Problem 113. N-Queens Checker
Picture a chessboard populated with a number of queens (i.e. pieces that can move like a queen in chess). The board is a matrix, a, filled mostly with zeros, while the queens are given as ones. Your job is to verify that the board is a legitimate answer to the N-Queens problem. The board is good only when no queen can "see" (and thus capture) another queen.
Example
The matrix below shows two queens on a 3-by-3 chessboard. The queens can't see each other, so the function should return TRUE.
1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Here is a bigger board with more queens. Since the queens on rows 3 and 4 are adjacent along a diagonal, they can see each other and the function should return FALSE.
0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0
The board doesn't have to be square, but it always has 2 or more rows and 2 or more columns. This matrix returns FALSE.
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
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Chess
- 18 Problems
- 4 Finishers
- Count the peaceful queens
- Valid Chess Moves
- The Dark Knight
- Knight's Watch
- N-Queens Checker
- Knight's Tour Checker
- Eight Queens Solution Checker
- Queen's move
- Queen's move - 02
- Checkmate
- Checkmate-02
- Can the knight take out the pawn?
- Castling-01
- Castling-02
- Castling-03
- chess position
- En passant - 01
- King's Cage
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