Welcome to the Coding Olympics, where coding skills are judged not by their beauty, but by their functionality, efficiency, and sheer terror-inducing speed!
Here's a brief history of the Coding Olympics:
It all started in the dark ages when coding was still a young and wild sport. Programmers would write their code on stone tablets, using only the most basic of tools and the most advanced of their skills.
As the centuries passed, coding became more refined, and the Olympics grew in popularity. Programmers from all corners of the world flocked to the Olympics to compete in events like:
Where competitors must write a program of 500 lines or more within a 24-hour time limit, with no errors, no bugs, and no coffee-fueled rage quits.
Where competitors must solve a puzzle that requires the most memory ever seen, with a time limit of 30 minutes, and a prize of a year's supply of RAM.
Where competitors must write a program in the fewest amount of characters possible, with a limit of 10 characters per entry, and a prize of a year's supply of free coding time.
Want to learn more about these events? Click the links below to find out more: