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International Olympiad in Informatics
Annual programming competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) is an annual competitive programming competition and one of the International Science Olympiads for secondary school students. The first IOI was held in 1989 in Pravetz, Bulgaria.

Each country sends a team of up to four students, plus one team leader, one deputy leader, and guests. Students in each country are selected for their country's team through national computing contests. Students at the IOI compete on an individual basis. There is no official team ranking.
The contest consists of two days of solving six complicated algorithmic tasks by writing computer programs in C++.[1][2] All task materials are published on each year's contest website soon after the competition ends.
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Competition structure and participation
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On each of the two competition days, the competitors are typically given three problems which they have to solve in five hours. Each student works on their own to solve the problems with no outside help, specifically no communication with other contestants, books, web access, etc. Contestants are typically allowed to bring non-programmable wired keyboards and mice.[3] Usually to solve a task the contestant has to write a computer program (in C++) and submit it before the five-hour competition time ends. The program is graded based on secret test data. Since IOI 2010, tasks are divided into subtasks with graduated difficulty, and points are awarded only when all tests for a particular subtask yield correct results, within specific time and memory limits. In some cases, the contestant's program has to interact with a secret computer library, which allows problems where the input is not fixed, but depends on the program's actions – for example in game problems (a.k.a. interactive problems). Another type of problem has the inputs publicly available, for these, the contestants have to submit an output file instead of a program, and it is up to them whether they obtain the output files by writing a program (possibly exploiting special characteristics of the input), or by hand, or by a combination of these means. Pascal has been removed as an available programming language as of 2019.[4]:11
IOI 2010 for the first time had a live web scoreboard with real-time provisional results. Submissions will be scored as soon as possible during the contest, and the results posted. Contestants will be aware of their scores, but not others', and may resubmit to improve their scores. Starting from 2012, IOI has been using the Contest Management System (CMS) for developing and monitoring the contest.[5]
The scores from the two competition days and all problems are summed up separately for each contestant. Medals are awarded depending on their relative total score. The top 50% of the contestants are awarded medals, such that the relative number of gold : silver : bronze : no medal is approximately 1:2:3:6 (thus 1/12 of the contestants get a gold medal).
Prior to IOI 2010, students who did not receive medals did not have their scores published, although the scores of students who did not receive medals are still not available in the official results, they are known from the live web scoreboard. In IOI 2012 the top 3 nations ranked by aggregate score (Russia, China and USA) were subsequently awarded during the closing ceremony.
Analysis of female performance shows 77.9% of women obtain no medal, while 49.2% of men obtain no medal. "The average female participation was 4.4% in 1989–1994 and 2.2% in 1996–2014." It also suggests much higher participation of women on the national level, claiming sometimes double-digit percentages in total participation on the first stage.[6] President of the IOI (2011-2014), Richard Forster, says the competition has difficulty attracting women and that in spite of trying to solve it, "none of us have hit on quite what the problem is, let alone the solution."[1] The European Girls’ Olympiad in Informatics (EGOI), which was first held in 2021 was started with the goal to increscent female participants at IOI and other Informatics Olympiads.[7]
In IOI 2017 held in Iran, due to not being able to participate in Iran, the Israeli students participated in an offsite competition organized by IOI in Russia.[4]:11 Due to visa issues, the full USA team was unable to attend, although one contestant Zhezheng Luo[8] was able to attend by traveling with the Chinese team[9] and winning gold medal and 3rd place in standings.[10]
In IOI 2019 held in Azerbaijan, the Armenia team did not participate due to the dispute between the two countries, despite the guarantees provided[11] and official invitation letter sent by the host Azerbaijan.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, both the IOI 2020 and IOI 2021, originally scheduled to be hosted by Singapore, were held as online contests. The IOI 2022, hosted by Indonesia, was held as a hybrid event, with around 25% of the contestants participating online.[12]
In response to the invasion of Ukraine, students from Russia and Belarus can only participate as individuals under the IOI flag but not as national delegations starting from IOI 2022, and they would only participate online for IOI 2022.[13] From 2023 onwards they would participate in person, but under the IOI flag.
