1, 3, 7, f, 7, /, DEL, ???
Probably much easier to catch if you were told the sequence written entirely in base 10 is 1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127 if you don't know different bases, if you are used to lot's of different bases then it's easier as written because you'll notice that they were all the last of the characters for a given common (or not so common) base.
The clue on that one is gonna catch the eye probably for those who are used to hexadecimal, were one counts 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,a,b,c,d,e,f, 10 and so on. The / and DEL might then catch the eyes of those used to older computer coding, those all represent the last number before ten of a given base, in this case binary, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, and 128, or 2^n, so that the numbers are 2^n -1 in base 2^n, where n is the position of each clue.
1 ----> 2^1 - 1 in base 2^1 or binary
3 ----> 2^2 - 1 in base 2^2 or 4
7 ----> 2^3 - 1 in base 2^3 or 8
f ----> 2^4 - 1 in base 2^4 or 16
7 ----> 2^5 - 1 in base 2^5 or 32 - Whuh? Yeah base 32 counts 7 as it's last number, which wants a unique character for every number between 0-31, with 32 to be written as 10, goes alphabetically for 26 letters than uses numbers. This character serves more for completeness and to allow confirmation, Base32 is not commonly used.
/ ----> 2^6 - 1 in base 2^6 or 64 - Much like the other, in base64 / is the last unique character used.
DEL----> 2^7 - 1 in base 2^7 or 128 - ASCII, this las tone is actually the best clue, if you see it and have some familiarity with ASCII and hex, you'll take the f and the DEL and realize someone is using increasing bases, which let's you solve backwards and realize what is going on - with tables presumably, I doubt anyone has all those bases memorized though often the last digit of them, their '9' tends to be somewhat familiar
So of course the last is 255, and proceeds 511, 1023, 2047, etc. Extended ASCII (base 256) would probably be the preferred format for the unique character but there are several versions. Personally I consider a pretty good example of why I dislike these sorts of problems. You'd never guess them if you weren't familiar with that sort of thing, and while weird computer bases in powers of 2 were pretty common braniac knowledge for the earlier computer days, it's mostly redundant now. To me it's sort of like measuring intelligence by asking what color a Sith Lord's lightsaber is, you will probably find those who answered red or crimson are above average IQ, but you can't say much about those who said 'Huh?' and those who just guess and guess right probably would make up a big chunk of the right answers.
Edit: By the way the 'somewhat humorous' answer I alluded to in the original question hinges on one of the more common Extended ASCII version using the space character as it's last symbol, so a big blank for an answer, another common one uses a box or square, vaguely alluding to base 2 exponential answers. So, RdrR sort of funny
Probably much easier to catch if you were told the sequence written entirely in base 10 is 1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127 if you don't know different bases, if you are used to lot's of different bases then it's easier as written because you'll notice that they were all the last of the characters for a given common (or not so common) base.
The clue on that one is gonna catch the eye probably for those who are used to hexadecimal, were one counts 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,a,b,c,d,e,f, 10 and so on. The / and DEL might then catch the eyes of those used to older computer coding, those all represent the last number before ten of a given base, in this case binary, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, and 128, or 2^n, so that the numbers are 2^n -1 in base 2^n, where n is the position of each clue.
1 ----> 2^1 - 1 in base 2^1 or binary
3 ----> 2^2 - 1 in base 2^2 or 4
7 ----> 2^3 - 1 in base 2^3 or 8
f ----> 2^4 - 1 in base 2^4 or 16
7 ----> 2^5 - 1 in base 2^5 or 32 - Whuh? Yeah base 32 counts 7 as it's last number, which wants a unique character for every number between 0-31, with 32 to be written as 10, goes alphabetically for 26 letters than uses numbers. This character serves more for completeness and to allow confirmation, Base32 is not commonly used.
/ ----> 2^6 - 1 in base 2^6 or 64 - Much like the other, in base64 / is the last unique character used.
DEL----> 2^7 - 1 in base 2^7 or 128 - ASCII, this las tone is actually the best clue, if you see it and have some familiarity with ASCII and hex, you'll take the f and the DEL and realize someone is using increasing bases, which let's you solve backwards and realize what is going on - with tables presumably, I doubt anyone has all those bases memorized though often the last digit of them, their '9' tends to be somewhat familiar
So of course the last is 255, and proceeds 511, 1023, 2047, etc. Extended ASCII (base 256) would probably be the preferred format for the unique character but there are several versions. Personally I consider a pretty good example of why I dislike these sorts of problems. You'd never guess them if you weren't familiar with that sort of thing, and while weird computer bases in powers of 2 were pretty common braniac knowledge for the earlier computer days, it's mostly redundant now. To me it's sort of like measuring intelligence by asking what color a Sith Lord's lightsaber is, you will probably find those who answered red or crimson are above average IQ, but you can't say much about those who said 'Huh?' and those who just guess and guess right probably would make up a big chunk of the right answers.
Edit: By the way the 'somewhat humorous' answer I alluded to in the original question hinges on one of the more common Extended ASCII version using the space character as it's last symbol, so a big blank for an answer, another common one uses a box or square, vaguely alluding to base 2 exponential answers. So, RdrR sort of funny
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
This message last edited by Isaac on 10/05/2010 at 04:45:22 PM
A Logic Problem
09/05/2010 09:24:36 PM
- 1050 Views
I despise these sorts of problems (spoiler)
09/05/2010 09:38:41 PM
- 775 Views
that is correct (now no looking ahead, cheaters ) *NM*
09/05/2010 09:43:35 PM
- 353 Views
Based on the view count I would say at least half the people have decided to cheat *NM*
09/05/2010 09:52:42 PM
- 351 Views
Not bad. Try this one.
09/05/2010 10:21:42 PM
- 729 Views
That's going to bug me for ages now.
09/05/2010 11:48:07 PM
- 645 Views
You would need a good base in math to figure it out. *NM*
10/05/2010 12:03:09 AM
- 366 Views
I'm a little confused by this. *kind of spoiler*
10/05/2010 12:12:37 AM
- 612 Views
I thought of that, but that doesn't seem to lead anywhere, so dropped that line of thought...
10/05/2010 12:16:04 AM
- 674 Views
Yeah, probably 99.9% of people won't get this, but it has less to do with patterns I think (spoiler)
10/05/2010 12:21:06 AM
- 669 Views
I never like base change ones, let me see if I can remember one...
10/05/2010 01:28:06 AM
- 706 Views
To save confusion, anyone who gets that just give it in base 10 *NM*
10/05/2010 01:52:45 AM
- 359 Views
Answer (Spoiler)
10/05/2010 03:09:18 PM
- 682 Views
Ths is not a logic problem. It's a puzzle.
10/05/2010 02:33:19 PM
- 562 Views
Re: No no, there's a definite pattern.
10/05/2010 06:50:01 PM
- 580 Views
ok, how do you analyze the problem?
10/05/2010 08:08:21 PM
- 691 Views
Here's how I thought of it.
10/05/2010 10:20:10 PM
- 677 Views
thanks for the explanation. and a reminder that I LOATHE that kind of stuff. *NM*
10/05/2010 10:26:32 PM
- 368 Views
Re: I like things like these, because while I don't think they mean anything about how smart I am,
10/05/2010 06:52:07 PM
- 683 Views
My settings allow me to automatically see white text. Couldn't help but see the answer. *NM*
11/05/2010 04:53:11 PM
- 339 Views