Enumerate the ways of putting six armies of queens on a humongous chessboard












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This is a sort of a sub-problem of the open puzzle Peaceful Encampments, for high numbers of armies.



Consider a chessboard with an astronomically large number of vanishingly small squares, on which we place six contiguous armies of queens — a red army, a green army, a blue army, a magenta army, a yellow army, and a cyan army — such that no queen is ever threatened by a queen of any other color. Here are four possible ways those armies could appear on the board:





Consider the upper-left image here. Scan it from left to right; you encounter the armies in the order "G-R-B-M-C-Y". Scan it from top to bottom: "M-R-G-Y-C-B". Scan it slashwards from lower left to upper right: "B-G-R-C-Y-M". Scan it backslashwards from upper left to lower right: "G-R-M-B-C-Y".



I claim that these four scans uniquely identify this particular arrangement of armies. So the four arrangements in the picture above can be summarized as:



Upper left: GRBMCY MRGYCB BGRCYM GRMBCY.

Upper right: GRBMCY MRYGCB BGRCYM RGMBYC.

Lower left: RGBMYC RMGYBC BGRCMY RGMBYC.

Lower right: RGBMYC MRYGCB BGRCYM RMGYBC.



So my combinatorial puzzle is:




How many different ways are there to arrange six armies on the board?




It would be reasonable to rearrange the colors so that the encoding always begins with, say, RGBCMY. I was a bit too lazy to do that when making these diagrams. But if we do that, we get these four encodings:



Upper left: RGBCMY CGRYMB BRGMYC RGCBMY.

Upper right: RGBCMY CGYRMB BRGMYC GRCBYM.

Lower left: RGBCMY RCGMBY BGRYCM RGCBMY.

Lower right: RGBCMY CRMGYB BGRYMC RCGMBY.









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    $begingroup$


    This is a sort of a sub-problem of the open puzzle Peaceful Encampments, for high numbers of armies.



    Consider a chessboard with an astronomically large number of vanishingly small squares, on which we place six contiguous armies of queens — a red army, a green army, a blue army, a magenta army, a yellow army, and a cyan army — such that no queen is ever threatened by a queen of any other color. Here are four possible ways those armies could appear on the board:





    Consider the upper-left image here. Scan it from left to right; you encounter the armies in the order "G-R-B-M-C-Y". Scan it from top to bottom: "M-R-G-Y-C-B". Scan it slashwards from lower left to upper right: "B-G-R-C-Y-M". Scan it backslashwards from upper left to lower right: "G-R-M-B-C-Y".



    I claim that these four scans uniquely identify this particular arrangement of armies. So the four arrangements in the picture above can be summarized as:



    Upper left: GRBMCY MRGYCB BGRCYM GRMBCY.

    Upper right: GRBMCY MRYGCB BGRCYM RGMBYC.

    Lower left: RGBMYC RMGYBC BGRCMY RGMBYC.

    Lower right: RGBMYC MRYGCB BGRCYM RMGYBC.



    So my combinatorial puzzle is:




    How many different ways are there to arrange six armies on the board?




    It would be reasonable to rearrange the colors so that the encoding always begins with, say, RGBCMY. I was a bit too lazy to do that when making these diagrams. But if we do that, we get these four encodings:



    Upper left: RGBCMY CGRYMB BRGMYC RGCBMY.

    Upper right: RGBCMY CGYRMB BRGMYC GRCBYM.

    Lower left: RGBCMY RCGMBY BGRYCM RGCBMY.

    Lower right: RGBCMY CRMGYB BGRYMC RCGMBY.









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      $begingroup$


      This is a sort of a sub-problem of the open puzzle Peaceful Encampments, for high numbers of armies.



      Consider a chessboard with an astronomically large number of vanishingly small squares, on which we place six contiguous armies of queens — a red army, a green army, a blue army, a magenta army, a yellow army, and a cyan army — such that no queen is ever threatened by a queen of any other color. Here are four possible ways those armies could appear on the board:





      Consider the upper-left image here. Scan it from left to right; you encounter the armies in the order "G-R-B-M-C-Y". Scan it from top to bottom: "M-R-G-Y-C-B". Scan it slashwards from lower left to upper right: "B-G-R-C-Y-M". Scan it backslashwards from upper left to lower right: "G-R-M-B-C-Y".



      I claim that these four scans uniquely identify this particular arrangement of armies. So the four arrangements in the picture above can be summarized as:



      Upper left: GRBMCY MRGYCB BGRCYM GRMBCY.

      Upper right: GRBMCY MRYGCB BGRCYM RGMBYC.

      Lower left: RGBMYC RMGYBC BGRCMY RGMBYC.

      Lower right: RGBMYC MRYGCB BGRCYM RMGYBC.



      So my combinatorial puzzle is:




      How many different ways are there to arrange six armies on the board?




      It would be reasonable to rearrange the colors so that the encoding always begins with, say, RGBCMY. I was a bit too lazy to do that when making these diagrams. But if we do that, we get these four encodings:



      Upper left: RGBCMY CGRYMB BRGMYC RGCBMY.

      Upper right: RGBCMY CGYRMB BRGMYC GRCBYM.

      Lower left: RGBCMY RCGMBY BGRYCM RGCBMY.

      Lower right: RGBCMY CRMGYB BGRYMC RCGMBY.









      share









      $endgroup$




      This is a sort of a sub-problem of the open puzzle Peaceful Encampments, for high numbers of armies.



      Consider a chessboard with an astronomically large number of vanishingly small squares, on which we place six contiguous armies of queens — a red army, a green army, a blue army, a magenta army, a yellow army, and a cyan army — such that no queen is ever threatened by a queen of any other color. Here are four possible ways those armies could appear on the board:





      Consider the upper-left image here. Scan it from left to right; you encounter the armies in the order "G-R-B-M-C-Y". Scan it from top to bottom: "M-R-G-Y-C-B". Scan it slashwards from lower left to upper right: "B-G-R-C-Y-M". Scan it backslashwards from upper left to lower right: "G-R-M-B-C-Y".



      I claim that these four scans uniquely identify this particular arrangement of armies. So the four arrangements in the picture above can be summarized as:



      Upper left: GRBMCY MRGYCB BGRCYM GRMBCY.

      Upper right: GRBMCY MRYGCB BGRCYM RGMBYC.

      Lower left: RGBMYC RMGYBC BGRCMY RGMBYC.

      Lower right: RGBMYC MRYGCB BGRCYM RMGYBC.



      So my combinatorial puzzle is:




      How many different ways are there to arrange six armies on the board?




      It would be reasonable to rearrange the colors so that the encoding always begins with, say, RGBCMY. I was a bit too lazy to do that when making these diagrams. But if we do that, we get these four encodings:



      Upper left: RGBCMY CGRYMB BRGMYC RGCBMY.

      Upper right: RGBCMY CGYRMB BRGMYC GRCBYM.

      Lower left: RGBCMY RCGMBY BGRYCM RGCBMY.

      Lower right: RGBCMY CRMGYB BGRYMC RCGMBY.







      geometry combinatorics chess





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