Come join SLU's team!!!!

The 2015/2016 ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest


Key Dates

           Informational Meeting         Tuesday, 25 August 2015, 4:10pm Ritter 117
           Regular Practices         Tuesdays, 4:10-6:00pm    Ritter 117
           Local Qualifier         Saturday, 3 October, 2015 (time TBD)    Ritter 117
Regional Competition Saturday, 7 November 2015 (all day) Webster University
World Finals May 15-20, 2016 Phuket, Thailand


Each year the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) sponsors the International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC). Students work in teams of three to solve as many problems as possible in a five-hour time period. The available programming languages for the contest are C++ and Java.

Last year's contest involved over 38,000 students from 2,534 universities in 101 countries, competing at over 459 different regional sites. The top 127 teams in the world traveled to Marrakech, Morocco for the world finals. Here are the problems from last year's regionals and the very difficult problems from last year's finals. If you want to try these, or to try problems from past regionals, you may submit code online at the ICPC Live Archive and get immediate feedback.

Saint Louis University can send up to nine students (three teams of three) to the regional competition. We'd like you to be one of them.

Interested students should come attend an organizational meeting at 4:10pm on Tuesday, 25 August 2015 in Ritter 117, or contact Dr. Goldwasser otherwise.


There is also an opportunity to receive university credit for those interested in participating in the contest. In the fall, our department offers a course titled Computational Problem Solving (CSCI 2190). This course will serve to prepare students for the types of problems seen on the contest. (students are also welcome to participate without registering for this course).

The course is a 1-credit course using the Pass/No Pass grading option. Given the nature of the typical problems, participating students should generally have completed coursework through the level of CSCI 2100 (Data Structures) or equivalent. The regular meeting time for the course coincides with the practices for the programming contest team. For more information, please see the formal syllabus.


Additional resources for our team
Questions? Contact Michael Goldwasser

Michael Goldwasser
CSCI 2190, Fall 2015
Last modified: Tuesday, 18 August 2015