Tuesday, 9 February 2010

What can Crossword Puzzle Software do for you?

Hi,  i have been doing research on lots of Crossword Puzzle Software, and it seems that there are many great features for many of them. Have a look at some of these...

Filling words

The AutoFill feature lets you fill grids automatically from a word list. A default word list is supplied, and many optional extras list are available or you can can make your own lists. You can also fill round existing words and do themed fills.

The filler is very fast - many grids can be filled in seconds or less. It uses a word scoring system to use more 'good' words, so you can generate high-quality fills automatically.

The Word List Manager feature can be used to make, edit and manipulate word lists. You can also import and export from text files.

Finding Words

If you prefer you can use the AutoFind feature to find words to go in a particular slot in the grid. You can search multiple word lists and also check intersections.

Writing clues

You can use the Clue Editor to write clues or insert clues from a database. You can link directly to the optional WordWeb Pro dictionary/thesaurus, or to various third-party dictionaries.

Clues can contain bold and italic, and sub- and super-script, and can be in any language. You can add a citation or explanation for cryptic clues. A button links to an anagram generator for finding anagrams, partial words and container anagrams. Pop-up menus give help with cryptic-clue indicators.

Reviewing clues

In the Review/Edit Clues window you can view all your clues, edit, and spell-check them.

I will be writing more about Crossword puzzle software so you can keep checking back if you want :D

Josh

Making a Crossword Puzzle

Instructions

  • Step 1:
    Put down the graph paper and walk away slowly. Quality crossword puzzles are rarely eked out in this painfully slow and frustrating manner, at least not by the uninitiated. So, warm up to the idea of using software-based programs to make a crossword puzzle.
  • Step 2:
    Consider the scope of the crossword puzzles you want to create. Are you hoping to publish them? Or do you just want to make a crossword puzzles for friends and family to enjoy? This makes a difference in the type and complexity of software to use, not to mention its price.
  • Step 3:
    Try a free crossword puzzle maker like Armored Penguin online to get the hang of it (see Resources below). You may store your puzzle on the Armored Penguin's server for up to 2 months. If you're very clever (and proficient in programming), you may be able to design your own database to generate crossword puzzles yourself once you see how it comes together. Or for professional results, you may choose to purchase software designed specifically for crossword puzzle constructionists and publishers.
  • Step 4:
    Use heavy-duty software to make different types of crossword puzzles and still go light on your wallet. Crossword Express provides affordable "lite" and pro versions of software that allows you to create all sorts of puzzles, from Acrostic to Sudoku, for Windows and Macintosh (see Resources below.)
  • Step 5:
    Meet other crossword puzzle creators and get helpful tips from the Cruciverb-L online forum (see Resources below).

Tips & Warnings

  • If you intend to submit your crossword puzzles for publication (such as with a syndication service), then refrain from posting your puzzle on the Internet, even if it's just on your personal page. Doing so may constitute previous publication, and most publishers seek submissions for which they can purchase first or all rights.

Crosswords and The New York Times Magazine

It took a world war to get a crossword puzzle into The New York Times Magazine — on Sunday, Feb. 15, 1942.

The crossword puzzle had been a national craze since Arthur Wynne's simple word whimsy made its debut in The New York World in 1913. This crossword included the words "fun" and "more" in the answers. Despite, or maybe because of, the simplicity of "the plural of is" ("are") and "part of your head" ("face"), from that day on the crossword puzzle became part of the national culture, then part of the international culture. They flourish in just about every language that boasts a newspaper.

In 1924, an editorial in The Times deplored the puzzle as "a primitive form of mental exercise," and predicted its swift demise. Eighteen years later, The Times became one of the last newspapers to surrender to the crossword, and made its crossword the most influential in the land. The daily crossword has appeared since 1950.

The first Sunday puzzle consisted mostly of direct one-word solutions "with a flavor of current events and general information," as the accompanying box described it. Now the crossword comes in a welter of bewildering guises. Its answers may skid giddily through the entire reach of the diagrams and may consist of many words, truncated words, punning words, words that read backward, words that are doggerel, words that are fiendishly misleading.

The puzzle has been shaped by four editors: Margaret Farrar, a dedicated pioneer from the pastime's beginnings and an arbiter of standards that still apply today; Will Weng, a former head of The Times's metropolitan copy desk, who reigned from 1969 to 1977; Eugene T. Maleska, an educator, poet and leading authority on the art, from 1977 to 1993; and Will Shortz, a puzzle master, from 1993 to today.

Why did the puzzle begin in The Times in the early days of World War II? It's likely that a prime mover was Arthur Hays Sulzberger, the publisher at the time, who enjoyed wordsmanship and was reported to have long been chagrined at the need to buy The Herald Tribune to do a crossword. But the first relevant document in The Times archives is a memo dated Dec. 18, 1941, less than two weeks after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, to Sulzberger from Lester Markel, the Sunday editor, who said that the puzzles deserved space, considering what was going on in the world: "We ought to proceed with the puzzle, especially in view of the fact that it is possible that there will now be bleak blackout hours -- or if not that, then certainly a need for relaxation of some kind or other."


The first daily puzzle in The Times was, by modern standards, not particularly memorable. Its theme, New York City's water supply, was . . . well, a bit dry. The key names were scattered around the grid, not symmetrical as they would be now. Not a single humorous, punning or misleading element could be found. Yet this puzzle, edited by Farrar, showed an intelligence and a cultural standard far above other puzzles of the time. One contemporary touch was 7-Across (''New York's rainmaker''), referring to the meteorologist whose work in cloud seeding supposedly helped end the city's water shortage of 1949-50.
Beverly Sills, the late opera star and executive, who was a crossword aficionado, once said, "You are never famous until you've had your name in a crossword puzzle." — Adapted from articles in The Times by Richard F. Shepard and Will Shortz