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by Retric
4106 days ago
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I have no idea why people like to use HS math problems for interviews. #1 If the ratio is A:B, then you need to remove A/(A+B) * f(x). So, using your numbers it's 1/(1+3) * f(x) = 1/4 f(x). #2 = rise + safety factor. But, safety factor is going to be some BS number. Area wise it's got to deal with rivers not just coast lines, but for a minimum wall you could in theory just use pumps and ridiculous amounts of energy. Honestly, Google actually tracked this stuff and these types of problems are very poor indicators of workplace performance. PS: For more fun with exponential functions grub starts a reaction that produces 1 atom the first day 2 atoms the second day... 2 ^n. Now your blast away from the area in a space ship at .9c, approximately how long do you get to live? Hint the earth has around 10^50 atoms it's radios is ~4,000 miles and the speed of light is 1.6 * 10^10 miles per day. |
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The important thing about interview success is getting an understanding of three things, can the person listen, can they reason under stress, and can they get stuff done. The candidates always over think the questions, it is the nature of things. Locking someone up mentally because you've over stressed them a question on tensor physics really doesn't help determine if they would be a good candidate or not. If you start with the HS math and they blow through it, you can work your way up to multi-variable calculus :-)