Cube Solids

This entry is part 33 of 71 in the series Durtles Problems of the Weeks
Problem of the Week #33: Monday August 21st, 2023
As before, these problems are the results of me following my curiosity, and I make no promises regarding the topics, difficulty, solvability of these problems.
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The cube solid below is made up of 4 unit cubes, three on the lowest level and one on the second level:

three cubes on the first level arranged in an L shape with another cube on top of the center cube on the second level

If we were to look at this solid from the front, (right) side, and top, we would see the following views:

three 2x2 squares each labeled as "front", "side", and "top".  The first one has the top right space left blank and the other three spaces shaded.  The second has the top left space blank and the other three shaded.  The last one has the bottom right space blank and the other three shaded.

For all questions in this problem, let’s ignore the effects of gravity, which means higher unit cubes can float in space without lower unit cubes to support them.

a). Considering all cube solids made up of unit cubes and are at most 2 units in length, width, and height, is this the only cube solid that gives this combination of front, side, and top views?

b). Find a combination of front, side, and top views for a cube solid at most 2 units in length, width, and height that fits no other cube solid.

c). How many combinations of 2×2 front, side, and top views fit exactly one cube solid?

d). How many combinations of 2×2 front, side, and top views do not fit any cube solid at all?

e). How many combinations of 2×2 front, side, and top views fit more than one cube solid?

f). What is the maximum number of different cube solids a combination of 2×2 front, side, and top views can fit?

g). Share your own problem inspired by this one.

h). Give one of these questions to a friend/colleague/student/family member to start a mathematical discussion.

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