Hmm, I suppose they might be combining the problem statement and the prompt provided by the user into a single prompt somehow, and feeding that to the network? Either that or they’re cheating :)
Yes, that’s what they did! (Emphasis on the “somehow”—details a mystery to me.) Some piece of intro text for the challenge explained that Codex would receive, as input, both the problem statement (which always included a handful of example inputs/output/explanation triplets), and the user’s current code up to their cursor.
Hmm, I suppose they might be combining the problem statement and the prompt provided by the user into a single prompt somehow, and feeding that to the network? Either that or they’re cheating :)
Yes, that’s what they did! (Emphasis on the “somehow”—details a mystery to me.) Some piece of intro text for the challenge explained that Codex would receive, as input, both the problem statement (which always included a handful of example inputs/output/explanation triplets), and the user’s current code up to their cursor.