• Send Us A Tip
  • Calling all Tech Writers
  • Advertise
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
  • Login
TechStory
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
TechStory
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Quantum Katas: Microsoft’s new learning portal

by Smriti Sharma
July 24, 2018
in News, Story
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Quantum Katas: Microsoft’s new learning portal
TwitterWhatsappLinkedin

24 July, 2018

You might also like

OnePlus Is Exiting The US And Europe This Week: A Move That Ends The Original Flagship Killer Story

Chinese AI Startup StepFun Launches World’s First Agentic Smartphone StepX Neo With Built-In Amoo AI Agent

Autonomous Disruption Atlanta Rideshare Drivers Rally Against Waymo Expansion

Microsoft just launched Quantum Katas, an open source project that does just that by providing you with tutorials for learning at your own pace. According to Microsoft, these exercises are based on three learning principles: Active learning, incremental complexity growth, and feedback.

“Each kata offers a sequence of tasks on a certain quantum computing topic, progressing from simple to challenging,” Microsoft Quantum Team states. “Each task requires you to fill in some code; the first task might require just one line, and the last one might require a sizable fragment of code. A testing framework validates your solutions, providing real-time feedback.”

Currently, there are only four katas covering basic quantum computing gates, superposition, measurements, and the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm. Each kata is a stand-alone project containing a sequence of tasks progressing from trivial to challenging, requiring you to manually insert chunks of code. They also provide a testing framework that sets up, runs and validates your final code.

To use these katas, you need to install the Quantum Development Kit for Windows 10, MacOS and Linux. This kit is typically used to build your own quantum computing programs and experiments. It includes the Q# language and compiler, the Q# standard library, a local quantum machine simulator, a quantum computer trace simulator, and two other components. After installing the kit, you can grab the katas through Git or by downloading stand-alone copies in a ZIP file.

Microsoft’s katas arrive after the company hosted its first Q# coding contestin early July, challenging more than 650 developers and new programmers alike. According to Microsoft, more than 350 participants solved at least one Q# problem while 100 participants solved all 15. The problems ranged from generating a superposition of all basis states to creating a second array reconstruction algorithm. The contest winner completed all tasks under 2.5 hours, Microsoft says.

Given Microsoft’s Quantum Katas is an open-source project, the company welcomes all contributions and suggestions. “Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution,” Microsoft adds.

(Image:- digitaltrends.com)

Tags: learning platformMicrosoftQuantum Katas
Tweet54SendShare15
Previous Post

How to delete (hear) any conversation that Virtual assistant has recorded

Next Post

Nikon Teases First Look of a New Mirrorless Camera

Smriti Sharma

Recommended For You

OnePlus Is Exiting The US And Europe This Week: A Move That Ends The Original Flagship Killer Story

by Rounak Majumdar
July 14, 2026
0
OnePlus Is Exiting The US And Europe This Week: A Move That Ends The Original Flagship Killer Story

The brand that once dared the smartphone industry to think differently is quietly walking out the door. According to an exclusive report from German tech outlet WinFuture published...

Read more

Chinese AI Startup StepFun Launches World’s First Agentic Smartphone StepX Neo With Built-In Amoo AI Agent

by Rounak Majumdar
July 14, 2026
0
Chinese AI Startup StepFun Launches World's First Agentic Smartphone StepX Neo With Built-In Amoo AI Agent

While the tech world has been waiting for OpenAI to launch what it calls an AI phone, a Chinese AI startup nobody was watching just put one on...

Read more

Autonomous Disruption Atlanta Rideshare Drivers Rally Against Waymo Expansion

by Anochie Esther
July 14, 2026
0
Atlanta rideshare driver Waymo protest

The long-predicted conflict between human labor and autonomous algorithms has officially spilled onto the streets of metro Atlanta. For years, rideshare gig workers functioned as the indispensable logistical...

Read more
Next Post
Nikon's-mirrorless-camera-concept

Nikon Teases First Look of a New Mirrorless Camera

Please login to join discussion

Techstory

Tech and Business News from around the world. Follow along for latest in the world of Tech, AI, Crypto, EVs, Business Personalities and more.
reach us at info@techstory.in

Advertise With Us

Reach out at - info@techstory.in

Aviator Game India 2026

BROWSE BY TAG

#Crypto #howto 2024 acquisition AI amazon Apple Artificial Intelligence bitcoin Business China cryptocurrency e-commerce electric vehicles Elon Musk Ethereum facebook funding Gaming Google India Instagram Investment ios iPhone IPO Market Markets Meta Microsoft News OpenAI samsung Social Media SpaceX startup startups tech technology Tesla TikTok trend trending twitter US

© 2025 Techstory.in

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to

© 2025 Techstory.in

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?