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README.md |
Software Development
Agile Software Development
What is Agile in regards to software development?
Atlassian: "is a structured and iterative approach to project management and product development. It recognizes the volatility of product development, and provides a methodology for self-organizing teams to respond to change without going off the rails."
What is Kanban in regards to software development?
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Kanban is an agile software development framework
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It focuses on having flexible and fluid process - no deadlines, fewer meetings, less formal roles
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While arguable, Kanban seems to fit better small teams rather than big teams who might benefit more from structurized process
What is Scrum in regards to software development?
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Scrum is an agile software development framework
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Fixed length iterations
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Requires the team to have roles like scrum master and product owner
Can you compare between Kanban and Scrum?
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Kanban is continuous, fluid and visualized process whereas Scrum is short and structured, where work is shipped during fixed intervals known as sprints
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Kanban is less structured compared to other frameworks like scrum
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Kanban is more visualized way of managing the development process
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Kanban has fewer meetings and formal roles compared to other frameworks like scrum
Programming
What programming language do you prefer to use for DevOps related tasks? Why specifically this one?
For example, Python. It's multipurpose, easy-to-learn, continuously-evolving, and open-source. And it's very popular today
What are static typed (or simply typed) languages?
In static typed languages the variable type is known at compile-time instead of at run-time. Such languages are: C, C++ and Java
Explain expressions and statements
An expression is anything that results in a value (even if the value is None). Basically, any sequence of literals so, you can say that a string, integer, list, ... are all expressions.
Statements are instructions executed by the interpreter like variable assignments, for loops and conditionals (if-else).
What is Object Oriented Programming? Why is it important?
educative.io "Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) is a programming paradigm in computer science that relies on the concept of classes and objects. It is used to structure a software program into simple, reusable pieces of code blueprints (usually called classes), which are used to create individual instances of objects."
OOP is the mainstream paradigm today. Most of the big services are wrote with OOP
Explain Composition
Composition - ability to build a complex object from other objects
What is a compiler and interpreter?
Compiler:
"A compiler is a translator used to convert high-level programming language to low-level programming language. It converts the whole program in one session and reports errors detected after the conversion. Compiler takes time to do its work as it translates high-level code to lower-level code all at once and then saves it to memory."
Interpreter:
"Just like a compiler, is a translator used to convert high-level programming language to low-level programming language. It converts the program line by line and reports errors detected at once, while doing the conversion. With this, it is easier to detect errors than in a compiler."
Are you familiar with SOLID design principles?
SOLID design principles are about:
- Make it easier to extend the functionality of the system
- Make the code more readable and easier to maintain
SOLID is:
- Single Responsibility - A class* should have one ~responsibility~ reason to change. It was edited by Robert Martin due to wrong understanding of principle
- Open-Closed - A class should be open for extension, but closed for modification. What this practically means is that you should extend functionality by adding a new code and not by modifying it. Your system should be separated into components so it can be easily extended without breaking everything
- Liskov Substitution - Any derived class should be able to substitute the its parent without altering its corrections. Practically, every part of the code will get the expected result no matter which part is using it
- Interface Segregation - A client should never depend on anything it doesn't uses. Big interfaces must be split to smaller interfaces if needed
- Dependency Inversion - High level modules should depend on abstractions, not low level modules
*there also can be module, component, entity, etc. Depends on project structure and programming language
What is YAGNI? What is your opinion on it?
YAGNI - You aren't gonna need it. You must add functionality that will be used. No need to add functionality that is not directly needed
What is DRY? What is your opinion on it?
DRY - Don't repeat yourself. Actually it means that you shouldn't duplicate logic and use functions/classes instead. But this must be done smartly and pay attention to the domain logic. Same code lines don't always mean duplication
What are the four pillars of object oriented programming?
- Abstraction - you don't need to know how this class implemented. You need to know what functionality does it provide (interface) and how to use it
- Encapsulation - keep fields for class purposes private (or protected) and provide public methods if needed. We must keep the data and code safe within the class itself
- Inheritance - gives ability to create class that shares some of attributes of existing classes
- Polymorphism - same methods in different contexts can do different things. Method overloading and overriding are some forms of polymorphism
Explain recursion
Recursion - process (or strategy), when function calls itself. It has recursive case and exit case. In recursive case we call function again, in exit case we finish function without calling it again. If we don't have exit case - function will work infinite, until memory overload or call stack limit
Explain Inversion of Control (IoC)
Inversion of Control - design principle, used to achieve loose coupling. You must use some abstraction layer to access some functionality (similar to SOLID Dependency Inversion)
Explain Dependency Injection (DI)
Dependency Injection - design pattern, used with IoC. Our object fields (dependencies) must be configurated by external objects
True or False? In Dynamically typed languages the variable type is known at run-time instead of at compile-time
True
Explain what are design patterns
refactoring.guru: "Design patterns are typical solutions to commonly occurring problems in software design. They are like pre-made blueprints that you can customize to solve a recurring design problem in your code."
