Skip to main content

Buku Persiapan OSN Komputer: Pemrograman Kompetitif Dasar

 https://toki.id/buku-pemrograman-kompetitif-dasar/

<Download di sini>

 

 

 

 


 

Tentang PKD

PKD merupakan buku persiapan OSN komputer/informatika yang dapat diunduh secara gratis. Kami mempersiapkan buku ini agar semua peserta OSN memiliki kesempatan belajar yang sama, terutama bagi mereka yang masih kesulitan mendapatkan akses guru pengajar. Konten buku ini dirancang sesuai dengan silabus OSN terbaru.

Buku ini fokus ke algoritma, bukan buku untuk mempelajari bahasa pemrograman. Maka, pembaca buku ini diharapkan sudah mengerti dasar-dasar membuat program (disarankan mengerti bahasa C++ ataupun Pascal). Apabila Anda belum menguasai kompetensi dasar tersebut, kami menyarankan Anda untuk mempelajarinya terlebih dahulu. Sumber pembelajaran yang kami anjurkan adalah TLX Training Gate (https://tlx.toki.id/training). Seluruh kompetensi dasar yang diperlukan dibahas pada kursus berjudul “Pemrograman Dasar”.

Mendapatkan PKD

Saat ini, buku PKD tersedia dalam bentuk elektronik dan dapat diunduh pada tautan di atas secara gratis. Namun untuk sekarang buku ini belum tersedia dalam versi cetak. Apabila Anda mengetahui orang lain yang akan mendapatkan manfaat dari buku ini, tidak perlu ragu untuk membagikannya kepada mereka!

Tim Penulis

Buku ini ditulis oleh kakak-kakak alumni TOKI yang pernah menjuarai OSN dan IOI (International Olympiads of Informatics), dan juga beberapa kali berkontribusi sebagai penulis soal OSN!

Penulis utama dari buku ini adalah William Gozali (TOKI 2011) dan Alham Fikri Aji (2010). Selain itu, banyak pihak yang terkait dalam penulisan buku ini. Terima kasih kepada seluruh pihak yang terlibat dan mewujudkan terbitnya buku ini. Mereka adalah:

Kontributor

  • Agus Sentosa Hermawan (NUS),
  • Ali Jaya Meilio Lie (Université de Grenoble Alpes),
  • Arianto Wibowo (IA-TOKI),
  • Ashar Fuadi (IA-TOKI),
  • Cakra Wishnu Wardhana (UI),
  • Jonathan Irvin Gunawan (Google),
  • Maximilianus Maria Kolbe Lie (BINUS),
  • Muhammad Ayaz Dzulfikar (UI),
  • Muhammad Fairuzi Teguh (UI),
  • Reynaldo Wijaya Hendry (UI)

Penyunting

  • Ilham Winata Kurnia (Google),
  • Suhendry Effendy (NUS)

Desain dan tata letak

  • Ali Jaya Meilio Lie,
  • Pusaka Kaleb Setyabudi (Google)

 

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Difference Between LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Home Edition (#31313) and LEGO MINDSTORMS Education EV3 (#45544)

http://robotsquare.com/2013/11/25/difference-between-ev3-home-edition-and-education-ev3/ This article covers the difference between the LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Home Edition and LEGO MINDSTORMS Education EV3 products. Other articles in the ‘difference between’ series: * The difference and compatibility between EV3 and NXT ( link ) * The difference between NXT Home Edition and NXT Education products ( link ) One robotics platform, two targets The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 robotics platform has been developed for two different target audiences. We have home users (children and hobbyists) and educational users (students and teachers). LEGO has designed a base set for each group, as well as several add on sets. There isn’t a clear line between home users and educational users, though. It’s fine to use the Education set at home, and it’s fine to use the Home Edition set at school. This article aims to clarify the differences between the two product lines so you can decide which

Let’s ban PowerPoint in lectures – it makes students more stupid and professors more boring

https://theconversation.com/lets-ban-powerpoint-in-lectures-it-makes-students-more-stupid-and-professors-more-boring-36183 Reading bullet points off a screen doesn't teach anyone anything. Author Bent Meier Sørensen Professor in Philosophy and Business at Copenhagen Business School Disclosure Statement Bent Meier Sørensen does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations. The Conversation is funded by CSIRO, Melbourne, Monash, RMIT, UTS, UWA, ACU, ANU, ASB, Baker IDI, Canberra, CDU, Curtin, Deakin, ECU, Flinders, Griffith, the Harry Perkins Institute, JCU, La Trobe, Massey, Murdoch, Newcastle, UQ, QUT, SAHMRI, Swinburne, Sydney, UNDA, UNE, UniSA, UNSW, USC, USQ, UTAS, UWS, VU and Wollongong.

Building a portable GSM BTS using the Nuand bladeRF, Raspberry Pi and YateBTS (The Definitive and Step by Step Guide)

https://blog.strcpy.info/2016/04/21/building-a-portable-gsm-bts-using-bladerf-raspberry-and-yatebts-the-definitive-guide/ Building a portable GSM BTS using the Nuand bladeRF, Raspberry Pi and YateBTS (The Definitive and Step by Step Guide) I was always amazed when I read articles published by some hackers related to GSM technology. H owever , playing with GSM technologies was not cheap until the arrival of Software Defined Radios (SDRs), besides not being something easy to be implemented. A fter reading various articles related to GSM BTS, I noticed that there were a lot of inconsistent and or incomplete information related to the topic. From this, I decided to write this article, detailing and describing step by step the building process of a portable and operational GSM BTS. Before starting with the “hands on”, I would like to thank all the pioneering Hackers and Researchers who started the studies related to previously closed GSM technology. In particul