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Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
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Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
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First Poster
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k a My Retirement & New Leadership at AoPS
rrusczyk   1571
N Mar 26, 2025 by SmartGroot
I write today to announce my retirement as CEO from Art of Problem Solving. When I founded AoPS 22 years ago, I never imagined that we would reach so many students and families, or that we would find so many channels through which we discover, inspire, and train the great problem solvers of the next generation. I am very proud of all we have accomplished and I’m thankful for the many supporters who provided inspiration and encouragement along the way. I'm particularly grateful to all of the wonderful members of the AoPS Community!

I’m delighted to introduce our new leaders - Ben Kornell and Andrew Sutherland. Ben has extensive experience in education and edtech prior to joining AoPS as my successor as CEO, including starting like I did as a classroom teacher. He has a deep understanding of the value of our work because he’s an AoPS parent! Meanwhile, Andrew and I have common roots as founders of education companies; he launched Quizlet at age 15! His journey from founder to MIT to technology and product leader as our Chief Product Officer traces a pathway many of our students will follow in the years to come.

Thank you again for your support for Art of Problem Solving and we look forward to working with millions more wonderful problem solvers in the years to come.

And special thanks to all of the amazing AoPS team members who have helped build AoPS. We’ve come a long way from here:IMAGE
1571 replies
rrusczyk
Mar 24, 2025
SmartGroot
Mar 26, 2025
k a March Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Mar 2, 2025
March is the month for State MATHCOUNTS competitions! Kudos to everyone who participated in their local chapter competitions and best of luck to all going to State! Join us on March 11th for a Math Jam devoted to our favorite Chapter competition problems! Are you interested in training for MATHCOUNTS? Be sure to check out our AMC 8/MATHCOUNTS Basics and Advanced courses.

Are you ready to level up with Olympiad training? Registration is open with early bird pricing available for our WOOT programs: MathWOOT (Levels 1 and 2), CodeWOOT, PhysicsWOOT, and ChemWOOT. What is WOOT? WOOT stands for Worldwide Online Olympiad Training and is a 7-month high school math Olympiad preparation and testing program that brings together many of the best students from around the world to learn Olympiad problem solving skills. Classes begin in September!

Do you have plans this summer? There are so many options to fit your schedule and goals whether attending a summer camp or taking online classes, it can be a great break from the routine of the school year. Check out our summer courses at AoPS Online, or if you want a math or language arts class that doesn’t have homework, but is an enriching summer experience, our AoPS Virtual Campus summer camps may be just the ticket! We are expanding our locations for our AoPS Academies across the country with 15 locations so far and new campuses opening in Saratoga CA, Johns Creek GA, and the Upper West Side NY. Check out this page for summer camp information.

Be sure to mark your calendars for the following events:
[list][*]March 5th (Wednesday), 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, HCSSiM Math Jam 2025. Amber Verser, Assistant Director of the Hampshire College Summer Studies in Mathematics, will host an information session about HCSSiM, a summer program for high school students.
[*]March 6th (Thursday), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Free Webinar on Math Competitions from elementary through high school. Join us for an enlightening session that demystifies the world of math competitions and helps you make informed decisions about your contest journey.
[*]March 11th (Tuesday), 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, 2025 MATHCOUNTS Chapter Discussion MATH JAM. AoPS instructors will discuss some of their favorite problems from the MATHCOUNTS Chapter Competition. All are welcome!
[*]March 13th (Thursday), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Free Webinar about Summer Camps at the Virtual Campus. Transform your summer into an unforgettable learning adventure! From elementary through high school, we offer dynamic summer camps featuring topics in mathematics, language arts, and competition preparation - all designed to fit your schedule and ignite your passion for learning.[/list]
Our full course list for upcoming classes is below:
All classes run 7:30pm-8:45pm ET/4:30pm - 5:45pm PT unless otherwise noted.

