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hi friends
i am preparing interviews...plz let me knw abt asp.net FAQ's......
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Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 0:10am    
You should not ask questions in such a manner: it's simply rude. Please, full punctuation, correct spelling and no textspeak.
Now, why on Earth anyone could be interested in helping you with those interviews?!
How about doing your job yourself?
--SA
josh-jw 3-Mar-11 0:25am    
ok
Albin Abel 3-Mar-11 0:54am    
Instead of asking a question like this you may browse over these Code Project question answers. Good exercise for you

:doh:

Whatever you have learnt till now, concentrate on that and make sure your basics are strong.
.NET Framework and langauge (C# or VB.NET whatever you started).

Rest, there are no specific topics or questions as such. You sound like a fresher and one just expects freshers to have a good aptitude, be quick learner, shows dedication and confidence.

Further, couple of interviews in itself will tell you what all you should know and you are weak in. :)
 
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Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 13:50pm    
This is the best recommendation so far, my 5. That said, using available interview questions is pretty much pointless, in my opinion; please see my comments to other Answers.
--SA
Sandeep Mewara 3-Mar-11 13:55pm    
Thanks.

Agree, that using available interview questions are pointless for a 'good company/place' to work.

Read all your comments and replied back too. :)
Interview questions referenced by Ramalinga are not too bad.

However, I'm very skeptical about using them, especially if you're the one who is being interviewed. You should just use you knowledge and experience and be yourself. Monkey training cannot replace education and experience; and even little experience can be useful at work if you position yourself rightfully and your attitude is good for work.

The interview styles can differ dramatically. You should never expect you face with something similar to what you've been trained for. So prepare yourself for work, not for interview, and be yourself.

See also the advice by Sandeep, my Answer of choice.

—SA
 
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Sandeep Mewara 3-Mar-11 22:29pm    
5! :)
Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 4-Mar-11 11:39am    
Thank you.
--SA
Why dont you search on the internet or check out msdn?
 
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Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 13:47pm    
Why not, indeed? However, I'm very skeptical about the idea to prepare for the interviews looking at questions like that. When I am interviewing, I always use original questions. Knowledge and experience (even little experience can be usable at work) can not be replaced by monkey training.
--SA
Sandeep Mewara 3-Mar-11 13:51pm    
How to upvote this? :)
Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 14:42pm    
Sorry, to up-vote what? My non-existing Answer? I could add one, whatever you say :-)
--SA
Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 14:48pm    
OK, new Answer is ready...
--SA
 
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Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 13:48pm    
I would not advise to use and (even though your reference looks much better than others). See my comment to Abhinav's Answer.
--SA
Sandeep Mewara 3-Mar-11 13:54pm    
Links/Questions on web are quite basic ones.

I assume everyone after gaining certain level of experience and taking an interview will be able to easily identify/judge if a person is giving replies based on some read/mugged-up stuff or not. About myself, if I get an answer to something, I just put some twists to confirm if candidate actually knew it/worked on it or not and how true he is. :)
Sergey Alexandrovich Kryukov 3-Mar-11 14:50pm    
Anyway, Sandeep probably hits me I could post my Answer, please see.
--SA
Google is enough for you this. Also Sandeep's answer is perfect.

BTW here I have answered a similar question last month.

Provide Interview questions for .NET 4yrs Exp.[^]
 
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