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CodeAlpha interview questions
based on 6 ratings - Updated May 27, 2026
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Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at CodeAlpha as 100% positive with a difficulty rating score of 1 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for Python Developer Intern and rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Python Developer Intern and roles were rated as the easiest.
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The application process is pretty simple and straightforward. There is no formal interview at all — you just submit your application and, if accepted, you receive an offer letter. I get the sense they are mainly marketing themselves and building a large pool of candidates rather than running a selective process. This can be a positive thing if you are early in your career or looking for your first practical experience, because it gives you an easy way to get something on your résumé and start working on real tasks without going through a stressful interview loop.
I applied online. I interviewed at CodeAlpha (Bangalore Rural) in Jul 2025
Interview
gone smoothly with good and efficient manner they mainly ask about the dsa and oops concept and they slowly move to the projects that mentioned in your resume after that hr round round will be conducted
I applied online. The process took 1 day. I interviewed at CodeAlpha in Jan 2024
Interview
When you apply for the CodeAlpha Web Developer Internship, the process is pretty straightforward. First, you just fill out the form or apply through their portal. If your resume shows some basic web dev skills—like HTML, CSS, JavaScript, or maybe a small project—you’ll usually get shortlisted.
After that, they might give you a short online test. Nothing too crazy—it’s usually MCQs and small coding tasks. For example, questions like “How do you center a div in CSS?” or “Write a simple JavaScript function to validate an email”. Sometimes they’ll ask you to build a mini feature, like a to-do app or a form with validation.
If you pass that, you may get a quick interview. It’s not super intense; they mostly ask about your projects, why you want the internship, and if you know the basics of front-end frameworks or APIs. For example, they might say: “Tell me about a website you built—what challenges did you face and how did you fix them?” They’re more interested in how you think and learn rather than super advanced stuff.
Finally, if you’re selected, they send you an offer letter and you start the internship. It’s usually remote, 1–3 months long, and you’ll be assigned tasks like building modules, fixing bugs, or improving UI features.
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