Introductory: Grades 5-10

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0 replies
jlacosta
Mar 2, 2025
0 replies
k i Adding contests to the Contest Collections
dcouchman   1
N Apr 5, 2023 by v_Enhance
Want to help AoPS remain a valuable Olympiad resource? Help us add contests to AoPS's Contest Collections.

Find instructions and a list of contests to add here: https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c40244h1064480_contests_to_add
1 reply
dcouchman
Sep 9, 2019
v_Enhance
Apr 5, 2023
k i Zero tolerance
ZetaX   49
N May 4, 2019 by NoDealsHere
Source: Use your common sense! (enough is enough)
Some users don't want to learn, some other simply ignore advises.
But please follow the following guideline:


To make it short: ALWAYS USE YOUR COMMON SENSE IF POSTING!
If you don't have common sense, don't post.


More specifically:

For new threads:


a) Good, meaningful title:
The title has to say what the problem is about in best way possible.
If that title occured already, it's definitely bad. And contest names aren't good either.
That's in fact a requirement for being able to search old problems.

Examples:
Bad titles:
- "Hard"/"Medium"/"Easy" (if you find it so cool how hard/easy it is, tell it in the post and use a title that tells us the problem)
- "Number Theory" (hey guy, guess why this forum's named that way¿ and is it the only such problem on earth¿)
- "Fibonacci" (there are millions of Fibonacci problems out there, all posted and named the same...)
- "Chinese TST 2003" (does this say anything about the problem¿)
Good titles:
- "On divisors of a³+2b³+4c³-6abc"
- "Number of solutions to x²+y²=6z²"
- "Fibonacci numbers are never squares"


b) Use search function:
Before posting a "new" problem spend at least two, better five, minutes to look if this problem was posted before. If it was, don't repost it. If you have anything important to say on topic, post it in one of the older threads.
If the thread is locked cause of this, use search function.

Update (by Amir Hossein). The best way to search for two keywords in AoPS is to input
[code]+"first keyword" +"second keyword"[/code]
so that any post containing both strings "first word" and "second form".


c) Good problem statement:
Some recent really bad post was:
[quote]$lim_{n\to 1}^{+\infty}\frac{1}{n}-lnn$[/quote]
It contains no question and no answer.
If you do this, too, you are on the best way to get your thread deleted. Write everything clearly, define where your variables come from (and define the "natural" numbers if used). Additionally read your post at least twice before submitting. After you sent it, read it again and use the Edit-Button if necessary to correct errors.


For answers to already existing threads:


d) Of any interest and with content:
Don't post things that are more trivial than completely obvious. For example, if the question is to solve $x^{3}+y^{3}=z^{3}$, do not answer with "$x=y=z=0$ is a solution" only. Either you post any kind of proof or at least something unexpected (like "$x=1337, y=481, z=42$ is the smallest solution). Someone that does not see that $x=y=z=0$ is a solution of the above without your post is completely wrong here, this is an IMO-level forum.
Similar, posting "I have solved this problem" but not posting anything else is not welcome; it even looks that you just want to show off what a genius you are.

e) Well written and checked answers:
Like c) for new threads, check your solutions at least twice for mistakes. And after sending, read it again and use the Edit-Button if necessary to correct errors.



To repeat it: ALWAYS USE YOUR COMMON SENSE IF POSTING!


Everything definitely out of range of common sense will be locked or deleted (exept for new users having less than about 42 posts, they are newbies and need/get some time to learn).

The above rules will be applied from next monday (5. march of 2007).
Feel free to discuss on this here.
49 replies
ZetaX
Feb 27, 2007
NoDealsHere
May 4, 2019
AMC 10/AIME Study Forum
PatTheKing806   72
N 6 minutes ago by PatTheKing806
[center]

Me (PatTheKing806) and EaZ_Shadow have created a AMC 10/AIME Study Forum! Hopefully, this forum wont die quickly. To signup, do /join or \join.

