www.the-doctors.info

Doctors Home

Site Pages

Doctors Menu

Our Articles

Question satellite PC to TV

Parenting articles Index

Food and drink Info Index

Education Info Index

Recreation Info Index
Our Other Sites Articles
Ausis articles Index

tecacentre articles

the best articles


CONTACT INFO
About The Author
The www.the-doctors.info team are professional Solutions consultants and Colour restorers who specialise in a wide number of topics. For more info and all the latest news and information visit our websites at
thebestisit.com
tecacentre.net
www.ausis.info
www.the-doctors.info
www.aussiess.info
EMAIL DETAILS for your FREE QUOTE admin@the-doctors.info
or
Request a consultation or
Post Comments Queries or Suggestions
Press Board

THE-DOCTORS.info HINTS:
Use DOCTORS ARTICLES for MONEY SAVING Ideas, Hints, Info and Tips !!!

the-doctors.info provides solutions and Bright Ideas to help make or save money

Recreations and games Ideas to help make or save money

Health and other associated issues - Tips, Information and Guides


Freecell Solitaire Power Moves explained

 by: Dan Fletcher

Most people understand the rules for Freecell, but not everyone understands Freecell PowerMoves. Understanding PowerMoves is one of the most important keys to winning Freecell, and knowing how they work will increase your chances of winning Freecell.

A Freecell powermove (also called a supermove), is simply a shortcut move. It lets you move a sequence of cards in one move, instead of doing lots of individual moves.

It isn't a special move though.

It's just a shortcut, to move all the cards in the sequence in one move, rather than several moves using the available freecells and empty columns.

The number of cards you can move in a supermove sequence is based on how many freecells and empty columns are available. Some freecells games implement this incorrectly, and let you move any number of cards in a sequence.

But this is wrong. If you couldn't move the sequence using individual card moves, then you can't move the sequence using a powermove either.

A freecell supermove uses the empty columns and freecells as efficiently as possible, to ensure you can move the maximum number of cards. To work out how many cards can be moved, the following formula is used:

(1 + number of empty freecells) * 2 ^ (number of empty columns)

This is easier to understand by looking at the following chart...

A: Empty Columns


B: Empty Freecells


C: Card Sequence Length



A - B - C


0 - 0 - 1


0 - 1 - 2


0 - 2 - 3


0 - 3 - 4


0 - 4 - 5


1 - 0 - 2


1 - 1 - 4


1 - 2 - 6


1 - 3 - 8


1 - 4 - 10


2 - 0 - 4


2 - 1 - 8


2 - 2 - 12


2 - 3 - 16


2 - 4 - 20

This assumes you are moving the sequence to a non-empty column. If you are moving into an empty column, then the column you are moving into does not count as empty column.

A freecell powermove can always be broken down into several individual moves. Suppose you have 1 empty column, and 1 empty freecell. From the chart above you can see that we can move a sequence of 4 cards. Suppose we want to move 9,8,7,6 sequence onto a 10.

The moves would proceed as follows:

- Move the 6 to the freecell (Now one empty column, no empty freecells)

- Move the 7 to the empty column (Now no empty columns, and no empty freecells)

- Move the 6 onto the 7 (Now no empty columns, and one empty freecell)

- Move the 8 to the freecell (Now no empty columns, and no empty freecells)

- Move the 9 onto the 10 (Now no empty columns, and no empty freecells)

- Move the 8 onto the 9 (Now no empty columns, and one empty freecell)

- Move the 6 to the freecell (Now no empty column, no empty freecells)

- Move the 7 onto the 8 (Now one empty column, and no empty freecell)

- Move the 6 onto the 7 (Now one empty column, and one empty freecell)

So in this example, the powermove has saved us time by allowing us to do 1 move instead of 9.

There are a few things to notice in this example:

- The freecells and empty columns are used temporarily. At the end of the powermove, the number of empty freecells and columns is the same as at the start of the powermove.

- The freecells and empty columns are used as efficiently as possible. There is no way that any more cards could have been moved.

- Only the empty freecells and empty columns were used. Cards in other stacks were NOT used as temporary storage spaces.

This last point is particularly note-worthy. A supermove will only use the freecells and empty columns. It doesn't account for any other cards in the tableau. This means you can often move a longer sequence by breaking doing the moves yourself, or doing several powermoves.

In the example above, if there had been a spare 9 in the tableau with the right color, a much longer sequence could have been moved. The 8,7,6 sequence would be moved onto the other 9 first. Then we could move another 4 cards using a normal powermove (Because we still have an empty column and freecell). So we could now move 9,10,J,Q onto a King, and then move the 8,7,6 onto the 9 again. So by breaking the sequence up into 2 moves, we are able to move a sequence of 7 instead of 4.

Being aware of this short-coming of supermoves will allow you to move longer sequences, which helps a lot in winning some of the harder freecell deals.

The other thing to be aware of with supermoves is how important empty columns are. If you look back to the chart above, you will see that empty columns are very valuable in freecell. Four empty freecells lets you move a sequence of 5 moves, while two empty freecells and two empty columns lets you move a sequence of 12! So try and empty up columns as soon as you can!

About The Author

Dan Fletcher is a developer at dogMelon. They make Classic Solitaire, a fun pack of solitaire games which includes freecell solitaire: http://www.dogmelon.com.au/solhelp/Freecell%20Solitaire.shtml and spider solitaire: http://www.dogmelon.com.au/solhelp/Spider%20Solitaire.shtml

Recommended Links


Health Index doc thanks Jonathan Leger txt

Press and info centre and...

Some fine print.

We here at www.the-doctors.info offer this Bulletin board and other sections like it to the people and businesses of the world to enable free discussion or gain and share more information about what people think is the best of products, services, experiences and more hoping to help make our lives better.

Please feel free in using this board specifically for improvement purposes. We are not as strict as some places on the web so feel free to use a different name to your own. When posting all we ask is that if you have something useful to say please share with us and not just pick on those that do contribute. We just ask that you refrain from performing illegal or slanderous acts or from using obscene language.

press centre

The logos hereon are owned by the respective copyright holders. This page is for information educational purposes. The creator makes no claim to any of the content except for that as owned outright and the styles applied. Terms and conditions governing the use of this site can be found at Terms Of Site.

We wish to THANKYOU for your visit and hope you return soon.

All work is copyright (c) WWW.the-doctors.INFO (c) 1990 -2006 Used under licence All rights reserved.

Doctors are only human and they are great when you need them.

Back To TOP
Other Links

rss feed HTML rss feed sITEMAP feed [Valid RSS] Valid XHTML 1.1

Domains and Web Hosting