Algorithm questions Memes

Posts tagged with Algorithm questions

The Ultimate Reverse Binary Tree Hack

The Ultimate Reverse Binary Tree Hack
The ultimate power move in tech interviews isn't knowing how to reverse a binary tree—it's having the audacity to ask the interviewer to do it instead. That silent angry stare in the last panel is worth a thousand lines of code. Next time someone asks you to solve FizzBuzz on a whiteboard, just respond with "I don't know, can YOU?" and watch their entire interview script crash and burn. Checkmate, tech industry.

Way Ahead Of Us

Way Ahead Of Us
Oh. My. GOD! The absolute TRAGEDY of tech interviews in 2023! 😱 There's this poor soul having an existential crisis trying to solve some ridiculous algorithm that probably involves reversing a binary tree while standing on one foot... meanwhile, the interviewer is just a clueless doggo who Googled "hard coding questions" five minutes before the interview and has NO IDEA what the solution even is! The sheer AUDACITY! It's like being judged on your cooking skills by someone who can't even boil water but somehow memorized Gordon Ramsay's recipe book! The tech industry has truly reached its final form - where we're all just pretending to know things while secretly panicking inside. Chess metaphor is *chef's kiss* because both players are absolutely CLUELESS about their next move!

Good Deeds

Good Deeds
Finally, a policy everyone in tech can get behind! The meme brilliantly captures the collective trauma of every developer who's ever had to reverse a binary tree on a whiteboard while some senior engineer watches with folded arms. LeetCode questions are basically the tech industry's hazing ritual - "Sure you built three successful apps, but can you solve this completely irrelevant algorithm puzzle in O(log n) time?" If this executive order were real, developers everywhere would be throwing their whiteboard markers into the air like graduation caps. The greatest humanitarian achievement of our time would be freeing junior devs from explaining dynamic programming to people who already know the answer.