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  2. Codeforces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codeforces

    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 ...

  3. Competitive programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_programming

    Specific feature - participants have a chance to check the correctness of other contestants' solutions after the coding phase and before final automatic testing (so-called "challenge phase"). UVa Online Judge [19] [17] Contains over 4,500 problems for practising. Hosts regular online competitions. Opened in 1995, it is one of the oldest such ...

  4. Gennady Korotkevich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gennady_Korotkevich

    Codeforces peak rating 4009 (30 August 2024) Gennady Korotkevich ( Belarusian : Генадзь Караткевіч , Hienadź Karatkievič , Russian : Геннадий Короткевич ; born 25 September 1994) is a Belarusian competitive sport programmer who has won major international competitions since the age of 11, as well as numerous ...

  5. International Collegiate Programming Contest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Collegiate...

    The 2007 ACM-ICPC World Finals were held at the Tokyo Bay Hilton, in Tokyo, Japan, March 12–16, 2007. The World Finals was hosted by the ACM Japan Chapter and the IBM Tokyo Research Lab. Some 6,099 teams competed on six continents at the regional level. Eighty-eight teams advanced to the World Finals.

  6. Level ancestor problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Level_ancestor_problem

    The level ancestor query LA(v,d) requests the ancestor of node v at depth d, where the depth of a node v in a tree is the number of edges on the shortest path from the root of the tree to node v. It is possible to solve this problem in constant time per query, after a preprocessing algorithm that takes O( n ) and that builds a data structure ...

  7. LeetCode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LeetCode

    The performance of users' solutions is evaluated based on execution speed and memory usage, and is ranked against other submissions in the LeetCode database. [6] Additionally, LeetCode provides its users with mock interviews and online assessments. LeetCode hosts weekly and biweekly contests, each having 4 problems.

  8. Beam search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beam_search

    The beam width bounds the memory required to perform the search. Since a goal state could potentially be pruned, beam search sacrifices completeness (the guarantee that an algorithm will terminate with a solution, if one exists). Beam search is not optimal (that is, there is no guarantee that it will find the best solution).

  9. HackerRank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HackerRank

    HackerRank was founded as InterviewStreet Inc. by two NIT Trichy alumni, Vivek Ravisankar and Hari Karunanidhi. [5] [6] HackerRank is a Y Combinator-backed company, and was the first Indian company accepted into Y Combinator. [1]