USACO February 2014 Contest -- Final Results

The USACO February 2014 contest featured algorithmic programming problems covering a wide range of techniques and levels of difficulty.

Click here to see the contest problems and official solutions, or to practice re-submitting solutions.

A total of 1727 participants submitted at least one solution, hailing from 75 different countries:

  778 USA  124 CHN   70 BLR   66 IRN   54 VNM   46 TUR   41 CAN
   28 MEX   26 RUS   25 DEU   23 BGR   22 ARM   19 MYS   19 GEO
   18 UKR   18 KAZ   18 IND   17 ROU   15 CUB   14 KOR   14 IDN
   14 BRA   12 TKM   12 THA   12 BGD   11 FRA   11 AZE   11 AUS
   10 SYR   10 MKD    9 VEN    9 MNG    9 GRC    9 EST    8 POL
    8 LTU    8 JPN    8 HRV    8 GBR    7 COL    6 ZAF    6 NLD
    6 FIN    6 DOM    4 TJK    4 SGP    4 NZL    4 MDA    4 CZE
    4 CYP    3 TWN    3 SVK    3 SRB    3 EGY    2 PRT    2 LVA
    2 BEL    2 AUT    2 ARG    1 TUN    1 TTO    1 SWE    1 SVN
    1 SAU    1 NOR    1 LUX    1 LKA    1 KGZ    1 ITA    1 IRL
    1 HKG    1 ESP    1 BOL    1 BIH    1 ASM

The average participant submitted solutions for 1.9 problems. In total, there were 3311 graded submissions, broken down by language as follows:

 1962 C++           
 1020 Java          
  186 Pascal        
   55 C             
   49 Python 2.7.2  
   39 Python 3.2    

Gold Division Results

Full Gold Results

The Gold division had 343 total participants, of whom 255 were pre-college students. The gold division this time around was particularly brutal, with almost nobody earning many points on the very challenging 'boarding' problem. Nonetheless, we still saw two perfect scores in the pre-college category and one in the observer category!

Top pre-college participants:

Country   Grad   Name Score
USA  2014    Steven Hao1000
USA  2014    Alex Pei1000
USA  2016    Demi Guo967
GEO  2014    Nika Svanidzzze833
ROU  2014    Andrei Heidelbacher767
USA  2015    Scott Wu767
CAN  2016    Yikuan Li733
USA  2015    Kevin Liu733
KOR  2015    Seokhwan Choi733
CHN  2018    Yilin You733
CHN  2015    段 雷733
UKR  2014    Vlad Glembotskiy733
RUS  2014    Aidar Sayranov733
IRN  2014    Mohammad Amin Khashkhashi Moghaddam733
TWN  2015    Brian Chen733
BLR  2014    Pavel Leshkevich733
RUS  2016    Vlad Makeev733
GEO  2016    George Skhirtladze733
USA  2016    Lawrence Li733
BGR  2014    Momchil Peychev733
GEO  2015    Elene Machaidze733
USA  2015    Alexander Dai733
USA  2016    Alexander Wei733
CHN  2015    Kung Chul Yen733
IRN  2015    Mohammad Roghani733
CZE  2014    Martin Raszyk733
BLR  2014    Vladislav Sazanovich733
USA  2015    Andrew He733
AUT  2015    Gary Ye733
USA  2014    Sujit Rao733
VNM  2014    Hai Nguyen Hoang733
IRN  2015    Keivan Mohtashami733
VNM  2015    Khanh Do Ngoc733
IDN  2014    Stefano Chiesa733
USA  2014    Joshua Brakensiek733
IRN  2015    Reza Soltani733

Top observers:

Country   Name Score
RUSAlexey Shlyunkin967
ROUGeorge Marcus767
VNMLe Minh Hoang Hnue733
RUSIvan Belonogov733
FRAJérémie Marquès733
USAYujie An733
SVKJakub Safin733
TUROmer Eren733
ZAFBruce Merry733
USAJason Li733
POLAdam Karczmarz733
VNMHiep Tran733
RUSIlya Peresadin733

Silver Division Results

Note: The silver contest was recently re-graded after fixing issues with the test data for 'auto'. Students were promoted if they reached the required cutoff (700 points in this case) either before or after the re-grading.