Click here to join! (or do some pushups) :P

People should join this forum if they are wanting to do well on the AMC 10 next year, trying get into AIME, or loves math!
72 replies
PatTheKing806
Thursday at 11:34 PM
PatTheKing806
6 minutes ago
2025 Math and AI 4 Girls Competition: Win Up To $1,000!!!
audio-on   14
N 7 minutes ago by FIFITHECAT
Join the 2025 Math and AI 4 Girls Competition for a chance to win up to $1,000!

Hey Everyone, I'm pleased to announce the dates for the 2025 MA4G Competition are set!
Applications will open on March 22nd, 2025, and they will close on April 26th, 2025 (@ 11:59pm PST).

Applicants will have one month to fill out an application with prizes for the top 50 contestants & cash prizes for the top 20 contestants (including $1,000 for the winner!). More details below!

Eligibility:
The competition is free to enter, and open to middle school female students living in the US (5th-8th grade).
Award recipients are selected based on their aptitude, activities and aspirations in STEM.

Event dates:
Applications will open on March 22nd, 2025, and they will close on April 26th, 2025 (by 11:59pm PST)
Winners will be announced on June 28, 2025 during an online award ceremony.

Application requirements:
Complete a 12 question problem set on math and computer science/AI related topics
Write 2 short essays

Prizes:
1st place: $1,000 Cash prize
2nd place: $500 Cash prize
3rd place: $300 Cash prize
4th-10th: $100 Cash prize each
11th-20th: $50 Cash prize each
Top 50 contestants: Over $50 worth of gadgets and stationary


Many thanks to our current and past sponsors and partners: Hudson River Trading, MATHCOUNTS, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Automation Anywhere, JP Morgan Chase, D.E. Shaw, and AI4ALL.

Math and AI 4 Girls is a nonprofit organization aiming to encourage young girls to develop an interest in math and AI by taking part in STEM competitions and activities at an early age. The organization will be hosting an inaugural Math and AI 4 Girls competition to identify talent and encourage long-term planning of academic and career goals in STEM.

Contact:
mathandAI4girls@yahoo.com

For more information on the competition:
https://www.mathandai4girls.org/math-and-ai-4-girls-competition

More information on how to register will be posted on the website. If you have any questions, please ask here!


14 replies
audio-on
Jan 26, 2025
FIFITHECAT
7 minutes ago
Congrats Team USA!
MathyMathMan   131
N 24 minutes ago by MathRook7817
Congratulations to the USA team for placing 1st at the 65th IMO that took place in Bath, United Kingdom.

The team members were:

Jordan Lefkowitz
Krishna Pothapragada
Jessica Wan
Alexander Wang
Qiao Zhang
Linus Tang
131 replies
MathyMathMan
Jul 21, 2024
MathRook7817
24 minutes ago
A number theory about divisors which no one fully solved at the contest
nAalniaOMliO   22
N an hour ago by nAalniaOMliO
Source: Belarusian national olympiad 2024
Let's call a pair of positive integers $(k,n)$ interesting if $n$ is composite and for every divisor $d<n$ of $n$ at least one of $d-k$ and $d+k$ is also a divisor of $n$
Find the number of interesting pairs $(k,n)$ with $k \leq 100$
M. Karpuk
22 replies
nAalniaOMliO
Jul 24, 2024
nAalniaOMliO
an hour ago
D1018 : Can you do that ?
Dattier   1
N an hour ago by Dattier
Source: les dattes à Dattier
We can find $A,B,C$, such that $\gcd(A,B)=\gcd(C,A)=\gcd(A,2)=1$ and $$\forall n \in \mathbb N^*, (C^n \times B \mod A) \mod 2=0 $$.

