is approximately  .[6] More precisely, the number   of solutions has asymptotic growth

 
where   is a constant that lies between 1.939 and 1.945.[7] (Here o(1) represents little o notation.)

If one instead considers a toroidal chessboard (where diagonals "wrap around" from the top edge to the bottom and from the left edge to the right), it is only possible to place n queens on an   board if   In this case, the asymptotic number of solutions is[8][9]

 

Related problems

Higher dimensions

Find the number of non-attacking queens that can be placed in a d-dimensional chess space of size n. More than n queens can be placed in some higher dimensions (the smallest example is four non-attacking queens in a 3×3×3 chess space), and it is in fact known that for any k, there are higher dimensions where nk queens do not suffice to attack all spaces.[10][11]

Using pieces other than queens

On an 8×8 board one can place 32 knights, or 14 bishops, 16 kings or eight rooks, so that no two pieces attack each other. In the case of knights, an easy solution is to place one on each square of a given color, since they move only to the opposite color. The solution is also easy for rooks and kings. Sixteen kings can be placed on the board by dividing it into 2-by-2 squares and placing the kings at equivalent points on each square. Placements of n rooks on an n×n board are in direct correspondence with order-n permutation matrices.

Chess variations

Related problems can be asked for chess variations such as shogi. For instance, the n+k dragon kings problem asks to place k shogi pawns and n+k mutually nonattacking dragon kings on an n×n shogi board.[12]

Nonstandard boards

Pólya studied the n queens problem on a toroidal ("donut-shaped") board and showed that there is a solution on an n×n board if and only if n is not divisible by 2 or 3.[13] In 2009 Pearson and Pearson algorithmically populated three-dimensional boards (n×n×n) with n2 queens, and proposed that multiples of these can yield solutions for a four-dimensional version of the puzzle.[14][better source needed]

Domination

Given an n×n board, the domination number is the minimum number of queens (or other pieces) needed to attack or occupy every square. For n = 8 the queen's domination number is 5.[15][16]

Queens and other pieces

Variants include mixing queens with other pieces; for example, placing m queens and m knights on an n×n board so that no piece attacks another[17] or placing queens and pawns so that no two queens attack each other.[18]

Magic squares

In 1992, Demirörs, Rafraf, and Tanik published a method for converting some magic squares into n-queens solutions, and vice versa.[19]

Latin squares

In an n×n matrix, place each digit 1 through n in n locations in the matrix so that no two instances of the same digit are in the same row or column.

Exact cover

Consider a matrix with one primary column for each of the n ranks of the board, one primary column for each of the n files, and one secondary column for each of the 4n − 6 nontrivial diagonals of the board. The matrix has n2 rows: one for each possible queen placement, and each row has a 1 in the columns corresponding to that square's rank, file, and diagonals and a 0 in all the other columns. Then the n queens problem is equivalent to choosing a subset of the rows of this matrix such that every primary column has a 1 in precisely one of the chosen rows and every secondary column has a 1 in at most one of the chosen rows; this is an example of a generalized exact cover problem, of which sudoku is another example.

n-queens completion

The completion problem asks whether, given an n×n chessboard on which some queens are already placed, it is possible to place a queen in every remaining row so that no two queens attack each other. This and related questions are NP-complete and #P-complete.[20] Any placement of at most n/60 queens can be completed, while there are partial configurations of roughly n/4 queens that cannot be completed.[21]

Exercise in algorithm design

Finding all solutions to the eight queens puzzle is a good example of a simple but nontrivial problem. For this reason, it is often used as an example problem for various programming techniques, including nontraditional approaches such as constraint programming, logic programming or genetic algorithms. Most often, it is used as an example of a problem that can be solved with a recursive algorithm, by phrasing the n queens problem inductively in terms of adding a single queen to any solution to the problem of placing n−1 queens on an n×n chessboard. The induction bottoms out with the solution to the 'problem' of placing 0 queens on the chessboard, which is the empty chessboard.

This technique can be used in a way that is much more efficient than the naïve brute-force search algorithm, which considers all 648 = 248 = 281,474,976,710,656 possible blind placements of eight queens, and then filters these to remove all placements that place two queens either on the same square (leaving only 64!/56! = 178,462,987,637,760 possible placements) or in mutually attacking positions. This very poor algorithm will, among other things, produce the same results over and over again in all the different permutations of the assignments of the eight queens, as well as repeating the same computations over and over again for the different sub-sets of each solution. A better brute-force algorithm places a single queen on each row, leading to only 88 = 224 = 16,777,216 blind placements.

