mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Puzzles

Polygraph

Draw a regular polygon. Connect all its vertices to every other vertex. For example, if you picked a pentagon or a hexagon, the result would look as follows:
Colour the regions of your shape so that no two regions which share an edge are the same colour. (Regions which only meet at one point can be the same colour.)
What is the least number of colours which this can be done with?

Show answer & extension

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
 Most recent collections 

Advent calendar 2023

Advent calendar 2022

Advent calendar 2021

Advent calendar 2020


List of all puzzles

Tags

albgebra palindromes pascal's triangle taxicab geometry tournaments combinatorics shapes the only crossnumber geometry grids bases binary fractions gerrymandering christmas sets digital clocks crossnumbers rectangles lines ellipses multiplication consecutive numbers sport division calculus crossnumber wordplay integration percentages elections products factorials money scales probabilty circles parabolas books averages time multiples planes determinants partitions chess dominos arrows games even numbers colouring polygons star numbers algebra remainders functions 3d shapes irreducible numbers symmetry dice squares prime numbers geometric mean addition factors hexagons triangle numbers cube numbers perimeter advent square roots sum to infinity unit fractions square numbers 2d shapes tiling logic dates surds regular shapes number doubling balancing cryptic clues triangles matrices menace chocolate decahedra range cubics sums geometric means coordinates probability cryptic crossnumbers differentiation tangents perfect numbers volume rugby sequences trigonometry means angles quadratics odd numbers graphs crosswords chalkdust crossnumber median folding tube maps digits consecutive integers floors speed people maths expansions proportion mean spheres pentagons axes digital products shape ave complex numbers quadrilaterals integers dodecagons clocks routes cards coins numbers area indices polynomials

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2024