Problem database last updated: June 20, 2025

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Thomson Reuters Coding Interview Questions

3 problems · 2 Easy, 1 Medium, 0 Hard · Ranked #322 of 458

Difficulty breakdown

2 Easy

67% · avg 23%

1 Medium

33% · avg 59%

0 Hard

0% · avg 18%

Top topics

string
100%3.6x
sliding-window
33.3%7.1x
greedy
33.3%3.9x
hash-table
33.3%1.5x
math
33.3%2.6x

Interview profile

Based on 3 reported problems, Thomson Reuters interviews are easier than average - only 0% Hard compared to 18% across all companies.

Compared to the industry average, Thomson Reuters puts unusual emphasis on string (100% of problems, 3.6x the industry average). If you're short on time, these are the categories to double down on.

The most common topics are string (100%), sliding-window (33.3%), greedy (33.3%), hash-table (33.3%). Problems below are sorted by frequency, the ones at the top are asked most often.

All 3 problems

Longest Substring Of All Vowels in Order

Solve

A string is considered beautiful if it satisfies the following conditions:

MediumVery Likely
stringsliding-window

Minimum Time to Type Word Using Special Typewriter

Solve

There is a special typewriter with lowercase English letters 'a' to 'z' arranged in a circle with a pointer. A character can only be typed if the pointer is poi...

EasyVery Likely
stringgreedy

Roman to Integer

Solve

Roman numerals are represented by seven different symbols: I, V, X, L, C, D and M.

EasyLikely
hash-tablemathstring

How often are these problems asked?

Frequency scores are based on crowdsourced interview reports. A higher score means the problem has been reported more often in recent Thomson Reuters interviews.

Very Likely

75-100%

Likely

50-74%

Sometimes

25-49%

Rare

0-24%

Preparing for your Thomson Reuters coding interview

Thomson Reuters interviews focus heavily on string, sliding-window, greedy problems. If you're short on time, these are the categories to prioritize. The problems on this page are sorted by frequency, so start from the top and work your way down.

Beyond solving problems, practice explaining your approach. Thomson Reuters interviewers care about your thought process - how you break down a problem, consider edge cases, and evaluate tradeoffs between solutions. A clean O(n) solution you can explain clearly beats an O(log n) solution you can't articulate.

Looking for more companies? Browse all 458 companies in our directory, or sharpen your fundamentals with our free data structure visualizers and AI-powered DSA tutor.

Frequently Asked Questions

What coding problems does Thomson Reuters ask in interviews?add

Thomson Reuters has been reported to ask 3 distinct coding problems. The most common topics are string, sliding-window, greedy. 2 are Easy difficulty, 1 are Medium, and 0 are Hard. Problems are sorted by frequency - the ones at the top are asked most often.

How hard are Thomson Reuters coding interviews?add

Based on 3 reported problems, Thomson Reuters interviews are easier than average - only 0% Hard compared to 18% across all companies. 33% of questions are Medium difficulty. Focus on the high-frequency Medium problems first, then work through the Hard ones.

How should I prepare for a Thomson Reuters coding interview?add

Start with the highest-frequency problems listed on this page. Focus on the core topics: string, sliding-window, greedy. Practice solving them under time pressure and explaining your approach out loud. Mock interviews with AI can simulate the real experience.

Other companies to explore

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