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Is it possible to use the BrainFuck language on the exam?
I remember in task C6 (the last one) you need to specify the programming language in which you will write, and its version. When I wrote C6, the thought came to me without interruption - is it possible to use BrainFuck and how will they check it (whether they will check it at all)?
waiting for your thoughts
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I remember an anecdote.
Two soldiers, one to the other:
- Let's play a trick on the ensign?
“Enough, the dean has already been joked about…”
Better on whitespace . Pampering, of course, will work only if the exam inspector is a geek (with a sense of humor). The likelihood of that is hardly high.
One friend wrote an entrance to the university in php and waited 3 hours for a teacher who knows php to arrive.
Can you cope with the task of the Unified State Examination on the brainfuck?
You can take a chance, but I'm afraid they won't appreciate it :). It's a pity…
You can write on any idea. Then, of course, you will have to go to appeal the results, where you will already explain everything to them, that this is such a language, and this is exclusively their problem, that they do not understand it. In principle, yes, trolling is the most that neither is, and quite good.
Last year I wrote the exam in Python3. At the appeal, I had to wait 15 minutes for a specially trained person who knew him to come. At the same time, he knew it averagely, because I even saw the error myself, for example, I got confused in the sorted () function with the transfer of operator.itemgetter to it. As a result, part C was raised by 3 points (~ 7%).
This year at the VMK, at a seminar on programming, the teacher said: “This is what it has come to! Schoolboy Lomonosov wrote the Olympiad in Python! I didn't say anything to her, but it was me again :)
Previously, this was provided, among the allowed languages were only BASIC, Pascal, C and "natural language", not sure how this year.
formally yes.
Moreover, now there is a state order for a “computer exam in informatics” where it is written “in any programming language”.
Even on fictional...
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