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Queen's Internal Programming Contest 2002

Sponsored by Microsoft

Date Saturday, January 26, 2002
Time 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (pizza lunch will be provided)
Location Goodwin 248/233/235
Eligibility Queen's University undergraduate students
Others are welcome, but they will not be eligible for prizes
Prize The top performer of each academic year will receive a prize from Microsoft, a plaque, and their names will be engraved on a plaque which is on display in the Department of CISC

Description

The Department of Computing and Information Science and CISC DSC are proud to announce the third annual Queen's Internal Programming Contest. The format of the contest will be very similar to the annual ACM programming contest. Each contestant will be given five to six questions to solve individually. The solution must be written in C, C++, or Java. You are allowed to use any non-electronic reference, so you can bring any books or notes, but no searching in the Internet.

Contestants are judged based on their academic year, i.e., second year contestants will compete with other second year contestants, fourth year (and above) contestants will compete with other fourth year contestants. The problems are the same for all contestants. The year of a student is determined by the number of years he/she studied at Queen's.

There will be four winners, one from each year, and each of them will receive a plaque from the Department of CISC. We are pleased to have Microsoft as our corporate sponsor this year, and Microsoft will provide software prizes for each of the winners.

ONLINE CONTEST REGISTRATION

Schedule

1100 - 1200 Practice contest
1200 - 1300 Pizza lunch (sponsored by Department of CISC)
1300 - 1700 Contest

Format of the Contest

There will be five or six questions. You are allowed to use a Unix workstation or a PC to program the solutions. The solution must be in standard C, C++, or Java. Solutions will be judged on a Unix workstation.

To test the correctness of your solution, we have a set of input and the corresponding set of model output. Your solution is judged as correct if your output matches the model output. You do not have to handle invalid input - the input to test your solution will always be valid (according to the specification of the question).

In case you want to know, the questions are written by people at Queen's University and at University of Toronto, as we are holding our internal contests simultaneously with the same set of questions.

Links


For more information, please send email to acmteam@cs.queensu.ca.

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Maintained by the ACM Team, last updated January 2, 2002