When darkness falls on a Friday night, some students go out to the street. Others do homework, or catch up on sleep. But Princeton ACM members are more hardcore. WE CODE. AT NIGHT.

What is a Code@Night?

The Code@Night is Princeton ACM's premier technical workshop series. Usually a student, professor, or company engineer gives a presentation, then opens up the second half for questions, experimentation, and socialization.

Traditionally, they've been held on Friday nights. Anyone is welcome — join us to learn something new and enjoy some free food!

Access the Code@Night Archive (which contains slides, code, etc. from past events) here.
In the past, we've held Code@Nights on/with

Frequently Asked Questions

Our Code@Nights are usually held in the Butler iSpace on Friday evenings, but this is subject to change if we need more capacity or encounter scheduling conflicts with another student org.

Check the event calendar!

Yes, absolutely! In the past, we've had student presentations on Git, design principles, Pytorch, programming competitions, interview tips, and more. Reach out if you'd like to give a presentation.

Yes, yes, and did I say yes? Having engaging events depends on your feedback, so please contact us if you'd like to request a topic for one of the next Code@Nights.

Reach out to us indicating your interest in hosting a Code@Night and let us know what presentation topic you had in mind as who from your organization will give the presentation. Our only two requirements are that the presentation either have some technical content or professional advice, and that there be time to either interact or experiment with presentation content afterward. You can find our sponsorship rates for Code@Nights here. As always, our suggestions — whether it be contribution amount or presentation format — are open to negotiation if your organization is looking for something slightly different.