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in the classic no-where neat puzzle, you start with a large square, and try to fit as many smaller squares as you can in it such that no two squares of the same size share a full edge. my question is this: is it possible to construct an etirely prime no-where neat square? that is: the large square side length is prime, and all the smaller squares inside have a prime length edge?

i suspect the answer to be yes, but have yet to find such a solution.

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Are the lengths of the sides restricted to integer values > 1?

If so then a 3x3 square with one 2x2 square inside it. If not then the number of squares inside will be infinity or have sides of length 1 which isn't prime

in the classic no-where neat puzzle, you start with a large square, and try to fit as many smaller squares as you can in it such that no two squares of the same size share a full edge. my question is this: is it possible to construct an etirely prime no-where neat square? that is: the large square side length is prime, and all the smaller squares inside have a prime length edge?

i suspect the answer to be yes, but have yet to find such a solution.

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post-9659-025599000 1295642430.gif

I didn't solve this myself, but while looking up what the heck "ho-where neat puzzle" means I found this example which fit the requirement of the puzzle. Red squares are size 1, blue - 2, yellow - 3, cyan - 5, magenta - 7. The total square is 19x19. All prime numbers!

EDIT: Well, 1 is not a prime number, so this is probably not a valid solution.

Edited by k-man
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