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Jun 7, 2019 at 14:21 comment added dmoore1181 Another big thing is to just be honest. If I am interviewing a candidate for a developer position and ask a question I am much happier if they tell me that they don't know the answer than if they lie and try to make up an answer. Especially where skills are concerned any lies will be evident within the first couple weeks on the job, so they are not worth it.
Jun 6, 2019 at 13:27 comment added dan.m was user2321368 I'd just answer to arrange your interviews such that you interview to your dream jobs after you have a few "practice" interviews first. It take one or two of them to warm up - and you'll learn about what to study based on the kinds of questions you are asked.
Jun 6, 2019 at 7:49 comment added Justin Both this and @twyxz answer are spot on, plus also looking at open source projects and I would additionally suggest getting comfortable with Git. Frameworks and libraries might have changed slightly, but I don't think any of your skillset has changed. Some minor updates to tools, maybe. Depends on how long you spent on maternity, of course.
Jun 6, 2019 at 7:14 history answered Sourav Ghosh CC BY-SA 4.0