The MIT Programming Contest (2003)
Current Contest Scoreboard
News
- The results of the World Finals in Prague (March 28 - April 1) are out...
MIT (Daniel Dumitran, Reid Barton, and Victor Costan) placed 1st in North
America and 5th overall. Congratulations to them!
- Test data and solutions to the 2/14 practice session
- Congratulations to Daniel Dumitran, Reid Barton, and Victor Costan for
coming in first place in the Regional Contest in Rochester, NY on Saturday,
November 8! They have qualified for the World Finals in the Czech Republic in
March, 2004.
- Congratulations to the two MIT teams, who finished in the top two places at
the Preliminary Contest in Springfield, MA on Saturday, October 25! The first
team: Daniel Dumitran, Reid Barton, Victor Costan. The second team: David
Pritchard, Tim Abbott, Velin Tzanov.
- Practice Contest 1 (with Harvard) Problems and Results
- Team Contest Problems and Results
- Tips for the Team Contest
- Individual Contest Problems and Results
- How to do I/O in Java
- More information about the World Finals.
- Questions about how the contest works? See the Contest Logistics.
- Practice for the contest with the Valladolid Online Judge or previous years' problems.
- Upcoming contest: the Individual Contest on
September 28, 2003 (2-7pm) in 1-115.
- To hear about contest-related updates, subscribe to the ACM Programming
Contest mailing list by either:
- on Athena, typing blanche acmpc -add $USER or
- e-mailing pliang@mit.edu.
We strongly encourage you to subscribe to the mailing list.
- A poster.
About
If you like programming and solving problems, we invite you to participate
in the MIT Individual Programming Contest. If you're one of the best out
there, this is your chance to shine, and join a team consisting of the
top programmers at MIT. Even if you don't think you're good enough to compete
in the World Programming Finals, you can see how you compare to the best
at MIT, and possibly surprise yourself.
We're particularly interested in people who have:
- extensive C/C++/Java programming experience
- experience in contests such as the IOI, USACO, IMO, or USAMO
- taken classes like 6.001, 6.046, 6.170
Contestants must be at least half-time undergraduates or first or second
year graduate students. (Students in coop programs such as 6A can participate
as well.)
If you are interested or want more information, e-mail pliang@mit.edu.
Contests
- MIT Individual Contest: Sunday, September 28, 2003 (2-7pm); Room 1-115
- MIT Team Contest: Sunday, October 5, 2003 (9am-2pm); Room 1-115
- Prelimiaries:
Saturday, October 25, 2003; Western New England College
- Northeast North America Regionals:
Saturday, November 8, 2003; in Rochester Institute of Technology
(rules)
- World Finals:
March 28-April 1, 2004; in Prague, Czech Republic
The top performers of the MIT Individual Programming Contest will not only
earn glory within MIT, they will also be invited to join the MIT Programming
Team, and participate in the 2003 ACM
Programming Contest. We will use the results of the individual contest
to choose several top teams. Each of these teams (and any other teams formed by
interested students), consisting of three people sharing one computer, will
compete in the MIT team contest, with the results of both contests used to help
select the team chosen to represent MIT in the ACM programming contest. The
individual contest is mandatory for anyone who wishes to represent MIT in the
ACM contests.
The team contests will be 4-5 hours in length, and the teams will use C/C++/Java
on Unix boxes. The MIT team will participate in the Preliminary ACM contest,
at Western New England College. The top teams in this contest advance to
compete in the Northeast Regional ACM contest, at Rochester Institute of
Technology. A top two finish in this contest should guarantee a spot in the
prestigious ACM World Finals, to be held in Prague, Czech Republic. All travel
expenses for team members will be covered by MIT and the ACM.
The organizers at MIT
This year the MIT Programming Contest is organized by professor Martin Rinard and students Percy Liang and Cristian Cadar. All organization and
coaching work is done on a volunteer basis in a limited amount of time. We
will do our best to run the contest as smoothly as possible, but be prepared
for some glitches.
Contest Tips
- Practice! There are hundreds of practice ACM problems available at the Valladolid Online Judge. You
can do problems and submit them for automatic grading.
- Since all problems regardless of difficulty have the same weight and the
time recorded for each problem that you solve starts counting from the
beginning of the contest, it is advisable to solve easier problems before
harder problems.
Last updated November 11, 2003.
pliang@mit.edu