Rubik’s algorithms

Sunday 26 February 2017This is close to eight years old. Be careful.

Recently, a nephew asked about how to solve a Rubik’s Cube. I couldn’t sit down with him to show him what I knew, so I looked around the web for explanations. I was surprised by two things: first, that all the pages offering solutions seemed to offer the same one, even down to the colors discussed: “Start by making a white cross, ..., finally, finish the yellow side.”

Second, that the techniques (or “algorithms”) were often given without explanation. They’re presented as something to memorize.

My own solving technique uses a few algorithms constructed in a certain way that I describe in Two-Part Rubik’s Algorithms. I wrote them up as a resource I hope my nephew will be able to use.

A Rubik's Cube with two edges flipped

BTW, that page makes use of Conrad Rider’s impressive TwistySim library.

Comments

[gravatar]
Hi Ned,

I put together a method that requires very little memorization, maybe your nephew will find it useful:

http://beust.com/rubik/

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