Red-Green-Code

Deliberate practice techniques for software developers

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Project 462
  • CP FAQ
  • Newsletter

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 16

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Oct 16 0

Quora Experiment 2019

Quora has many programming topics in its topic ontology, and many technical question and answer writers in its user base. But the Quora question interface isn’t optimal for expressing the types of questions that a programmer encounters in daily work. Hence this question: How can I submit a programming question on Quora if I can’t write the question the way it should be written? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 15

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Oct 9 0

Quora Experiment 2019

Coding interviews can seem ridiculous, but would company leaders trust such an important part of their business to a process that didn’t work? Or to Quorify that question: Do you think programming interviews these days are a joke? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 14

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Oct 2 0

Quora Experiment 2019

There’s plenty of griping about the coding interview process. But at least everyone gets to use their favorite programming language.

When Microsoft interviews a software engineer, do they prefer what programming language is used during the interview? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 13

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Sep 25 0

Quora Experiment 2019

Stack Exchange and Quora operate according to different Q&A philosophies. One difference is that Stack Exchange sites separate questions about a site (meta questions) from questions about the topic covered by that site. On Quora, the subject of “Quora the Q&A site” is just another topic. In that topic, you can find questions like this one: I see a lot of trolling and easily Google-able questions on Quora. Should we have stricter policies like Stack Exchange does? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 12

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Sep 18 0

Quora Experiment 2019

One way to categorize competitive programming contests is by duration. A short contest wraps up after a few hours. In a long contest you get several days to think about and submit solutions. With that in mind, Why would you not participate in a long contest? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 11

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Sep 11 0

Quora Experiment 2019

This week, two Quora questions about books:

  • Does reading the book Competitive Programming 3 really help with competitive programming? (answer)
  • Is it worth reading the book “How to Solve It” by G. Polya for competitive coders? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 10

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Sep 4 0

Quora Experiment 2019

Here are a few Quora questions for this week that approach the issue of competitive/interview programming vs. real-world programming from different angles:

  • How would a competitive coder compare to a top-level programmer on real work projects? (answer)
  • Do you coders think that coding test platforms give accurate results on your abilities? (answer)
  • And a fun one that’s getting some clicks: How good is Mark Zuckerberg with competitive programming? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 9

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Aug 28 0

Quora Experiment 2019

It’s popular on Quora to ask questions comparing competitive programming (or competitive programmers) with real-world programming (or real-world programmers). For example:

If you only know competitive programming, could you fake being a real programmer?

But how would someone “only know competitive programming”? At a minimum, competitive programmers have textbook computer science knowledge, just like other university CS graduates. And people don’t call new graduates “fake programmers” just because they have minimal real-world experience.

Here’s my answer to the question.

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 8

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Aug 21 0

Quora Experiment 2019

A Quora reader is wondering if technical interviewers are looking for a perfect answer (as required by an online judge) or if they’re more interested in conceptual understanding:

What happens in a programming interview if you get the answer wrong but show that you understand the concepts needed to be successful? (answer)

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

Quora Experiment 2019: Week 7

By Duncan Smith Leave a Comment Aug 14 0

Quora Experiment 2019

I worked on a math project for the first half of this year, so I was thinking about the issues posed by this Quora question:

Do I need to be good in math to do competitive programming? (answer)

Programming competitions are not math competitions, so they don’t usually focus on tricky math problems, and they don’t require the same level of math puzzle expertise. But the right math preparation can definitely make things easier.

Why is this post so short? Find the answer, and links to a blog table of contents, at A Summer 2019 Experiment.

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • Next Page »

Stay in the Know

I'm trying out the latest learning techniques on software development concepts, and writing about what works best. Sound interesting? Subscribe to my free newsletter to keep up to date. Learn More
Unsubscribing is easy, and I'll keep your email address private.

Getting Started

Are you new here? Check out my review posts for a tour of the archives:

  • 2023 in Review: 50 LeetCode Tips
  • 2022 in Review: Content Bots
  • 2021 in Review: Thoughts on Solving Programming Puzzles
  • Lessons from the 2020 LeetCode Monthly Challenges
  • 2019 in Review
  • Competitive Programming Frequently Asked Questions: 2018 In Review
  • What I Learned Working On Time Tortoise in 2017
  • 2016 in Review
  • 2015 in Review
  • 2015 Summer Review

Archives

Recent Posts

  • Do Coding Bots Mean the End of Coding Interviews? December 31, 2024
  • Another Project for 2024 May 8, 2024
  • Dynamic Programming Wrap-Up May 1, 2024
  • LeetCode 91: Decode Ways April 24, 2024
  • LeetCode 70: Climbing Stairs April 17, 2024
  • LeetCode 221: Maximal Square April 10, 2024
  • Using Dynamic Programming for Maximum Product Subarray April 3, 2024
  • LeetCode 62: Unique Paths March 27, 2024
  • LeetCode 416: Partition Equal Subset Sum March 20, 2024
  • LeetCode 1143: Longest Common Subsequence March 13, 2024
Red-Green-Code
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Project 462
  • CP FAQ
  • Newsletter
Copyright © 2025 Duncan Smith