There were two gentlemen, one asked about technical questions and the other was about behavioral.
Basic technical questions that you should know to have a base of what you are applying for. I was not asked to do any programming in such, but there were some who had those.
They make you very comfortable and tell "I don't know" when you "don't know" :). Don't try to push very hard.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
1. What is OOP?
2. Contractor/destructor
3. Looping
4. SQL statements
5. Types of exceptions
6. Familiarity in IDE's
Just basic questions.
I applied online. I interviewed at Infosys (Reston, VA)
Interview
Unprofessional interview . The interviewer didn't turn on the camera and I could hear kids running around on her end.
It was very difficult to understand the interviewer. I asked a couple times for the interviewer to repeat the questions but she just said them louder which didn't help. I also asked if she could type the question but she refused and skipped the questions. I felt that my interview was unfair since I was unable to understand what the interviewer was asking because of her accent. For some short questions such as " whats the difference between hashmap vs hashset" . I could understand that but when she was asking longer question likes scenario based questions. I had no idea what she was saying. At some point , I just gave up and answered what I thought the question was because I could sense her irritation. Also,without being able to see her ;It was pretty hard.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
I would fill out this section If I only knew what she was asking.
I applied online. I interviewed at Infosys (New York, NY) in Oct 2020
Interview
After submitting my application, I received a phone screening within a few days. We scheduled a technical and cultural interview with the team within 2 weeks and I was extended an offer within a week after interviewing. The interview was 50% technical, 50% cultural.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
They asked me fundamental questions about Java OOP, such as, "What are the 5 pillars of Object-Oriented Programming?"