16th IOCCC Winners Released
An anonymous submitter wrote: "A while ago the 16th IOCCC winners were announced. Apparently "releas[ing] the winning source by mid April 2002" actually means "within a year", but you can finally enjoy them here. Or, if you don't enjoy them, you can beat your head against the wall trying to figure out how these programs work ;-)"
main(v,c)char**c;{for(v[c++]="First post!\n)";! !c]+!!c,!c));
(!!c)[*c]&&(v--||--c&&execlp(*c,*c,c[
**c=!c)write(!!*c,*c,!!**c);}
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
No, I'm being unfair. IOCCC code is much easier to understand :o)
Google cache of mirrors
Enjoy them while they last.
.. look at one of the mirrors
- Hsin-Chu, Taiwan (24 48' N 120 59' E)
- Sydney, Australia (34 0' S 151 0' E)
- Humburg, Germany (53 33' N 10 2' E)
- Madrid, Spain (40 25' N 3 41' W)
- Athens, Greece (38 00' N 23 44' E)
SETI is looking for some sites
- Sunnyvale California, US (37 22' N 122 02' W)
- Saint Paul, Minnesota US (44 57' N 93 06' W)
none
We are looking for more mirrors.
Do you want to mirror the IOCCC web site?
No, the contest is to demonstrate a mastery of ANSI C. Only someone who truly understands every intricacy of the preprocessor and the compiler can write one of these. A much better comparison might be something like an NBA slam dunk contest -- you'll see stuff that you won't see anywhere else and is completely stunning. Very, very few programmers could hope to create an entry such as these.
The average VB Developer doesn't understand words with as many syllables as "redundant."
...I didn't even know the International Olympic Committee had a c compiler.
(yeah, yeah, ObReinterpretedAcronymComment, I know)
Liberty uber alles.
My all-time favorite IOCCC winner has been savastio.
It's been up on my cube wall for a while. If anyone complains about my code here at work I threaten them to code like it.
Always works!
The IOCCC is an ASCII modern art competition right?
~ a low user id is no indication I have a clue what I'm talking about.
We began to compare notes: "You won't believe the code I am trying to fix". And: "Well you cannot imagine the brain damage level of the code I'm trying to fix". As well as: "It more than bad code, the author really had to try to make it this bad!"
After a few minutes we wandered back into my office where I posted a flame to net.lang.c inviting people to try and out obfuscate the UN*X source code we had just been working on.
OK, back to the story. We received a number of entries by EMail. When we began to receive messages from outside of the US, Larry and I decided to include International in the name. The 1st IOCCC winners were posted on 17 April 1984.
The name used in the posting of the 1st IOCCC winner posting was International Obfuscated C Code Contest or IOCCC for short.
The posting said 1st annual, so in 1985 we held the 2nd IOCCC contest and the tradition continues as the longest running contest on the Internet.
P.S. Part of the inspiration for making the IOCCC a contest goes to the Bulwer-Lytton fiction contest.
P^2.S. See the overall README for more details.
P^3.S. See also the IOCCC FAQ.
P^4.S. Please see my apology for the late posting of the 2001 winners.
chongo (was here)