I’ve attached an image of my solved problems. Most of them are rated 800, and I’ve solved 86 of them so far. What should I do to get better? Any advice is welcome!
then only virtual rating is upgraded, while the verified-human rating will not be upgraded (just similar to the current out-of-competition mechanism to prevent double account rating abusers). Only after the user performs at least 2800 in the next onsite contest, the 3000-point Codeforces perform...
You want to give value to the community, you need to invest the time. I don't really write articles that much because for me as well it takes a very long time. The recent article I wrote [inaudible 00:11:37] and that took me about three weeks or so as well. Even like recording ...
There's a straight conversion betweenleetcodeproblems and annual salary: ten leetcode problems is +$2000 a year annual salary. This is an approximation based on my experience, but I want to make it clear that if you do one hundred leetcode problems you're going to have a much easier tim...
GPT-4 still has some work to do with its coding skills, which is curious since one of its marketed uses is for helping developers. Its rating for Codeforces, which hosts competitive programming events, is 392, which puts it way down in the Newbie category of anything below 1199. ...
Explore Problems Contest Discuss Interview Store Explore Support Terms Privacy Policy MoreCopyright © 2025 LeetCode United States
Sorry for asking this 69 IQ question for yet another time, but I really have no idea what situation I'm in. I started solving CF problems in a fixed difficulty range every day recently. From what I've heard, as a thumb rule you should solve X+200 (where X is your rating) difficult...
going through too hard problems is just as bad is going through too easy problems. It is not worth spending 4h understanding a 3000 rated problem when you could learn much more concepts from 4 2300 rated problems in the same amount of time (if that's good for your skill level). That'...
However, it's my impression that "questions" is a common term in much of the Indian competitive programming community, and I don't think it's right for a high-rated, influential member of our community to use their platform to constantly point it out and make fun of it. Indian English...