Provided by www.YuvaJobs.com - Adobe Technical - Other Hi, I went through the Adobe process some months back for a dev position (I have 3+ yrs of exp.). They have a written test day followed by (if you cleared the tests!) a interview day.Tests are fairly easy… hey I sailed through them! Typical quantitative, problem solving (puzzles), coding. Some areas to brush up on for the tests:- C pointers (goes without saying!)- Searching (bsearch)- Binary trees and in-order, pre-order etc.- Recursion (a C test of some standing without recursion? Nah..!)- Automata / state machines- General C concepts - diff between macro and inline fn. diff between static, local, dynamic vars etc. Tests last for 2-3 hours but are not very intensive (if you’ve taken the JEE you’ll know what intensive is…). Interview day is.. intensive! My suggestion is.. no matter how much you’ve worked on C/C++ and low-level algo stuff - DON’T go into the interview day without 4-5 days of solid revision of core concepts. I had to go through 4 tech and 1 hr interview. You’ll either be asked *very* deep technology or no technology (only puzzles that is)… no general probing tech questions here.Tech areas that were covered:- C++ - inheritance, polymorphism - VPTR/VTBL questions, operator overloading, templates- Linked lists and trees! Lots about this- Find general algos for list questions etc- Deeper areas like compression algos, algo complexity Tech questions to puzzles split was 40:60. That is mostly puzzles… but this is upto you - you might be asked which you want. If you’re confident about knowing tech inside out go for tech questions — easier to prove yourself. Puzzles have a luck component. Great place to work btw… very cool plush office. Lots of smart people. So how did I fare? Do I work for Adobe now? That’s the mystery… Provided by www.YuvaJobs.com - Adobe Technical - Other