Hamming Leaderboard


RANK

NETID

LINES

OPERATIONS

SUBMISSION TIME

1

tshanker

29

23,759

March 25, 2017  11:30am

2

skzhang

30

25,729

March 27, 2017  02:19am

3

taylorb

31

30,059

March 23, 2017  07:19pm

4

kl16

32

29,355

March 22, 2017  06:48pm

5

ggrealy

32

31,061

March 27, 2017  11:14pm

6

ajjarapu

32

31,560

March 23, 2017  04:14pm

azberman

32

31,560

March 31, 2017  09:13am

8

harryf

33

26,153

March 26, 2017  03:10am

9

aidand

33

104,965

March 27, 2017  10:54pm

10

gnoarov

34

30,088

March 27, 2017  02:08am

11

ajk2

35

29,370

March 26, 2017  04:09pm

12

gsommers

36

25,588

March 25, 2017  03:28pm

13

adalman

36

26,118

March 26, 2017  09:05pm

14

mg25

37

26,121

March 21, 2017  06:11pm

15

tylers

37

30,077

March 24, 2017  02:12pm

16

dac3

37

31,755

March 27, 2017  02:38pm

17

akohli

38

27,236

March 28, 2017  03:08am

18

kyleem

38

30,295

March 27, 2017  08:50pm

19

yxzhang

38

31,353

March 19, 2017  01:06pm

20

mmuslea

39

27,337

March 26, 2017  02:06pm

21

reference

39

28,973

March 16, 2017  06:30pm

22

kmwadman

39

29,580

March 26, 2017  03:55pm

23

zadong

39

30,196

March 26, 2017  10:46pm

24

jjiranek

39

33,199

March 26, 2017  07:59pm

The third column shows the number of lines of code for decode.toy.
The fourth column shows the number of TOY machine instructions
executed to decode a certain input with 1,000 7-bit encoded messages.

Under 40 lines of code is very good; under 35 is great.
The all-time record is a mind-boggling 27 lines, by João Oliveira '19.