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KPIT Technologies Senior Software Developer Interview Questions and Answers for Experienced

Updated 11 Feb 2024

KPIT Technologies Senior Software Developer Interview Experiences for Experienced

1 interview found

Interview experience
4
Good
Difficulty level
Easy
Process Duration
Less than 2 weeks
Result
Selected Selected

I applied via Campus Placement and was interviewed in Jan 2024. There were 2 interview rounds.

Round 1 - Aptitude Test 

Basics of Control systems and logical questions

Round 2 - HR 

(1 Question)

  • Q1. What can you bring to table. What you expect from company Etc

Interview Preparation Tips

Interview preparation tips for other job seekers - NA

Interview questions from similar companies

Interview Questionnaire 

2 Questions

  • Q1. PATTERN PROBLEMS
  • Q2. CALCULATION OF CHILDREN AND GRANDCHILDREN
  • Ans. 

    Calculate the number of children and grandchildren

    • Count the number of direct children of a person

    • Count the number of grandchildren of a person

    • Use recursion to count all descendants

    • Consider only living descendants

    • Exclude step-children and adopted children

  • Answered by AI

Interview Preparation Tips

Interview preparation tips for other job seekers - Understand the logic
Practice

Interview Questionnaire 

1 Question

  • Q1. Simple basic c programing questions

I appeared for an interview before May 2021.

Round 1 - Coding Test 

(3 Questions)

Round duration - 90 minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

  • Q1. 

    Longest Increasing Subsequence Problem Statement

    Given 'N' students standing in a row with specific heights, your task is to find the length of the longest strictly increasing subsequence of their heights...

  • Ans. 

    Find the length of the longest strictly increasing subsequence of heights of students in a row.

    • Iterate through the heights array and for each element, find the length of the longest increasing subsequence ending at that element.

    • Use dynamic programming to keep track of the longest increasing subsequence length for each element.

    • Return the maximum length found as the result.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q2. 

    Overlapping Intervals Problem Statement

    You are given the start and end times of 'N' intervals. Write a function to determine if any two intervals overlap.

    Note:

    If an interval ends at time T and anothe...

  • Ans. 

    Given start and end times of intervals, determine if any two intervals overlap.

    • Iterate through intervals and check if any two intervals overlap by comparing their start and end times

    • Sort intervals based on start times for efficient comparison

    • Consider edge cases where intervals end and start at the same time

  • Answered by AI
  • Q3. What SQL queries were asked during your interview?
  • Ans. 

    Various SQL queries related to data manipulation and retrieval were asked during the interview.

    • Basic SELECT queries to retrieve data from a single table

    • JOIN queries to retrieve data from multiple tables based on a common column

    • Aggregate functions like COUNT, SUM, AVG, etc. to perform calculations on data

    • Subqueries to retrieve data based on the result of another query

    • UPDATE queries to modify existing data in a table

    • DELE...

  • Answered by AI
Round 2 - Face to Face 

(2 Questions)

Round duration - 60 Minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

  • Q1. 

    Zig-Zag String Problem Statement

    Given a string STR of size N and an integer M representing the number of rows in the zig-zag pattern, return the string formed by concatenating all rows when the string ST...

  • Ans. 

    Arrange a string in zig-zag pattern with given number of rows and concatenate the rows.

    • Iterate through the string and distribute characters to rows based on zig-zag pattern

    • Concatenate the characters in each row to get the final result

    • Handle edge cases like when number of rows is 1 or equal to the length of the string

  • Answered by AI
  • Q2. 

    Next Permutation Problem Statement

    You are given a permutation of 'N' integers. A sequence of 'N' integers is considered a permutation if it includes all integers from 1 to 'N' exactly once. Your task is ...

  • Ans. 

    The task is to rearrange a given permutation of 'N' integers to form the lexicographically next greater permutation.

    • Iterate from right to left to find the first element that is smaller than the element to its right.

    • Swap this element with the smallest element to its right that is greater than it.

