Ho presentato la mia candidatura online. La procedura ha richiesto 3 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso MathWorks (Natick, MA) nel mese di gen 2026
Colloquio
I had technical round followed by a behavioural round. Overall the process was quite smooth. Although Python was not an available choice for the OA, I was allowed to use Python in the technical round. At first they asked few questions based on my resume and then the interviewer pulled up my solutions of OA and asked few questions based on it such as time complexity and how to optimize the code. My solution was optimal, so it was more about how to make the code more cleaner. This was followed by a DSA question on HackerRank. My solution was correct but had timelimit exceeded error for some tests. Nevertheless, I was chosen for the behavioural round.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
One of the questions was to explain my solution from the online assessment, analyze its time complexity, and suggest improvements in terms of optimization and code quality.
Pretty normal interview process. There were 3 rounds. The OA was 3 medium-hard LC problems, the phone screen was 1 medium-hard LC and explanations of the OA problems, behavioral HM round was easy.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
Given a list of positive integers a[n], compute phi[a[i]] for each i, where phi[x] is the number of positive integers relatively prime to x.
Interview was nice with one tech round and one behavioral. Both rounds lasted 45 mins. Tech round had one coding question and resume stuff. Behavioral had some basic case questions.
Ho presentato la mia candidatura online. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso MathWorks (Natick, MA)
Colloquio
Two rounds: technical & bq. Technical round was mainly talking about the resume projects, reviewing oa question & 1 leetcode dynamic programming question. In the bq round the manager introduced the role and the company, then some general questions like tight ddl and why mathworks.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
Conflict with team members, tight ddl, why mathworks