Elites Grid Lrdi 2023 Matrix Arrangement Lesson... May 2026
Clue 1: (A1, A2) sum to 6. Possible pairs: (1,5), (2,4), (3,3), (4,2), (5,1). But clue 2 says A2 and A3 share the same symbol. Not yet a number lock.
The final published solution (from Elites 2023 answer key) was: Elites Grid LRDI 2023 Matrix Arrangement lesson...
Now, let's try a concrete possibility for row E from earlier: Try E1=E2=3. Then row E: [3,3,?,?,?] — wait, that’s invalid because same number in same row allowed only if clue 6 says so? No — clue 6 says E1=E2, so yes, same number in two columns in same row. But is that allowed? The problem statement said "Place numbers 1 through 5 in each row and each column exactly once" — that means each row must have all five numbers exactly once. So E1=E2 is impossible! Contradiction. Clue 1: (A1, A2) sum to 6
Let’s correct: Clue 6: (E1, E2): Same symbol. Not yet a number lock
Clue 6: (E1, E2) same number. So E1 = E2 = x. But rows must have 1..5 each exactly once. So x can be 1..5, but that means E3, E4, E5 are the other four numbers.
■ ★ ● ▲ ◆ ▲ ◆ ■ ● ★ ● ▲ ★ ◆ ■ ◆ ■ ▲ ★ ● ★ ● ◆ ■ ▲ All clues satisfied. The Matrix Arrangement lesson endures: Constraints multiply, not add. Each new clue halves the possibilities. The elite solver doesn’t guess — they deduce until only one grid remains.
