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Topcoder Open (TCO) is an annual design, software development, data science and competitive programming championship, organized by Topcoder, and hosted in different venues around US[1][2][3]. Each year, the most successful participants of each competition track included into TCO are selected and invited for a free one-week trip to on-site finals, where they compete for prizes, and also socialize with each other, helping to build community sprit among the most active members. In the first two years, 2001 and 2002, the tournament was titled TopCoder Invitational.
Topcoder Open (TCO) | |
---|---|
File:Tco18-logo.png Topcoder Open 2018 logo | |
Frequency | annually |
Country | USA |
Years active | 2001 - nowadays |
Inaugurated | Nov 2 - 3, 2001 |
Most recent | October 21 - 24, 2017 |
Activity | Competitive Programming, Data Science, Design, and Software Development Championship |
Organized by | Topcoder |
Website | http://tco18.topcoder.com |
In addition to the main championship, from 2001 to 2007 Topcoder was organizing an annual TopCoder Collegiate Challenge tournament, for college students only. Also from 2007 to 2010 TopCoder High School competition was held.
From 2015, Topcoder Regional events are held through the year in different countries.
Competition Tracks
Competition tracks included in Topcoder Open tournament changed through its history. Many of them resemble the types of challenges offered to Topcoder Community through the year, but there is no 1:1 match. Here is the alphabetical list of all competition tracks ever present at TCO:
- Algorithm Compeition (SRM) – 2001 - nowadays – The only track that was present at all main TCOs events, and at the most of other Topcoder events. Follows the format of regular 1.5 hours Single Round Matches:[4]
- The Coding Phase – 75 mins: All competitors are presented with the same three algorithmic problems of different complexity, each problem has its own maximal number of points. Problem descriptions are initially invisible. Competitors have 75 minutes to solve these problems. Competitor can open any problem description in any order; once he opened a problem, the number of points he can get for the correct solution of that problem starts decreasing over time. When competitor submits problem solution (a code that successfully compiles), he is awarded with the current amount of points he can get for that problem. He can re-submit a solution, getting the further descrease amount of points, minus extra penalty for the resubmission. During the phase competitors can see the current points awarded to each participant, but they don't know whether solutions of those participants are correct or wrong, thus whether these scores will hold after The System Testing Phase, or will be reset.
- The Challenge Phase – 15 mins: Each competitor can see all submission done by other competitors. He can (optionally) challenge any of them, submitting test cases that will cause other competitor's submission produce a wrong result. Submission of correct challenge test case gives sumitter 50 points award, submission of an incorrect test case (i.e. the challenged solution can solve it successfully) will lead to 25 points penalty for the test case submitter.
- The System Testing Phase – In the last phase system tests are automatically executed for all submissions from all competitors. If a submission fails testing, the scores awarded for that submission during The Coding Phase are reset to zero. The final scores after the system testing determine the winner.
- First to Finish (F2F) – 2009 - nowadays – Officially called as Mod Dash from 2009 to 2013, and First2Finish afterwards. Competitors are provided with set of small programming tasks (like bug fixes / enhancements in an existing codebase), and they get scores based on who correctly resolves each task first. The exact rules for on-site competition may vary from year to year.
- Information Architecture – 2015. Provided with client requirements for a software product, competitors are asked to create a wireframe mockup of the future app / website.
- Marathon Match (MM) – 2007 - nowadays – Officially called as just Marathon from 2007 to nowadays. Follows the format of regular MM competitions (a 1-2 weeks long online, and 1 day long during on-site competitions). Competitors are provided with the same algorithmic / data science problem, which is judged objectively with a live leaderboard, visible to everybody. Everybody can submit multiple times with no penalties, with the goal to come up with a code that scores the maximal possible amount of scores on that problem. During the competition the leaderboard is generated based on submissions testing against a limit number of test cases, and after the contest the final results are determined in a testing against a larger test dataset.
- Software Design – 2004 - 2014 – Officially called as Component Design from 2004 to 2009, and just Design from 2010 to 2014. Competitors were asked to take client requirements for a software component / product as input, and produce development documentation / technical specifications. Solutions were evaluated by a panel of judges according to objective scorecards.
- Software Development – 2004 - nowadays – Officially called as Component Development from 2004 to 2009, and just as Development from 2010 to nowadays. The actual rules differ from year to year, but, typically, competitors are present with technical specifications for development of a software component / application / tool, or with a more open, hackathon-style requirements, and they have about 4 hours to implement the component / product in the best possible way. Submitted solutions are evaluated by a panel of judges according to objective scorecards.
- UI Design – 2007 - nowadays – Officially called as Studio from 2007 to 2014, and UI Design from 2015 to nowadays. Competitors, provided with client requirements, are asked to create the best UI (visual) design for an software product / web portal, etc.
- UI Prototype – 2015 - nowadays. Competitors are provided with design specifications for a website / web-application, and they should create a working prototype of the frontend within a ~4 hours timeframe. The resulting submissions are judged against objective scorecards.