    • Reverse the elements to the right of the swapped element to get the lexicographically next greater permutation.

  • Answered by AI
Round 3 - Face to Face 

(2 Questions)

Round duration - 60 Minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

  • Q1. 

    Remove Consecutive Duplicates Problem Statement

    Given a string S, your task is to recursively remove all consecutive duplicate characters from the string.

    Input:

    String S

    Output:

    Output string

    Constr...

  • Ans. 

    Recursively remove consecutive duplicate characters from a string.

    • Use recursion to check if the current character is the same as the next character, if so skip the next character

    • Base case: if the string is empty or has only one character, return the string

    • Example: Input: 'aaabcc', Output: 'abc'

  • Answered by AI
  • Q2. 

    Print Permutations - String Problem Statement

    Given an input string 'S', you are tasked with finding and returning all possible permutations of the input string.

    Input:

    The first and only line of input ...
  • Ans. 

    Return all possible permutations of a given input string.

    • Use recursion to generate all possible permutations of the input string.

    • Swap characters at different positions to generate permutations.

    • Handle duplicate characters in the input string by using a set to store unique permutations.

  • Answered by AI
Round 4 - Face to Face 

(1 Question)

Round duration - 60 Minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

  • Q1. Design an e-commerce website similar to Flipkart or Amazon.
  • Ans. 

    Design an e-commerce website similar to Flipkart or Amazon.

    • Implement user-friendly interface for easy navigation

    • Include search functionality with filters for products

    • Incorporate secure payment gateway for transactions

    • Provide personalized recommendations based on user behavior

    • Include customer reviews and ratings for products

    • Implement order tracking and delivery status updates

    • Offer various payment options like credit/deb

  • Answered by AI

Interview Preparation Tips

Professional and academic backgroundI completed Computer Science Engineering from National Institute of Technology, Kurukshetra. I applied for the job as SDE - 1 in BangaloreEligibility criteriaAbove 7.5 CGPASAP Labs interview preparation:Topics to prepare for the interview - DSA(Data Structures and Algorithms),Object-Oriented Programming Principles,Operating Systems,Database Management Systems,Web Development,Machine Learning,Projects(Internship/Full-time)Time required to prepare for the interview - 3 monthsInterview preparation tips for other job seekers

Tip 1 : Prepare DSA well. Standard Leetcode-type questions will be asked.
Tip 2 : You should be crystal clear about your project/s as any question would be asked and you should be able to answer it.
Tip 3 : Prepare CS fundaments like OS, OOPs, DBMS, etc.

Application resume tips for other job seekers

Tip 1 : Clearly mention the tech. stack you have worked on in the project/s
Tip 2 : As a fresher, you should add your coding profiles on CodeChef, Codeforces, etc. so as to make the resume shortlisting easy

Final outcome of the interviewSelected

Skills evaluated in this interview

Interview Questionnaire 

1 Question

  • Q1. Computer networking, oops, programming

I appeared for an interview before Jan 2021.

Round 1 - Coding Test 

(2 Questions)

Round duration - 120 Minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

The test included MCQ questions from SQL, Linux Commands, C/C++ programming, Logical Reasoning, Aptitude questions. The other section was the coding round, where 2 SQL queries and 2 coding questions were there.

  • Q1. 

    Subarray with Equal Occurrences Problem Statement

    You are provided with an array/list ARR of length N containing only 0s and 1s. Your goal is to determine the number of non-empty subarrays where the numbe...

  • Ans. 

    Count the number of subarrays where the number of 0s is equal to the number of 1s in a given array of 0s and 1s.

    • Iterate through the array and keep track of the count of 0s and 1s encountered so far.

    • Use a hashmap to store the count of 0s and 1s encountered at each index.

    • For each index, check if the count of 0s is equal to the count of 1s encountered so far and update the result accordingly.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q2. 