Full Silver Results

The Silver division had 410 total participants, of whom 347 were pre-college students.

Top pre-college participants:

Country   Grad   Name Score
RUS  2015    Igor Kudryashov1000
BLR  2014    Andrew Raukut1000
USA  2014    Alan Jaffe1000
IRN  2015    Kianoosh Abbasi1000
USA  2014    Michael Zhao1000
FRA  2014    David Cheikhi1000
VNM  2014    Viet Doan Van1000
DEU  2015    Friedrich Huebner1000
KAZ  2015    Bekzhan Bekbolatuly1000
RUS  2014    Valeriy Stromov1000
USA  2016    Calvin Lee1000
THA  2014    Songwong Tasneeyapant1000
CAN  2015    Alex Li1000
USA  2015    Xiaotian Le1000
FIN  2015    Sami Kalliomäki1000
VNM  2015    NhaDinhCaoLamGiaThuan 1000

Top observers:

Country   Name Score
PRTPedro Paredes1000
USAJason Fieldman1000
JPNTakuto Ikuta1000
THASira Songpolrojjanakul1000
ARMNarek Hovsepyan833
CANMartin Mika800
COLManuel Pineda767
SAUSami Emad767
CUBSandor Garcia733
CHNLittle Bell Chan700
INDSanchit Abrol700
GBRLouis Ricketts700

All participants with scores at least 700 will be automatically promoted to the gold division for future contests.

Bronze Division Results

Note: The bronze contest was recently re-graded after fixing issues with the test data for 'auto' and 'scode'. Students were promoted if they reached the required cutoff (700 points in this case) either before or after the re-grading.

Full Bronze Results

The Bronze division had 974 total participants, of whom 801 were pre-college students.

Top pre-college participants:

Country   Grad   Name Score
JPN  2015    Ken Ogura1000
BGR  2015    Vasil Sarafov1000
USA  2016    Suchir Balaji1000
USA  2015    Preetham Gujjula1000
RUS  2015    Egor Shcherbin1000
FIN  2015    Tuukka Korhonen1000
BRA  2015    Lucca Siaudzionis967
USA  2015    Paul Rosa967
USA  2016    Jack Neus926
BRA  2017    Joao Victor Almeida de Aguiar900
USA  2017    Andrew Yang900
USA  2014    Mak Lee900
USA  2016    Benjamin Yang900

Top observers:

Country   Name Score
NZLBill Rogers1000
RUSNikita Shapovalov1000
VNMQuynh Nga Nguyen1000
CUBErnesto Carvajal1000
GRCUltimo Proxima967
BLRAleksey Borunov963
CHNPeter Chenning926
NLDMarc Paul Noordman896
CHNChao Zhang767
CHNYuxuan Wang759
CHNZhanhong Shi759

All participants with scores at least 700 will be automatically promoted to the silver division for future contests.

Final Remarks

For those not yet promoted, remember that the more practice you get, the better your algorithmic coding skills will become -- please keep at it! USACO contests are designed to challenge even the very best students, and it can take a good deal of hard work to excel at them. To help you fix any bugs in your code, you can now re-submit your solutions and get feedback from the judging server using "analysis mode".

A large number of people contribute towards the quality and success of USACO contests. Those who helped with this contest include Mark Gordon, Bruce Merry, Richard Peng, Travis Hance, Fatih Gelgi, Lewin Gan, Chad Waters, and Neal Wu. Thanks also to our translators and to Clemson CCIT for providing our contest infrastructure. Finally, we are grateful to the USACO sponsors for their generous support: IBM, Usenix, TwoSigma, and Jump Trading.

We look forward to seeing everyone again for the 2014 March contest, the last contest of the season before the US Open!

Happy coding!

- Brian Dean ([email protected])
Director, USA Computing Olympiad