Elites Grid Lrdi 2023 Matrix Arrangement Lesson... Online
But clue 7 says difference 2, so other possibilities: (2,4),(3,1),(3,5),(4,2),(5,3). Keep all.
Wait — this is the — they sometimes allow numbers to repeat but symbols to be unique per row/col? No, the problem states clearly: "Place numbers 1 through 5 in each row and each column exactly once" — so Latin square for numbers. Then clue 6 is impossible unless E1=E2 and still row has all five numbers — impossible. So perhaps clue 6 is misphrased? In actual Elites 2023, clue 6 was "Same symbol" — a known errata.
We need a systematic solve, but in story form, Riya realizes: “The star Latin square is the key. Let’s assume star positions.” Elites Grid LRDI 2023 Matrix Arrangement lesson...
Clue 3: (B2, C2) B2 < C2.
2 5 1 4 3 3 1 4 5 2 4 2 5 3 1 5 3 2 1 4 1 4 3 2 5 But clue 7 says difference 2, so other
She checks the original text: Clue 6 actually says: (E1, E2): Same number. That’s impossible under standard rules. So either it’s a trick — meaning E1 and E2 are the same number, so the row has a duplicate, meaning the “each row has 1..5 once” rule is for numbers? Or the puzzle uses numbers 1-5 with repetition allowed? But that breaks Latin square.
But clue 10: (B3,B4) differ by 3 → possible (1,4),(2,5),(4,1),(5,2). Not yet connected. The ★ appears once per row and per column. That’s a huge restriction. Let’s denote positions of ★ as (r,c) with all r and c unique. No, the problem states clearly: "Place numbers 1
She builds a trial grid:
“The trick is to treat numbers and symbols as two interlocking Latin squares. Start with the most restrictive clue — here, the ★ per row/col plus product odd and sum clues. Use a 5x5 possibilities table. Never assume without checking row-column uniqueness for both attributes simultaneously.”




