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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 ...
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 ...
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.
Codeforces peak rating: 3350 Scott Wu (born 1997) is an American entrepreneur who is co-founder of Cognition AI and Lunchclub . He is also competitive programmer who won three gold medals (placing first in 2014) at the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) and came third place in the 2021 Google Code Jam .
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 ...
Codeforces peak rating 3115 Makoto Soejima ( 副島 真 , Soejima Makoto , born 1991) is a Japanese former competitive programmer . [ 1 ] He is one of three people to have won both the Google Code Jam and the Facebook Hacker Cup and the only one to have also won a gold medal with a perfect score at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO).
The USCF initially aimed for an average club player to have a rating of 1500 and Elo suggested scaling ratings so that a difference of 200 rating points in chess would mean that the stronger player has an expected score of approximately 0.75. A player's expected score is their probability of winning plus half their probability of drawing. Thus ...
Topcoder was founded in 2001 by Jack Hughes, chairman and Founder of the Tallan company. [1] [2] The name was formerly spelt as "TopCoder" until 2013.Topcoder ran regular competitive programming challenges, known as Single Round Matches or "SRMs," where each SRM was a timed 1.5-hour algorithm competition and contestants would compete against each other to solve the same set of problems.