bing interview questions
Top bing frequently asked interview questions
I remember there was a version of Google or Bing that you could input a search query, hit enter, and get the link for that, and send it to someone, and they could watch the query type itself out and search for the query?
If anyone could remind me what that webapp was, that would be great! Thanks!
Source: (StackOverflow)
I need to understand, from a users point of view (layman terms), what is it that makes search engines rank web apps above others when returning search results.
Source: (StackOverflow)
I want to remove results from a query in bing. But when I use the NOT, which I have read is to remove searches. But whenever I do use NOT it just includes the keyword I am trying to remove.
For example, when I type keyword1 and NOT keyword2.Results starting showing up for keyword2. NOT doesn't seem very effective.
Source: (StackOverflow)
After I typed "a" into Bing, a list of terms that I had recently queried in Google appeared in purple.

How does Bing know what terms I recently Googled?
Source: (StackOverflow)
Is there in Bing (www.bing.com) anythink like Google searching extensions?
For example:
inurl:bing site:stackoverflow.com
will restrict searching through Google only for this (awesome, btw) website and only for pages containing word bing in url address.
Source: (StackOverflow)
Bing News (www.bing.com/news) defaults to a location that is nowhere near where I live. Changing my location using the site seems to store the information in a cookie. This is less than ideal. Can anyone suggest an alternative way to get Bing News to display news for the city I live in?
Source: (StackOverflow)
When I search "@test"
in Google, the results contain exact @test
phrase (which is right) but in Bing it ignores @
. Is there anyway to change Bing's behaviour?
Source: (StackOverflow)
I found this today on Bing:
Clicking leads you to bingsearch://app/search?q=ghhfgfgdgfdgh&FORM=HDRW8P
, which is not any known or sensible protocol and consequently displays as a dead link. What is this?
Source: (StackOverflow)