It is possible to do much better than this. One algorithm solves the eight rooks puzzle by generating the permutations of the numbers 1 through 8 (of which there are 8! = 40,320), and uses the elements of each permutation as indices to place a queen on each row. Then it rejects those boards with diagonal attacking positions.

 
This animation illustrates backtracking to solve the problem. A queen is placed in a column that is known not to cause conflict. If a column is not found the program returns to the last good state and then tries a different column.

The backtracking depth-first search program, a slight improvement on the permutation method, constructs the search tree by considering one row of the board at a time, eliminating most nonsolution board positions at a very early stage in their construction. Because it rejects rook and diagonal attacks even on incomplete boards, it examines only 15,720 possible queen placements. A further improvement, which examines only 5,508 possible queen placements, is to combine the permutation based method with the early pruning method: the permutations are generated depth-first, and the search space is pruned if the partial permutation produces a diagonal attack. Constraint programming can also be very effective on this problem.

 
min-conflicts solution to 8 queens

An alternative to exhaustive search is an 'iterative repair' algorithm, which typically starts with all queens on the board, for example with one queen per column.[22] It then counts the number of conflicts (attacks), and uses a heuristic to determine how to improve the placement of the queens. The 'minimum-conflicts' heuristic – moving the piece with the largest number of conflicts to the square in the same column where the number of conflicts is smallest – is particularly effective: it easily finds a solution to even the 1,000,000 queens problem.[23][24]

Unlike the backtracking search outlined above, iterative repair does not guarantee a solution: like all greedy procedures, it may get stuck on a local optimum. (In such a case, the algorithm may be restarted with a different initial configuration.) On the other hand, it can solve problem sizes that are several orders of magnitude beyond the scope of a depth-first search.

As an alternative to backtracking, solutions can be counted by recursively enumerating valid partial solutions, one row at a time. Rather than constructing entire board positions, blocked diagonals and columns are tracked with bitwise operations. This does not allow the recovery of individual solutions.[25][26]

Sample program

The following program is a translation of Niklaus Wirth's solution into the Python programming language, but does without the index arithmetic found in the original and instead uses lists to keep the program code as simple as possible. By using a coroutine in the form of a generator function, both versions of the original can be unified to compute either one or all of the solutions. Only 15,720 possible queen placements are examined.[27][28]

def queens(n, i, a, b, c): if i < n: for j in range(n): if j not in a and i+j not in b and i-j not in c: yield from queens(n, i+1, a+[j], b+[i+j], c+[i-j]) else: yield a for solution in queens(8, 0, [], [], []): print(solution) 

In popular culture

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The number of combinations of 8 squares from 64 is the binomial coefficient 64C8.
  2. ^ Other symmetries are possible for other values of n. For example, there is a placement of five nonattacking queens on a 5×5 board that is identical to its own 90° rotation. If n > 1, it is not possible for a solution to be equal to its own reflection because that would require two queens to be facing each other.