In response to the conflict and humanitarian crisis in Gaza, students from Israel can only participate as individuals under the IOI flag but not as a national delegation from IOI 2025 onwards. Over two thirds of the delegations voted in favour of the sanction in the IOI General Assembly.[14]
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Members
 Albania Albania
 Algeria Algeria
 Argentina Argentina
 Armenia Armenia
 Australia Australia
 Austria Austria
 Azerbaijan Azerbaijan
 Bangladesh Bangladesh
 Belarus Belarus
 Belgium Belgium
 Bolivia Bolivia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Brazil Brazil
 Bulgaria Bulgaria
 Canada Canada
 Chile Chile
 China China
 Colombia Colombia
 Croatia Croatia
 Cuba Cuba
 Cyprus Cyprus
 Czech Republic Czech Republic
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 Dominican Republic Dominican Republic
 Ecuador Ecuador
 Egypt Egypt
 El Salvador El Salvador
 Estonia Estonia
 Finland Finland
 France France
 Georgia Georgia
 Germany Germany
 Greece Greece
 Hong Kong Hong Kong
 Hungary Hungary
 Iceland Iceland
 India India
 Indonesia Indonesia
 Iran Iran
 Ireland Ireland
 Israel Israel
 Italy Italy
 Japan Japan
 Jordan Jordan
 Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
 Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan
 Latvia Latvia
 Libya Libya
 Lithuania Lithuania
 Luxembourg Luxembourg
 Macau Macau
 Malaysia Malaysia
 Mexico Mexico
 Moldova Moldova
 Mongolia Mongolia
 Montenegro Montenegro
 Morocco Morocco
 Netherlands Netherlands
 New Zealand New Zealand
 Nigeria Nigeria
 North Macedonia North Macedonia
 Norway Norway
 Pakistan Pakistan
 Palestine Palestine
 Peru Peru
 Philippines Philippines
 Poland Poland
 Portugal Portugal
 Romania Romania
 Russia Russia
 Rwanda Rwanda
 Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
 Serbia Serbia
 Singapore Singapore
 Slovakia Slovakia
 Slovenia Slovenia
 South Africa South Africa
 South Korea South Korea
 Spain Spain
 Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
 Sweden Sweden
 Switzerland Switzerland
 Syria Syria
 Taiwan Taiwan
 Tajikistan Tajikistan
 Thailand Thailand
 Tunisia Tunisia
 Turkey Turkey
 Turkmenistan Turkmenistan
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 United Kingdom United Kingdom
 United States United States
 Uzbekistan Uzbekistan
 Venezuela Venezuela
 Vietnam Vietnam
Former members
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Summary
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All-time medal table
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Top Performances
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The following is a list of the top performers in the history of the IOI, with the list containing any contestant with at least 3 gold medals.[75] The P sign indicates a perfect score, a rare achievement in IOI history. The U sign indicates an unofficial participation, where a contestant participated in a host's second team. Also, first (I), second (II) and third (III) places among gold medalists are indicated where appropriate.
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Feeder competitions
Most participating countries use feeder competitions to select their team. They are usually referred to as National Olympiad in Informatics and is the course of selection of the country's top team or persons to participate in the IOI. A number of these are listed below:
- Australian Informatics Olympiad
- British Informatics Olympiad
- Canadian Computing Olympiad
- The participants of which are chosen from the Canadian Computing Competition
 
- Central European Olympiad in Informatics
- Indian Computing Olympiad
- National Olympiad in Informatics, China
- Olimpiada Națională de Informatică[76]
- Nederlandse Informatica Olympiade[77]
- Olimpiada Mexicana de Informática
- South African Computer Olympiad
- Syrian Olympiad in Informatics
- United States of America Computing Olympiad[78]
- Moroccan Olympiad in Informatics
- All Ireland Programming Olympiad
- Indonesian Olympiad in Informatics
- Egyptian Olympiad in Informatics
- National Olympiad in Informatics - Philippines[79]
- Bundeswettbewerb Informatik - Germany
- Vietnamese Olympiad in Informatics
- Thailand Olympiad in Informatics (TOI)
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Notes
- 1.^a IOI 2020 virtual closing ceremony was held on September 23, 2020.
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