The List of Topcoder Open and Regional Events
The list of Topcoder Open and Regional events, and their winners[5][note 1] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date | Event | Venue | Competition Tracks,[note 2] and their winners[note 3] |
Jun 5 - 7, 2001 | TCCC01 (San Francisco, CA, USA)[6][note 4] | Hilton San Francisco and Towers | SRM ( qubits) |
Nov 2 - 3, 2001 | TCI01 (Mashantucket, CT, USA)[7][note 5] | Foxwoods Resort Casino | SRM ( jonmac) |
Apr 19 - 20, 2002 | TCCC02 (Cambridge, MA, USA)[8][note 6] | University Park Hotel @ MIT | SRM ( Daniel Wright dmwright) |
Nov 22 - 23, 2002 | TCI02 (Uncasville, CT, USA)[9][3][note 7] | Mohegan Sun Casino | SRM ( John Dethridge John Dethridge) |
Apr 4 - 5, 2003 | TCCC03 (Cambridge, MA, USA)[10][note 6] | University Park Hotel @ MIT | SRM ( David Arthur dgarthur) |
Dec 4 - 5, 2003 | TCO03 (Uncasville, CT, USA)[11][note 8] | Mohegan Sun Casino | SRM ( Tomasz Czajka tomek) |
Apr 15 - 16, 2004 | TCCC04 (Boston, MA, USA)[12][note 9] | Boston Park Plaza Hotel | Dev ( roma), SDg ( Pavlo Aksonov aksonov), SRM ( Tomasz Czajka tomek) |
Nov 11 - 12, 2004 | TCO04 (Santa Clara, CA, USA)[13][note 10] | Santa Clara Marriot | Dev ( Standlove), SDg ( Adrian Carcu adic), SRM ( Tomasz Czajka tomek) |
Mar 10 - 11, 2005 | TCCC05 (Santa Clara, CA, USA)[14][note 11] | Santa Clara Marriot | Dev ( Gary Linscott gladius), SDg ( Adrian Carcu adic), SRM ( Mathys Vogelzang mathijs) |
Oct 12 - 14, 2005 | TCO05 (Santa Clara, CA, USA)[15][note 12] | Santa Clara Marriot | Dev ( Qi Liu visualage), SDg ( Nikolay Archak nicka81), SRM ( Eryk Kopczyñski Eryx) |
May 3 - 5, 2006 | TCO06 (Las Vegas, NV, USA)[16][17][note 13] | Aladdin Resort and Casino | Dev ( Sindunata Sudarmagi sindu), SDg ( Tim Roberts Pops), SRM ( Petr Mitrichev Petr) |
Nov 14 - 18, 2006 | TCCC06 (San Diego, CA, USA)[18][note 14] | San Diego Marriot Mission Valley | Dev, SDg, SRM |
May 18 - 20, 2007 | TCHS07 (West Lafayette, IN, USA)[19][note 15] | Purdue University | SRM[note 16] |
Jun 26 - 29, 2007 | TCO07 (Las Vegas, NV, USA)[20][note 17] | The Mirage | Dev, Dg, MM, SDg, SRM |
Oct 30 - Nov 2, 2007 | TCCC07 (Orlando, FL, USA)[21] | Disney World Contemporary Resort | Dev, Dg, MM, SDg, SRM |
Mar 14 - 16, 2008 | TCHS08 (West Lafayette, IN, USA)[22] | Purdue University | SRM |
May 11 - 15, 2008 | TCO08 (Las Vegas, NV, USA)[23] | The Mirage | Dev, Dg, MM, SDg, SRM |
Jan 3 - 24, 2009 | TCHS09 (online-only)[24] | online-only | SRM |
Jun 1 - 4, 2009 | TCO09 (Las Vegas, NV, USA)[25] | The Mirage | Dg, F2F, MM, SRM[note 18] |
Feb 27 - Mar 20, 2010 | TCHS10 (online-only)[26] | online-only | SRM |
Oct 11 - 14, 2010 | TCO10 (Las Vegas, NV, USA)[27] | The Mirage | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, SDg, SRM |
Sep 25 - 28, 2011 | TCO11 (Hollywood, FL, USA)[28] | Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, SDg, SRM |
Sep 30 - Oct 4, 2012 | TCO12 (Orlando, FL, USA)[29][30] | Caribe Royale Hotel | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, SDg, SRM |
Nov 10 - 14, 2013 | TCO13 (Washington DC, USA)[31][32] | Capital Hilton Hotel | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, SDg, SRM |
Nov 16 - 19, 2014 | TCO14 - San Francisco (CA, USA)[33][34] | Pier 48 | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, SDg, SRM |
May 31, 2015 | TCO15 - St. Petersburg (Russia)[35][36] | ITMO University | Dev, SRM |
Jun 20, 2015 | TCO15 - San Francisco (CA, USA)[37] | MemSQL HQ | Dev, SRM |
Jul 18, 2015 | TCO15 - Tokyo (Japan)[38] | Dwango offices | Dev, SRM |
Aug 22, 2015 | TCO15 - Jaipur (India)[39][40] | Manipal University | Dev, SRM |
Sep 21 - 22, 2015 | TCO15 - Yogyakarta (Indonesia)[37][note 19] | Eastparc Hotel | Dg, Pr |
Nov 8 - 10, 2015 | TCO15 (Indianapolis, IN, USA)[37][note 19] | Omni Severin Hotel | Dev, IA, MM, SRM |
Jun 5, 2016 | TCO16 - Beijing (China)[41] | ThoughtWorks HQ | SRM |
Jun 17, 2016 | TCO16 - New York City (USA)[42] | Google offices | SRM |