References

  1. ^ a b W. W. Rouse Ball (1960) "The Eight Queens Problem", in Mathematical Recreations and Essays, Macmillan, New York, pp. 165–171.
  2. ^ O.-J. Dahl, E. W. Dijkstra, C. A. R. Hoare Structured Programming, Academic Press, London, 1972 ISBN 0-12-200550-3, pp. 72–82.
  3. ^ a b c Bo Bernhardsson (1991). "Explicit Solutions to the N-Queens Problem for All N". SIGART Bull. 2 (2): 7. doi:10.1145/122319.122322. S2CID 10644706.
  4. ^ E. J. Hoffman et al., "Construction for the Solutions of the m Queens Problem". Mathematics Magazine, Vol. XX (1969), pp. 66–72. [1]
  5. ^ The Q27 Project
  6. ^ Sloman, Leila (21 September 2021). "Mathematician Answers Chess Problem About Attacking Queens". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  7. ^ Simkin, Michael (28 July 2021). "The number of $n$-queens configurations". arXiv:2107.13460v2 [math.CO].
  8. ^ Luria, Zur (15 May 2017). "New bounds on the number of n-queens configurations". arXiv:1705.05225v2 [math.CO].
  9. ^ Bowtell, Candida; Keevash, Peter (16 September 2021). "The $n$-queens problem". arXiv:2109.08083v1 [math.CO].
  10. ^ J. Barr and S. Rao (2006), The n-Queens Problem in Higher Dimensions, Elemente der Mathematik, vol 61 (4), pp. 133–137.
  11. ^ Martin S. Pearson. "Queens On A Chessboard – Beyond The 2nd Dimension" (php). Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  12. ^ Chatham, Doug (1 December 2018). "Reflections on the n +k dragon kings problem". Recreational Mathematics Magazine. 5 (10): 39–55. doi:10.2478/rmm-2018-0007.
  13. ^ G. Pólya, Uber die "doppelt-periodischen" Losungen des n-Damen-Problems, George Pólya: Collected papers Vol. IV, G-C. Rota, ed., MIT Press, Cambridge, London, 1984, pp. 237–247
  14. ^ "Queens on a Chessboard - Beyond the 2nd Dimension".
  15. ^ Burger, A. P.; Cockayne, E. J.; Mynhardt, C. M. (1997), "Domination and irredundance in the queens' graph", Discrete Mathematics, 163 (1–3): 47–66, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(95)00327-S, hdl:1828/2670, MR 1428557
  16. ^ Weakley, William D. (2018), "Queens around the world in twenty-five years", in Gera, Ralucca; Haynes, Teresa W.; Hedetniemi, Stephen T. (eds.), Graph Theory: Favorite Conjectures and Open Problems – 2, Problem Books in Mathematics, Cham: Springer, pp. 43–54, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-97686-0_5, MR 3889146
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 October 2005. Retrieved 20 September 2005.
  18. ^ Bell, Jordan; Stevens, Brett (2009). "A survey of known results and research areas for n-queens". Discrete Mathematics. 309 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1016/j.disc.2007.12.043.
  19. ^ O. Demirörs, N. Rafraf, and M.M. Tanik. Obtaining n-queens solutions from magic squares and constructing magic squares from n-queens solutions. Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 24:272–280, 1992
  20. ^ Gent, Ian P.; Jefferson, Christopher; Nightingale, Peter (August 2017). "Complexity of n-Queens Completion". Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research. 59: 815–848. doi:10.1613/jair.5512. ISSN 1076-9757. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  21. ^ Glock, Stefan; Correia, David Munhá; Sudakov, Benny (6 July 2022). "The n-queens completion problem". Research in the Mathematical Sciences. 9 (41): 41. doi:10.1007/s40687-022-00335-1. PMC 9259550. PMID 35815227. S2CID 244478527.
  22. ^ A Polynomial Time Algorithm for the N-Queen Problem by Rok Sosic and Jun Gu, 1990. Describes run time for up to 500,000 Queens which was the max they could run due to memory constraints.
  23. ^ Minton, Steven; Johnston, Mark D.; Philips, Andrew B.; Laird, Philip (1 December 1992). "Minimizing conflicts: a heuristic repair method for constraint satisfaction and scheduling problems". Artificial Intelligence. 58 (1): 161–205. doi:10.1016/0004-3702(92)90007-K. ISSN 0004-3702. S2CID 14830518.
  24. ^ Sosic, R.; Gu, Jun (October 1994). "Efficient local search with conflict minimization: a case study of the n-queens problem". IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering. 6 (5): 661–668. doi:10.1109/69.317698. ISSN 1558-2191.
  25. ^ Qiu, Zongyan (February 2002). "Bit-vector encoding of n-queen problem". ACM SIGPLAN Notices. 37 (2): 68–70. doi:10.1145/568600.568613.
  26. ^ Richards, Martin (1997). Backtracking Algorithms in MCPL using Bit Patterns and Recursion (PDF) (Technical report). University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory. UCAM-CL-TR-433.
  27. ^ Wirth, Niklaus (1976). Algorithms + Data Structures = Programs. Prentice-Hall Series in Automatic Computation. Prentice-Hall. Bibcode:1976adsp.book.....W. ISBN 978-0-13-022418-7. p. 145
  28. ^ Wirth, Niklaus (2012) [orig. 2004]. "The Eight Queens Problem". Algorithms and Data Structures (PDF). Oberon version with corrections and authorized modifications. pp. 114–118.
  29. ^ DeMaria, Rusel (15 November 1993). The 7th Guest: The Official Strategy Guide (PDF). Prima Games. ISBN 978-1-5595-8468-5. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  30. ^ "ナゾ130 クイーンの問題5". ゲームの匠 (in Japanese). Retrieved 17 September 2021.

