Most Popular Programming Contest Sites for Coding Practices
Topcoder
You
get to earn real money, and it's supported by a community of nearly a
million coders, so I'm pretty sure there is a lot of challenging stuff
to encounter. I'm saying that because I believe that some beginner
programming enthusiasts might find [topcoder] to be rather difficult.
It's
possible to participate in both daily, and weekly coding challenges;
both are extremely difficult, and require great thinking skills to
complete. It's worth it though, as it all adds up to your resume at the
end of the day.
Hacker Earth
HackerEarth
provides a SaaS application to do an automated assessment of technical
and logical skills of candidates. It also helps companies to source
smart talent by serving as a developer aggregation and selection
platform.
They've
got frequent challenges being added, and you can sign up weeks before;
both to prepare and know beforehand when you've got to participate. Like
TopCoder, this is a high quality website, and offers thoughtful
challenges that will prove to be of use later in your career.
CodeMonk
The
latest feature of HackerEarth is a challenge series dubbed CodeMonk
with CodeMonk challenges you can immerse yourself in the world of code
from all of its aspects, repeat challenges to really make the particular
problem sets sink into your brain. The challenges will be focused on
programming problems.
And
if you're feeling even more adventurous and have stepped beyond the
boundaries of learning to complete challenges, perhaps you want to take
advantage of HackerEarth's Sprint service which offers you to create
your very own hackathon.
Coder Byte
Coderbyte
is a Kickstarter funded project (although, it existed before the
campaign itself), and is aimed at complete beginners and intermediate
programmers alike.
It
was launched in 2012, by Daniel Borowski, and has since grown into a
self-maintained community of programmers who like to tackle programming
problems in their spare time.
You
can also ask questions if there is something you don't understand, and
the community is fairly active; so it is more than likely that you'll
get an answer. Plenty of people love Coderbyte, and I've seen only
positive reviews for it.
Project Euler
Project
Euler is probably the most popular coding challenge website in the
world, and has been the home of some several hundred thousand users,
since the initial launch, over a decade ago. You get one extra challenge
added per week, but I'm quite sure it's going to take some time before
you tack the 450+ problems that there are to solve already.
They've
been built to not be very hard, rather; involve critical thinking and
problem solving, in order to help you grow and learn more about the
language you're using. It's all about working your way up, making sure
you thoroughly understand what you're doing.
You can learn more about Project Euler on: Wikipedia, Reddit, Stack Overflow and Google Code.
I think there's even an Android application for it, see it for yourself.
Daily Programmer
We
are going to wrap this up with one of my personal favorites: Reddit's
Daily Programmer. It's a wonderful discussion board to be a part of, if
you want to learn more about programming and problem solving. I think as
it stands right now, you get three unique problems to solve per week.
Not
to mention, several hundred to work with already. Every submission you
create in the comments is reviewed by the community members, so you get a
mix of opinions and answers to your approach.
Highly recommended.
Codility
You
get several pre-customized and pre-thought challenges that you can
submit in many programming languages. They're all sorted by their
appropriate difficulty, and there is like 40-50 challenges to go
through.
Each
has a detailed explanation on what the end program should do, and as
far as I could tell you're also given a time limit on each, so there is
no slacking!
SPOJ
Sphere
Online Judge (SPOJ) is a treasure-trove of thousands of coding
challenges which will keep you busy for weeks. The challenges at SPOJ
range from simple coding problems to hard algorithmic challenges that
require some serious problem-solving skills, like finding the best
heuristics for NP-hard problems. SPOJ lets you code in almost every
programming language you can imagine and provides you with feedback on
your solution, which may for some challenges contain additional hints.
This site is very famous for online coding challenges.
There
is also an amazing community (+300k users) behind SPOJ, with many
active members willing to help out on the community forums. SPOJ allows
users to add their own challenges, organize programming contests, and
compete for the highest ranks. It is used by both novice and confirmed
programmers. For many, it serves as a training platform before large
programming contests. It has been created out of pure passion for
programming by theoretical computer scientists and is quite laid-back,
which you can easily tell from the motto of the site: Where Hackers eat
Crackers.
Code Chef
CodeChef
was created by Directi as a way to challenge and engage the developer
community and provide a platform for practice, competition and
improvement. It's powered by a large set of problems to work with, and
you can also gain access to the source codes that others used to solve
the given coding challenges. In this site you can see programming
contest every week.
It's
split in several difficulty categories, and the website itself has a
reasonable size community. Looks like a really great challenge site.
Code Eval
You
can join CodeEval as a developer who wants to show his programming
skills to employers and other developers. You get to participate and
join competitions for several different areas, but mostly for building a
product / app and in return get money prizes. Also, you get access to
programming challenges, which can be solved and added to your resume to
further make a good first impression to your potential employers.
It's
focused on helping developers to advertise themselves as experienced
within their field of work, and seems to be doing that job great.
Hacker Rank
The
thing I instantly liked about HackerRank was their section for
challenges that are related to artificial intelligence, which is kind of
cool and gives advanced programmers something to play around with. It
also contains web coding. It's backed by companies like Y Combinator,
SVAngel and many more. Definitely a nice bunch of hackers working on
this.
Code Wars
Codewars
has a pretty nice approach to coding challenges and take their craft
quite seriously, I was trying to find the right words to describe it,
but here is a ten minute introductory video of what Codewars has to
offer.
Rosalind
It's
a little bit more specific approach, but nonetheless a great way to
tackle and learn about programming problems. Rosalind offers some
challenges towards bioinformatics, which you can solve at your own pace.
Fight Code
You
get to program your own robots, and then use them to fight against
other community members. It's the code-and-play type of platform, but
still useful for those who're new to such approach, or perhaps just want
to have some fun. Try the docs to get a better sense of it.
Code Forces
In
the initial revision of this post back in 2014, this particular website
was somehow left out, but thanks to the nice community members in
comments, we've now got an additional, and great, programming challenge
site to add to our list. Codeforces is all about daily/weekly
challenges. You can host your own groups, attend code gym, and see who
the top coders on the site are, there are also frequent coding cups
hosted that can help you to get noticed by the right people.
Exercism
This
was also suggested by someone in the comments, it's a coding challenge
platform built by Katrina Owen. The Exercism platform is all about
crowdsourced problem solving. By becoming a member, not only do you get
to improve your thinking/computing/coding skills, you also get to
interact with other people who can share insightful answers and
resolutions to your coding problems. A really nice approach indeed.
Kaggle
It
seems that Kaggle is built more for the professional/competitive minded
people, since the competitions page seems to clearly indicate that
Kaggle is all about paid competitions, but even then if you're serious
about coding and problem solving, there are some serious paychecks to be
earned, of that there is no doubt. You can also find jobs board
available, as well as programming tutorials to keep you fresh and
focused.
Codin Game
>At
CodinGame, we believe that everyone should be able to discover the
pleasure of coding. We are programmers at heart, and we know that code
is a powerful tool to innovate and create. It's a matter of passion, but
above all, it's fun. So we've imagined a platform which merges
programming and video games. Our goal is to help developers from around
the world, whatever their qualifications or professional experience, to
learn, improve their coding skills and find their dream job, while
playing.
The
above quote was taken from their official About page, in short it kind
of is exactly what the about says, it's a coding game that is focused on
the gaming aspects of entertainment, and since all of us have our
brains wired in different ways, some people might find this particular
site more appealing.
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