Online judge
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An online judge is an online system to test programs in programming contests. They are also used to practice for such contests.
The system can compile and execute your code, and test your code with pre-constructed data. Submitted code may be run with restrictions, including time limit, memory limit, security restriction and so on. The output of the code will be captured by the system, and compared with the standard output. The system will then return the result.
When mistakes were found in a standard output, rejudgement using the same method must be made.
Some examples of online judges are:
- Valladolid Problem Archive with Online Judge, about 2000 problems, supports C, C++, Pascal and Java programming languages
- Ural State University Problem Archive with Online Judge, over 500 problems
- Saratov State University Problem Archive with Online Judge, over 200 problems
- Peking University Online Judge, over 2300 problems including more than 200 original problems
- Moscow Problem Archive with Online Judge, not many, but high quality problems
- Sphere Online Judge, over 1500 problems, supports over 30 different programming languages
- Lviv National University Online Judge, over 100 hard ACM-type problems. Only ukrainian language.
- Tianjin University Online Judge, over 1700 problems
- Zhejiang University Online Judge, 1875 problems but only supports C, C++, and Pascal
- Harbin Institute of Technology Online Judge
- Fuzhou University Online Judge
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