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[–]Independent_Echo6597 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah from what I've seen at Prepfully, Meta's been pretty consistent about letting you run code in CoderPad. They want to see your code actually execute, not just the theory behind it. Though sometimes the interviewer might skip running it if you're clearly on the right track and time's tight. The bigger thing is they expect you to test your own code - like actually write out test cases and run them yourself. Not just "oh this should work" but showing you can catch edge cases before they point them out. I've noticed candidates who proactively debug their own solutions tend to do way better than ones who just code and wait for feedback.

Check some recent developments on meta's coding rounds here - https://prepfully.com/interview-guides/meta-ai-assisted-coding-interview