    Pythagorean Triplets Detection

    Determine if an array contains a Pythagorean triplet by checking whether there are three integers x, y, and z such that x2 + y2 = z2 within the array.

    Input:

    The first lin...
  • Ans. 

    Detect if an array contains a Pythagorean triplet by checking if there are three integers x, y, and z such that x^2 + y^2 = z^2.

    • Iterate through all possible triplets of numbers in the array and check if they form a Pythagorean triplet.

    • Use a nested loop to generate all possible combinations of three numbers from the array.

    • Check if the sum of squares of two numbers is equal to the square of the third number for each trip...

  • Answered by AI
Round 2 - Face to Face 

(3 Questions)

Round duration - 50 Minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

This was a standard DSA round where I was asked to solve 2 questions and also code it in a production ready manner . At the end I was also asked some questions related to Linux and SQL . I was tested on some basic commands of Linux .

  • Q1. 

    Palindromic Substrings Problem Statement

    Given a string S, your task is to return all distinct palindromic substrings of the given string in alphabetical order.

    Explanation:

    A string is considered a pal...

  • Ans. 

    Return all distinct palindromic substrings of a given string in alphabetical order.

    • Iterate through all possible substrings of the given string.

    • Check if each substring is a palindrome.

    • Store distinct palindromic substrings in alphabetical order.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q2. 

    Swap Two Numbers Problem Statement

    Given two integers a and b, your task is to swap these numbers and output the swapped values.

    Input:

    The first line contains a single integer 't', representing the num...
  • Ans. 

    Swap two integers 'a' and 'b' and output the swapped values.

    • Create a temporary variable to store one of the integers before swapping.

    • Swap the values of 'a' and 'b' using the temporary variable.

    • Output the swapped values of 'a' and 'b'.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q3. What is meant by normalization and denormalization?
  • Ans. 

    Normalization is the process of organizing data in a database to reduce redundancy and improve data integrity, while denormalization is the process of intentionally adding redundancy to improve query performance.

    • Normalization involves breaking down a table into smaller tables and defining relationships between them to reduce redundancy and dependency.

    • Denormalization involves combining tables or adding redundant data to...

  • Answered by AI
Round 3 - Face to Face 

(3 Questions)

Round duration - 60 Minutes
Round difficulty - Medium

This was a DS/Algo + Core round where I was asked questions related to DBMS , SQL queries and Linux Commands . The first question was of DSA and I was able to code it preety fast . I was also asked to execute some SQL queries on my laptop.
Overall , this round went good according to my opinion.

  • Q1. 

    Anagram Pairs Verification Problem

    Your task is to determine if two given strings are anagrams of each other. Two strings are considered anagrams if you can rearrange the letters of one string to form the...

  • Ans. 

    Check if two strings are anagrams of each other by comparing their sorted characters.

    • Sort the characters of both strings and compare them.

    • Use a dictionary to count the frequency of characters in each string and compare the dictionaries.

    • Ensure both strings have the same length before proceeding with comparison.

    • Handle edge cases like empty strings or strings with different lengths.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q2. How would you delete duplicate emails from a database using SQL?
  • Ans. 

    Use SQL query with GROUP BY and HAVING clause to delete duplicate emails from a database.

    • Use GROUP BY clause to group emails together

    • Use HAVING clause to filter out groups with more than one email

    • Use DELETE statement to remove duplicate emails

  • Answered by AI
  • Q3. What is the difference between the DELETE and TRUNCATE commands in a DBMS?
  • Ans. 

    DELETE removes specific rows from a table, while TRUNCATE removes all rows and resets auto-increment values.

    • DELETE is a DML command, while TRUNCATE is a DDL command.

    • DELETE can be rolled back, while TRUNCATE cannot be rolled back.

    • DELETE triggers ON DELETE triggers, while TRUNCATE does not trigger any triggers.

    • DELETE is slower as it maintains logs, while TRUNCATE is faster as it does not maintain logs.

    • Example: DELETE FRO...

