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Four switches (Posted on 2005-05-09) Difficulty: 5 of 5
You have two tasks. You must design a 3-switch lamp and a 4-switch lamp. It is recommended that you try the 3-switch lamp first. Your design will include a lightbulb, wires, switches and power sources. The design must follow these rules:

1. You may only use 1 lightbulb for each lamp. The 3-switch lamp can only have one power source, and the 4-switch lamp must have exactly two. You may use any number of wires.
2. Every flip of a switch, no matter the previous positions, must turn the lamp from on to off or off to on.
3. Each wire may connect to any number of switches, power sources, and other wires, and to the lightbulb.
4. Each switch has two separate positions to which wires can connect. If the switch is up, then all the wires connected to position 1 are considered connected to each other. If the switch is down, all the wires connected to position 2 are considered connected to each other.
5. The lightbulb turns on if and only if there exists a complete circuit that includes both the lightbulb and at least one power source.
6. A circuit is a sequence of wires, power sources, and the lightbulb where each is connected to the next item in the sequence (the last is connected to the first). No such sequence may list the same wire, power source, or the lightbulb twice.

I recommend that you denote the different wires with letters like A, B, C, etc.

See The Solution Submitted by Tristan    
Rating: 3.4286 (7 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re: Question | Comment 13 of 37 |
(In reply to Question by Avin)

Those are excellent points.  By my rules, the described circuit is allowed, and there are no positive/negative ends of the power source.

I was somewhat aware of these inconsistencies with reality, but I only noticed long after I had solved it, so I was reluctant to fix the rules, lest whatever my thought process was be thrown off.

You could probably (no guarantees) create two solutions that both follow my rules, but of which only one follows the real rules.

  Posted by Tristan on 2005-05-10 21:37:31

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