i am not opposing anyone, but if anyone watching this tweet, wanted to learn LLD, from my personal experience i would highly recommended this LLD playlist
of Aditya sir , Have completed all 40 videos ad level of depth is next level...
( i haven't checkout other one, so no idea)
Starting a Number Theory series on my account..
I've divided the major Competitive Programming Number Theory topics into 5 modules.
I'll post 5 in-depth articles.. no mugging up, just first principles, core derivations, and intuition behind everything.
New article every Friday at 7 PM.
Will complete the whole series this month only.
Stay tuned. π€
@sarveshtiwarit I myself have contributed in final year and it gives good headstart
Totally depends upto the person
And it prepare you for GSoC and other open source as well
This is really good headstart but u can try Ggsoc or hacktoberrfest
U get goodies and other perks as well and you GitHub profile is highlighted as well π―
Keep going bruhh πͺ
Task Destroyer App Update :
Still optimizing the paper burn animation effect.
Gave Claude lots of references to get it to this level.
Still not good output but making steady progress.
#buildinpublic
This is insane π
On their official it is mentioned 250-450k π° + equity, so assuming their equity offers them this much
What you think on this, genuine of just click baith π
All things are upto the mark, just try participating in open source such as GSoC or Ggsoc or any other similar so that your Development skills can be honed and from fresher apart from all this nothing more is expected, I wish everyone who is preparing for. Interview get placed β¨
This is how I planned to spend 2-3 hours daily preparing for interviews:
- I'm already comfortable with DSA, but I'll finish NeetCode 250 as a structured revision.
- I'll start recording myself explaining solutions and thinking out loud while coding.
- Adding 2 hours dedicated to CS fundamentals.
Q1. How do I improve communication while coding and explaining my thoughts?
- Record myself solving problems and explain every decision as if I'm talking to an interviewer.
- After solving, spend 2-3 minutes summarizing the approach, complexity, and stuff.
- Watch strong interview walkthroughs and observe how candidates structure their thinking.
Q2. Best resources for CS fundamentals (interview-focused)?
- OOP, OS, DBMS, and CN notes from TUF.
- GeeksforGeeks CS Core Subjects for revision.
- DBMS by Kunal Kushwaha.
- Operating Systems by Gate Smashers.
- Interview-specific question lists from InterviewBit and GFG.
Q3. Behavioral round preparation?
- Learn the STAR format (Situation, Task, Action, Result).
- Prepare stories around:
- Biggest challenge
- Failure and lessons learned
- Leadership experience
- Team conflicts
- Tight deadlines
- Strengths and weaknesses
- Why this company?
Since I'm still in college and not getting interview calls yet, I plan to use hackathons, projects, contests, and team assignments for these stories.
The goal isn't to crack interviews tomorrow. It's to avoid starting from scratch when an opportunity finally comes.
If you think there's a better way to prepare, I'd genuinely appreciate your suggestions.