  • Answered by AI
Round 4 - HR 

(2 Questions)

Round duration - 30 Minutes
Round difficulty - Easy

This was a typical HR round with some standard Behavioral questions .

  • Q1. What is something about you that is not included in your resume?
  • Q2. Why do you want to work at Amdocs?

Interview Preparation Tips

Eligibility criteriaAbove 7 CGPAAmdocs interview preparation:Topics to prepare for the interview - Data Structures, Algorithms, System Design, Aptitude, OOPSTime required to prepare for the interview - 4 MonthsInterview preparation tips for other job seekers

Tip 1 : Must do Previously asked Interview as well as Online Test Questions.
Tip 2 : Go through all the previous interview experiences from Codestudio and Leetcode.
Tip 3 : Do at-least 2 good projects and you must know every bit of them.

Application resume tips for other job seekers

Tip 1 : Have at-least 2 good projects explained in short with all important points covered.
Tip 2 : Every skill must be mentioned.
Tip 3 : Focus on skills, projects and experiences more.

Final outcome of the interviewSelected

Skills evaluated in this interview

Interview Questionnaire 

1 Question

  • Q1. C++ Program to reverse a string
  • Ans. 

    C++ program to reverse a string

    • Use a loop to iterate through the string

    • Swap the characters at the beginning and end of the string

    • Continue swapping until the middle of the string is reached

  • Answered by AI

Skills evaluated in this interview

I applied via Referral and was interviewed before Apr 2020. There were 3 interview rounds.

Interview Questionnaire 

1 Question

  • Q1. Mostly Basic concepts of javascript, html and css

Interview Preparation Tips

Interview preparation tips for other job seekers - Make sure to prepare basic concepts properly. Don't hurry to highlight advance topics.
Answer questions only if you are sure about the correct answer.

Interview Questionnaire 

16 Questions

  • Q1. Simple linked list questions-find middle element,given a pointer to second last element delete it
  • Q2. Explain insertion sort,quicksort
  • Ans. 

    Insertion sort and quicksort are sorting algorithms used to sort arrays of data.

    • Insertion sort: iterates through the array and inserts each element into its proper position.

    • Quicksort: selects a pivot element and partitions the array into two sub-arrays, one with elements less than the pivot and one with elements greater than the pivot.

    • Insertion sort is best for small arrays, while quicksort is best for large arrays.

    • Bot...

  • Answered by AI
  • Q3. Concept of virtual destructors,runtime polymorphism
  • Q4. Test cases for an installation software like check if sufficient memory available,check for a previous version,check to undo all the changes made to the system while quitting the installation. 5.2 puzzles
  • Q5. Merge two sorted linked lists using recursion
  • Ans. 

    Merge two sorted linked lists using recursion

    • Create a recursive function that compares the first nodes of both lists

    • Set the smaller node as the head of the merged list and call the function again with the next node of the smaller list

    • Base case: if one list is empty, return the other list

    • Return the merged list

  • Answered by AI
  • Q6. Given an integer(consider 4 bytes) find which byte is zero
  • Ans. 

    Given an integer, determine which byte is zero.

    • Convert the integer to a byte array using bitwise operations.

    • Iterate through the byte array and check for a zero value.

    • Return the index of the zero byte.

    • Consider endianness when converting to byte array.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q7. Program to check whether your machine is little endian or big endian
  • Ans. 

    To check endianness, create a 4-byte integer with a known value and check the byte order.

    • Create a 4-byte integer with a known value

    • Check the value of the first byte to determine endianness

    • If the first byte is the least significant, the machine is little endian

    • If the first byte is the most significant, the machine is big endian

  • Answered by AI
  • Q8. Print something before execution of main()(use static objects)
  • Ans. 

    Static objects can be used to print something before main() execution.

    • Static objects are initialized before main() execution

    • They can be used to print something before main()

    • Example: static int x = printf("Hello World!");

    • Output: Hello World! will be printed before main() execution

  • Answered by AI
  • Q9. Memory allocation for static varibles(when,which segment etc)
  • Ans. 