Further reading

  • Bell, Jordan; Stevens, Brett (2009). "A survey of known results and research areas for n-queens". Discrete Mathematics. 309 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1016/j.disc.2007.12.043.
  • Watkins, John J. (2004). Across the Board: The Mathematics of Chess Problems. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11503-0.
  • Allison, L.; Yee, C.N.; McGaughey, M. (1988). "Three Dimensional NxN-Queens Problems". Department of Computer Science, Monash University, Australia.
  • Nudelman, S. (1995). "The Modular N-Queens Problem in Higher Dimensions". Discrete Mathematics. 146 (1–3): 159–167. doi:10.1016/0012-365X(94)00161-5.
  • Engelhardt, M. (August 2010). "Der Stammbaum der Lösungen des Damenproblems (in German, means The pedigree chart of solutions to the 8-queens problem". Spektrum der Wissenschaft: 68–71.
  • On The Modular N-Queen Problem in Higher Dimensions, Ricardo Gomez, Juan Jose Montellano and Ricardo Strausz (2004), Instituto de Matematicas, Area de la Investigacion Cientifica, Circuito Exterior, Ciudad Universitaria, Mexico.
  • Budd, Timothy (2002). "A Case Study: The Eight Queens Puzzle" (PDF). An Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming (3rd ed.). Addison Wesley Longman. pp. 125–145. ISBN 0-201-76031-2.
  • Wirth, Niklaus (2004) [updated 2012]. "The Eight Queens Problem". Algorithms and Data Structures (PDF). Oberon version with corrections and authorized modifications. pp. 114–118.

External links

  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Queens Problem". MathWorld.
  • queens-cpm on GitHub Eight Queens Puzzle in Turbo Pascal for CP/M
  • eight-queens.py on GitHub Eight Queens Puzzle one line solution in Python
  • Solutions in more than 100 different programming languages (on Rosetta Code)

