Just my experience. I selected “react-native” and this is what I got.1) React Native hasn't been JavaScript-first in years. Most modern React Native codebases use TypeScript by default. Even legacy JS-based projects have long since adopted ES6 modules, not CommonJS, which was deprecated ages ago. The test felt like it was pulled from a tutorial circa 2014. The tech stack was outdated by nearly a decade and not representative of how React Native is built or written today.2) I literally had to use Chrome DevTools to debug your own test harness. The embedded console crashed multiple times, and I had to patch around it just to get a working environment. That shouldn't be necessary during a skills assessment.3) Despite completing the task correctly—and ahead of time—the system flagged the result as invalid or non-compliant, with zero explanation. I wish I’d recorded the session, because from my side, everything was above board.4) Even if the test environment had worked, the content itself was entry-level and overly focused on syntax minutiae. It’s like asking a senior software engineer to prove their experience by solving a freshman-year programming quiz from memory, without documentation, in a broken IDE. Yes, we can do it. But why would we? It’s not a valid measure of real-world capability.
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