For example :

$C=20$
$A=47650065401584409637777147310342834508082136874940478469495402430677786194142956609253842997905945723173497630499054266092849839$

$B=238877301561986449355077953728734922992395532218802882582141073061059783672634737309722816649187007910722185635031285098751698$

Can you find $A,B,C$ such that $A>3$ is prime, $C,B \in (\mathbb Z/A\mathbb Z)^*$ with $o(C)=(A-1)/2$ and $$\forall n \in \mathbb N^*, (C^n \times B \mod A) \mod 2=0 $$?
1 reply
Dattier
Mar 24, 2025
Dattier
an hour ago
USAMO/USAJMO Swag?!
AoPSuser412   1
N an hour ago by RedFireTruck
I wondered if those who qualified got an email from MAA and Citadel Securities that they'd be sending out shirts. I filled out the form before the deadline but haven't received the shirt or any confirmation that it is being sent. Does anybody have theirs yet?
1 reply
AoPSuser412
3 hours ago
RedFireTruck
an hour ago
Nordic 2025 P3
anirbanbz   8
N 2 hours ago by Primeniyazidayi
Source: Nordic 2025
Let $ABC$ be an acute triangle with orthocenter $H$ and circumcenter $O$. Let $E$ and $F$ be points on the line segments $AC$ and $AB$ respectively such that $AEHF$ is a parallelogram. Prove that $\vert OE \vert = \vert OF \vert$.
8 replies
anirbanbz
Mar 25, 2025
Primeniyazidayi
2 hours ago
f( - f (x) - f (y))= 1 -x - y , in Zxz
parmenides51   6
N 2 hours ago by Chikara
Source: 2020 Dutch IMO TST 3.3
Find all functions $f: Z \to Z$ that satisfy $$f(-f (x) - f (y))= 1 -x - y$$for all $x, y \in Z$
6 replies
parmenides51
Nov 22, 2020
Chikara
2 hours ago
Hard limits
Snoop76   2
N 3 hours ago by maths_enthusiast_0001
$a_n$ and $b_n$ satisfies the following recursion formulas: $a_{0}=1, $ $b_{0}=1$, $ a_{n+1}=a_{n}+b_{n}$$ $ and $ $$ b_{n+1}=(2n+3)b_{n}+a_{n}$. Find $ \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{a_n}{(2n-1)!!}$ $ $ and $ $ $\lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{b_n}{(2n+1)!!}.$
2 replies
Snoop76
Mar 25, 2025
maths_enthusiast_0001
3 hours ago
2025 Caucasus MO Seniors P2
BR1F1SZ   3
N 3 hours ago by X.Luser
Source: Caucasus MO
Let $ABC$ be a triangle, and let $B_1$ and $B_2$ be points on segment $AC$ symmetric with respect to the midpoint of $AC$. Let $\gamma_A$ denote the circle passing through $B_1$ and tangent to line $AB$ at $A$. Similarly, let $\gamma_C$ denote the circle passing through $B_1$ and tangent to line $BC$ at $C$. Let the circles $\gamma_A$ and $\gamma_C$ intersect again at point $B'$ ($B' \neq B_1$). Prove that $\angle ABB' = \angle CBB_2$.
3 replies
BR1F1SZ
Mar 26, 2025
X.Luser
3 hours ago
IMO Shortlist 2010 - Problem G1
Amir Hossein   130
N 3 hours ago by LeYohan
Let $ABC$ be an acute triangle with $D, E, F$ the feet of the altitudes lying on $BC, CA, AB$ respectively. One of the intersection points of the line $EF$ and the circumcircle is $P.$ The lines $BP$ and $DF$ meet at point $Q.$ Prove that $AP = AQ.$

