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On August 30th, 2024, Korotkevich became the first to break the 4000 Elo barrier on Codeforces. [6] Before this, the highest rating category was thought to be "Legendary Grandmaster" achieved at rating 3000, for which users would be rewarded by having the first letter of their handle turn black and the rest of the handle red.
Codeforces (Russian: Коудфорсес) is a website that hosts competitive programming contests. [1] It is maintained by a group of competitive programmers from ITMO University led by Mikhail Mirzayanov. [2] Since 2013, Codeforces claims to surpass Topcoder in terms of active contestants. [3] As of 2019, it has over 600,000 registered users ...
The programming community around the world has created and maintained several internet-resources dedicated to competitive programming. They offer standalone contests with or without minor prizes. Users will typically be assigned a rating based on their performance on said contests.
Petr Mitrichev (born 19 March 1985) is a Russian competitive programmer who has won multiple major international competitions. His accomplishments include gold (2000, 2002) and silver (2001) medals in the IOI, gold medals (2003, 2005) in the ACM ICPC World Finals as part of the team of Moscow State University and winning Google Code Jam (2006 [1]), the Topcoder Open (2018, 2015, 2013, 2006 [2 ...
This is a list of programmers notable for their contributions to software, either as original author or architect, or for later additions. All entries must already have associated articles. All entries must already have associated articles.
A more comprehensive list of achievements can be found at the Competitive Programming Hall Of Fame website. [2] International Olympiad in Informatics: 2 Gold (2014 and 2015) (Third place overall in 2015) International Collegiate Programming Contest (Representing MIT): 1 Gold (2019) (Second place overall) and 1 Silver (2016) (Sixth place overall)
The monthly winners received prizes in the name of Harsha Suryanarayana. [27] In March 2016, a coding contest called "Humblefool Cup" was organised as a part of Aparoksha, the technical fest of IIIT Allahabad, in memory of Harsha. [28] It was conducted on CodeChef in 2016, but has been organised by TopCoder every year since 2017. [29]
The ICPC traces its roots to a competition held at Texas A&M University in 1970 hosted by the Alpha Chapter of the Upsilon Pi Epsilon Computer Science Honor Society (UPE). ). This initial programming competition was titled First Annual Texas Collegiate Programming Championship and each university was represented by a team of up to five memb