Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- I Geometry
- II Number Theory and Graph Theory
- III Flexagons and Catalan Numbers
- IV Making Things Fit
- V Further Puzzles and Games
- 24 Cups and Downs
- 25 30 Years of Bulgarian Solitaire
- 26 Congo Bongo
- 27 Sam Loyd's Courier Problem with Diophantus, Pythagoras, and Martin Gardner
- 28 Retrolife and The Pawns Neighbors
- 29 RATWYT
- VI Cards and Probability
- VII Other Aspects of Martin Gardner
- Index
- About the Editors
29 - RATWYT
from V - Further Puzzles and Games
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- I Geometry
- II Number Theory and Graph Theory
- III Flexagons and Catalan Numbers
- IV Making Things Fit
- V Further Puzzles and Games
- 24 Cups and Downs
- 25 30 Years of Bulgarian Solitaire
- 26 Congo Bongo
- 27 Sam Loyd's Courier Problem with Diophantus, Pythagoras, and Martin Gardner
- 28 Retrolife and The Pawns Neighbors
- 29 RATWYT
- VI Cards and Probability
- VII Other Aspects of Martin Gardner
- Index
- About the Editors
Summary
In memory of Martin Gardner, who was and remains enchantingly influential and inspiring.
WYTHOFF
In 1907, the Dutch mathematician, Willem Abraham Wythoff [13] invented this game, later vividly explained by Martin Gardner in [7].
Wythoff is played on a pair of nonnegative integers, (M, N). A move consists of either (i) subtracting any positive integer from precisely one of M or N such that the result remains nonnegative, or (ii) subtracting the same positive integer from both M and N such that the results remain nonnegative. The first player unable to move loses.
Given the position (3, 3), say, the next player wins in a single move: (3, 3) → (0, 0). The position (3, 3) is called an N-position, because the Next player wins. If M = N = 0, the next player loses, and the previous player, the one who moved to (0, 0), wins. Thus (0, 0) is a P-position, because the Previous player wins.
If M > 0, it is easy to see that (0, M) and (M, M) are N-positions, since the next player can win in one move. On the other hand, (1, 2) is a P-position because all its followers—positions reached in one move—are N-positions. The first few P-positions are listed in Table 29.1. Note that every N-position has at least one P-follower, but all followers of a P-position are N-positions. From an N-position, in order to win, a player must move to a P-position.
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- Information
- Martin Gardner in the Twenty-First Century , pp. 213 - 218Publisher: Mathematical Association of AmericaPrint publication year: 2012