Technical interview questions and answers are critical when preparing for an AJAX Interview because companies want to evaluate your understanding of asynchronous communication, XMLHttpRequest, JSON handling, DOM manipulation, and interactive web applications. AJAX is considered a core concept in modern web development, and many companies include it as part of their technical rounds for frontend and full-stack developer roles. Organizations like TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Cognizant, and Capgemini frequently ask AJAX-related questions to check whether candidates can build dynamic, responsive, and efficient web pages. This guide includes commonly asked AJAX interview questions with clear explanations to help freshers and job seekers strengthen their web development fundamentals. These questions will improve your preparation for placement interviews, coding rounds, and real-time project discussions.
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91. Is it possible to have different access modifiers on the get/set methods of a property?
No. The access modifier on a property applies to both its get and set accessors. What you need to do if you want them to be different is make the property read-only (by only providing a get accessor) and create a private/internal set method that is separate from the property.
92. Is it possible to have a static indexer in C#?
No. Static indexers are not allowed in C#.
93. Does C# support #define for defining global constants?
No. If you want to get something that works like the following C code:
#define A 1
use the following C# code: class MyConstants
{
public const int A = 1;
}
Then you use MyConstants.A where you would otherwise use the A macro.
Using MyConstants.A has the same generated code as using the literal 1.
94. Does C# support templates?
No. However, there are plans for C# to support a type of template known as a generic. These generic types have similar syntax but are instantiated at run time as opposed to compile time. You can read more about them here.
95. Does C# support parameterized properties?
No. C# does, however, support the concept of an indexer from language spec. An indexer is a member that enables an object to be indexed in the same way as an array. Whereas properties enable field-like access, indexers enable array-like access. As an example, consider the Stack class presented earlier. The designer of this class may want to expose array-like access so that it is possible to inspect or alter the items on the stack without performing unnecessary Push and Pop operations. That is, S
96. Does C# support C type macros?
No. C# does not have macros. Keep in mind that what some of the predefined C macros (for example, __LINE__ and __FILE__) give you can also be found in .NET classes like System.Diagnostics (for example, StackTrace and StackFrame), but they'll only work on debug builds.
97. Can you store multiple data types in System.Array?
No.
98. Is it possible to inline assembly or IL in C# code?
No.
99. Can you declare the override method static while the original method is non-static?
No, you cannot, the signature of the virtual method must remain the same, only the keyword virtual is changed to keyword override