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      Entretien pour Software Engineer In Test

      4 juin 2013
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      New York, NY
      Aucune offre
      Expérience positive
      Entretien moyen

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 2 mois. J'ai passé un entretien chez Google (New York, NY) en mai 2013

      Entretien

      The recruiter set up my first technical interview with an engineer in CA. My first technical interviewer asked me 4 questions in my phone interview. The interview was conducted over the phone and Google Docs where I would type my code. The questions were: 1. Describe a time at your job when you debugged / tested something but couldn't find what was wrong. 2. Describe a good test. 3. Coding question 4. Coding question For the first coding question, the main one, I had to think about the answer and talk through what I was thinking with the interviewer. Talking through your thought process is a must for Google interviews, if you simply say nothing, the only thing the interviewer has to go off of is the correctness of your answer rather than the approach you're using and your reasoning for it, so if the answer is wrong, the interviews can not get you back on track. Eventually after I got the ball rolling, had no trouble solving the problem. The solution consisted of a 2D matrix rotation and a recursive flood fill algorithm. The interviewer gave positive responses for my solution, and did not ask how it could be improved. I finished the problem with 20 minutes to spare, so the interviewer asked if I wanted to go over another problem and I said, "Sure". The next problem was a piece of C code which had errors in it, the interviews asked me to find the errors in the code and I found most of them given what the code actually was supposed to do. I don't think the interviewer actually cared very much about this portion since I don't believe he expected me to finish so early and the C question was just something to fill time. He then asked me if I had any questions so I asked him to describe what an average day was like for him and what he did. He was very thorough and we had an interesting conversation. After the phone interview was done my recruiter called me back the 2 business days later and told me I had done very well, and that Google wanted me to fly to Manhattan for my last interview set over the course of a day. Between flying to Manhattan ( 2 weeks after the recruiter called me back ) I studied my ass off. I reviewed every available resource to me online and offline prior to flying to Manhattan. I went to my primary coding review website (www.CodeEval.com) and solved every possible problem on this site. Working as a back-end web developer for 10 months prior to this gave me some great knowledge about databases , object-oriented design and multi-threaded applications. Some of the aforementioned skills and information is hard to get without having prior experience, in my opinion, especially if you're straight out of college. I had 6 interviews onsite, 1 of the interviews wasn't an interview at all, and was really lunch / off-the-record conversation with another SET who had been working at Google for quite some time. The other 5 interviews were all very technical and mostly exclusively dealt with specific coding questions. I won't reveal specifically any of the interview questions here since I signed an NDA, but I will reveal the phone interview question (mentioned above) since that was prior to me signing the NDA. I will go into the general format of the questions at the onsite interviews. The first interview was with a young Software Engineer, who was around my age, probably 22. The question had to do with generating permutations in an efficient manner. He asked me for the complexity of my algorithm in terms of memory and run-time. He said my solution was correct off the bat and asked how the memory complexity could be improved. After talking out loud and exchanging ideas, I arrived out how to reduce memory complexity. The following 4 technical interviews were of the same format except the last which was a higher level design question that was mostly open. Be prepared to be asked questions about how to test your code, that being said, your code ought to be written such that it's decoupled and easy to test rather than ONLY implementing the solution. Another piece of advice I would give to someone is that wherever possible in my interview, point out how a problem can be threaded. I was specifically interviewing in Java, so I knew how to do this using the available components in Java. Google is a big company and any of the software that they build needs to be able to parralelized and scaled wherever it can be, the interviewers will be looking for this. After the interview my onsite assigned recruiter said I would get a decision in less than 2 weeks, and after that, the offer stage would come. About 4 weeks later I was called and told that I didn't get the job, despite my performance in the interviews which the recruiter told me was not bad.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Given a 2D rectangular matrix of boolean values, write a function which returns whether or not the matrix is the same when rotated 180 degrees. Additionally verify that every boolean true is accessible from every other boolean true if a traversal can be made to an adjacent cell in the matrix, excluding diagonal cells. That is , (x , y ) can access the set [ ( x + 1 , y ) , ( x - 1 , y ) , (x , y - 1 ) , (x , y + 1 ) ] For example, the matrix { { true , false } , { false , true } } should not pass this test.
      3 réponse(s)
      30

      Autres retours d’entretien d’embauche pour un poste comme Software Engineer In Test chez Google

      Entretien pour Software Test Developer

      14 mars 2024
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      München, Bavaria
      Aucune offre
      Expérience positive
      Entretien facile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Google (München, Bavaria)

      Entretien

      Very friendly recruiter, she took the time to go through the overall process. I appreciated the attitude. Sadly I did not match the jobs requirements so it didn't go further than the first HR meeting.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Typical HR questions asking about experience, technologies used...etc
      Répondre à cette question

      Entretien pour Software Engineer In Test

      29 août 2018
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Mountain View, CA
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien moyen

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via une autre source. Le processus a pris 2 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Google (Mountain View, CA)

      Entretien

      LinkedIn HR called, phone interview, then onsite interviews, HR was calling frequently to update status (good), one of the interview was just too cold, he wasn't very responsive throughout

      Questions d'entretien [4]

      Question 1

      Tree questions
      2 réponse(s)

      Question 2

      QE scenario question on testing mobile app
      2 réponse(s)

      Question 3

      stack question
      1 réponse

      Question 4

      another tree question
      1 réponse
      1

      Entretien pour Software Engineer Test

      31 juill. 2018
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Bengaluru
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 3 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Google (Bengaluru) en mai 2018

      Entretien

      The interviewer asked 2questions. One coding question although I wrote the package and relevant classes to be used to solve the problem. Interviewer was not happy, as I wrote code in Java and the interviewer expected it in some other language of his preference. They made me prepare DS, Algorithms, OS, System Design. And asked a non-relevant question not part of any of the subjects asked to prepare. They boast aroud their "Reduced Four" interview process. But, their interviewers need more trainings. Ethical interviews, unethical practices like the EU antiTrust fine.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Pattern matching and extraction
      1 réponse
      2