I have two phone coding interview over Skype. Than they invite me to offline interview: four interviews one after another in a single day. Questions was pretty hard to answer, because you should hold in your mind two major things: think very fast and to be very accurate in what you are writing in the code. That was hard for me, but I'm very happy to have such experience. Facebook was seemed to me like superior place in case if you want to spend you whole life to coding and if really like it.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
You given an array of scores that team can score in one game and the final team score. Write the code that returns a list of all possible intermediate scores.
Spoke with interviewer over video conferencing. He was very communicative . He answered my questions. Asked me BFS question. A question that involved BFS search. Given a matrix, I am suppose to find a path from top left to down right.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
A question that involved BFS search. Given a matrix, I am suppose to find a path from top left to down right.
The technical round hit me with a classic array manipulation problem: moving zeroes to the end without disrupting the order of non-zero elements. As I tackled it, I felt a wave of familiarity wash over me; I had just practiced a similar challenge on PracHub. The rest of the interview followed a straightforward path, with some easy behavioral questions sprinkled in. Overall, it felt very easy, but I wasn’t quite the right fit for what they needed, so I didn’t receive an offer.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Move zeroes in an array to the end while keeping non-zero element order, in place
I applied online. I interviewed at Meta (Menlo Park, CA)
Interview
It's honestly striaght from leetcode tagged
There are no surprises if you do tagged you would be good and do well.
System design is much harder. Would recommend using hello interview.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Design Twitter and consider if it was suddenly an extremely low latency env