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Objective
To test and sharpen the problem solving and computer programming skill. Apart from the attractive prize for the winners, it opens a great chance for outstanding participants to join our team for upcoming contest in future.
Contest Information
Date: April 13th, 2007 (Friday)
Time: 4:00pm to 7:00pm
Venue: CSE PC Lab, Room 924, HSH Engineering Building (SHB924)
Contest Judges :
- Ho Ho Kwong Kane
- Ng Yu Hang
Contest Poster:
Prizes
- Champion: iPod Shuffle
- 1st Runner up: iPod Shuffle
- 2nd Runner up: iPod Shuffle
- 4th - 10th: 2GB TOSHIBA USB flash drive
Outstanding participants may be invited to join our CUHK/CSE Programming Team for future
regional/international contests.
Qualification
All Year 1 and Year 2 students(non acm team member) in CSE Department
of CUHK are eligible to join this Programming Contest. We strongly encourage year 1 students to
participate.
Registration
(please use your CSE email account)
Send email to hkho5@cse.cuhk.edu.hk
with subject line as: "Registration" (no quotes).
In the body of your email, state your information including:
Name,
Student ID,
Major (CS/CE),
Year of Study,
E-mail Address and
(Optional) A brief self introduction (We're willing to know more about you, our great
participant, besides your "number" and your name).
A notification mail will be returned upon registration. You may view the registration roster at
anytime.
Quota is limited. To reserve your entry, please register early!
Conduct of the Contest
A minimum of five (5) problems and a maximum of eight (8) will be given. Contestants
will have three hours to complete the problems.
Contestants may bring resource materials such as books, manuals, and hardcopy of
program listings. Contestants may not bring any machine-readable versions of software or data. (No
personally owned diskettes are allowed)
Solutions to problems submitted for judging are called runs. Each run will be judged as
accepted or rejected, and the contestant will be notified of the results.
Notification of accepted runs may be suspended at the appropriate time to keep the
final results secret. A general announcement to that effect will be made during the contest. Notification of rejected runs will continue until
the end of the contest.
A contestant may submit a claim of ambiguity or error in a problem statement by
submitting a clarification request. If the Judges agree that an ambiguity or error exists, a clarification
will be issued to all contestants.
Contestants are not allowed to converse with other contestants and personnel. System
support staff may advise contestants on system-related problems, such as explaining system error messages.
While the contest is scheduled for
a particular time length, the length of the contest may
be altered in the event of unforeseen difficulties. Should the contest duration be altered, every attempt will be made to
notify contestants in a timely and uniform manner.
The contestant may be disqualified for any activity that jeopardizes the contest such as dislodging extension cords, unauthorized
modification of contest materials, or distractive behavior.
All problems will be written in English. During the contest, formal communications with contest officials should be in English.
Note that decisions regarding the acceptability of submitted solutions rest solely with
the contest judging staff.
Contest Scoring
The Contest Judges are primarily responsible for
determining the correctness of submitted runs. In consultation with the Contest Judges, the Chief Judge is responsible for
determining the ranking of the Programming Contest. The Chief Judge's decisions after consulting with Contest Judges are final.
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Contestants are ranked according to the number of problems solved; a contestant solving more problems is
always ranked higher than a contestant solving fewer problems.
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Within a group of contestants solving the same number of problems, contestants are ranked by increasing
Penalty Points (that is, the contestant with the lowest number of Penalty Points is ranked highest within
the group). Contestants only accrue Penalty Points for problems which the contestant has solved; unsolved
problems do not affect the scoring in any way.
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Contestants accrue Penalty Points for solved problems in two ways:
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One point for each minute elapsed from the start of the contest until the problem was solved (the time of
SUBMISSION is counted as the time solved; it does not matter how long it took the Judges to judge it).
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A specific number of penalty points for each INCORRECT submission submitted to the Judges prior to a
correct solution for the problem (runs submitted after a correct solution are not counted in the scoring).
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If two or more contestants have the same number of solved problems and exactly the same number of Penalty
Points, ties are broken in favor of the contestant with the earliest time of the last correct submission
(that being the time when the contestant finished the contest).
Contest Prelude
Want to get familiar with contest questions?
Still have no idea about the contest?
Want to hear some hints?
Check it out! Here is the Contest Prelude.
Content of this link will be updated irregularly before the contest.
Feel free to come back from time to time.
Contest Environment
Hardware:
- CPU: Intel P4 3.2 GHz
- RAM: 512 MB/ 1024 MB
- Memory: 200 MBytes
Software:
Reference Materials:
Detail on How to use PC2
Related Links
More Information/Inquiries
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