vote up -2 vote down star

I was at a job interview for a software developer position at a company that will remain unnamed, and was asked to solve a puzzle. I spent the good part of an hour trying to come up with an algorithm, and just couldn't grok it.

It won't help me score that dream job, but I just have to know, what's the solution?

"A hundred prisoners are each locked in a room with three pirates, one of whom will walk the plank in the morning. Each prisoner has 10 bottles of wine, one of which has been poisoned; and each pirate has 12 coins, one of which is counterfeit and weighs either more or less than a genuine coin. In the room is a single switch, which the prisoner may either leave as it is, or flip. Before being led into the rooms, the prisoners are all made to wear either a red hat or a blue hat; they can see all the other prisoners' hats, but not their own. Meanwhile, a six-digit prime number of monkeys multiply until their digits reverse, then all have to get across a river using a canoe that can hold at most two monkeys at a time. But half the monkeys always lie and the other half always tell the truth. Given that the Nth prisoner knows that one of the monkeys doesn't know that a pirate doesn't know the product of two numbers between 1 and 100 without knowing that the N+1th prisoner has flipped the switch in his room or not after having determined which bottle of wine was poisoned and what colour his hat is."

The only reference I found online is this.

EDIT: It's a joke, get it?

flag

50% accept rate
This is an amalgam of several other teasers. I don't think it's reasonably solvable, and was probably intended as humor. – Forgotten Semicolon Sep 25 '08 at 16:17
Funny. But very much unrelated to programming. – Dima Sep 25 '08 at 16:25

closed as not a real question by kronoz Dec 30 '08 at 7:19

10 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

Drink the wine and take the coins. Leave the monkeys.

link|flag
Hell no.. take the monkeys, too! – Wayne Sep 25 '08 at 16:26
Bring the hat for me please. The red one. – Mohit Nanda Dec 30 '08 at 8:28
vote up 7 vote down

The answer is 42

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

There is no answer because it is not a riddle, I believe the original source was an Irregular Webcomic poll from 2007.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Yeah, this is trying to trick you into losing track of the fact that a question is never asked.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Answer can be found by piping /dev/random into /dev/null. :-)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

That paragraph reads like a concatenation of several other "interview puzzles", probably intended as a joke, e.g.

Here's a list of plenty more of these puzzles (and their "solutions") if you're interested in them.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The whole thing may have a solution, but it is obvious that you will never find it during a job interview. It must have been intended at a psychlogical test, to see how you reactto/try to solve an unsovlable problem (see Kobayashi Maru Test).

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

What are we supposed to find? The last line does not contain a question...

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

There is no solution, because there is no question. Just a series of statements.

link|flag
wow! you are intelligent – Mohit Nanda Dec 30 '08 at 8:24
That's what my mother always told me :) – Even Mien Dec 30 '08 at 16:20
vote up -1 vote down

Honestly, how could you remember for this thing? :) Other than that, I agree with rcar

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.