eight, queens, puzzle, eight, queens, puzzle, problem, placing, eight, chess, queens, chessboard, that, queens, threaten, each, other, thus, solution, requires, that, queens, share, same, column, diagonal, there, solutions, problem, first, posed, 19th, century. The eight queens puzzle is the problem of placing eight chess queens on an 8 8 chessboard so that no two queens threaten each other thus a solution requires that no two queens share the same row column or diagonal There are 92 solutions The problem was first posed in the mid 19th century In the modern era it is often used as an example problem for various computer programming techniques abcdefgh8877665544332211abcdefghThe only symmetrical solution to the eight queens puzzle up to rotation and reflection The eight queens puzzle is a special case of the more general n queens problem of placing n non attacking queens on an n n chessboard Solutions exist for all natural numbers n with the exception of n 2 and n 3 Although the exact number of solutions is only known for n 27 the asymptotic growth rate of the number of solutions is 0 143 n n Contents 1 History 2 Constructing and counting solutions when n 8 3 Existence of solutions 4 Counting solutions for other sizes n 4 1 Exact enumeration 4 2 Asymptotic enumeration 5 Related problems 6 Exercise in algorithm design 7 Sample program 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditChess composer Max Bezzel published the eight queens puzzle in 1848 Franz Nauck published the first solutions in 1850 1 Nauck also extended the puzzle to the n queens problem with n queens on a chessboard of n n squares Since then many mathematicians including Carl Friedrich Gauss have worked on both the eight queens puzzle and its generalized n queens version In 1874 S Gunther proposed a method using determinants to find solutions 1 J W L Glaisher refined Gunther s approach In 1972 Edsger Dijkstra used this problem to illustrate the power of what he called structured programming He published a highly detailed description of a depth first backtracking algorithm 2 Constructing and counting solutions when n 8 EditThe problem of finding all solutions to the 8 queens problem can be quite computationally expensive as there are 4 426 165 368 possible arrangements of eight queens on an 8 8 board a but only 92 solutions It is possible to use shortcuts that reduce computational requirements or rules of thumb that avoids brute force computational techniques For example by applying a simple rule that chooses one queen from each column it is possible to reduce the number of possibilities to 16 777 216 that is 88 possible combinations Generating permutations further reduces the possibilities to just 40 320 that is 8 which can then be checked for diagonal attacks The eight queens puzzle has 92 distinct solutions If solutions that differ only by the symmetry operations of rotation and reflection of the board are counted as one the puzzle has 12 solutions These are called fundamental solutions representatives of each are shown below A fundamental solution usually has eight variants including its original form obtained by rotating 90 180 or 270 and then reflecting each of the four rotational variants in a mirror in a fixed position However one of the 12 fundamental solutions solution 12 below is identical to its own 180 rotation so has only four variants itself and its reflection its 90 rotation and the reflection of that b Such solutions have only two variants itself and its reflection Thus the total number of distinct solutions is 11 8 1 4 92 All fundamental solutions are presented below abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 1 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 2 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 3 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 4 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 5 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 6 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 7 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 8 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 9 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 10 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 11 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghSolution 12 Solution 10 has the additional property that no three queens are in a straight line Solutions 1 and 8 have a 4 queen line Existence of solutions EditBrute force algorithms to count the number of solutions are computationally manageable for n 8 but would be intractable for problems of n 20 as 20 2 433 1018 If the goal is to find a single solution one can show solutions exist for all n 4 with no search whatsoever 3 4 These solutions exhibit stair stepped patterns as in the following examples for n 8 9 and 10 abcdefgh8 877665544332211abcdefghStaircase solution for 8 queens abcdefghi9 98 87 76 65 54 43 32 21 1abcdefghiStaircase solution for 9 queens abcdefghij10 109 98 87 76 65 54 43 32 21 1abcdefghijStaircase solution for 10 queens The examples above can be obtained with the following formulas 3 Let i j be the square in column i and row j on the n n chessboard k an integer One approach 3 is If the remainder from dividing n by 6 is not 2 or 3 then the list is simply all even numbers followed by all odd numbers not greater than n Otherwise write separate lists of even and odd numbers 2 4 6 8 1 3 5 7 If the remainder is 2 swap 1 and 3 in odd list and move 5 to the end 3 1 7 5 If the remainder is 3 move 2 to the end of even list and 1 3 to the end of odd list 4 6 8 2 5 7 1 3 Append odd list to the even list and place queens in the rows given by these numbers from left to right a2 b4 c6 d8 e3 f1 g7 h5 For n 8 this results in fundamental solution 1 above