home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles.crosswords
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!demon!bryson.demon.co.uk!ross
- From: ross@bryson.demon.co.uk (Ross Beresford)
- Subject: Re: Computer Crosswords (was Re: COMPUTER JOURNAL ...)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.193541.2708@bryson.demon.co.uk>
- Organization: Bryson Limited, Reading, UK
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
- References: <Dec.20.23.15.48.1992.21947@romulus.rutgers.edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 92 19:35:41 GMT
- Lines: 47
-
- Chris Long (clong@romulus.rutgers.edu) wrote:
- : This is the easy part; the hard part is tagging all of the (thousands)
- : of words, which must be done by hand.
-
- In this regard, you may find the MRC2 database in the Oxford Text
- Archive (anonymous ftp to 129.67.1.165) useful.
-
- That database (originally derived from the Shorter Oxford) includes a
- lot of specialised psycholinguistic information that I imagine you
- could make good use of.
-
- A start would be to base your score on one of the various written
- frequency values, giving all the unrated words a low score.
-
- : But
- : assuming "fuzz" is in all the lists, it gets a great score between
- : that and having the doubled "z".
-
- For crosswords, this aspect of the scoring is the opposite from what
- I'd expect. Both from the point of view of making filling the grid
- easier, and of making clueing the words easier.
-
- I would give preference to words putting high frequency letters at
- the given positions in the unassigned crossing lights. One
- problem with this is that you could end up putting the same high
- (or low from your POV) scoring words in every grid.
-
- : Finally, the hardest part doing the clues! Anyone know how to
- : automate these? :)
-
- Perhaps someone is doing this as their master's thesis right now?
- IMHO it's an easier problem than parsing and interpreting clues
- which is what Mr Hart seems to be trying to do.
-
- Seriously, from my experience of compiling puzzles, the grid
- construction stage is often slow and painstaking and well-suited
- to some sort of automated help.
-
- Grid construction may get easier with experience, but I think an
- automatic means of filling in corners around thematic bits in
- a grid would always save a substantial amount of time that could
- be better spent thinking up imaginative themes and/or clues.
-
- --
- Ross Beresford
- Email: ross@bryson.demon.co.uk Voice: +44 734 344153
- Bryson Limited, 10 Wagtail Close, Twyford, Reading, RG10 9ED, UK
-