Proposed by Christopher Bradley, United Kingdom
130 replies
Amir Hossein
Jul 17, 2011
LeYohan
3 hours ago
CGMO6: Airline companies and cities
v_Enhance   13
N 3 hours ago by Marcus_Zhang
Source: 2012 China Girl's Mathematical Olympiad
There are $n$ cities, $2$ airline companies in a country. Between any two cities, there is exactly one $2$-way flight connecting them which is operated by one of the two companies. A female mathematician plans a travel route, so that it starts and ends at the same city, passes through at least two other cities, and each city in the route is visited once. She finds out that wherever she starts and whatever route she chooses, she must take flights of both companies. Find the maximum value of $n$.
13 replies
v_Enhance
Aug 13, 2012
Marcus_Zhang
3 hours ago
nice problem
hanzo.ei   0
4 hours ago
Source: I forgot
Let triangle $ABC$ be inscribed in the circumcircle $(O)$ and circumscribed about the incircle $(I)$, with $AB < AC$. The incircle $(I)$ touches the sides $BC$, $CA$, and $AB$ at $D$, $E$, and $F$, respectively. A line through $I$, perpendicular to $AI$, intersects $BC$, $CA$, and $AB$ at $X$, $Y$, and $Z$, respectively. The line $AI$ meets $(O)$ at $M$ (distinct from $A$). The circumcircle of triangle $AYZ$ intersects $(O)$ at $N$ (distinct from $A$). Let $P$ be the midpoint of the arc $BAC$ of $(O)$. The line $AI$ cuts segments $DF$ and $DE$ at $K$ and $L$, respectively, and the tangents to the circle $(DKL)$ at $K$ and $L$ intersect at $T$. Prove that $AT \perp BC$.
0 replies
hanzo.ei
4 hours ago
0 replies
Find a given number of divisors of ab
proglote   9
N 4 hours ago by zuat.e
Source: Brazil MO 2013, problem #2
Arnaldo and Bernaldo play the following game: given a fixed finite set of positive integers $A$ known by both players, Arnaldo picks a number $a \in A$ but doesn't tell it to anyone. Bernaldo thens pick an arbitrary positive integer $b$ (not necessarily in $A$). Then Arnaldo tells the number of divisors of $ab$. Show that Bernaldo can choose $b$ in a way that he can find out the number $a$ chosen by Arnaldo.
9 replies
proglote
Oct 24, 2013
zuat.e
4 hours ago
[TEST RELEASED] OMMC Year 4
DottedCaculator   162
N Mar 26, 2025 by Ruegerbyrd
FINAL LEADERBOARD: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/0/d/12RamVH-gQIPN4wibYZVqkx1F2JQuy5Li_8IJ8TqVEyg/htmlview#gid=409219165

Hello to all creative problem solvers,

Do you want to work on a fun, untimed team math competition with amazing questions by MOPpers and IMO & EGMO medalists? $\phantom{You lost the game.}$
Do you want to have a chance to win thousands in cash and raffle prizes (no matter your skill level)?

Check out the fourth annual iteration of the

Online Monmouth Math Competition!

Online Monmouth Math Competition, or OMMC, is a 501c3 accredited nonprofit organization managed by adults, college students, and high schoolers which aims to give talented high school and middle school students an exciting way to develop their skills in mathematics.

Our website: https://www.ommcofficial.org/
Our Discord (5000+ members): https://tinyurl.com/joinommc
Test portal: https://ommc-test-portal.vercel.app/

This is not a local competition; any student 18 or younger anywhere in the world can attend. We have changed some elements of our contest format, so read carefully and thoroughly. Join our Discord or monitor this thread for updates and test releases.

How hard is it?

We plan to raffle out a TON of prizes over all competitors regardless of performance. So just submit: a few minutes of your time will give you a great chance to win amazing prizes!

How are the problems?

You can check out our past problems and sample problems here:
https://www.ommcofficial.org/sample
https://www.ommcofficial.org/2022-documents
https://www.ommcofficial.org/2023-documents
https://www.ommcofficial.org/ommc-amc

How will the test be held?/How do I sign up?

Solo teams?

Test Policy

Timeline:

Main Round: May 19th - May 26th
Test Portal Released. The Main Round of the contest is held. The Main Round consists of 25 questions that each have a numerical answer. Teams will have the entire time interval to work on the questions. They can submit any time during the interval. Teams are free to edit their submissions before the period ends, even after they submit.

Final Round: May 28th - May 30th
The top placing teams will qualify for this invitational round (7 questions). The final round consists of 7 proof questions. Teams again will have the entire time interval to work on these questions and can submit their proofs any time during this interval. Teams are free to edit their submissions before the period ends, even after they submit.

Conclusion of Competition: Early June
Solutions will be released, winners announced, and prizes sent out to winners.