A few more examples follow 14 queens remainder 2 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 3 1 7 9 11 13 5 15 queens remainder 3 4 6 8 10 12 14 2 5 7 9 11 13 15 1 3 20 queens remainder 2 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 3 1 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 5 Counting solutions for other sizes n EditExact enumeration Edit There is no known formula for the exact number of solutions for placing n queens on an n n board i e the number of independent sets of size n in an n n queen s graph The 27 27 board is the highest order board that has been completely enumerated 5 The following tables give the number of solutions to the n queens problem both fundamental sequence A002562 in the OEIS and all sequence A000170 in the OEIS for all known cases n fundamental all1 1 12 0 03 0 04 1 25 2 106 1 47 6 408 12 929 46 35210 92 72411 341 2 68012 1 787 14 20013 9 233 73 71214 45 752 365 59615 285 053 2 279 18416 1 846 955 14 772 51217 11 977 939 95 815 10418 83 263 591 666 090 62419 621 012 754 4 968 057 84820 4 878 666 808 39 029 188 88421 39 333 324 973 314 666 222 71222 336 376 244 042 2 691 008 701 64423 3 029 242 658 210 24 233 937 684 44024 28 439 272 956 934 227 514 171 973 73625 275 986 683 743 434 2 207 893 435 808 35226 2 789 712 466 510 289 22 317 699 616 364 04427 29 363 495 934 315 694 234 907 967 154 122 528Asymptotic enumeration Edit In 2021 Michael Simkin proved that for large numbers n the number of solutions of the n queens problem is approximately 0 143 n n displaystyle 0 143n n 6 More precisely the number Q n displaystyle mathcal Q n of solutions has asymptotic growthQ n 1 o 1 n e a n displaystyle mathcal Q n 1 pm o 1 ne alpha n where a displaystyle alpha is a constant that lies between 1 939 and 1 945 7 Here o 1 represents little o notation If one instead considers a toroidal chessboard where diagonals wrap around from the top edge to the bottom and from the left edge to the right it is only possible to place n queens on an n n displaystyle n times n board if n 1 5 mod 6 displaystyle n equiv 1 5 mod 6 In this case the asymptotic number of solutions is 8 9 T n 1 o 1 n e 3 n displaystyle T n 1 o 1 ne 3 n Related problems EditHigher dimensionsFind the number of non attacking queens that can be placed in a d dimensional chess space of size n More than n queens can be placed in some higher dimensions the smallest example is four non attacking queens in a 3 3 3 chess space and it is in fact known that for any k there are higher dimensions where nk queens do not suffice to attack all spaces 10 11 Using pieces other than queensOn an 8 8 board one can place 32 knights or 14 bishops 16 kings or eight rooks so that no two pieces attack each other In the case of knights an easy solution is to place one on each square of a given color since they move only to the opposite color The solution is also easy for rooks and kings Sixteen kings can be placed on the board by dividing it into 2 by 2 squares and placing the kings at equivalent points on each square Placements of n rooks on an n n board are in direct correspondence with order n permutation matrices Chess variationsRelated problems can be asked for chess variations such as shogi For instance the n k dragon kings problem asks to place k shogi pawns and n k mutually nonattacking dragon kings on an n n shogi board 12 Nonstandard boardsPolya studied the n queens problem on a toroidal donut shaped board and showed that there is a solution on an n n board if and only if n is not divisible by 2 or 3 13 In 2009 Pearson and Pearson algorithmically populated three dimensional boards n n n with n2 queens and proposed that multiples of these can yield solutions for a four dimensional version of the puzzle 14 better source needed DominationGiven an n n board the domination number is the minimum number of queens or other pieces needed to attack or occupy every square For n 8 the queen s domination number is 5 15 16 Queens and other piecesVariants include mixing queens with other pieces for example placing m queens and m knights on an n n board so that no piece attacks another 17 or placing queens and pawns so that no two queens attack each other 18 Magic squaresIn 1992 Demirors Rafraf and Tanik published a method for converting some magic squares into n queens solutions and vice versa 19 Latin squaresIn an n n matrix place each digit 1 through n in n locations in the matrix so that no two instances of the same digit are in the same row or column Exact coverConsider a matrix with one primary column for each of the n ranks of the board one primary column for each of the n files and one secondary column for each of the 4n 6 nontrivial diagonals of the board The matrix has n2 rows one for each possible queen placement and each row has a 1 in the columns corresponding to that square s rank file and diagonals and a 0 in all the other columns Then the n queens problem is equivalent to choosing a subset of the rows of this matrix such that every primary column has a 1 in precisely one of the chosen rows and every secondary column has a 1 in at most one of the chosen rows this is an example of a generalized exact cover problem of which sudoku is another example n queens completionThe completion problem asks whether given an n n chessboard on which some queens are already placed it is possible to place a queen in every remaining row so that no two queens attack each other This and related questions are NP complete and P complete 20 Any placement of at most n 60 queens can be completed while there are partial configurations of roughly n 4 queens that cannot be completed 21 Exercise in algorithm design EditFinding all solutions to the eight queens puzzle is a good example of a simple but nontrivial