You should have some facility with all the standard tools in the developer toolbox: recursion, tree traversal, hashing, sorting, pointer arithmetic, etc. It's unlikely that someone is going to say "what's the Shell Sort algorithm?" What's more likely is that someone will give you a ...
Here are some of those “outside the box” technologies & techniques: Serbea: This is one of my own Rubygems. I like to think of Serbea as a “superset” of ERB. It uses braces ({% and %}) instead of angle brackets for delimiters, which I find vastly preferable for an H...
Video about Retro audio music tape recorder old vintage with audio cassette hipster for geeks from 70s, 80s, 90s isolated. Video of electrical, finger, analog - 264998488
“Are You an Awesomely Modest Front-End Developer Looking for New Digs?” San Francisco-based Flickerbox wants to hire you. GOOD ran a contest asking readers to design an infographic about the earthquake in Haiti. The submissions are stunning. First and last are favorites. Brick Lamp by HC ...
You should have some facility with all the standard tools in the developer toolbox: recursion, tree traversal, hashing, sorting, pointer arithmetic, etc. It's unlikely that someone is going to say "what's the Shell Sort algorithm?" What's more likely is that someone will give you a ...
But like a commenter said above, what that ends up testing is ability to use particular tools. Which is exactly what I want to test for in anyone whom I hire, even if they are fresh out of college. If I ask a candidate to implement something for me (I'm in java-land) and ...