A Beginner’s Guide to Quantum Programming 
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A new guide on programming quantum algorithms leads programmers through every 
step, from theory to implementing the algorithms on IBM’s publicly accessible 
5-qubit ibmqx4 quantum computer and others.

The guide covers the fundamentals, along with a summary of the main quantum 
algorithms and instructions on how to implement them on publicly available 
quantum computers


As quantum computers proliferate and become more widely available, would-be 
quantum programmers are left scratching their brains over how to get started in 
the field. A new beginner’s guide offers a complete introduction to quantum 
algorithms and their implementation on existing hardware.“Writing quantum 
algorithms is radically different from writing classical computing programs and 
requires some understanding of quantum principles and the mathematics behind 
them,” said Andrey Y. Lokhov, a scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and 
lead author of the recently published guide in ACM Transactions on QuantAnother 
section looks at the various types of quantum algorithms. From there, the guide 
dives into the 20 selected algorithms, with a problem definition, description, 
and steps for implementing each one on the IBM or, in a few cases, other 
computers.




Extensive references at the end of the guide will help interested readers go 
deeper in their explorations of quantum algorithms.

The study was funded by the Information Science and Technology Institute at Los 
Alamos National Laboratory through the Laboratory Directed Research and 
Development program.

Reference: “Quantum Algorithm Implementations for Beginners” by Abhijith J., 
Adetokunbo Adedoyin, John Ambrosiano, Petr Anisimov, William Casper, Gopinath 
Chennupati, Carleton Coffrin, Hristo Djidjev, David Gunter, Satish Karra, 
Nathan Lemons, Shizeng Lin, Alexander Malyzhenkov, David Mascarenas, Susan 
Mniszewski, Balu Nadiga, Daniel O’malley, Diane Oyen, Scott Pakin, Lakshman 
Prasad, Randy Roberts, Phillip Romero, Nandakishore Santhi, Nikolai Sinitsyn, 
Pieter J. Swart, James G. Wendelberger, Boram Yoon, Richard Zamora, Wei Zhu, 
Stephan Eidenbenz, Andreas Bärtschi, Patrick J. Coles, Marc Vuffray and Andrey 
Y. Lokhov, 7 July 2022, ACM Transactions on Quantum Computing.
DOI: 10.1145/351734
   
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