I know the feeling Bhargav xD my first piece of graphics looked like absolute crap
When I learned code, I used it. Upon seeing how bad it was later, I moved it to a folder, and delteted the file and did some overriding to make sure it can never ever come back xD
not hearing from them is probably a good sign since if they were just like "nope" id know by now, the waiting would likely be for them doing HR prep work on their end
my only fuck up in the interview was that recursive whiteboard thing we were talking about yesterday, but like i said even the interviewer was saying it was really challenging and just wanted to see how id handle it
the other whiteboard problem i nailed and the android interview i got everything right too
yea im planning on sending a follow up email this afternoon at like 430
i mean if theyre just putting off saying no to me they can at least put me out of my misery that way
and if im cool and just saying "hey just checking in, really excited hope to hear soon" type casual thing its not like theyre gonna be like "well we WERE gonna hire him, but he showed non-pushy enthusiasm for hearing back so he doesnt get the job"
like i hire people and id never do that especially if a stated timeline for hearing back came and went
@JMRboosties no, I asked the candidate "suppose your app is frequently crashing in an area where you load a lot of images, what would you do?" and the reply basically was "well if you use Glide you don't get OOM errors, so that couldn't happen."
so then I changed the question to "What if you're loading a lot of large catalog data and it's crashing in there?", and he replied "Well if you're using pagination correctly you don't get OOM errors, so you should be doing that."
btw carl, my answer would be too much data is being held in memory, so youd need to look into breaking the data query youre making into smaller pieces, from a db making smaller queries than run on a background thread so the front end isnt interrupted while the data is being loaded, or on the api side working with the result on the input stream level rather than parsing it in a big fat json block