I'm still newbie and cannot solve 1600+ rating problems. Should I try to solve those? Most of the time I cannot solve those and I have to see the solution. I have a feeling that I would not improve if I only solve 1000-1200 level problems.
# | User | Rating |
---|---|---|
1 | ecnerwala | 3648 |
2 | Benq | 3580 |
3 | orzdevinwang | 3570 |
4 | cnnfls_csy | 3569 |
5 | Geothermal | 3568 |
6 | tourist | 3565 |
7 | maroonrk | 3530 |
8 | Radewoosh | 3520 |
9 | Um_nik | 3481 |
10 | jiangly | 3467 |
# | User | Contrib. |
---|---|---|
1 | maomao90 | 174 |
2 | adamant | 164 |
2 | awoo | 164 |
4 | TheScrasse | 160 |
5 | nor | 159 |
6 | maroonrk | 156 |
7 | -is-this-fft- | 150 |
7 | SecondThread | 150 |
9 | orz | 146 |
10 | pajenegod | 145 |
I'm still newbie and cannot solve 1600+ rating problems. Should I try to solve those? Most of the time I cannot solve those and I have to see the solution. I have a feeling that I would not improve if I only solve 1000-1200 level problems.
Name |
---|
As a general advice, you should solve problems slightly above your level. If you can solve 80% of 1200 level problems, try 1400. When you're confortable with 1400, go to 1600. If you only solve easy problems, the progress will be just slow.
Thank you ekaerovets