vmayer99
BAN USER- 1of 1 vote
AnswersAssume courses labeled by their index in an array. Given a list of pairs where the first element represents a prerequisite course required for the second course, derive an ordered list of courses.
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Software Engineer Algorithm - 0of 0 votes
AnswersFor a given set of non-negative integers get the number of subsets that add up to a target value k.
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Linkedin Software Engineer Algorithm - 0of 0 votes
AnswersWrite a function to compute n^k. (don't forget negative exponents)
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Linkedin Software Engineer Algorithm
- 1 Answer looking at your notes during the interview
Is it okay to look at your notes regarding behavioral questions during the interview?
- vmayer99 March 06, 2013
Before my interview I had written down some notes on answers to common behavioral questions (the ones that basically ask me to dig up something from my history). During the interview I got asked something that was in my notes, and I think I would've answered the question better had I glanced at them, but I decided not to. If they can serve to refresh your memory, maybe it doesn't hurt? Or perhaps it depends on the question?| Flag | PURGE - 3 Answers whiteboard
So, I did my first interview in many years yesterday. I got a little freaked out by the white board and asked to write code on paper, and they were cool with that (invited me back too). But does this look bad to some/all companies? Is there a preference for candidates who do their code on the whiteboard?
- vmayer99 March 05, 2013| Flag | PURGE - 0 Answers Applying to the big companies
What's the best way to apply to the big companies? To apply to an individual job req or to somehow apply to the company but not for a specific job req? If so, how is this done? And if you apply to a specific job req and don't get hired, can you still apply for other reqs?
- vmayer99 February 25, 2013| Flag | PURGE - 3 Answers modern C++
The majority of my 11 years of experience is in C++, with some C# and a little Java. Anyway, the environment I work in doesn't stay hip, and thus I've only recently discovered Boost and C++ 11. How important is knowing these modern C++ programming techniques? I feel I should probably try to get smart on them before interviewing but what do you think?
- vmayer99 February 20, 2013| Flag | PURGE - 7 Answers Interview for seasoned professional vs new college grad
Hi, I've been working professionally for 11 years. I'm curious as to how my interview will be the same or different from a new college grad's? Also, do questions differ depending on whether the candidate got a Master's or beyond? For instance, I don't recall ever learning about Dynamic Programming in my Bachelor's degree education (although I have learned about it on my own since through self-study).
- vmayer99 February 19, 2013| Flag | PURGE
Thanks for the response!
Maybe it's unusual, but I actually have never been an interviewer where I've worked. Although, I think I'd be better off at interviewing if I had been.
In your experience, was most coding done on a white board or a computer? Or was the design done on a white board and implementation on a computer? Thanks.
This is interesting to use a graph.
Can you explain why the vertices are bands and the edges are people? To me, it seems like the vertices should be people and the edges be bands, since we're interested in the connectivity between people.
But maybe this is just because I don't know much about spanning trees.
Glad to hear it, thanks!
- vmayer99 March 05, 2013(If anyone else wants to chime in here, I'd love to hear more opinions.)