Sudoku

Sudoku Pointing Pairs — Box-to-Line Elimination

4 min read  ·  Burmly

Pointing pairs (also called box-line reduction) appear regularly in medium puzzles — often the step that breaks a stall when naked and hidden singles have run dry. They're fast to find and reliably produce new information.

The core idea

Inside a 3×3 box, look at where a digit can still be placed. If all its candidate cells fall in a single row or column within the box, eliminate that digit from the rest of that row or column outside the box.

Top-center box, looking for digit 5: · [5] · · · · · [5] · Both 5-candidates are in column 5. → Remove 5 from all other cells in column 5.

Why it works

Digit 5 must go somewhere in this box. The only options are in column 5. One of those cells will get the 5. Either way, column 5 has its 5 accounted for from within this box — no other cell in the column can hold it.

Row-confined pointing pairs

Middle-left box, digit 7: · · · [7] [7] · · · · Both candidates are in row 5. → Remove 7 from all other cells in row 5.

Pointing triples

Three candidates in one row or column within a box. Same logic — eliminate from the rest of that line. Less common than pairs but follows identically.

How to find them efficiently

  1. Pick a digit with several placements remaining
  2. For each unsolved box, check which rows and columns its candidates fall in
  3. If confined to one row or column → eliminate from the rest of that line
  4. Repeat for all digits
After eliminating: always rescan the affected row or column for hidden singles. Pointing pair eliminations often directly reveal a placement.

Practice on medium difficulty

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