Connect. ◾️See when your fellow contributors are online and which repos, branches and files they are working on. Automated. ◾️Connect your issue tracker to share what issue you are working on based on your current branch.
Live. ◾️ See others' local changes in the gutter of your editor and get notified the moment you make a conflicting change. Patch. ◾️View diffs of other contributors' local files and cherry‑pick individual lines, files or complete working copies.
Codeshare. ◾️Make voice and video calls directly from your editor and codeshare to see each others cursors.
Agnostic. ◾️Edit together simultaneously, interoperable between VS Code and all JetBrains IDEs.
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Interview Cake might be a bit more popular than GitLive. We know about 3 links to it since March 2021 and only 3 links to GitLive. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
There are plenty of tools that have started popping up to try and improve this situation since last year. CodeTogether, Duckly, Code With Me, and GitLive to name a few. Source: over 2 years ago
GitLive. Extend your IDE with the real-time features remote development teams need to work together effectively. See what your teammates are working on and get notified of merge conflicts before you commit. Make video calls and code together live, VS Code to JetBrains. [GITLIVE]. - Source: dev.to / about 3 years ago
This is in no way an answer to your question but perhaps you would find git.live's merge conflict detection feature useful to potentially avoid the conflicts in the first place 😅. Source: about 3 years ago
Here's another site that helped me when I was starting out: interviewcake.com (I think I had a free trial or something). Source: over 2 years ago
Interviewcake.com has some great explanations and practice problems for leetcode style problems. I got the year subscription on sale. Source: almost 3 years ago
I also used to do the exact same thing during a technical interview. Seems like an obvious answer, but I've always noticed the more prior practice I have, the less nervous I get. I think a good part of the mental fatigue comes from nerves. And those nerves were amplified when I encountered a problem for which I didn't immediately have a general grasp of the solution. But as soon as I got more consistent with my... Source: almost 3 years ago
CodeStream - CodeStream helps development teams resolve issues faster, and improve code quality by streamlining code reviews inside your IDE
AlgoExpert.io - A better way to prep for tech interviews
CodeTogether - Live share IDEs and coding sessions. See changes in real time.
Daily Coding Problem - Get exceptionally good at coding interviews
Visual Studio Live Share - Real-time collaborative development
CodingInterview - CodingInterview offers essential information to help you conquer programming interviews.