Taiwan at the 1968 Summer Olympics
Taiwan (governed by the Republic of China) competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, Mexico. 43 competitors, 35 men and 8 women, took part in 57 events in 8 sports.[1]
Republic of China at the 1968 Summer Olympics | |
---|---|
![]() | |
IOC code | ROC (TWN used at these Games) |
NOC | Republic of China Olympic Committee[lower-alpha 1] |
in Mexico City | |
Competitors | 43 (35 men, 8 women) in 8 sports |
Medals Ranked 42nd |
|
Summer Olympics appearances (overview) | |
Summer appearances | |
Other related appearances | |
![]() ![]() |
Athletics
Boxing
Cycling
Five cyclists represented Taiwan in 1968.
Gymnastics
Sailing
Shooting
Eight shooters, all male, represented Taiwan in 1968.
Swimming
Weightlifting
gollark: I'm pretty scared of brain implants because they would probably involve computer systems of some kind with read/write access to my brain. And computers/software seem to have more !!FUN!! security problems every day.
gollark: Personally, I blame websites and the increasingly convoluted web standards for browser performance issues. Websites with a few tens of kilobytes of contents to a page often pull in megabytes of giant CSS and JS libraries for no good reason, and browsers are regularly expected to do a lot of extremely complex things. With Unicode even text rendering is very hard.
gollark: Memory safety issues are especially problematic in things like browsers, so avoiding them is definitely worth something.
gollark: > google blames c/c++ and its lack of warnings to devs about memory issues for most of the critical bugs in chrome<@528315825803755559> I mean, it's a fair criticism. You can avoid them if you have a language (like Rust) which makes them actual compile errors.
gollark: Well, if it's just "one column picked from each row, one combination of columns is valid", and there's no other information, I don't see how you can do it without brute force, which is impractical because there are apparently 1329227995784915872903807060280344576 (4^60) combinations.
See also
Notes
References
- "Taiwan at the 1968 Mexico City Summer Games". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.