If you don’t have any coding experience, you’re going to be floundering for quite awhile. Are you taking any dev courses? Are you doing any coding in the side? If your expectation is to only take match courses and then expect Cerner, or another company, to teach you code, you aren’t going to be happy with the options. You need to come out of schooling with some practical knowledge. Then get a job. Then spend time on https://leetcode.com.
I can and have solved that question if asked. If that’s what you worry about. As I said, I wish to learn how a professional engineer would approach it. I wish you guys take into consideration how nervous a cllg student is going into these interviews. I would request you to go and look at the discuss section on leetcode.com, see how aggressive people are in order to do their research before their interviews. Yet, I apologize if you felt I overstepped their.
Yeah, unfortunately it doesn’t look like it exists anymore. Which is really unfortunate because it was super helpful. Someone asked about it here in the post on October 16th:
https://www.yammer.com/cerner.net/#/threads/inGroup?type=in_group&feedId=17353071
I've been down voted to hell for this, but whatever. you gave a low effort post so what the fuck did you expect? did you not use the search? don't waste out time first, fuckbag.
Good for you! Python is a good start with lots of web based resources. Figure out how to write software and then look at where you want to go. if you want to be a software engineer, then it doesn't matter what language you use, just how you use it. figure out unit testing and object oriented principles. Learn wtf a compiled and interpreted language is and why they are different, cohesion vs coupling, pass by ref vs value, pointers and memory allocation, and how disk writing works. etc, etc. The old shit is in c/c++ or vb, the new shit is in java, javascript, ruby on rails, etc, hell some teams use go. Different teams and areas use different languages, so it doesn't really matter. Figure out where you want to go, figure out what they use, then learn that.
here is a good book https://www.amazon.com/Design-Patterns-Elements-Reusable-Object-Oriented/dp/0201633612
there are lots of others. Most he info is out there free and in the open. Software engineering is not rocket science, even i manage to do it.
don't get someone killed writing bad code, chia suck.