A curated collection of interview questions for hiring iOS developers and designers, also useful for self-assessment.
iOS-Developer-and-Designer-Interview-Questions is a curated guide of technical and design questions for evaluating iOS talent. It helps hiring managers assess candidates effectively and allows developers to practice for interviews. The questions cover iOS-specific technologies, coding practices, UI/UX design, and App Store processes.
Hiring managers, recruiters, and technical interviewers looking to hire iOS developers or designers. It's also useful for iOS developers preparing for job interviews or wanting to self-assess their knowledge.
It provides a structured, community-maintained question set that reduces bias in hiring and ensures comprehensive coverage of iOS topics. Unlike generic interview guides, it's tailored specifically to the iOS ecosystem, including Swift, Objective-C, and Apple frameworks.
A small guide to help those looking to hire a developer or designer for iOS work. While tailored for iOS, many questions could be used for Android developers or designers as well. A great self-test if you're looking to keep current or practice for your own interview.
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The README organizes questions into seven categories including iOS Technologies, Coding, and App Store, ensuring a thorough assessment of candidate knowledge across essential areas.
Inspired by similar projects and open to pull requests, the content can evolve with iOS technologies, as highlighted in the README's encouragement for contributions.
Questions like 'Describe your workflow' and 'How do you track down bugs?' emphasize real-world skills over theoretical trivia, aligning with the project's philosophy.
Explicitly described as a 'great self-test' in the README, it allows developers to practice and stay current with iOS best practices independently.
The guide only lists questions without solutions, requiring interviewers to have expert knowledge to assess responses, which can be a barrier for less experienced hiring managers.
Limited to markdown files without interactive elements, coding challenges, or simulation tools, making it less suitable for hands-on technical assessments.
iOS frameworks update frequently, and the repository's reliance on community contributions may lead to gaps in covering latest features, as there's no guaranteed update schedule.