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      Colloquio per Software Engineer

      12 mar 2011
      Candidato anonimo a colloquio
      Mountain View, CA
      Nessuna offerta
      Esperienza positiva
      Colloquio difficile

      Candidatura

      Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite un selezionatore. La procedura ha richiesto un giorno. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Google (Mountain View, CA) nel mese di gen 2011

      Colloquio

      January 2011, Mt.View campus Visited Google first 5 years ago, that time was rejected. This time contacted by recruiter again, offered to come for the interview again. Sweeping Silicon Valley rumor mill brought several facts about interview practices – each interviewer has to submit rather detailed report to the hiring committee recording after you everything written on the white board and allegedly even recording what you say. Sometime 2 interviewers are talking to the candidate, in such cases second person is a trainee. Sometimes there are two rounds if Google is uncertain. Candidate has to select programming language of preference for the interview (my choice was C as I was applying to what recruiter called “kernel” positions in ChromeOS team). Was first met by the recruiter, he spent 10 mins with me, I asked about the practices above, even though he confirmed, but downplayed "exact recording of what candidate says part". Answered that written report on a candidate is about 1-2 typed pages on average. Total met 6 people, 5 technical, one lunch First interviewer: 1. General discussion on testing methodologies (why unit tests might fail?) 2. Asked me to code review some C++ code even though I explicitly selected that my language of preference is C. Couldn't say much as I don't use C++. 3. Asked to implement C++ method for a class "arbitrary reader" given we have a class 4K reader which can read only 4K blocks. Second interviewer: 1. Given two binary search trees, write function which tells if two such trees are the same – (i.e. same info in the nodes, same branching to left and right at every node). Recursive implementation was presented. Was asked to do non-recursive version (question was not about better solution, say, w/constant memory) – I proposed to change recursive algorithm to non-recursive with a user-defined stack (formal transformation rather boring but doable, FORTRAN people do it). Demonstrated that but code was messy with gotos, etc. Asked about complexity – both recursive and non-recursive versions required linear stack in worst case of pathological one-sided trees. Third interviewer: 1. Reverse bits in 32-bit integer. 2. Given two large files with 64-bit integers produce file with integers which are present in both files and estimate O(?) complexity of your algorithm. Proposed solution of splitting both files in n chunks (k integers in each) and solving n^2 subproblems while incrementally updating the result by merging sorted files of partial results (we will need to sort each chunk once). After algorithm was finalized, we checked the complexity and it was something cubic by n and k. Too bad. Navigated me to the solution to sort both files and find intersection by merging, this was better. As an afterthought I still think that when files do not have large overlap my solution might be winning as sorting original large files is not required (k should be selected so that each chunk could be sorted in memory, how about n=k=sqrt(file-size)?:). 3. One has a stream of queries coming over a day, how do you keep a cache of 1000 most-frequently used ones? Did not have time for this one. Fourth interviewer: 1. Asked light technical questions on past items listed in resume. 2. When you are doing "read()" call what it happening under the hood in user space? (answer needs to clarify how it is translated to a system call by libc). 3. How to find a median in a large file of 64-bit integers. I mentioned first the classical "order statistics" algorithm with splitting initial group into 5-tuples and finding median of medians, etc. My proposal on the problem was toadopt median algorithm to the case when we are dealing with large file – however no additional disk space could be used, it should be done "in place" and it is not clear for me if order statistics algorithm could be done easily with such restriction. Interviewer downplayed the order statistics deal and navigated me to the solution that I liked – keep in memory counters for binary intervals practically counting occurences of prefixes (say, 24-bit prefixes). After that we are able to tell what prefix range the median belongs to, recalculate index of the element to search instead of median and go over the particular prefix range and find it there. Sweet. After two week got rejection as not matching with current open positions.

