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      Entrevistas en GoogleEntrevistas para el cargo de Software Engineer en GoogleEntrevista en Google


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      Entrevista para Software Engineer

      16 feb 2014
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Mountain View, CA
      Sin ofertas
      Entrevista promedio

      Solicitud

      Me postulé en línea. Acudí a una entrevista en Google (Mountain View, CA)

      Entrevista

      Applied for Google Software Engineer position online. Recruiter contacted me within a week to set-up a phone interview. The phone screen was scheduled within week. The interviewer asked about various data structures and general computer science concepts. Asked me several questions about queues, and heaps. After that two programming questions: 1) traverse array in a spiral order. 2) check if directed graph contains a cycle. in 2 weeks I was contacted to set up on-site interview. I asked to schedule interview 3 weeks later, so I could prepare for it. There were 4 technical interviews onsite, one lunch interview (just informal talk with some guy from Google glass department), and lastly PhD dissertation discussion. First question was in-order traversal of BST. I wrote the code. Then asked me two check if two different BSTs have same inorder traversal. I suggested to store first inorder traversal into vector, and while traversing second BST check if the element values match. I also started suggesting using linked list, or modified recursive approach, but he said to make life easy and go with the simple solution. Second interviewer gave me array, with elements first strictly increasing, then strictly decreasing. Asked me to find the largest number. I suggested to use binary search. O(logN) time complexity, with no additional space required. After implementing the code he asked another question. Given infinite doubly linked list, and separate list of elements, which are linked to some linked list elements. Find out from the list of elements how many neighboring groups are formed. I suggested to use Hashtable, to make look-up process quick, and traverse the elements and check if they are neighboring elements. O(N) time and space complexity. Implemented the code, and time ran out to test if with different cases. Third interview was the weirdest. The guy had thick accent and from the beginning became apparent communication was an issue. He gave me system design question: Observer class has three methods AddObserver(), RemoveObserver(), NotifyAllObservers(). After asking some clarification questions, I suggested to use doubly linked list to keep track of all observers, and hash table to look-up the individual observer. Then he asked to implement three methods. After implementing the code in JAVA he told me the program would not work. Apparently the Observer was designed for Chrome browser. He went into details when user clicks on mouse and then key-press is released. I responded the initial question was very vague and asked for more clarification and precise requirements. I suggested what I would change to go around the problem, but time ran out and didn't get a chance to modify the code on whiteboard. After that I had lunch and came back for fourth technical interview. Fourth interview: the guy told me to add two numbers in base 3 system. The input: two base 3 streams provided as String. function should return sum of the two numbers also in String format as base 3 stream. I suggested to convert from base 3 into base 10, add numbers and convert back to base 3. I know how to add two (base 2) binary streams without conversion, since I was under the time pressure I went easy way. I implemented conversion from base 3 to base 10. The interviewer said he was satisfied and wanted me to solve another problem. He gave me file size, and asked me to partition file into chunks, so that each chunk size is power of two, and the number of chunks is minimal. I suggested to find the nearest power of two and obtain absolute value of difference between the original file size, and nearest power of two. Then re-apply the process until reminder is power of two (1 is 2^0). There was time pressure, so didn't have time for analysis, just implemented and turned in the code. Last interview was PhD dissertation discussion. It went alright. Most interviews went ok, except the 3rd one, during which I had hard time communicating. Within a week recruiter emailed me saying hiring committee didn't want to move forward with hiring.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      I didn't feel any of the questions were difficult, I haven't been stuck at any point, but apparently that wasn't enough. I also had chance to look up online the most optimal answers to the questions I was asked. To be honest there is very little I would have changed in my responses.
      Responder pregunta
      16

      Otras evaluaciones sobre las entrevistas para el cargo de Software Engineer en Google

      Entrevista para Software Engineer

      4 may 2014
      Empleado anónimo
      Auburndale, FL
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Me postulé a través de una recomendación de un empleado. Acudí a una entrevista en Google (Auburndale, FL) en abr 2014

      Entrevista

      Direct onsite because I interviewed in the past and did well that time. From the time I sent my resume to interview day: 2 weeks. From interview day to offer over the phone: 2 weeks. The syllabus for the interviews is very clear and simple: 1) Dynamic Programming 2) Super recursion (permutation, combination,...2^n, m^n, n!...etc. type of program. (NP hard, NP programs) 3) Probability related programs 4) Graphs: BFS/DFS are usually enough 5) All basic data structures from Arrays/Lists to circular queues, BSTs, Hash tables, B-Trees, and Red-Black trees, and all basic algorithms like sorting, binary search, median,... 6) Problem solving ability at a level similar to TopCoder Division 1, 250 points. If you can consistently solve these, then you are almost sure to get in with 2-weeks brush up. 7) Review all old interview questions in Glassdoor to get a feel. If you can solve 95% of them at home (including coding them up quickly and testing them out in a debugger + editor setup), you are in good shape. 8) Practice coding--write often and write a lot. If you can think of a solution, you should be able to code it easily...without much thought. 9) Very good to have for design interview: distributed systems knowledge and practical experience. 10) Good understanding of basic discrete math, computer architecture, basic math. 11) Coursera courses and assignments give a lot of what you need to know. 12) Note that all the above except the first 2 are useful in "real life" programming too! Interview 1: Graph related question and super recursion Interview 2: Design discussion involving a distributed system with writes/reads going on at different sites in parallel. Interview 3: Array and Tree related questions Interview 4: Designing a simple class to do something. Not hard, but not easy either. You need to know basic data structures very well to consider different designs and trade-offs. Interview 5: Dynamic programming, Computer architecture and low level perf. enhancement question which requires knowledge of Trees, binary search, etc. At the end, I wasn't tired and rather enjoyed the discussions. I think the key was long term preparation and time spent doing topcoder for several years (on and off as I enjoy solving the problems). Conclusion: "It's not the best who win the race; it's the best prepared who win it."
      2501

      Entrevista para Software Engineer

      23 jun 2026
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Sin ofertas
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en Google

      Entrevista

      2 rounds of interviews with the first round being a technical and a behaverial. The second round being two technicals. The format was straight forward and the interviewer was professional.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      Talk about how you resolve a conflict.
      Responder pregunta

      Entrevista para Software Engineer

      24 jun 2026
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Sin ofertas
      Experiencia neutra
      Entrevista promedio

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en Google

      Entrevista

      There was a technical screen within their coding platform, followed by a first-round technical interview, followed by a first-round behavioral interview, followed by second-round interviews, both technical and behavioral interviews.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      What was your role on a technical project you've worked on?
      Responder pregunta