Explain big O notation
habr.com "We can use Big O notation to compare and search different solutions to find which solution is best. The best solution is one that consumes less amount of time and space. Generally, time and space are two parameters that determine the efficiency of the algorithm.
Big O Notation tells accurately how long an algorithm takes to run. It is a basic analysis of algorithm efficiency. It describes the execution time required. It depends on the size of input data that essentially passes in. Big O notation gives us algorithm complexity in terms of input size. For the large size of input data, the execution time will be slow as compared to the small size of input data. Big O notation is used to analyze space and time."
What is "Duck Typing"?
"When I see a bird that walks like a duck and swims like a duck and quacks like a duck, I call that bird a duck."
This is direction in programming, where we are checking properties of object, but not it's type
Explain string interpolation
String interpolation - process of evaluating of string literal. For example (JS):
const messages = 5;
console.log(`You have ${messages} new messages`); // You have 5 new messages
Common algorithms
Binary search:
- How does it works?
- Can you implement it? (in any language you prefer)
- What is the average performance of the algorithm you wrote?
It's a search algorithm used with sorted arrays/lists to find a target value by dividing the array each iteration and comparing the middle value to the target value. If the middle value is smaller than target value, then the target value is searched in the right part of the divided array, else in the left side. This continues until the value is found (or the array divided max times)
The average performance of the above algorithm is O(log n). Best performance can be O(1) and worst O(log n).
Code Review
What are your code-review best practices?
Do you agree/disagree with each of the following statements and why?:
- The commit message is not important. When reviewing a change/patch one should focus on the actual change
- You shouldn't test your code before submitting it. This is what CI/CD exists for.
Strings
In any language you want, write a function to determine if a given string is a palindrome
In any language you want, write a function to determine if two strings are Anagrams
Integers
In any language you would like, print the numbers from 1 to a given integer. For example for input: 5, the output is: 12345
Time Complexity
Describe what would be the time complexity of the operations access
, search
insert
and remove
for the following data structures:
- Stack
- Queue
- Linked List
- Binary Search Tree
What is the complexity for the best, worst and average cases of each of the following algorithms?:
- Quick sort
- Merge sort
- Bucket Sort
- Radix Sort
Data Structures & Types
Implement Stack in any language you would like
Tell me everything you know about Linked Lists
- A linked list is a data structure
- It consists of a collection of nodes. Together these nodes represent a sequence
- Useful for use cases where you need to insert or remove an element from any position of the linked list
- Some programming languages don't have linked lists as a built-in data type (like Python for example) but it can be easily implemented
Describe (no need to implement) how to detect a loop in a Linked List
There are multiple ways to detect a loop in a linked list. I'll mention three here:
Worst solution:
Two pointers where one points to the head and one points to the last node. Each time you advance the last pointer by one and check whether the distance between head pointer to the moved pointer is bigger than the last time you measured the same distance (if not, you have a loop).
The reason it's probably the worst solution, is because time complexity here is O(n^2)
Decent solution:
Create an hash table and start traversing the linked list. Every time you move, check whether the node you moved to is in the hash table. If it isn't, insert it to the hash table. If you do find at any point the node in the hash table, it means you have a loop. When you reach None/Null, it's the end and you can return "no loop" value. This one is very easy to implement (just create a hash table, update it and check whether the node is in the hash table every time you move to the next node) but since the auxiliary space is O(n) because you create a hash table then, it's not the best solution
Good solution:
Instead of creating a hash table to document which nodes in the linked list you have visited, as in the previous solution, you can modify the Linked List (or the Node to be precise) to have a "visited" attribute. Every time you visit a node, you set "visited" to True.
Time compleixty is O(n) and Auxiliary space is O(1), so it's a good solution but the only problem, is that you have to modify the Linked List.
Best solution:
You set two pointers to traverse the linked list from the beginning. You move one pointer by one each time and the other pointer by two. If at any point they meet, you have a loop. This solution is also called "Floyd's Cycle-Finding"
Time complexity is O(n) and auxiliary space is O(1). Perfect :)
Implement Hash table in any language you would like
What is Integer Overflow? How is it handled?
Name 3 design patterns. Do you know how to implement (= provide an example) these design pattern in any language you'll choose?
Given an array/list of integers, find 3 integers which are adding up to 0 (in any language you would like)
def find_triplets_sum_to_zero(li):
li = sorted(li)
for i, val in enumerate(li):
low, up = 0, len(li)-1
while low < i < up:
tmp = var + li[low] + li[up]
if tmp > 0:
up -= 1
elif tmp < 0:
low += 1
else:
yield li[low], val, li[up]
low += 1
up -= 1