      Domande di colloquio [5]

      Domanda 1

      Given two binary search trees, write function which tells if two such trees are the same – (i.e. same info in the nodes, same branching to left and right at every node).
      6 risposte

      Domanda 2

      Given two large files with 64-bit integers produce file with integers which are present in both files and estimate O(?) complexity of your algorithm.
      4 risposte

      Domanda 3

      How to find a median in a large file of 64-bit integers
      1 risposta

      Domanda 4

      Input is a 4x4 table with letters. One starts from any of the 16 elements and can move in one step to any of the 8 neighboring cells not visited before (up, down, left, right, up-left, etc, no hyperspace jumps between rows 1 & 4, columns 1 & 4). Every time step is made letter in that cell is added so a word is built as we walk. These generated words are looked up in external dictionary (function to look up in the dictionary is provided, I did not understand significance of this dictionary well) and the goal of the exercise is to output all words generated by all possible table walks and which are contained in the dictionary.
      4 risposte

      Domanda 5

      When you are doing "read()" call what it happening under the hood in user space?
      2 risposte
      11

      Altre recensioni di colloqui per Software Engineer presso Google

      Colloquio per Software Engineer

      4 mag 2014
      Dipendente anonimo
      Auburndale, FL
      Offerta accettata
      Esperienza positiva
      Colloquio difficile

      Candidatura

      Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite segnalazione di un dipendente. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Google (Auburndale, FL) nel mese di apr 2014

      Colloquio

      Direct onsite because I interviewed in the past and did well that time. From the time I sent my resume to interview day: 2 weeks. From interview day to offer over the phone: 2 weeks. The syllabus for the interviews is very clear and simple: 1) Dynamic Programming 2) Super recursion (permutation, combination,...2^n, m^n, n!...etc. type of program. (NP hard, NP programs) 3) Probability related programs 4) Graphs: BFS/DFS are usually enough 5) All basic data structures from Arrays/Lists to circular queues, BSTs, Hash tables, B-Trees, and Red-Black trees, and all basic algorithms like sorting, binary search, median,... 6) Problem solving ability at a level similar to TopCoder Division 1, 250 points. If you can consistently solve these, then you are almost sure to get in with 2-weeks brush up. 7) Review all old interview questions in Glassdoor to get a feel. If you can solve 95% of them at home (including coding them up quickly and testing them out in a debugger + editor setup), you are in good shape. 8) Practice coding--write often and write a lot. If you can think of a solution, you should be able to code it easily...without much thought. 9) Very good to have for design interview: distributed systems knowledge and practical experience. 10) Good understanding of basic discrete math, computer architecture, basic math. 11) Coursera courses and assignments give a lot of what you need to know. 12) Note that all the above except the first 2 are useful in "real life" programming too! Interview 1: Graph related question and super recursion Interview 2: Design discussion involving a distributed system with writes/reads going on at different sites in parallel. Interview 3: Array and Tree related questions Interview 4: Designing a simple class to do something. Not hard, but not easy either. You need to know basic data structures very well to consider different designs and trade-offs. Interview 5: Dynamic programming, Computer architecture and low level perf. enhancement question which requires knowledge of Trees, binary search, etc. At the end, I wasn't tired and rather enjoyed the discussions. I think the key was long term preparation and time spent doing topcoder for several years (on and off as I enjoy solving the problems). Conclusion: "It's not the best who win the race; it's the best prepared who win it."
      2501

      Colloquio per Software Engineer

      3 giu 2026
      Candidato anonimo a colloquio
      Nessuna offerta
      Esperienza negativa
      Colloquio difficile

      Candidatura

      Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Google

      Colloquio

      Etapa de RH para filtragem de curriculo e fit inicial, e Screening Técnico com código em leetcode focado em algoritmos, onde o código era feito em um bloco de notas, sem uso de IDEs.

      Domande di colloquio [1]

      Domanda 1

      Você conhece sobre Big O notation?
      Rispondi alla domanda

      Colloquio per Software Engineer

      3 giu 2026
      Candidato anonimo a colloquio
      Mountain View, CA
      Nessuna offerta
      Esperienza positiva
      Colloquio facile

      Candidatura

      Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Google (Mountain View, CA)

      Colloquio

      Round 1 consists of coding and behavioural interviews. In behavioural, it was basic questions; it can be found online, so make sure you have all the stories ready. For DSA, it was a pretty much easy question related to Intervals or Heaps, don't want to reveal the questions directly!!

      Domande di colloquio [1]

      Domanda 1

      DSA question based on Intervals, Heaps
      Rispondi alla domanda

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