COSCON Fall 2023

Problems

Rules

Leaderboard

Eligibility

Your team can be comprised of at most three members, each of whom must be either an undergraduate or graduate student at Princeton. For your team to be eligible for undergrad prizes, each member must be a currently enrolled undergraduate. However, teams with at least one grad student are still eligible for the graduate placement prize and miscellaneous awards. To be eligible for the best freshman/sophomore prize, each member of the team must be a currently enrolled undergraduate student at Princeton graduating in 2026 or 2027. To be eligible for the best non-COS/MAT team prize, each member of the team must be concentrating in a field that is neither MAT nor COS. Undecided majors are OK too, but you must be a BSE frosh or an AB frosh/soph to fall into this category!

Scoring

The competition will consist of around eight problems with varying point values. The problem weights will be on the official handout of competition problems, and your team's final score is simply the total number of accrued points. The coding portion of the competition will be held on Codeforces. Solutions to these problems will not be eligible for partial credit. We will, however, be awarding partial credit on the non-coding problems. Once the competition period finishes, the undergraduate teams with the top three final scores and the graduate team with the top score will receive placement prizes! If there are ties, then the team who reached their final score earlier will be ranked higher. For example, if Teams A and B are tied at 70 points, but Team A submitted their last correct answer before Team B submitted their last correct answer, then Team A will be ranked higher.

Allowed Sources and Libraries

Miscellaneous

You are not required to be in the same room as your teammates. Though we would prefer if you discuss all solutions with them, this is not strictly required. Don't worry - we won't put chips in you and install eye trackers in your web camera to ensure that you and your teammates look at the same exact pixel on your computer screen at the same time, like some introductory computer science classes at Princeton whose course codes lie between 125 and 127. You are allowed to use a total of three computers per team - one for each teammate. Nope, no using AWS servers to run your brute-force algorithm. You are allowed to communicate with your teammates however you wish - in person, Zoom, Skype, Phone Call, Email, USPS (though the University might take 10 extra processing days), pigeons, smoke signals, stone tablets, or even Facebook Messenger. All code submissions (made through Codeforces) can be made with any supported language.