Desarrollador Web Interview Questions

Desarrollador Web Interview Questions

Las entrevistas para el puesto de desarrollador web suelen centrarse en las preguntas técnicas. Puedes esperar que te hagan preguntas para evaluar tu conocimiento de los principales lenguajes de programación, como JavaScript y CSS, y de las funciones web generales, o para conocer tu experiencia de diseño en servicios web como REST y SOAP. Como desarrollador, es probable que te pidan ejemplos de sitios web o proyectos anteriores.

Preguntas de entrevista más frecuentes para desarrollador/a web y cómo responderlas

Question 1

Pregunta n.º 1: ¿Podrías describir los lenguajes de programación y servicios web más populares?

How to answer
Respuesta recomendada: Con casi total seguridad, te preguntarán sobre lenguajes de programación y servicios web. Asegúrate de estar al día de los últimos lenguajes y servicios, incluidas las innovaciones y actualizaciones más recientes.
Question 2

Pregunta n.º 2: ¿Cómo te describirían los jefes de proyecto y otros desarrolladores web?

How to answer
Respuesta recomendada: Los empleadores quieren asegurarse de que encajarás bien con el resto del equipo de desarrollo. Si te formulan esta pregunta, destaca tu capacidad de trabajo en equipo. Puedes comentar tus dotes de comunicación, tus habilidades de escucha y tu capacidad para resolver conflictos.
Question 3

Pregunta n.º 3: ¿Cómo sueles resolver los problemas de código?

How to answer
Respuesta recomendada: El empleador quiere asegurarse de que tienes la capacidad para resolver cualquier problema de programación, de manera que puedas ser un miembro productivo de la plantilla. Comenta tus habilidades de resolución de problemas, tanto en el ámbito de la programación como de las relaciones en el lugar de trabajo; así demostrarás tu capacidad para superar dificultades en el trabajo. Puedes exponer tus habilidades analíticas, hablar de colaboraciones pasadas y explicar tu experiencia resolviendo problemas en proyectos anteriores.

710,273 desarrollador web interview questions shared by candidates

I was asked a pretty straight forward brain teaser during my last phone interview, which they said they don't normally do, but because I put that I was a logical problem solver on my resume they couldn't resist the opportunity to. It was the following "There are 20 different socks of two types in a drawer in a completely dark room. What is the minimum number of socks you should grab to ensure you have a matching pair?"
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Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET)

Interviewed at Webtrends

3.2
Sep 26, 2012

I was asked a pretty straight forward brain teaser during my last phone interview, which they said they don't normally do, but because I put that I was a logical problem solver on my resume they couldn't resist the opportunity to. It was the following "There are 20 different socks of two types in a drawer in a completely dark room. What is the minimum number of socks you should grab to ensure you have a matching pair?"

You have 17 red and 17 blue balls, and you remove 2 at a time. If the two are the same colour, add in one extra blue ball. If they are different colours, add in an extra red ball. What colour is the final ball removed?
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Software Engineer

Interviewed at Geonomics

4.1
Jul 23, 2014

You have 17 red and 17 blue balls, and you remove 2 at a time. If the two are the same colour, add in one extra blue ball. If they are different colours, add in an extra red ball. What colour is the final ball removed?

1.Given a string, write a function that return if it is Palindrome. This wasn't asked directly but from interviewer example i was need to understand that this function must ignore all spaces and special symbols. 2. Given an array, write a function that return true if any 3 elements of this array can sum to 0. My first solution was the simplest and far from best which result in O(n^3). Then interviewer asked me to improve to improve it to O(n^2). This give me a hint that i can use Hash to reduce complexity.
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Android Developer

Interviewed at Meta

3.6
Jan 19, 2015

1.Given a string, write a function that return if it is Palindrome. This wasn't asked directly but from interviewer example i was need to understand that this function must ignore all spaces and special symbols. 2. Given an array, write a function that return true if any 3 elements of this array can sum to 0. My first solution was the simplest and far from best which result in O(n^3). Then interviewer asked me to improve to improve it to O(n^2). This give me a hint that i can use Hash to reduce complexity.

Given an array of numbers, nums, return an array of numbers products, where products[i] is the product of all nums[j], j != i. Input : [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] Output: [(2*3*4*5), (1*3*4*5), (1*2*4*5), (1*2*3*5), (1*2*3*4)] = [120, 60, 40, 30, 24] You must do this in O(N) without using division.
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Software Development Engineer

Interviewed at Amazon

3.5
Sep 25, 2012

Given an array of numbers, nums, return an array of numbers products, where products[i] is the product of all nums[j], j != i. Input : [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] Output: [(2*3*4*5), (1*3*4*5), (1*2*4*5), (1*2*3*5), (1*2*3*4)] = [120, 60, 40, 30, 24] You must do this in O(N) without using division.

I got a few C++ questions, then a question on sorting algorithms then a brainteaser. The brainteaser went as follows: Three people are given hats. Each hat is either red or blue, chosen at random. Each person can see the other 2 hats, but not their own. They each must simultaneously either guess their own hat's color, or pass. No communication is allowed, although they can agree on a strategy ahead of time. What strategy will give them the best chances of at least one person guessing right, and nobody guessing wrong?
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High Frequency Developer

Interviewed at Tower Research Capital

4.1
Nov 29, 2011

I got a few C++ questions, then a question on sorting algorithms then a brainteaser. The brainteaser went as follows: Three people are given hats. Each hat is either red or blue, chosen at random. Each person can see the other 2 hats, but not their own. They each must simultaneously either guess their own hat's color, or pass. No communication is allowed, although they can agree on a strategy ahead of time. What strategy will give them the best chances of at least one person guessing right, and nobody guessing wrong?

Find the first index of the substring. Condition: Do not use java library function or regular expressions. And measure the performance of your implementation with the standard java library function. Examples: String 1: “abcdefg” String 2: “bcd” Should return 1 String 1: “abcdefg” String 2: “x” Should return -1
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Software Engineer

Interviewed at Salesforce

4.1
May 2, 2012

Find the first index of the substring. Condition: Do not use java library function or regular expressions. And measure the performance of your implementation with the standard java library function. Examples: String 1: “abcdefg” String 2: “bcd” Should return 1 String 1: “abcdefg” String 2: “x” Should return -1

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