Given that some basic mathematical knowledge is needed to solve cross-figures, they are much less popular than crosswords. As a result, very few books of them have ever been published.
Dell Magazines publishes a magazine called
Math & Logic Problems four times a year that includes these puzzles, which they name "Figure Logics"; the eighteen puzzles contained within each issue generally increase in difficulty, from easy to "challenger". A magazine called
Figure it Out, which was dedicated to number puzzles, included some, but it was very short-lived. This also explains why cross-figures have fewer established conventions than crosswords (especially cryptic crosswords). One exception is the use of the semicolon (;) to attach two strings of numbers together, for example 1234;5678 becomes 12345678. Some cross-figures voluntarily ignore this option and other "non-mathematical" approaches (e.g.
palindromic numbers and
repunits) where same result can be achieved through algebraic means. == External links ==