When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: math logic puzzles 8th grade level reading books for classroom projects

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Recreational mathematics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recreational_mathematics

    Some of the more well-known topics in recreational mathematics are Rubik's Cubes, magic squares, fractals, logic puzzles and mathematical chess problems, but this area of mathematics includes the aesthetics and culture of mathematics, peculiar or amusing stories and coincidences about mathematics, and the personal lives of mathematicians.

  3. Mathematical puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_puzzle

    Mathematical puzzles require mathematics to solve them. Logic puzzles are a common type of mathematical puzzle. Conway's Game of Life and fractals, as two examples, may also be considered mathematical puzzles even though the solver interacts with them only at the beginning by providing a set of initial conditions. After these conditions are set ...

  4. Games, Puzzles, and Computation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Games,_Puzzles,_and...

    Games, Puzzles, and Computation concerns the computational complexity theory of solving logic puzzles and making optimal decisions in two-player and multi-player combinatorial games. Its focus is on games and puzzles that have seen real-world play, rather than ones that have been invented for a purely mathematical purpose. [2]

  5. The ClueFinders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_ClueFinders

    The first ClueFinders title, The ClueFinders 3rd Grade Adventures: The Mystery of Mathra, was released in January 1998, and The ClueFinders 4th Grade Adventures was released in July. The Learning Company used their new game as the prototype for Internet Applet technology, which allowed users to download supplementary activities from the ...

  6. Taking Sudoku Seriously - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taking_Sudoku_Seriously

    This book is intended for a general audience interested in recreational mathematics, [7] including mathematically inclined high school students. [4] It is intended to counter the widespread misimpression that Sudoku is not mathematical, [5] [6] [8] and could help students appreciate the distinction between mathematical reasoning and rote calculation.

  7. To Mock a Mockingbird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/To_Mock_a_Mockingbird

    To Mock a Mockingbird and Other Logic Puzzles: Including an Amazing Adventure in Combinatory Logic (1985, ISBN 0-19-280142-2) is a book by the mathematician and logician Raymond Smullyan. It contains many nontrivial recreational puzzles of the sort for which Smullyan is well known.