problem For this reason it is often used as an example problem for various programming techniques including nontraditional approaches such as constraint programming logic programming or genetic algorithms Most often it is used as an example of a problem that can be solved with a recursive algorithm by phrasing the n queens problem inductively in terms of adding a single queen to any solution to the problem of placing n 1 queens on an n n chessboard The induction bottoms out with the solution to the problem of placing 0 queens on the chessboard which is the empty chessboard This technique can be used in a way that is much more efficient than the naive brute force search algorithm which considers all 648 248 281 474 976 710 656 possible blind placements of eight queens and then filters these to remove all placements that place two queens either on the same square leaving only 64 56 178 462 987 637 760 possible placements or in mutually attacking positions This very poor algorithm will among other things produce the same results over and over again in all the different permutations of the assignments of the eight queens as well as repeating the same computations over and over again for the different sub sets of each solution A better brute force algorithm places a single queen on each row leading to only 88 224 16 777 216 blind placements It is possible to do much better than this One algorithm solves the eight rooks puzzle by generating the permutations of the numbers 1 through 8 of which there are 8 40 320 and uses the elements of each permutation as indices to place a queen on each row Then it rejects those boards with diagonal attacking positions This animation illustrates backtracking to solve the problem A queen is placed in a column that is known not to cause conflict If a column is not found the program returns to the last good state and then tries a different column The backtracking depth first search program a slight improvement on the permutation method constructs the search tree by considering one row of the board at a time eliminating most nonsolution board positions at a very early stage in their construction Because it rejects rook and diagonal attacks even on incomplete boards it examines only 15 720 possible queen placements A further improvement which examines only 5 508 possible queen placements is to combine the permutation based method with the early pruning method the permutations are generated depth first and the search space is pruned if the partial permutation produces a diagonal attack Constraint programming can also be very effective on this problem min conflicts solution to 8 queens An alternative to exhaustive search is an iterative repair algorithm which typically starts with all queens on the board for example with one queen per column 22 It then counts the number of conflicts attacks and uses a heuristic to determine how to improve the placement of the queens The minimum conflicts heuristic moving the piece with the largest number of conflicts to the square in the same column where the number of conflicts is smallest is particularly effective it easily finds a solution to even the 1 000 000 queens problem 23 24 Unlike the backtracking search outlined above iterative repair does not guarantee a solution like all greedy procedures it may get stuck on a local optimum In such a case the algorithm may be restarted with a different initial configuration On the other hand it can solve problem sizes that are several orders of magnitude beyond the scope of a depth first search As an alternative to backtracking solutions can be counted by recursively enumerating valid partial solutions one row at a time Rather than constructing entire board positions blocked diagonals and columns are tracked with bitwise operations This does not allow the recovery of individual solutions 25 26 Sample program EditThe following program is a translation of Niklaus Wirth s solution into the Python programming language but does without the index arithmetic found in the original and instead uses lists to keep the program code as simple as possible By using a coroutine in the form of a generator function both versions of the original can be unified to compute either one or all of the solutions Only 15 720 possible queen placements are examined 27 28 def queens n i a b c if i lt n for j in range n if j not in a and i j not in b and i j not in c yield from queens n i 1 a j b i j c i j else yield a for solution in queens 8 0 print solution In popular culture EditIn the game The 7th Guest the 8th Puzzle The Queen s Dilemma in the game room of the Stauf mansion is the de facto eight queens puzzle 29 48 49 289 290 In the game Professor Layton and the Curious Village the 130th puzzle Too Many Queens 5 クイーンの問題5 is an eight queens puzzle 30 See also EditMathematical game Mathematical puzzle No three in line problem Rook polynomial Costas arrayNotes Edit The number of combinations of 8 squares from 64 is the binomial coefficient 64C8 Other symmetries are possible for other values of n For example there is a placement of five nonattacking queens on a 5 5 board that is identical to its own 90 rotation If n gt 1 it is not possible for a solution to be equal to its own reflection because that would require two queens to be facing each other References Edit a b W W Rouse Ball 1960 The Eight Queens Problem in Mathematical Recreations and Essays Macmillan New York pp 165 171 O J Dahl E W Dijkstra C A R Hoare Structured Programming Academic Press London 1972 ISBN 0 12 200550 3 pp 72 82 a b c Bo Bernhardsson 1991 Explicit Solutions to the N Queens Problem for All N SIGART Bull 2 2 7 doi 10 1145 122319 122322 S2CID 10644706 E J Hoffman et al Construction for the Solutions of the m Queens Problem