Jul 30, 2016 | TCO16 - Jaipur (India)[43] | Hotel Clarks Amer | Dg, SRM |
Aug 6 - 7, 2016 | TCO16 - Yogyakarta (Indonesia)[44] | Hotel Royal Ambarrukmo | Dg |
Sep 3, 2016 | TCO16 - St. Petersburg (Russia)[45] | ITMO University | SRM |
Nov 18 - 21, 2016 | TCO16 (Washington DC, USA)[46] | Booz Allen Hamilton Innovation Center | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, Pr, SRM |
Apr 29, 2017 | TCO17 - Austin (TX, USA)[47] | Capital Factory | SRM |
May 7, 2017 | TCO17 - St. Petersburg (Russia)[48] | ITMO University | SRM |
Jun 24, 2017 | TCO17 - Beijing (China)[49] | Meituan-Dianping HQ | SRM |
Aug 12 - 13, 2017 | TCO17 - Yogyakarta (Indonesia)[50] | Hotel Royal Ambarrukmo | Dg |
Aug 20, 2017 | TCO17 - Bangalore (India)[51] | Cowrks | SRM |
Sep 2, 2017 | TCO17 - Warsaw (Poland)[52] | University of Warsaw, Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Mechanics | SRM |
Sep 8, 2017 | TCO17 - Pittsburgh (PA, USA)[53] | Google offices | SRM |
Oct 21 - 24, 2017 | TCO17 (Buffalo, NY, USA)[54][55][56][57] | Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, Pr, SRM |
Upcoming | |||
May 12, 2018 | TCO18 - Warsaw (Poland)[58] | University of Warsaw, Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Mechanics | MM, SRM |
May 26, 2018 | TCO18 - Beijing (China)[59] | Jingdong HQ | SRM |
TBA | TCO18 - India (TBA) | TBA | TBA |
TBA | TCO18 - Indonesia (TBA) | TBA | TBA |
TBA | TCO18 - South America (TBA) | TBA | TBA |
TBA | TCO18 (USA, TBA)[60] | TBA | Dev, Dg, F2F, MM, Pr, SRM |
Notes
- ^ Golden background highlights main Topcoder Open events of each year, where that year's champions were determined for related competition tracks.
- ^ The following abbreviations are used in the table "The list of Topcoder Open and Regional events": Dev = Software Development (Code); Dg = UI Design (also called as Studio Design); F2F = First to Finish (also called Mod Dash); IA = Information Architecture (Wireframes); MM = Marathon Match; Pr = UI Prototype; SDg = Software Design (also called Component Design, and just Design); SRM = Algorithm.
- ^ Topcoder member nicknames are given in italic
- ^ Officially titled 2001 TopCoder Collegiate Challenge
- ^ Officially titled 2001 TopCoder Invitational
- ^ a b Officially titled Sun Microsystems TopCoder Collegiate Challenge
- ^ Officially titled 2002 TopCoder Invitational
- ^ Officially titled 2003 TopCoder Open Sponsored by Intel
- ^ Officially titled 2004 Topcoder Collegiate Challenge Sponsored by Yahoo!
- ^ Officially titled 2004 TopCoder Open Sponsored by Microsoft
- ^ Officially titled 2005 TopCoder Collegiate Challenge Sponsored by Yahoo!
- ^ Officially titled 2005 TopCoder Open Sponsored by Sun Microsystems
- ^ Officially titled 2005 TopCoder Open Sponsored by AMD
- ^ Officially titled 2006 TopCoder Collegiate Challenge Sponsored by AOL
- ^ Officially titled 2007 TopCoder High School
- ^ Individual and team competition
- ^ Officially titled 2007 TopCoder Open Sponsored by AOL
- ^ Software development competition that year was online-only, and it was divided into Architecture, Assembly, Component Design, Component Development, and Specification sub-tracks.
- ^ a b In 2015, on-site finals for UI Design and UI Prototype competitions where held at TCO15 Yogyakarta event; and other on-site finals: Competitive Progamming (SMR), Information Architecture, Marathon Match, Software Development were held at TCO15 Indianapolis event.
References
- ^ Brandel, Mary (January 22, 2008). "Rock star coders". Computerworld. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
- ^ Lai, Eric (July 9, 2007). "Jiazhi Wu: Programming's Crack Competitor". Computerworld. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
- ^ a b Consilvio, Jean (December 9, 2002). "And the Winner Is..." Computerworld. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
- ^ Sial, Rashid (April 25, 2017). "SRM Overview". Topcoder Help Center. Retrieved April 23, 2018.
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