Introduction

Years ago I wrote an article about solving the 2x2x2 Rubik’s cube, using an efficient representation of the scrambled states of the cube, and using VPython as a means of visualizing the cube and rotations of its faces. The primary motivation at the time was to describe the use of a linear-time algorithm for converting permutations of the cubies into consecutive integer array indices… but I ignored the arguably more complex details of representing the orientations of the cubies. The objective here is to describe that representation in more detail, with some additional code (available on GitHub) to help visualize what’s going on.

Cubies and cubicles

To begin, we establish notation for how to “hold” the cube and apply moves by rotating its faces. The figure below shows the solved cube, with its eight cubies labeled 0 through 7, and three rotation axes that we will use as shorthand to refer to each possible move.

Note that cubie zero is not visible in the back; we hold the cube by this cubie zero so that it remains fixed, and apply moves by rotating any of the three faces not involving cubie zero about the axes shown. For example, pressing x in the GUI applies move x to rotate the red face counterclockwise about the x-axis, so that– from the solved state– cubie 1 moves to where cubie 3 was, cubie 3 moves to where cubie 7 was, etc. (Press capital X to rotate the face clockwise; similarly for y, Y, z, and Z.)

Having labeled the cubies, which move around as we rotate faces of the cube, let’s also assign labels 0 through 7 to the corresponding cubicles, or the locations that remain fixed relative to the axes even as we permute the cubies “within” the cubicles. Specifically, for each i from 0 to 7, cubicle i is the location of cubie i in the solved state.

Since cubie zero never moves, we can represent an arbitrary cube state with a permutation , where is the label on the cubicle containing cubie , or equivalently, is the label on the cubie in cubicle . We can represent each of the six moves in the same way (by its action on the solved state), so that applying move to state yields the new cube state .

In the Python implementation, we represent a permutation as an array p , with p[i] = (arrays are indexed starting with zero), so that using Numpy’s array indexing operator, applying move m to state p yields the new cube state p[m] .

Tags on cubicles and cubies

Now that we have a means of representing the permuted positions of the cubies, we need to handle their orientations as well. A particular cubie in a particular cubicle may be in any of three different orientations, differing by rotations of 120 degrees about the diagonal through the cubie’s “outer” corner. We need a way to represent the orientations of all cubies in a given cube state, as well as a way to transform this representation corresponding to each possible move.

In preparation for doing this, let’s begin again with the cube in the solved state, and for each cubicle, we select exactly one of its three faces and mark it with a cubicle tag. Having done so, we subsequently mark each cubie as well with a cubie tag on exactly one face… namely, the same face as the corresponding cubicle tag.

Recall that the cubicles– and thus the cubicle tags– remain fixed in space and do not move, but the cubie tags “follow” their corresponding cubies as we apply moves that rotate the cubies from one cubicle to another.

We have some freedom here: this selection of a face per cubicle to tag is arbitrary, and any of the possible such selections will work. The figure below shows the convention used in the Python implementation, with the cubicle tags applied to the opposite orange and red faces orthogonal to the (red) x-axis:

In rubik2_gui.py , set draw_axes and draw_labels to True to experiment with this. The cubicle tags are in black, and remain fixed relative to the rotation axes. The cubie tags are in gray, and move with the cubies to which they are attached.

Orientation of cubies

We are now ready to encode the orientations of the cubies. For a given cube state, let’s consider a single cubie: that cubie has a cubie tag, and the cubicle in which it currently resides has a cubicle tag. We encode the orientation of the cubie as an integer 0, 1, or 2, indicating the number of 120-degree clockwise rotations of the cubie needed to align the cubie tag with the cubicle tag.

For example, in the figure above showing a particular scrambled cube state, the cubie with cubie tag 2 (in gray, on the orange face) in cubicle 7 has orientation 2; cubie 6 in cubicle 3 has orientation 0, since both of its tags are on the same orange face; and cubie 4 in cubicle 6 has orientation 1 (since the black cubicle tag must be on the face that we can’t see). Also, note that since cubie zero (not shown) never moves, its orientation is always 0.

We now have everything we need to encode an arbitrary cube state as an ordered pair , where encodes the permuted positions of the cubies as described earlier, and is a vector of integers encoding the orientations, with indicating the orientation of the cubie in cubicle .

Applying moves

But even better, this encoding not only makes it easy to represent a cube state, it also makes it easy to apply cube moves, i.e., face rotations. Given an arbitrary cube state , and one of the six moves represented by the state that results from applying the move to the solved state, we can show that the result of applying move to state yields the new state , where the group action permutes the coordinates of (with the same Numpy array indexing implementation described earlier)… and the vector addition is simply element-wise mod 3.

To convince ourselves that the modular addition of cubie orientations works, first note that in a face rotation, if a cubie’s position does not change, then neither does its orientation, and so adding zero to the orientation encoding has no effect as desired. For a cubie that does move, it suffices to focus on a single rotation– say a counterclockwise quarter turn about the x-axis– and a single “source” and “destination” cubicle, say from cubicle 3 to cubicle 7. (To see this, note that clockwise and half turns can be expressed as compositions of counterclockwise turns, and for any other rotation axis and source/destination cubicles, we can rotate the entire cube to match the “cubie in cubicle 3 rotated by x to cubicle 7″ geometry.)

Then there are effectively 3×3=9 cases to consider, one for each possible selection of faces where we could have placed cubicle tags on the source (3 choices) and destination (3 choices) cubicles. For each such pair of choices, we can verify– by brute force enumeration if needed– that the counterclockwise arrangement of the (0,1,2) possible orientation codes for a cubie in the source cubicle is preserved as it is rotated into the destination cubicle.

The Fundamental Theorem of Cubology

A couple of final notes: first, the above description of the representation of a cube state as an ordered pair suggests that there are possible cube states. This isn’t quite true; we have overcounted by a factor of 3, due to the following invariant that is part of what is commonly referred to as the “fundamental theorem of cubology:” for any valid cube state, the sum of the integers in the orientation encoding is congruent to zero mod 3. (This can be verified for a particular encoding by first noting that the solved state has all entries of equal to zero, and that for each possible move the sum of entries in is equal to zero.) Thus, there are only distinct possible cube states, where in implementation we can, for example, discard the last entry from our orientation encoding since its value is determined by the other six.

Second, the ideas presented here are also applicable to the original 3x3x3 Rubik’s cube. A cube state represents the 8 corner cubies with a permutation in and an orientation vector in , and the 12 edge cubies with a permutation in and an orientation vector in , with similar parity constraints on each.