    Static variables are allocated memory in the data segment of the program's memory space.

    • Static variables have a fixed memory location throughout the program's execution.

    • They are initialized to zero by default.

    • If initialized explicitly, they are stored in the data segment.

    • Static variables can be accessed by any function in the program.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q10. Find space and time complexity for a recursive function(he wrote it)
  • Ans. 

    Finding space and time complexity of a recursive function.

    • Space complexity is the amount of memory used by the function.

    • Time complexity is the amount of time taken by the function to execute.

    • Recursive functions have higher space complexity due to the call stack.

    • Time complexity can be calculated using Big O notation.

    • Examples of recursive functions include factorial and Fibonacci sequence.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q11. Some questions on major project
  • Q12. Preprocessor directives,volatile keyword
  • Q13. Virtual pointer table,operator overloading,friend functions,semaphores
  • Q14. Diamond heirarchy problem
  • Ans. 

    Diamond hierarchy problem is a problem in object-oriented programming where a class inherits from multiple classes in a diamond-shaped hierarchy.

    • Occurs when a class inherits from two classes that share a common base class

    • Can lead to ambiguity in method calls and data members

    • Solved using virtual inheritance or by using interfaces

  • Answered by AI
  • Q15. Fibonacci series.(:P)
  • Q16. Puzzle

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: Test
Experience: 1. Aptitude-Mostly caselets on ordering and some easy quant questions.
2. c/c++-No objective questions.Mostly on basics(function pointers,give output of string based codes).Some simple progams(Find smallest of three numbers using conditional operators.gcd using recursion)
3.Data Structures-LCA for BST,2's compliment,reverse a doubly linked list.

College Name: NA

Skills evaluated in this interview

Interview Questionnaire 

20 Questions

  • Q1. He asked me my specialization?
  • Q2. Why not further studies? (He had noted that I was third in my batch. He appeared impressed by that
  • Q3. He asked me to tell him about my favorite project
  • Q4. He then looked at my grades. He commented that my lowest grade – B- was in Digital Image Processing. I just looked at him like a doofus thinking of what to say. But he quickly added, ‘don’t worry, it happe...
  • Q5. He then asked me a question that had been asked in Round 4, written test:Describe an optimal algorithm to find the second minimum number in an array of numbers. What is the exact number of comparisons requ...
  • Q6. Given a polygon (could be regular, irregular, convex, concave), find out whether a particular point lies inside it or outside it
  • Ans. 

    To determine if a point is inside a polygon, use the ray casting algorithm.

    • Create a line from the point to a point outside the polygon

    • Count the number of times the line intersects with the polygon edges

    • If the count is odd, the point is inside the polygon; otherwise, it is outside

  • Answered by AI
  • Q7. He asked me to explain Canny’s algorithm to him. (this was because my DIP project was related to this)
  • Q8. Then, he gave me a practical problem to solve: Suppose you are given an image which contains some text and some photos. How do you find the location of the image?
  • Q9. Which are the four storage classes in C
  • Ans. 

    The four storage classes in C are auto, register, static, and extern.

    • Auto: default storage class for all local variables

    • Register: used to define local variables that should be stored in a register instead of RAM

    • Static: used to define local variables that retain their value between function calls

    • Extern: used to declare a global variable that is defined in another file

  • Answered by AI
  • Q10. Given a program: int i; int main() { int j; int *k = (int *) malloc (sizeof(int)); … } Where are each of these variables stored?
  • Ans. 

    i is stored in global data segment, j is stored in stack, k is stored in heap.

