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Interview Programming Questions - In house Exam
Interview question on C# and VB.net similarities/differences

I currently work at a credit union as a Support Analyst. I applied for a job as a C# developer in the same credit union working on internal applications. They told me that they would be setting up an interview for me in the next month or so.

In the mean time I was wondering where would be a good place to start preparing for this interview?

This would be my first interview for a programming position and I was looking for maybe some good books to look into, some questions I should know before going in, and in general anything that might be useful for specifically a programming interview like this.

Thanks.

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There are similar topic here : stackoverflow.com/search?q=interview+question/… – hadi teo Jul 8 at 14:25

closed as exact duplicate by Mitch Wheat, George Stocker, Daok, JB King, Welbog Jul 10 at 14:01

10 Answers

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To my mind, the best way to prepare for an interview is to be as good a developer as you can be. Write loads of code. Read books, but with an eye to learning for the sake of developing yourself rather than learning trivia to respond to questions with. Ultimately you want to actually be the best candidate for the job rather than just looking like the best candidate for the job.

Personally the thing I look for in an interview is passion rather than knowledge. If you can come across as the kind of person who doesn't have much experience yet but is just bursting with potential, that's great.

On an alternative note, answering questions here - particularly ones you don't initially know the answer to, but can find out with a bit of research - is a good way of learning to communicate well (very important!) and will expose you to problems people face in the real world.

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+1 - great answer jon – Scott Ivey Jul 8 at 14:42
I appreciate the response and yes, I'm not looking to memorize trivia questions I'm looking for ways to further myself. I'm still in college and working full time so I dont have all the experience I would want for the position but I'm looking for a good place to start the process. Thanks again! – Duncan Jul 8 at 15:59
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Steve Yegge's 5 Essential Phone Screen Questions is a good read for interview preparation, though it is not C# specific.

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Depends on the place. I've interviewed at places that didn't ask me one programming examle and others that made me write a recursive function.

Most often for low level positions they might ask you to write a function to reverse a string.

Try out FizzBuzz as well.

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I'm happy to say I just did the Fizz Buzz without a hitch or having to look anything up. Interesting little problem. Thanks! – Duncan Jul 8 at 19:20
now write a function to reverse a string. (Avanade had me do that one). Remember there is no String.Reverse :) – JackM Jul 8 at 20:12
All FixxBuzz really determines is if: a) you've written code before b) understand the basics enough to just write them If you've never used the modulus, or a for loop or an if statement, then you're screwed on that problem and shouldn't be applying for a programmer job :) – JackM Jul 8 at 20:18
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Might want to check out: http://www.amazon.com/Programming-Interviews-Exposed-Secrets-Programmer/dp/047012167X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247063126&sr=8-1

you will certainly be asked some questions that are more on the puzzle/problem solving side and less on the programming side, in addition to your language specific C# programming questions.

Good luck.

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Ill have to take a look into it. It seems interesting. – Duncan Jul 8 at 15:59
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It sounds like an entry level developer job you applied to.

In my experience, there are certain topics that are pretty 'hot' for entry level developer jobs:

  • Design patterns (singletons and etc)
  • Polymorphism
  • Correctly using interfaces and classes in an object oriented manner

But where and how you should start preparing ultimately depends on your current level in programming and C# in particular. More information regarding your current level would be helpful in recommending the right material for you to prepare with.

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I highly doubt they'll ask him design patterns for a junior level role. possible but unlikely. Polymorphism yeah. Interfaces/Classes, possible. – JackM Jul 8 at 14:30
Then I guess it's just me. I was in a alot of junior-level programming job interviews (30ish?) for my coop job and alot of them asked if i know any design patterns and list / explain the ones i know. – Aidan Jul 8 at 14:38
interesting. Not sure why someone would expect junior dev's to know that sorta thing. Maybe a question to test if they read up on this sorta thing, but I don't expect junior devs to implement Dependency Injection – JackM Jul 8 at 20:14
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Be calm, speak clearly, and make sure that you understand the questions being asked of you, and make sure you are answering the question that was asked.

One of the biggest turn-offs we have when looking for new employees are applicants who answer quickly, with conviction, but don't address the question we asked in any way, shape or form. This shows a lack of ability to comprehend the subject matter and communicate well with us, and no matter what technical knowledge they may have, we can't work with a person like that.

That being said, if the 'social' part of your interviewing skills is top notch, then you'll likely just be vying against other applicants based on your past experience and your familiarity with the specific requirements of the job. Unless the job really could be doing any type of development, a "C# developer" usually specializes in certain parts of the .NET world. Perhaps console applications, multi-threaded systems, web services, forms, etc. Make sure you know what the job actually is. Knowing C# lingo and a few answers to common object-oriented questions will get you past the first line of questioning, but there will usually be specific questions related to the work the team you are applying for does.

Once you've identified the type of C# development that is required, you can focus your research and preparation to make sure you understand what will be requested from you, and how you can leverage your own experience to make yourself the "ideal" candidate.

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All very good points. Thanks for the tips. – Duncan Jul 8 at 16:02
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There's a great post on Joel on Software called The Guerilla Guide to Interviewing. Well worth a read. Good luck!

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Maybe this a stupid question, but do you know C# well? They probably won't ask a lot about C#... but then again, they might. I had an interview (for an internship, mind you) where the vast majority of the "quiz" was C++ specifics (e.g. specifics on STL, etc.). If you feel that they might ask C# specifics, there are a lot of questions on SO to guide you.

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Personally the skills i have found that land me jobs are.

knowing a good bit about test Driven Development (it forms a good basis for a lot of development methodologies) ... which implies knowledge about unit tests.

Knowing the merits and pitfalls of splitting code into tiers. Ie object orientated programming .... the difference between grey box and black box (and how to make it happen)

Error handling methods ... custom exceptions with useful data attached. Maybe a web service to handle and audit them all with some xsl to make a nice html doc?

Being able to document code and produce specs is always a good selling point ... because it ties into the next 2 points .... communication.

Take a book with you, any random book (that you know) - preferably one that they may of read that isn't too mainstream. If they have read it you can be someone will ask a question about it which makes it easy to be personable.

But the most important is showing that you can communicate on a personal level with people and arn't simply a geek that will sit in a corner and say nothing (that person is rare in IT though despite the preconception I have found). Show them that you have a life and that it brings something positive with you.

but at the end of the day the aim is to get the interviewer not to view you as another candidate. You want him to view you as someone who he/she could be friends with and would want to work alongside.

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