Scoring:

Prizes:

I have more questions. Whom do I ask?

We hope for your participation, and good luck!

OMMC staff


OMMC’S 2024 EVENTS ARE SPONSORED BY:

[list]
[*]Nontrivial Fellowship
[*]Citadel
[*]SPARC
[*]Jane Street
[*]And counting!
[/list]
162 replies
DottedCaculator
Apr 23, 2024
Ruegerbyrd
Mar 26, 2025
[TEST RELEASED] OMMC Year 4
G H J
G H BBookmark kLocked kLocked NReply
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
DottedCaculator
7319 posts
#1 • 60 Y
Y by kred9, sehgalsh, ESAOPS, Sedro, squareman, EpicBird08, yofro, MathJams, CT17, KevinYang2.71, teasaffrontaffy, Bradygho, ilostthegame1434, Amkan2022, eg4334, LostDreams, think4l, RetroTurtle, ApraTrip, ostriches88, Everestbaker, goldendog, Alex-131, tigeryong, bjump, AtharvNaphade, bluelinfish, rocketsri, eclipsefan123, MathRiddler77, A21, ike.chen, vincentwant, CyclicISLscelesTrapezoid, jmiao, scannose, GeoKing, sargamsujit, KnowingAnt, buddyram, ryanbear, Rice_Farmer, Blue_banana4, ihatemath123, AMR12, megarnie, fuzimiao2013, lucaswujc, bronzetruck2016, NerdYak28, aidan0626, MathWizard10, AlphaBetaGammaOmega, Jndd, RP3.1415, justJen, Tastymooncake2, Solocraftsolo, imagien_bad, Yiyj1
FINAL LEADERBOARD: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/0/d/12RamVH-gQIPN4wibYZVqkx1F2JQuy5Li_8IJ8TqVEyg/htmlview#gid=409219165

Hello to all creative problem solvers,

Do you want to work on a fun, untimed team math competition with amazing questions by MOPpers and IMO & EGMO medalists? $\phantom{You lost the game.}$
Do you want to have a chance to win thousands in cash and raffle prizes (no matter your skill level)?

Check out the fourth annual iteration of the

Online Monmouth Math Competition!

Online Monmouth Math Competition, or OMMC, is a 501c3 accredited nonprofit organization managed by adults, college students, and high schoolers which aims to give talented high school and middle school students an exciting way to develop their skills in mathematics.

Our website: https://www.ommcofficial.org/
Our Discord (5000+ members): https://tinyurl.com/joinommc
Test portal: https://ommc-test-portal.vercel.app/

This is not a local competition; any student 18 or younger anywhere in the world can attend. We have changed some elements of our contest format, so read carefully and thoroughly. Join our Discord or monitor this thread for updates and test releases.

How hard is it?

We plan to raffle out a TON of prizes over all competitors regardless of performance. So just submit: a few minutes of your time will give you a great chance to win amazing prizes!

How are the problems?

You can check out our past problems and sample problems here:
https://www.ommcofficial.org/sample
https://www.ommcofficial.org/2022-documents
https://www.ommcofficial.org/2023-documents
https://www.ommcofficial.org/ommc-amc

How will the test be held?/How do I sign up?

Solo teams?

Test Policy

Timeline:

Main Round: May 19th - May 26th
Test Portal Released. The Main Round of the contest is held. The Main Round consists of 25 questions that each have a numerical answer. Teams will have the entire time interval to work on the questions. They can submit any time during the interval. Teams are free to edit their submissions before the period ends, even after they submit.

Final Round: May 28th - May 30th
The top placing teams will qualify for this invitational round (7 questions). The final round consists of 7 proof questions. Teams again will have the entire time interval to work on these questions and can submit their proofs any time during this interval. Teams are free to edit their submissions before the period ends, even after they submit.

Conclusion of Competition: Early June
Solutions will be released, winners announced, and prizes sent out to winners.

Scoring:

Prizes:

I have more questions. Whom do I ask?

We hope for your participation, and good luck!

