There are definately "Google" problems that are hard to solve if a mental meltdown is ongoing. There are problems that, even if you get the solution explained to, you might not "get" initially. Fibonacci is not such a…
Yep, when I got hired, 4 years ago. And I liked the experience so I keep using it today. When completing an imperative solution (with a little guidance, due to nervousness) I went on and made a recursive one, just to…
The day before yesterday, I held an interview much like this one. I presented a candidate with a problem of easy-to-intermediate difficulty (Fibonacci) and asked him to explain his thought process while coding. I did…
...and my list of 146 completed items is still not sorted in any way at all...
Aaaaaaaand it's down.
If you're talking about Windows, then maybe it will improve once this issue is fixed: https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=137692
There are definately "Google" problems that are hard to solve if a mental meltdown is ongoing. There are problems that, even if you get the solution explained to, you might not "get" initially. Fibonacci is not such a…
Yep, when I got hired, 4 years ago. And I liked the experience so I keep using it today. When completing an imperative solution (with a little guidance, due to nervousness) I went on and made a recursive one, just to…
The day before yesterday, I held an interview much like this one. I presented a candidate with a problem of easy-to-intermediate difficulty (Fibonacci) and asked him to explain his thought process while coding. I did…
...and my list of 146 completed items is still not sorted in any way at all...
Aaaaaaaand it's down.
If you're talking about Windows, then maybe it will improve once this issue is fixed: https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=137692