1991 marked the "The Eighth International Obfuscated C Code Contest" Copyright (c) 1991, Landon Curt Noll & Larry Bassel. All Rights Reserved. Permission for personal, educational or non-profit use is granted provided this this copyright and notice are included in its entirety and remains unaltered. All other uses must receive prior permission in writing from both Landon Curt Noll and Larry Bassel. Instructions for use: Run make to compile entries. It is possible that on BSD or non-unix systems the makefile needs to be changed. Look at the source and try to figure out what the programs do, and run them with various inputs. If you want to, look at the hints files for (minor) spoilers. This year, we did not single out an entry that was better than all of the rest. We selected 3 entries that were, in our opinion, went beyond all of the other entries this year: Grand Prize by Brian Westley Most Well Rounded by Diomidis Spinellis Best Of Show by Daniel J. Bernstein Name and address information are separated from the actual program prior to judging. This eliminates any chance that we would bias our judging for/against any person or group. In the end, we are surprised as you are to see who as won. Even so, it is worth noting that Brian Westley has submitted a winning entry for the past 5 years! A few notes regarding possible changes to the contest: We did not give awards to some traditional contest categories such as "Best Layout" or "Worst Abuse of the Rules". We felt that to do so would deny awards to more deserving entries. These categories have not been eliminated, and will likely be considered in future years. A number of entries made use of the following C pre-processor feature: #define X define #X foo bar This is not permitted under ANSI C. Some ANSI C compilers do allow this. In the future, we do not want programs to use this feature. Because this request was not stated in the 1991 rules, we did not reject entries of this type. However we provided more portable versions so that more people could compile these programs. This year we received entries that made use of the X Window System. This functionality is now available on many systems, we feel that programs that use these are now portable enough to be valid entries. We may allow programs to make use of the X Window System libs and include files, provided that they can operate with a system running at the level of at least X11r4. Requiring the use of imake, a specific window manager, specific display hardware, or a specific user interface (Openl**k, M*tif, ...) is likely not to be allowed. We will provide a more detailed explanation of our viewpoint in next year's rules. In order to encourage more 'normal' looking C programs, we are considering the following change to the maximum size rule: Your source, not counting any , , and a character, and not counting any ';', '{' and '}' character followed by a character, must be 1536 bytes or less. The entire source, counting all characters, be 4096 bytes or less. Some thought has been given to adding some c++ categories, however this is not likely to happen soon. We are waiting until c++ compilers become common place on a wide number of systems. We also need time to brace ourselves for what obfuscation c++ could wield! Be sure to wait until the 1992 rules are posted before submitting entries. We may fine tune the rules to reflect the some ideas above. Please send us comments and suggestions what we have expressed above. Also include anything else that you would like to see in future contests. Send such email to: ...!{sun,pacbell,uunet,pyramid}!hoptoad!judges judges@toad.com Credits: We would like to thank Barbara Frezza for her role as official chef of the contest. Landon Noll appreciated the opportunity to serve as assistant pizza chef. Larry Bassel was official taste tester. Yummo!