OMMC staff


OMMC’S 2024 EVENTS ARE SPONSORED BY:

  • Nontrivial Fellowship
  • Citadel
  • SPARC
  • Jane Street
  • And counting!
Attachments:
OMMC2024MAIN.pdf (290kb)
This post has been edited 5 times. Last edited by DottedCaculator, Jul 31, 2024, 1:21 AM
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squareman
966 posts
#2 • 1 Y
Y by Maximilian113
We encourage you to “sign up” on this thread, just like how you might with a mock contest. This isn’t required to take the test nor does it force you to take the test. But it’s a great way to show support and bump the thread to the top of the forums, so we appreciate it. (Also a great way to find teammates!)

signups (0)
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KevinYang2.71
410 posts
#3 • 2 Y
Y by LostDreams, deduck
signups (1)
This post has been edited 4 times. Last edited by KevinYang2.71, Apr 24, 2024, 12:01 AM
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LostDreams
145 posts
#4 • 3 Y
Y by KevinYang2.71, eg4334, Andyluo
signups (2)
This post has been edited 3 times. Last edited by RyanPMathematics, Apr 26, 2024, 4:34 PM
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RedFireTruck
4221 posts
#5
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how many peeps per team
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squareman
966 posts
#6
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RedFireTruck wrote:
how many peeps per team
the announcement already wrote:
We highly recommend competitors join our Community Discord for the latest updates on the competition, as well as for finding team members to team up with. Each team is between 1 and 4 people, inclusive. Each competitor in a team has to be 18 or younger. You won’t have to sign up right now. Look out for a test portal link by which teams can register and access the test. Teams will put in their registration information as they submit the test.

However, we do encourage you to “sign up” on this thread, just like how you might with a mock contest. This isn’t required to take the test nor does it force you to take the test. But it’s a great way to show support and bump the thread to the top of the forums, so we appreciate it. (Also a great way to find teammates!)
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asdf334
7586 posts
#7
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can i sign up with 0 members
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MrMustache
2912 posts
#8 • 7 Y
Y by goldendog, tigeryong, A21, CaptPhrog, Tastymooncake2, ihatemath123, DU4532
signup (3)

also,
RyanPMathematics wrote:
The Skibidi Toilet Gyatted Alpha Sigma Rizzlers:
_
This post has been edited 5 times. Last edited by MrMustache, Apr 23, 2024, 4:44 PM
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Gavin_Deng
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#9
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I will consider it.
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squareman
966 posts
#10
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A sample test with 3 questions can be found at this link: https://ommc-sample-portal.vercel.app/
During the testing period, the test will be found at this link: https://ommc-test-portal.vercel.app/
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scannose
986 posts
#12
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hi, since im looking for a team please notify me if your team is interested in having me as a team member! i will send qualifications if necessary
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by scannose, Apr 23, 2024, 8:57 PM
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RedFireTruck
4221 posts
#13
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squareman wrote:
RedFireTruck wrote:
how many peeps per team
the announcement already wrote:
We highly recommend competitors join our Community Discord for the latest updates on the competition, as well as for finding team members to team up with. Each team is between 1 and 4 people, inclusive. Each competitor in a team has to be 18 or younger. You won’t have to sign up right now. Look out for a test portal link by which teams can register and access the test. Teams will put in their registration information as they submit the test.

However, we do encourage you to “sign up” on this thread, just like how you might with a mock contest. This isn’t required to take the test nor does it force you to take the test. But it’s a great way to show support and bump the thread to the top of the forums, so we appreciate it. (Also a great way to find teammates!)

sry abt that :what?:
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squareman
966 posts
#14
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Our sample problem sets (olympiad and computational) are attached to this post.
Attachments:
OMMC_Sample_Computational_2024.pdf (166kb)
OMMC Sample Olympiad 2024.pdf (186kb)
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eg4334
617 posts
#15
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This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by eg4334, Apr 24, 2024, 1:59 AM
Reason: added team name @ballslightning
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Awesomeness_in_a_bun
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#16
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