Are you a C,C++ or C# programmer who is looking forward to get some
coding adventure and test your skills in some coding contests? Then this is for you. Annual contests:
1. International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP) This
has been running for a decade and happens in June or July each year.
Though it's based in Germany, anyone can enter using any programming
language, from any location. It's free to enter and your team isn't
limited by size.
2. The BME International:
The BME International is an intense free to enter contest that takes
place in Europe once a year for teams of three, and you have to bring
your own computers and software. This year, the 7th edition took place
in Budapest. This contest has had some interesting challenges in the
past including driving a car over a virtual terrain? Other past tasks
included controlling an oil-company, driving an assembly line robot and
programming for secret communication. All programs were written in a
24-hour intense period!
3. International Collegiate Programming Contest:
One of the longest running- this contest started in 1970 at Texas
A&M and has been run by the ACM since 1989 and has IBM's involvement
since 1997. One of the bigger contests, it has thousands of teams from
universities and colleges competing locally, regionally and ultimately
in the a world final. The contest pits teams of three university
students against eight or more complex, real-world problems, with a
gruelling five-hour deadline.
4. The Obfuscated C contest:
The Obfuscated C contest has been running for nearly 20 years. This is
done on the internet, with email submissions. All you have to do is
write the most obscure or obfuscated Ansi C program in under 4096
characters length according to the rules. The 19th contest took place
back in January/February 2007.
5. The Loebner Prize:
The Loebner Prize is not a general programming contest but an AI
challenge to enter a computer program that can do the Turing test, ie
talk to a human sufficiently well to make the judges believe they are
talking to a human. The Judge program, written in Perl will ask
questions like "What time is it?", or "What is a hammer?" as well as
comparisons and memory. The prize for the best entrant is $2,000 and a
Gold Medal.
6. Chatterbox Challenge:
It is similar to the Loebner Prize is the Chatterbox Challenge. This is
to write the best chatter bot- a web based (or downloadable)
application written in any language that can carry on text
conversations. If it has an animated display that syncs with text then
that is even better- you get more points!
7. International Problem Solving Contest (IPSC):
This is more for fun, with teams of three entering via the web. There
are 6 programming problems over a 5 hour period. Any programming
language is allowed.
8. The Rad Race:
Competitors in teams of two have to complete a working business program
using any language over two days. This is another contest where you
have to bring along equipment, including a router, computer(s), cables, a
printer etc. The next one will be in Hasselt, Belgium in October 2007.
9. The Imagine Cup:
Students at school or college compete by writing software applicable to
the set theme which for 2008 is "Imagine a world where technology
enables a sustainable environment." Entries started August 25th 2007.
10. ORTS Competition:
ORTS (Open Real Time Strategy game) is a programming environment for
studying real-time AI problems such as path-finding, dealing with
imperfect information, scheduling, and planning in the domain of RTS
games. These games are fast-paced and very popular. Using the ORTS
software once every year there is a series of battles to see whose AI is
best.
11. The International Obfuscated C Code Contest:
Abbreviated IOCCC is a programming contest for the most creatively
obfuscated C code. It started in 1984 and the 20th competition started
in 2011. Entries are evaluated anonymously by a panel of judges. The
judging process is documented in the competition guidelines and consists
of elimination rounds. By tradition, no information is given about the
total number of entries for each competition. Winning entries are
awarded with a category, such as "Worst Abuse of the C preprocessor" or
"Most Erratic Behavior", and then announced on the official IOCCC
website. There's no prize except if your program is featured on the site
then you won!
12. Google Code Jam:
Running since 2008, it's open to anyone aged 13 or other, and you or a
close relative don't work for Google or a subsidiary country and you
don't live in a banned country: Quebec, Saudi Arabia, Cuba, Syria, Burma
(Myanmar). (The contest is prohibited by law). There's a qualification
round and three other rounds and the top 25 travel to a Google office
for the Grand Final.
Ongoing contests:
13. Hutter Prize:
If you can improve on the compression of 100 MB of Wikipedia data by 3%
or better then you can win cash prizes. Currently the smallest
compression is 15,949,688. For every 1% reduction (minimum 3%) you win
€500.
14. Project Euler:
This is an ongoing series of challenging mathematical/computer
programming problems that will require more than just mathematical
insights to solve. computationally the problems should be solvable in
less than a minute. A typical problem is "Find the first ten digits of
the sum of one-hundred 50-digit numbers."
15. Sphere Online Judge. Run
at Gdansk University of Technology in Poland, they have regular
programming contests - with over 125 completed. Solutions are submitted
to an automatic online judge that can deal with C, C++ and C# 1.0 and
many other languages.
16. Intel's Threading Programming Problems:
Running from September 2007 until the end of September 2008 Intel have
their own Programming Challenge with 12 programming tasks, one per month
that can be solved by threading. You get awarded points for solving a
problem, coding elegance, code execution timing, use of the Intel
Threading Building Blocks and bonus points for posting in their problem
set discussion forum. Any language but C++ is probably the preferred
language.
17. Codechef:
Codechef is India's first, non-commercial, multi-platform online coding
competition, with monthly contests in more than 35 different
programming languages including C, C++ and C#. Winners of each contest
get prizes, peer recognition and an invitation to compete at the
CodeChef Cup, an annual live event. | |
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