Mathematics Magazine Vol XX 1969 pp 66 72 1 The Q27 Project Sloman Leila 21 September 2021 Mathematician Answers Chess Problem About Attacking Queens Quanta Magazine Retrieved 22 September 2021 Simkin Michael 28 July 2021 The number of n queens configurations arXiv 2107 13460v2 math CO Luria Zur 15 May 2017 New bounds on the number of n queens configurations arXiv 1705 05225v2 math CO Bowtell Candida Keevash Peter 16 September 2021 The n queens problem arXiv 2109 08083v1 math CO J Barr and S Rao 2006 The n Queens Problem in Higher Dimensions Elemente der Mathematik vol 61 4 pp 133 137 Martin S Pearson Queens On A Chessboard Beyond The 2nd Dimension php Retrieved 27 January 2020 Chatham Doug 1 December 2018 Reflections on the n k dragon kings problem Recreational Mathematics Magazine 5 10 39 55 doi 10 2478 rmm 2018 0007 G Polya Uber die doppelt periodischen Losungen des n Damen Problems George Polya Collected papers Vol IV G C Rota ed MIT Press Cambridge London 1984 pp 237 247 Queens on a Chessboard Beyond the 2nd Dimension Burger A P Cockayne E J Mynhardt C M 1997 Domination and irredundance in the queens graph Discrete Mathematics 163 1 3 47 66 doi 10 1016 0012 365X 95 00327 S hdl 1828 2670 MR 1428557 Weakley William D 2018 Queens around the world in twenty five years in Gera Ralucca Haynes Teresa W Hedetniemi Stephen T eds Graph Theory Favorite Conjectures and Open Problems 2 Problem Books in Mathematics Cham Springer pp 43 54 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 97686 0 5 MR 3889146 Queens and knights problem Archived from the original on 16 October 2005 Retrieved 20 September 2005 Bell Jordan Stevens Brett 2009 A survey of known results and research areas for n queens Discrete Mathematics 309 1 1 31 doi 10 1016 j disc 2007 12 043 O Demirors N Rafraf and M M Tanik Obtaining n queens solutions from magic squares and constructing magic squares from n queens solutions Journal of Recreational Mathematics 24 272 280 1992 Gent Ian P Jefferson Christopher Nightingale Peter August 2017 Complexity of n Queens Completion Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research 59 815 848 doi 10 1613 jair 5512 ISSN 1076 9757 Retrieved 7 September 2017 Glock Stefan Correia David Munha Sudakov Benny 6 July 2022 The n queens completion problem Research in the Mathematical Sciences 9 41 41 doi 10 1007 s40687 022 00335 1 PMC 9259550 PMID 35815227 S2CID 244478527 A Polynomial Time Algorithm for the N Queen Problem by Rok Sosic and Jun Gu 1990 Describes run time for up to 500 000 Queens which was the max they could run due to memory constraints Minton Steven Johnston Mark D Philips Andrew B Laird Philip 1 December 1992 Minimizing conflicts a heuristic repair method for constraint satisfaction and scheduling problems Artificial Intelligence 58 1 161 205 doi 10 1016 0004 3702 92 90007 K ISSN 0004 3702 S2CID 14830518 Sosic R Gu Jun October 1994 Efficient local search with conflict minimization a case study of the n queens problem IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering 6 5 661 668 doi 10 1109 69 317698 ISSN 1558 2191 Qiu Zongyan February 2002 Bit vector encoding of n queen problem ACM SIGPLAN Notices 37 2 68 70 doi 10 1145 568600 568613 Richards Martin 1997 Backtracking Algorithms in MCPL using Bit Patterns and Recursion PDF Technical report University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory UCAM CL TR 433 Wirth Niklaus 1976 Algorithms Data Structures Programs Prentice Hall Series in Automatic Computation Prentice Hall Bibcode 1976adsp book W ISBN 978 0 13 022418 7 p 145 Wirth Niklaus 2012 orig 2004 The Eight Queens Problem Algorithms and Data Structures PDF Oberon version with corrections and authorized modifications pp 114 118 DeMaria Rusel 15 November 1993 The 7th Guest The Official Strategy Guide PDF Prima Games ISBN 978 1 5595 8468 5 Retrieved 22 April 2021 ナゾ130 クイーンの問題5 ゲームの匠 in Japanese Retrieved 17 September 2021 Further reading EditBell Jordan Stevens Brett 2009 A survey of known results and research areas for n queens Discrete Mathematics 309 1 1 31 doi 10 1016 j disc 2007 12 043 Watkins John J 2004 Across the Board The Mathematics of Chess Problems Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11503 0 Allison L Yee C N McGaughey M 1988 Three Dimensional NxN Queens Problems Department of Computer Science Monash University Australia Nudelman S 1995 The Modular N Queens Problem in Higher Dimensions Discrete Mathematics 146 1 3 159 167 doi 10 1016 0012 365X 94 00161 5 Engelhardt M August 2010 Der Stammbaum der Losungen des Damenproblems in German means The pedigree chart of solutions to the 8 queens problem Spektrum der Wissenschaft 68 71 On The Modular N Queen Problem in Higher Dimensions Ricardo Gomez Juan Jose Montellano and Ricardo Strausz 2004 Instituto de Matematicas Area de la Investigacion Cientifica Circuito Exterior Ciudad Universitaria Mexico Budd Timothy 2002 A Case Study The Eight Queens Puzzle PDF An Introduction to Object Oriented Programming 3rd ed Addison Wesley Longman pp 125 145 ISBN 0 201 76031 2 Wirth Niklaus 2004 updated 2012 The Eight Queens Problem Algorithms and Data Structures PDF Oberon version with corrections and authorized modifications pp 114 118 External links Edit The Wikibook Algorithm Implementation has a page on the topic of N queens problem Weisstein Eric W Queens Problem MathWorld queens cpm on GitHub Eight Queens Puzzle in Turbo Pascal for CP M eight queens py on GitHub Eight Queens Puzzle one line solution in Python Solutions in more than 100 different programming languages on Rosetta Code Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eight queens puzzle amp oldid 1136183450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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