无忧视频

HMC Teams to Compete in Intercollegiate Programming Contest

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Four 无忧视频 teams will compete in the IBM-sponsored ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest Nov. 10 at Riverside Community College in Riverside, Calif.

Winners of the regional contest will move forward to the World Finals, slated for June 30-July 4, 2013 in St. Petersburg, Russia.

The HMC student teams consist of Andrew Carter 鈥13, Carl Walsh 鈥13, and Matt Prince 鈥13; Josh Oratz 鈥13, John Wentworth 鈥13 and James Kaplan 鈥15; Jordan Librande 鈥13 and Jordan Ezzell 鈥13; and, John Sarracino 鈥14, Emil Guliyev 鈥13 and Peter Fedak 鈥13.

The contest challenges students to solve complex, real-world programming problems within a five-hour period. To win, teams must solve the most problems in the fewest attempts in the least cumulative time.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a programming competition that challenges students to develop algorithms quickly, thoroughly and accurately. The many excellent teams in the region make it a tough contest,鈥 said Zach Dodds, professor of computer science and ACM coach. 鈥淲e have a one-unit CS class, Programming Practicum (CS 189), with which students prepare for the event by practicing those problem-solving skills.鈥

Each year that one of HMC鈥檚 teams has placed first at the regional competition (1996, 1997, 1998, 2009 and 2010), the team has gone on to represent the College at the World Finals. In 1997, HMC鈥檚 team of Brian Carnes ’97, Brian Johnson ’98, Kevin Watkins ’98 and Dominic Mazzoni ’99 (coached by Robert Keller, professor of computer science) won the World Finals.In fact, HMC is the only undergraduate institution to have won the contest, joining a list that includes MIT, Caltech, Waterloo, Stanford and Harvard.

The operates under the auspices of the Association for Computing Machinery and has its headquarters at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. The contest involves a global network of universities hosting regional competitions that advance teams to the ACM-ICPC World Finals. Participation has grown to several tens of thousands of the finest students and faculty in computing disciplines at nearly 2,000 universities from more than 80 countries on six continents.The contest fosters creativity, teamwork and innovation in building new software programs, and enables students to test their ability to perform under pressure.