J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Jane Street (New York, NY) en août 2022
Entretien
- Applied online. - Two weeks later, got an offer to interview - Spoke with a senior engineer about fit, who directed me to a team - Did the phone screen
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
The phone screen was much less algorithm-heavy than I was expecting, which paradoxically made it hard because it was different than expected. It wasn't necessarily a hard interview objectively: didn't take a lot of knowledge, and also didn't really require algorithms. Just precise and careful coding, and a little bit of design.
It was a very quick and painless process. Recruiter very responsive, kind interviewers. High implementation and difficult problems, so failed onsite after 3 interviews and a Question and Answer Session.
J'ai passé un entretien chez Jane Street (Londres, Angleterre)
Entretien
Did not pass the initial coding round. I tried to explain my thought in details to the interviewer but failed to translate my thought into code. So far interviewer is very nice.
J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Jane Street (New York, NY)
Entretien
My experience interviewing at Jane Street was definitely challenging, but also surprisingly collaborative. Instead of focusing only on whether I could get the right answer quickly, the interviewers were much more interested in how I approached problems and explained my thinking. I worked through a few coding questions involving data structures and algorithms, and there were also some probability-style questions that tested logical reasoning. The interviewers were clearly very sharp, but they were also approachable and encouraged me to talk through my thought process the entire time. When I got stuck, they would sometimes guide me with small hints so we could keep exploring the problem together. Overall, it felt less like a typical high-pressure interview and more like a thoughtful technical conversation with experienced engineers.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
“What is the expected number of coin flips needed to get two heads in a row?”