    • i is a global variable and is stored in the global data segment

    • j is a local variable and is stored in the stack

    • k is a pointer variable and is stored in the stack, while the memory it points to is allocated on the heap using malloc()

  • Answered by AI
  • Q11. Question on polymorphisms
  • Q12. He again went back to the first question he had asked me. Once again
  • Q13. Then he wrote out some code and asked me how the compiler will generate code for it. I gave some answer, but he was clearly not satisfied. I thought it was all over by then. Then, he asked me a DIP quest...
  • Q14. Given a set of words one after another, give me a data structure so that you’ll know whether a word has appeared already or not
  • Ans. 

    Use a hash table to store the words and check for existence in constant time.

    • Create a hash table with the words as keys and a boolean value as the value.

    • For each new word, check if it exists in the hash table. If it does, it has appeared before. If not, add it to the hash table.

    • Alternatively, use a set data structure to store only the unique words and check for existence in the set.

  • Answered by AI
  • Q15. He asked me some questions on Interprocess Communication: What’s a semaphore? How are they used? He would often pick out words from my answers and ask me what they meant. He wanted to make sure that I rea...
  • Q16. He then asked me some DB fundas. Transaction. Serializability, Consistent state, etc
  • Q17. Finally, he asked me whether I had any questions
  • Q18. There is a clock at the bottom of the hill and a clock at the top of the hill. The clock at the bottom of the hill works fine but the clock at the top doesn’t. How will you synchronize the two clocks. Obv...
  • Q19. There was one more puzzle.. I don’t remember it. but I do remember that we started discussing ways of generating large prime numbers
  • Q20. We also talked a bit about my phone browser project

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: Test
Duration: 15 minutes
Total Questions: 1

Round: Test
Duration: 30 minutes
Total Questions: 2

Round: Test
Duration: 30 minutes
Total Questions: 3

Round: Test
Total Questions: 4

Round: Technical Interview
Experience: 1.When I told him that I had none as I didn’t want to specialize in this stage, he was a little surprised but appeared satisfied with my reason.2.I told him that my profile clearly indicated that I’ve been trying to get into the industry via internships, industry-funded projects right from second year, second sem. I said that I was fully sure that I didn’t want to do MS anytime soon.3.I told him about the web-browser that I had developed for cell-phones. I thought that was the only project which was closest to what Adobe was working on. He appeared satisfied with my answers.4. So people, be fully prepared to explain any anomalous grades. I was prepared with the explanation of the W in the my grade-sheet but not of the B- in DIP. I know that this is really stupid considering that I was interviewing with Adobe. Don’t make this mistake.5.I screwed up, big time in this question. I had superficially discussed this question with my friend a while ago and he had outlined an algorithm which I thought that I had understood, but I hadn’t. I started off explaining it but got stuck in the middle. He sternly told me to read it up again. One solution that I could tell him, and which I had written in the test was this Use two variables – min and second min. Initialize them by comparing the first two elements of the array. This is (1) comparison. Then, go through the entire array, from index 2 to n-1 comparing each element, first with min and then with second min, updating each variable as necessary. This will involve a worst case of two comparisons for each element. Therefore, total number of comparisons = 2*(n-2) + 1 = 2*n – 3 comparisons.I’ll try to update this with a better solution, sometime soon.6.This is an easy, straight question from graphics. You shoot a ray parallel to the x-axis passing through this point. Start with odd parity. Change parity of ray each time it intersects an edge of the polygon (consider special case of when the line passes through a vertex of the polygon. Change parity only if it passes through a vertex which has one edge above it and one edge below the ray). If the parity of ray is even when it passes through the point, it is inside the polygon, else it is not.7.This is simple. Study DIP8.I gave various alternatives – from searching for RGB components, to using OCR.. he didn’t appear fully satisfied. I think he was looking for edge-detection, but that would fail, if the text contained tables, etc.

