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bobbycollins

11th May 2023, 14:05
I would be interested to hear of the proportion of solvers who genuinely enjoy these puzzles. I certainly don't and stopped bothering a long time ago. Printer's devilry was introduced by Afrit in 1937. The Playfair cipher was conceived by Charles Wheatstone in the 19th century and was used in the Boer War!

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jono

11th May 2023, 14:17
Intrigued by such devices rather than anything else. Have had limited success with Azed so shall have to treat it as a learning experience and look forward to the full blog!
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chrise

11th May 2023, 14:19
a nice example of solving a playfair is in Dorothy Sayers's Have his carcase
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buddy

11th May 2023, 16:32
I do not mind either as an occasional change of pace (emphasis on occasional). With Azed's PDs, I just take the tack that this is not a cryptic crossword, but something else, and forge ahead (which I did with no real issues this week, jono, just FYI :). Perhaps as an American I have the advantage that I regularly work all sorts of non-cryptic puzzles, and this is just one more in that category.

As for Playfairs, I just cheat and use the online keyword crackers and encrypt/decrypt sites that are out there on the interwebs (hangs head in shame).

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granama1

11th May 2023, 16:41
When they come up in the Azeds I give them a miss and carry on working my way through the Azed archive. I find the Printer's Devilry a bit tedious and Playfair isn't my cuppa tea at all. I have done both in the past though.
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bobbycollins

11th May 2023, 19:30
Thanks for sharing your views - illuminating!
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mattrom

11th May 2023, 22:48
I do enjoy Azed's Printer's Devilry puzzles, once I get my head around the idea that the answers aren't definitions. It's something different, and they don't come up very often.
I happily use on-line solvers for Playfairs, as I can't be bothered with the hard slog. I see them as annoying, rather than clever. But then, I think that about many end games, as well.
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cockie

12th May 2023, 08:59
The problem with playfairs is that no-one teaches you how to solve them, and the availability of an online cheat means that no-one will ever bother. But there is a logical path to unlocking them (much as there is with numericals - my least favourite Fridays). In this one the fact that, as it were, XY => YZ means that XYZ occur together in a row or a column gives you two possible paths. The other pair combinations rule one of them out pretty quickly, and after that it's a matter of seeing what's likely to be there, given that the later members of the alphabet are in the right order. X once set a playfair with CAB as the key word. I have no idea whether that was easier to crack, or harder.
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buzzybee

12th May 2023, 09:33
They are certainly challenging and require a different mindset from regular cryptics. I have usuaĺly struggled, and indeed this is the first that I have completed. My issue with Azed (aka Jonathan Crowther) is the very large number of extremely obscure words; he seems to have a great liking for Scottish slang.
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deepwater

12th May 2023, 16:17
For those who are interested in learning about how you could solve a playfair 'mechanically', there is a recently posted (old) article on the new Crossword Club website here: https://www.thecrossword.club/articles
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