Thursday, July 3, 2025

How to Remove Duplicates from Array without Using Java Collection API? Example

This is a coding question recently asked to one of my readers in a Java Technical interview on investment bank. The question was to remove duplicates from an integer array without using any collection API classes like Set, HashSet, TreeSet or LinkedHashSet, which can make this task trivial. In general, if you need to do this for any project work, I suggest better using the Set interface, particularly LinkedHashSet, because that also keeps the order on which elements are inserted into Set. Why Set? because it doesn't allow duplicates and if you insert duplicate the add() method of Set interface will return false. 

How to find smallest number from int array in Java, Python, JavaScript and Golang? [Solved]

This is the second part on this array interview question. In the first part, I have showed you how to find the largest element in array, and in this part, you will learn how to find the smallest number from an integer array. We will solve this problem on Java programming language but you are free to solve in any other programming language like Python or JavaScript. Most interviewer doesn't care much about which programming language you are solving the question, if you can provide working solution. This one is also a popular Java programming exercise which is taught in school and colleges and give in homework to teach programming to kids and engineering graduates. 

How to Find Multiple Missing Integers in Given Array of Numbers with Duplicates in Java?

Hello guys, It's been a long time since I have discussed any coding or algorithm interview questions, so I thought to revisit one of the most popular array-based coding problems of finding missing numbers in a given array of integers. You might have heard or seen this problem before on your programming job interviews and you might already know how to solve this problem. But, there are a lot of different versions of this problem with increasing difficulty levels which interviewers normally use to confuse candidates and further test their ability to adapt to frequent changes, which is key to surviving in the ever-changing software development world.