u/Fit-Establishment800

[FOR HIRE] Mobile App Developer | Flutter, Jetpack Compose & React Native | 4 Years Experience | Looking for Full-Time Remote Role

Hi everyone,

I’m a Mobile App Developer with 4 years of experience currently looking for a full-time remote opportunity.

My primary stack is Flutter, but I’m also comfortable working with Jetpack Compose and React Native when needed.

Skills & Experience:

• Flutter app development

• Jetpack Compose

• React Native

• MVVM & MVC architecture

• Firebase integration

• REST APIs

• State management

• UI/UX focused development

• Debugging & performance optimization

I’m a fast learner, strong problem solver, and comfortable adapting to new technologies and workflows quickly.

Open to full-time remote roles only.

If anyone is hiring or knows of opportunities, feel free to DM me. Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Fit-Establishment800 — 23 hours ago

Love coding interview

Hey everyone,

I’m 24 and I have my final live coding interview tomorrow for a remote Junior Android Developer role at an Australian company, and honestly I’m pretty nervous.

My background is mostly in Flutter — I’ve been doing it for around 3.5 years and have deployed 8+ apps on both the Apple App Store and Google Play Store. I’ve also built 2 React Native apps that are currently deployed as well.

Before Flutter, I worked with React.js/web development for around 1–2 years, and I still do occasionally, but mobile development is my main focus now.

For this company, I already passed multiple stages including a CCAT test and a technical quiz, and now this is the final stage: a live coding interview.

The thing is, I never worked deeply with native Android before because most of my experience is cross-platform. Over the last 4 days I’ve been grinding hard learning Jetpack Compose, MVVM, Retrofit, state handling, common syntax, etc.

I understand the concepts, but I’m scared I’ll blank out during the interview or forget syntax under pressure.

One thing I wanted to ask specifically:

If I get stuck on syntax or they ask for something where APIs/backend aren’t available, is it acceptable in live coding interviews to create the project/file structure and explain verbally what I’d normally implement there? Like:

creating repository/viewmodel/api files

explaining how I’d connect Retrofit

mocking data

describing the architecture and flow

Basically focusing more on the thinking/process instead of remembering every exact syntax line by line.

For people who’ve done live coding interviews before:

What should I focus on mentally tonight?

How do you avoid freezing during the interview?

Is it okay to forget syntax occasionally if your logic/problem solving is good?

What do interviewers usually care about most for junior roles?

Any advice would genuinely help a lot.

reddit.com
u/Fit-Establishment800 — 10 days ago

Help I have a Live coding interview

Hey everyone,

I’m 24 and I have my final live coding interview tomorrow for a remote Junior Android Developer role at an Australian company, and honestly I’m pretty nervous.

My background is mostly in Flutter — I’ve been doing it for around 3.5 years and have deployed 8+ apps on both the Apple App Store and Google Play Store. I’ve also built 2 React Native apps that are currently deployed as well.

Before Flutter, I worked with React.js/web development for around 1–2 years, and I still do occasionally, but mobile development is my main focus now.

For this company, I already passed multiple stages including a CCAT test and a technical quiz, and now this is the final stage: a live coding interview.

The thing is, I never worked deeply with native Android before because most of my experience is cross-platform. Over the last 4 days I’ve been grinding hard learning Jetpack Compose, MVVM, Retrofit, state handling, common syntax, etc.

I understand the concepts, but I’m scared I’ll blank out during the interview or forget syntax under pressure.

One thing I wanted to ask specifically:

If I get stuck on syntax or they ask for something where APIs/backend aren’t available, is it acceptable in live coding interviews to create the project/file structure and explain verbally what I’d normally implement there? Like:

* creating repository/viewmodel/api files

* explaining how I’d connect Retrofit

* mocking data

* describing the architecture and flow

Basically focusing more on the thinking/process instead of remembering every exact syntax line by line.

For people who’ve done live coding interviews before:

* What should I focus on mentally tonight?

* How do you avoid freezing during the interview?

* Is it okay to forget syntax occasionally if your logic/problem solving is good?

* What do interviewers usually care about most for junior roles?

Any advice would genuinely help a lot.

reddit.com
u/Fit-Establishment800 — 10 days ago