Two Pointer Pattern: Coding Interview Guide
When you see a sorted array or a linked list problem with pair/triplet semantics, two pointers is almost always the right tool. Used in 7+ canonical interview problems and appears regularly in onsite loops at 5 top companies.
When To Use the Two Pointer Pattern
Pattern recognition is the meta-skill in coding interviews. Two Pointer is the right tool in the following situations, and learning to spot them in under 30 seconds is how strong candidates avoid the brute-force trap.
- Array is sorted (or you can sort it cheaply)
- Finding a pair, triplet, or subarray with a target property
- Removing duplicates in place
- Palindrome verification
- Linked list cycle or middle-node detection (variant: fast/slow)
If you see two or more of these signals in the problem statement, default to two pointer as your first approach. If the brute-force pass doesn't fit, this is usually the next stop.
Template Code
Memorize this skeleton. In real interviews you should be able to type it from muscle memory in under two minutes, then specialize the inner logic for the specific problem. The bug surface in two pointer is usually in the inner conditional, not the outer loop, so getting the boilerplate right protects you from off-by-one mistakes.
def two_pointer(arr, target):
l, r = 0, len(arr) - 1
while l < r:
s = arr[l] + arr[r]
if s == target:
return [l, r]
elif s < target:
l += 1
else:
r -= 1
return [-1, -1]
This template is the Python form. The same shape translates directly to Java, C++, Go, and JavaScript; only the container types change. Practicing the template in your strongest language first builds the right mental model before you port it.
Time and Space Complexity
- Time: O(n) single pass after sort
- Space: O(1) extra
State the complexity out loud at the start of every problem you solve with this pattern. Interviewers grade on whether you reason about complexity before writing code, not after.
Classic Problems To Practice
Drill these in order. The first 2-3 establish the template, the middle ones add a twist (duplicates, multiple constraints, edge cases), and the last ones combine two pointer with a second pattern. Working all of them is roughly 8-12 hours of focused practice.
- Two Sum II (sorted input)
- 3Sum
- Container With Most Water
- Trapping Rain Water
- Remove Duplicates from Sorted Array
- Valid Palindrome
- Sort Colors (Dutch National Flag)
After finishing the list, do a timed mock with one problem from this pattern picked at random. If you can solve it in under 25 minutes with no hints and a clean complexity analysis, you have internalized the pattern.
Companies That Ask the Two Pointer Pattern
Based on LeakCode's aggregated interview reports, two pointer questions appear regularly in coding rounds at the following companies. Click any to see their full question pool.
Patterns are not company-specific in theory but in practice some companies lean harder than others. Meta and Amazon are known for two-pointer and sliding-window heavy phone screens; Google leans graph and DP; Stripe favors design-leaning patterns. Calibrate your prep mix by checking the recent reports for your target company before drilling generic lists.
Common Mistakes
These are the failure modes that show up most in LeakCode reports from candidates who got "no hire" or "weak hire" on rounds where this pattern was expected.
- Forgetting to handle the equality case when both pointers point to the target
- Off-by-one when right pointer is len(arr) vs len(arr)-1
- Mutating pointers in both branches when only one should move
- Using two-pointer on unsorted input without sorting first
Read each mistake, then write the template again from scratch making sure you handle the corresponding edge case. The mistakes are easier to internalize when you have made them once in a low-stakes context than when you discover them in a real interview.
How To Practice This Pattern
The fastest way to internalize two pointer is deliberate practice with constraint, not raw volume. Three sessions of 90 minutes each beat one session of 6 hours because spaced practice consolidates the pattern recognition wiring.
Session 1: read the template, draw the state diagram on paper, then solve the first 3 classic problems with the template visible. Goal is template fluency, not problem solving.
Session 2: solve problems 4-7 without looking at the template. If you blank, look, then close and restart from scratch. Goal is unaided recall of the template under no time pressure.
Session 3: timed mock with the remaining problems on a 25-minute clock each. Talk through complexity out loud as you would in an interview. Goal is performance under interview tempo. After this session, the pattern should feel obvious when you see a matching problem.
Practice This Pattern on Real Interview Reports
LeakCode has thousands of reports tagged by pattern, company, and round. Filter for reports mentioning two pointer at your target company to see exactly how the pattern appeared in recent loops.