Interviews have been teaching me something lately, Sometimes knowing how something works is not the same as explaining it cleanly. This week I am spending time on tightening how I talk about React concepts. Things like component lifecycle behavior, hooks and error handling. I realized that understanding is not enough and in an interview setting concepts like this should be so familiar that explaining them feel natural and can easily be brought up without struggling, even under pressure. #React #FrontendDevelopment #SoftwareEngineering #WebDevelopment #JobSearch #ContinuousLearning #TechCareers #CareerGrowth #ReactJS #LearningJourney
Tightening React explanations for natural interview flow
More Relevant Posts
-
How strong is your understanding of the React useContext Hook? Quick MCQs are a great way to revise concepts and prepare for frontend interviews. In this short video, try solving 5 React useContext questions and test your knowledge. Consistent practice with such questions can help developers improve faster and build confidence. Explore more React practice questions: https://www.quipoin.com #ReactJS #ReactHooks #FrontendDevelopment #CodingPractice #LearnReact #WebDevelopment
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Want to crack backend interviews at top companies? Master these, and interviews become much easier. 90% of backend interview questions come from a small set of core concepts. 🧱💻 Start mastering these core concepts every backend engineer must know. 🔖 Save this post & find the list below 👇 Follow me: - Parthib M. 🐺 to explore more updates on Web Development. credit : Bosscoder Academy #Backend #Dsa #Fundamentals #Interviews #SoftwareEngineer #Webdevelopment #Reactjs
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
🚀 React Interview Questions – Phase 2 (Medium Level) Preparing for React interviews? Here are some must-know medium-level questions focused on State, Props & Events 👇 🔹 State & Props 1️⃣ What is State in React? 2️⃣ What are Props? 3️⃣ What is the difference between State vs Props? 4️⃣ Why should state not be updated directly? (⭐ Very Important) 5️⃣ What is Lifting State Up? 6️⃣ What is Prop Drilling? 🔹 Events & Forms 7️⃣ What is preventDefault()? 8️⃣ What are Controlled Components? (⭐ Important) 9️⃣ What are Uncontrolled Components? 🔟 What is the difference between Refs vs Controlled Inputs? These concepts are foundational but frequently asked in mid-level React interviews. #ReactJS #FrontendDevelopment #JavaScript #WebDevelopment #TechInterviews #ReactInterview
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
For React interviews, here are some of the most common questions that I encounter and thought it to be worth sharing. 1. Output questions - These are loved by all the companies, they test the thinking and conceptual knowledge of the candidate, and most of the topics I faced them were from event loops, setTimeout, closures and this keyword. 2. Closures - The second most favorite topic of the interviewers, these are mostly asked along with their output questions. 3. Polyfills - Writing the basic utility functions from scratch test your knowledge for how well you write the code and logics. Most common questions include debounce and throttle polyfills along with filter,map and reduce. 4. Explaining projects - Your projects depict the work and skills you have which are equally important for any company. Make sure to keep in mind your most difficult challenges so that when they come up in an interview, you are prepared to communicate to them. 5. Async/Await and Event Loops - Understanding how the call stack, microtask queue, and macrotask queue work is very important. Many questions revolve around predicting the output when Promise, setTimeout and async/await are involved. Feel free to add your questions and most asked topics here, lets give back to the community! #ReactNative #ReactJS #InterviewExperience #InterviewTips
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Sharing the full Interview Flow of our Job Matching Platform (currently under development): 1️⃣ User clicks “Start Interview” 2️⃣ System assigns a difficulty level (Easy → Medium → Hard based on performance) 3️⃣ Questions load dynamically 4️⃣ Timer starts automatically 5️⃣ User submits answers 6️⃣ Instant result calculation (score + percentage) 7️⃣ Correct answers are shown for review 8️⃣ Performance is stored for future attempts ⚠️ Note: I’m currently working on this feature — it’s still under development and being refined for better logic and user experience. Excited to complete and optimize it soon!! #BuildInPublic #ReactJS #MERNStack #JobMatchingPlatform #UnderDevelopment
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Recently, I gave multiple React interviews. And every single one reminded me that your fundamentals matter more than anything. Here are some of the things I was asked repeatedly: • What’s the difference between state and props? • Explain React life cycle methods • What is Virtual DOM? • When does a component re-render? • Controlled vs uncontrolled components? • Which hooks have you used in real projects? Explain any 5 • Explain the importance of keys? JavaScript questions: • What is the difference between var, let, and const? • What is hoisting? • Explain closures with an example. • Explain promises and async/await. • What is event delegation? • How does Event Loop work? • Functional and class components If you’re preparing for React interviews too, focus on understanding the core concepts.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
I thought I was good at React… until my first interview. I had built projects. Used hooks. Worked with APIs. I felt confident. Then the interviewer asked: “What’s the difference between state and props?” “How does useEffect actually work?” “When would you use useReducer?” And suddenly… I wasn’t that confident anymore. That’s when I realized something important. Building with React is one thing. Understanding React is another. Interviews don’t test whether you can copy code from memory. They test whether you understand: – How React renders. – Why hooks work the way they do. – How performance optimization actually happens. If your fundamentals aren’t clear, it shows immediately. What helped me? Going back to basics. Revising core concepts. Practicing common interview questions. Learning to explain things in simple words. Because in interviews, clarity beats complexity. Strong React fundamentals don’t just help you build better apps. They help you speak with confidence.
