IOCCC Accepting New, 'Improved' Entries
Rudolf writes: "The 16th International Obfuscated C Code Contest is open from now until 01 Dec 2001 23:59:59 UTC. Details are at the IOCCC web site. From the front page,
the contest goals are: -- To write the most Obscure/Obfuscated C program (within contest rules -- To show the importance of programming style, in an ironic way. -- To stress C compilers with unusual code. -- To illustrate some of the subtleties of the C language. -- To provide a safe forum for poor C code. :-)"
I once heard, it may be a rumour, but at least it's a nice story, that (once upon a time) russian coders liked to write code with obfuscation built in. They were so scared to loose their jobs that they wrote code only themselves could understand, using strange/misleading variable names, senseless loops or whatever. Can anyone confirm this?
It's a well documented phenomena.
There already is one.
http://www.sysadminmag.com/tpj/obfuscated/
"You cannot find out which view is the right one by science in the ordinary sense." - C.S. Lewis on Intelligent Design
Grab it here instead. The source where cut in the post.
I doubt that other languages offer the same possibilities for befuddlement as C, but there's only one way to find out...
No, C was designed to limit the number of keywords required. There's a huge difference. Compare C to pascal. C has less than a dozen keywords and Pascal has almost 100, but neither is more readable if used correctly.
Also, C was not popular until we already had video terminals - and then, C was the UNIX-head-only language until the 80's.
You're so incredibly misinformed about computer history.
Hands in my pocket
(We gotta keep up with the code bloat like everyone else
(why 521? Well 521 is prime and 2^521-1 is a Mersenne prime and I like primes
chongo (was here)
There are some good examples of quines (self-replicating programs) at http://www.nyx.net/~gthompso/quine.htm
Also, I like Esoteric Topics in Computer Programming
Over the years, gcc has survived the best. It has chucked core cookies on a few entries, but not nearly as often as some of the commercial C compilers.
If a winning entry does cause problems for somebody's C compiler, we usually file a bug report. They may not be pleased with the code sample, but that is the break;'s. :-)
p.s. The entry that broke causde the most problems on the most platforms was the 1988 Best of show. Not only did it crash a few C pre-processors, it cause one system to turn casters-up when it ran out of swap space!
chongo (was here)