Printer's Devilry

Revision as of 22:00, 12 July 2022 by Leveloneknob (talk | contribs) (Added strategy, changed to puzzle type.)

Printer's Devilry is a type of word puzzle involving the removal of a substring from a sentence, and the subsequent reparsing of the remaining text into a new (and often nonsensical) sentence.

Background

The name "Printer's Devilry" is a play on a "printer's devil", and 18th-19th century word for an assistant to a lead printer who would be in charge of menial tasks like fetching type.

The puzzle type actually originated as a Cryptic Crossword variation, invented in 1937 by Alistair Ferguson Ritchie, AKA Afrit, a cryptic crossword setter who (at the time) wrote for The Listener. It became a relatively popular variant, with two other prominent setters, Ximenes (Derrick Somerset Macnutt) and Azed (Jonathan Crowther) picking up the practice and the former breaking his own one-per year tradition for variant puzzles by writing a Printer's Devilry puzzle every eight months or so.

Printer's Devilry as a hunt puzzle (without the crossword grid) dates back to the 2005 MIT Mystery Hunt puzzle Eoanthropus dawsoni, which provided only 10 clues with enumerations. The enumerations were likely a necessary compromise, as a grid's entries normally provide information on the length of the answers.

Puzzle Application

To do TO DO

Strategy

Identifying a Printer's Devilry puzzle usually isn't too difficult. When presented straight, either as a crossword or by itself, the lack of sense made by the sentences should be apparent, prompting further examination. If this is the case, see if some of the sentences could be improved by some respacing or removal of some of the punctuation. If a puzzle is not as clear, and perhaps involves some printer's devilry sentences and some clean sentences, keep an eye on the flavortext and title. Words like "printer", "devil", and "missing" can all hint towards

As Printer's Devilry sentences aren't supposed to make sense (at least not total sense) until the missing words are returned, the best place to begin is the sections that make the least sense. If a sentence's beginning and end seem to be about the same topic, check the middle words to see if you can split them up to form new word fragments.

Additionally, keep an eye out for indicators of variants. Sometimes, a puzzle will have the word split across multiple spots in the sentence, or have multiple words removed from the sentence. These cases are much harder to indicate via flavortext, but working strictly forward or backward through a sentence can help reduce the chance of missing something.

Notable Examples

  • pluHarmony (MIT 2009) - Click to revealGoing against Afrit's original guidelines, this puzzle has its sentences broken in multiple spots, requiring pieces of words to be inserted to fix them up.

See Also