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Frontend interviews are NOT about memorizing code snippets. Here's what actually matters in a frontend interview: → Can you break down a problem you've never seen? → Can you explain your trade-offs clearly? → Do you think about the user performance, accessibility, edge cases? → Can you debug when things go sideways? Nobody cares if you memorized Array.reduce(). They care if you can think. Stop cramming. Start practicing how you explain your reasoning out loud. That's the skill. That's what gets you hired. Follow the Frontend Circle By Sakshi channel on WhatsApp: https://lnkd.in/gj5dp3fm 𝗙𝗼𝗹𝗹𝗼𝘄𝘀 𝘂𝘀 𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲 → https://lnkd.in/geqez4re
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
🚀 Top React Hooks Interview Questions & Answers (Must Watch!) Preparing for a React interview? This video covers the most asked React Hooks questions with clear explanations and practical examples. 👉 Perfect for: Frontend Developers React.js Beginners & Experienced Anyone preparing for interviews 🎯 What you’ll learn: ✔ useState & useEffect deep concepts ✔ Real interview questions ✔ Practical coding insights ✔ Tips to crack React interviews 🎥 Watch now: https://lnkd.in/gmjJbkVG 💡 Don’t forget to like, share, and save for your next interview prep! #ReactJS #FrontendDeveloper #WebDevelopment #JavaScript #ReactHooks #InterviewPreparation #UIDeveloper #CodingInterview #TechJobs #LearnReact
Top React Hooks Interview Questions and Answers | React Interview Preparation
https://www.youtube.com/
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
🚨 What Interviews Don't Tell You About Real Work 👇 When I started preparing for interviews most of my time went into 🔹Understanding React 🔹Algorithms and 🔹Problem solving But after joining a real project, my day-to-day work looked very different : 🔷 I rarely write complex algorithms daily 🔹Most work is about building or enhancing existing features , integrating API like that. 🔷 Debugging plays a bigger Role 🔹Sometimes you find yourself spending long hours for understanding and solving a bug. 🔷Business logic matters most 🔹A feature is only valuable when it solves the actual business problem. 🔷 Team culture 🔹 Each teams has its own approach, starting from solving a problem to getting things done Interviews prepare you to enter the industry. But real work teaches you how to survive and grow in it. Cheers, Naresh Ravi
To view or add a comment, sign in
Explore related topics
- Front-end Development with React
- Advanced React Interview Questions for Developers
- Advanced Programming Concepts in Interviews
- How to Communicate Skills in Interviews
- Tips for Learning from Job Interview Failures
- Interview Skills Not Covered in Most Courses
- Handling Interview Stress
- How to Explain Job Changes During Interviews
Explore content categories
- Career
- Productivity
- Finance
- Soft Skills & Emotional Intelligence
- Project Management
- Education
- Technology
- Leadership
- Ecommerce
- User Experience
- Recruitment & HR
- Customer Experience
- Real Estate
- Marketing
- Sales
- Retail & Merchandising
- Science
- Supply Chain Management
- Future Of Work
- Consulting
- Writing
- Economics
- Artificial Intelligence
- Employee Experience
- Workplace Trends
- Fundraising
- Networking
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- Negotiation
- Communication
- Engineering
- Hospitality & Tourism
- Business Strategy
- Change Management
- Organizational Culture
- Design
- Innovation
- Event Planning
- Training & Development