Round: Technical Interview
Experience: He was friendly at the start but this interview was my worst. He asked me my favorite subject. I said that it was Programming. (He laughed at that)

1. static, extern, register, auto2.I started off correctly, but he was able to confuse me. He brought in shared libraries, static libraries fundas into the discussion. We had a discussion for about twenty-minutes on this. Finally, he was happy with one of my answers because I had deduced which policy made sense and answered correctly. He said that out of all the people interviewed so far (I was second last), nobody had been able to answer all of these questions correctly.3.this is easy – get it from any C++ book. He tried to confuse me again, but this time I was ready and he was finally satisfied.Then he looked at my grades and said that out of all your grades, you have only two Bs and one of them is in Compilers. Why? (Damn it. three non-A grades and that’s all they ask about. What’s wrong with this world?!)Didn’t you like Compilers? “Not in particular”, I replied. “Fine. Now, I HAVE to ask you questions on compilers”, he said.4.He again went back to the first question he had asked me. Once again5.I first suggested that we capture only a small portion of the board. To locate that portion, we could search for the chalk in the prof’s hand – of course, taking care that it had the blackboard in the background (no point capturing a video of the prof scratching his chin, na?). Further, if the prof was writing only text, we could convert the video into text by OCR and then transmitting. Simple diagrams could also be reduced to a set of vector-graphics instructions (we rarely, see the prof shading stuff). I think he liked my approach, but was not completely satisfied. Anyway, we left it at that and went forward.6.I suggested various alternatives. but he kept helping me and finally, we came up with an array of pointers to 26-trees (each node of the tree has 26 children). Store every word as a path from the root to a leaf with pointers in the correct places. For example, hello would be stored as – pointer from ‘h’ index of the root array to a node which had a pointer from ‘e’ index of it’s array to a node which had a pointer from ‘l’ index of the array.. and so on. This is both time and space efficient.7.I was able to answer all his questions, but I made the mistake of telling him, when we started off that I didn’t know much about this subject as I had done it a long time ago. He was very annoyed at that, apparently because a lot of people before me had said this.8.I was able to answer all of them. I stumbled around a bit in a few questions where I was explaining correctly, but not using the keywords that he was looking for.9.I thought that I should say something to make him realize that I was not completely stupid and so asked him whether there was any logic to the order in which the short-listed candidates were called. This turned out to be a dumb move. The order was alphabetic and he sent me off with a parting shot, saying “You guys do pattern recognition and stuff and still you can’t recognize such a simple pattern” Me and my big mouth! Moral of the story: Don’t ask questions for the sake of asking.

Round: Puzzle Interview
Experience: After the first two interviews, this one was like having a warm batch after being cold and wet for days! I did well in this one.1.You have to go up the hill and come back, with horse, without horse, getting four equations to solve four unknowns – time to go uphill – with horse, without horse, time to go downhill – with horse, without horse. Then you can go up the hill and set the clock to ‘(time when you left) + (time to go uphill with horse)’2.  I told him the funda of Mersenee primes (luckily remembered it) and he was decently impressed.

General Tips: Finally hired by Adobe. Special thanks to AmbitionBox team. Really amazing site for sharing experience. That’s all for the Adobe. They are focusing on your approach and your coding skills. All the best.
Skills: Algorithm, Data structure, C++, C, DIP
College Name: BIT Mesra

Skills evaluated in this interview

KPIT Technologies Interview FAQs

How many rounds are there in KPIT Technologies Senior Software Developer interview for experienced candidates?
KPIT Technologies interview process for experienced candidates usually has 2 rounds. The most common rounds in the KPIT Technologies interview process for experienced candidates are Aptitude Test and HR.

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KPIT Technologies Senior Software Developer Interview Process for Experienced

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KPIT Technologies Senior Software Developer Salary
based on 215 salaries
₹6.5 L/yr - ₹21 L/yr
At par with the average Senior Software Developer Salary in India
View more details

KPIT Technologies Senior Software Developer Reviews and Ratings

based on 29 reviews

3.5/5

Rating in categories

3.6

Skill development

3.3

Work-life balance

3.3

Salary

3.1

Job security

3.0

Company culture

3.0

Promotions

3.3

Work satisfaction

Explore 29 Reviews and Ratings
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