Am in search for a good job myself …. I know i can do it…just need to be patient and consistent. And videos like this is just what i need to stay motivated.
I have 2 years in hand till interviewing for faang, how many problems a day or so what would you recommend me? and what should be the time limit for level of problems. Thanks please keep making videos on DSA and LC.
if you have two years, I would worry too much about how many problems per day, but instead focus on the amount of time you study for. I think you can make great progress with 10-20 hours a week. the key is to be consistent, you'll start to see big gains in about a month sometimes I'd spend more than an hour on a single problem, other times only 10 minutes or so.
I considered a lot of options, but getting into FAANG made the most sense for me at the time. Mainly because of the immediate payout, but also because I wanted to learn some good engineering practices from established companies with strong engineering cultures.
This guy is like the Tommy Wiseau of the leetcode game. You are tearing me apart, Simon!
You the GOAT, brother Simon!! Keep up the great work!
orz
You said it, he's the GOAT
Am in search for a good job myself …. I know i can do it…just need to be patient and consistent. And videos like this is just what i need to stay motivated.
It took me about 2 years from my first leetcode problem to when I finally passed a FAANG interview. Keep on keeping on o7
04:46 💥
You are the vato
I have 2 years in hand till interviewing for faang, how many problems a day or so what would you recommend me? and what should be the time limit for level of problems. Thanks please keep making videos on DSA and LC.
if you have two years, I would worry too much about how many problems per day, but instead focus on the amount of time you study for. I think you can make great progress with 10-20 hours a week. the key is to be consistent, you'll start to see big gains in about a month
sometimes I'd spend more than an hour on a single problem, other times only 10 minutes or so.
Didn't you think for a startup rather than work for someone?
I considered a lot of options, but getting into FAANG made the most sense for me at the time. Mainly because of the immediate payout, but also because I wanted to learn some good engineering practices from established companies with strong engineering cultures.