Andreas Erm
Achievements
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representing | |||||
1994 | World Junior Championships | Lisbon, Portugal | 9th | 10,000 m | 42:21.72 |
1995 | European Junior Championships | Nyíregyháza, Hungary | 1st | 10,000 m | 40:51.38 |
1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | 24th | 20 km | 1:25:08 |
1997 | European U23 Championships | Turku, Finland | 5th | 20 km | 1:22:55 |
1998 | European Championships | Budapest, Hungary | 4th | 20 km | 1:21.53 |
2000 | European Race Walking Cup | Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany | 2nd | 20 km | 1:18:42 |
Olympic Games | Sydney, Australia | 5th | 20 km | 1:20:25 | |
2001 | European Race Walking Cup | Dudince, Slovakia | 3rd | 20 km | 1:19:51 |
World Championships | Edmonton, Canada | — | 20 km | DNF | |
2003 | World Championships | Paris, France | 3rd | 50 km | 3:37:46 |
2004 | Olympic Games | Athens, Greece | — | 50 km | DSQ |
gollark: Like Rust's `Option`, which is optimized to use null pointers or something, meaning it's basically only a compile-time performance cost.
gollark: There are *low-cost* ones.
gollark: Rust's pretty fast and has the neat safety thing going on.
gollark: Or you could just use high*er* level languages which make it somewhat harder to randomly corrupt memory or whatever.
gollark: Probably, but at least the logic errors generally lead to "oops that does not work correctly I must now fix it" instead of "oh look, the application is now vulnerable to remote code execution".
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