This is the Linux app named rufascube whose latest release can be downloaded as rc6oct23.7z. It can be run online in the free hosting provider OnWorks for workstations.
Download and run online this app named rufascube with OnWorks for free.
Follow these instructions in order to run this app:
- 1. Downloaded this application in your PC.
- 2. Enter in our file manager https://www.onworks.net/myfiles.php?username=XXXXX with the username that you want.
- 3. Upload this application in such filemanager.
- 4. Start the OnWorks Linux online or Windows online emulator or MACOS online emulator from this website.
- 5. From the OnWorks Linux OS you have just started, goto our file manager https://www.onworks.net/myfiles.php?username=XXXXX with the username that you want.
- 6. Download the application, install it and run it.
SCREENSHOTS:
rufascube
DESCRIPTION:
This is NOT another Rubic's Cube. It's a much simpler slider puzzle that is incrementally solvable. A 3x3x3 arrangement of cubelets with the center one missing allows sliding permutations. After a randomization, the goal is to restore the cube to its original configuration based on color and alphabetic hints. Written in Ada and compiles on Windows, OS-X or GNU/Linux. Nice laptop controls and support for Mac Retina displays. Requires OpenGL v3.3, and on Macs a recent version of OS-X. Now with mouse wheel zoom (2-finger swipe on MacBooks).
Includes a smaller 2x2x2 version called SevenSlider.
Works on Windows, Macs running OS-X and PCs running GNU/Linux.
The proper command to extract the archive and maintain the directory structure is "7z x filename".
Features
- Mac-Binary-Bundle now included!
- Any machine with GNAT can build rufascube! But first see if the delivered binaries run.
- Windows, GNU/Linux and OS-X binaries provided, as well as full source.
- Laptop-friendly controls; supports high DPI mode on Mac Retina displays.
- To move a cubelet on a laptop, position cursor, then hit the return key, or on a MacBook, you can use a 2-finger pad click.
- Challenging, but not as difficult as a Rubic's cube. Here, diligence pays off.
- Incremental solution is possible...you can unscramble one slice at a time...HINT: you might leave the middle slice until last, since it ultimately contains the blank space.
- When you finish, you can see the entire english alphabet appear in order on the [outer] 26 cubelets. The space ends up in the center.
- Three "skins" available: RufasCube, RgbCube, or iQube color inversion.
- Autosolver
Audience
End Users/Desktop
User interface
OpenGL
Programming Language
Ada
Categories
This is an application that can also be fetched from https://sourceforge.net/projects/rufascube/. It has been hosted in OnWorks in order to be run online in an easiest way from one of our free Operative Systems.