The objective of the well-known Towers of Hanoi puzzle is to move a set of disks one at a time from one of a set of pegs to another, while keeping the disks sorted on each peg. We propose an adversarial variation in which the first player forbids a set of states in the puzzle, and the second player must then convert one randomly-selected state to another without passing through forbidden states. Analyzing this version raises the question of the treewidth of Hanoi graphs. We find this number exactly for three-peg puzzles and provide nearly-tight asymptotic bounds for larger numbers of pegs
In this we paper we consider the version of the classical Towers of Hanoi games where the game-board...
AbstractIt is proved that seven different approaches to the multi-peg Tower of Hanoi problem are all...
The Bottleneck Tower of Hanoi (BTH) problem, posed in 1981 by Wood, is a natural generalization of t...
AbstractThe generalized Tower of Hanoi problem with h≥4 pegs is known to require a sub-exponentially...
The classic Tower of Hanoi puzzle involves moving a set of disks on three pegs. The number of moves ...
The Tower of Hanoi puzzle with its disks and poles is familiar to students in mathematics and comput...
AbstractThe Tower of Hanoi problem is generalized in such a way that the pegs are located at the ver...
More than a century after its proposal, the Towers of Hanoi puzzle with 4 pegs was solved by Thierry...
This summer we explored a specific variation of the Tower of Hanoi puzzle: the disks can only move t...
AbstractThe multi-peg Towers of Hanoi problem is still open. No provably optimal constructive algori...
AbstractHanoi graphs are the state graphs for Tower of Hanoi problems with three or more pegs. We pr...
In contrast to the widespread interest in the Frame-Stewart conjecture (FSC) about the optimal numbe...
Abstract. For the Tower of Hanoi problem, it has been found that it is possible to construct a nice ...
The Tower of Hanoi is a famous mathematical puzzle. It consists of three rods, and a number of disks...
The Tower of Hanoi Puzzle is a fascinating mathematical puzzle invented by the French mathematician ...
In this we paper we consider the version of the classical Towers of Hanoi games where the game-board...
AbstractIt is proved that seven different approaches to the multi-peg Tower of Hanoi problem are all...
The Bottleneck Tower of Hanoi (BTH) problem, posed in 1981 by Wood, is a natural generalization of t...
AbstractThe generalized Tower of Hanoi problem with h≥4 pegs is known to require a sub-exponentially...
The classic Tower of Hanoi puzzle involves moving a set of disks on three pegs. The number of moves ...
The Tower of Hanoi puzzle with its disks and poles is familiar to students in mathematics and comput...
AbstractThe Tower of Hanoi problem is generalized in such a way that the pegs are located at the ver...
More than a century after its proposal, the Towers of Hanoi puzzle with 4 pegs was solved by Thierry...
This summer we explored a specific variation of the Tower of Hanoi puzzle: the disks can only move t...
AbstractThe multi-peg Towers of Hanoi problem is still open. No provably optimal constructive algori...
AbstractHanoi graphs are the state graphs for Tower of Hanoi problems with three or more pegs. We pr...
In contrast to the widespread interest in the Frame-Stewart conjecture (FSC) about the optimal numbe...
Abstract. For the Tower of Hanoi problem, it has been found that it is possible to construct a nice ...
The Tower of Hanoi is a famous mathematical puzzle. It consists of three rods, and a number of disks...
The Tower of Hanoi Puzzle is a fascinating mathematical puzzle invented by the French mathematician ...
In this we paper we consider the version of the classical Towers of Hanoi games where the game-board...
AbstractIt is proved that seven different approaches to the multi-peg Tower of Hanoi problem are all...
The Bottleneck Tower of Hanoi (BTH) problem, posed in 1981 by Wood, is a natural generalization of t...