What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-17T08:37:31Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/157361 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer 42 What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Kip 2008-10-01T12:37:21Z 2009-02-03T15:00:10Z <p>What is a good <strong><em>non-programming</em></strong> question to ask a candidate during a job interview?</p> <p>I'll post my two favorites below, but I'd like to hear others.</p> <p><strong>Clarification:</strong> By "non-programming," I mean you are not asking them to solve a problem by writing or describing code.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157363#157363 59 Answer by Kip for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Kip 2008-10-01T12:37:31Z 2008-10-01T12:59:09Z <p>In an industry where some say fifty percent of what you know is obsolete in five years, what do you do to stay current?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157365#157365 18 Answer by Kip for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Kip 2008-10-01T12:37:50Z 2008-10-01T12:58:25Z <p>How much code do you write in your spare time?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157374#157374 4 Answer by Lehane for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Lehane 2008-10-01T12:39:48Z 2008-10-14T09:53:29Z <p>I guess the answer might involve some sort of programming response, but:</p> <p>Give an example of a time when you messed up. What did you learn from that?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157376#157376 1 Answer by Adam Bellaire for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Adam Bellaire 2008-10-01T12:39:52Z 2008-10-01T12:39:52Z <p>Tell me about a situation in the past when you had a serious disagreement with one of your co-workers. How did you deal with that?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157379#157379 52 Answer by Prakash for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Prakash 2008-10-01T12:40:18Z 2008-10-06T03:47:49Z <p>What are you passionate about?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157382#157382 8 Answer by InSciTek Jeff for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? InSciTek Jeff 2008-10-01T12:41:00Z 2008-10-01T12:41:00Z <p>How would describe the difference between a Hub, a Switch, and a Router to your Grandmother? If they do OK there, then ask them to describe the difference to me.</p> <p>The idea of the question is to understand if they can communicate/relate things well and then ultimately if they have a decent notion of these very common devices.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157391#157391 2 Answer by derby for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? derby 2008-10-01T12:42:09Z 2008-10-01T12:42:09Z <p>What websites/blogs do you read on a regular basis. When have you disagreed with a point the blogger was making and why?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157398#157398 6 Answer by Kevin for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Kevin 2008-10-01T12:43:10Z 2008-10-01T12:43:10Z <p>Describe the most challenging situation you have had with a customer and how did you resolve the situation?</p> <p>(or choose 'co-worker' or 'class partner' if you choose)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157402#157402 18 Answer by CJM for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? CJM 2008-10-01T12:43:44Z 2008-10-01T12:43:44Z <p>Since we're so often stereo-typed as socially awkward, uncommunicative loners, I ask questions about their hobbies &amp; interests - can all they do is code, or do they have 'a life'?</p> <p>I also ask more general business questions... do they have a feel for the business of their customers/clients/users?</p> <p>Good coders are two-a-penny. Good developers who can communicate with, understand and empathise with their clients are somewhat less abundant.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157414#157414 33 Answer by Kevin for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Kevin 2008-10-01T12:47:05Z 2008-10-01T12:47:05Z <p>Describe to me <em>(a particular project)</em> you worked on.</p> <p>Preferably it is a project you're not familiar with already. If the interviewee can't describe the project to you, (s)he will likely not be very good at communicating ideas to co-workers, management, or customers.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157415#157415 14 Answer by J-P for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? J-P 2008-10-01T12:47:14Z 2008-10-01T12:47:14Z <p>I think it's important to ask at least one really generic question to give them a bit of space to breath and speak freely. Through this you can find out quite a bit out about them! Oh yes and make them talk about other hobbies and how they got "into" programming! Did they do it before University? What are they most proud of? (programming-wise)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157418#157418 3 Answer by Ilya Kochetov for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Ilya Kochetov 2008-10-01T12:48:21Z 2008-10-01T12:48:21Z <p>I believe the developer aside from being able to code has to be:</p> <ol> <li>Communicable</li> <li>Responsible</li> <li>A team player</li> </ol> <p>Therefore I ask questions around those qualities. For example it's great to see how they talk about their previous job. Who is responsible for that project which did not go that well. How they describe the process of the software development. Etc</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157427#157427 3 Answer by Unsliced for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Unsliced 2008-10-01T12:51:49Z 2008-10-01T12:51:49Z <p>What else is their job going to entail? Try to consider some of the soft, social skills that their role might require (or might one day require) - working as part of the team, helping marketing describe the product, deal with supporting customer, demonstrating with the business development team, team lead, mentoring, handling an HR issue. </p> <p>My favourite one is actually "why are you leaving your current job? why are you here for this one?" You can lead that on to all manner of other places, and you get a decent grip of the morals, ethics and outlook of the candidate. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157444#157444 5 Answer by kitofr for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? kitofr 2008-10-01T12:55:42Z 2008-10-01T12:55:42Z <ol> <li>What books would you recommend for your colleagues?</li> <li>What do you do to keep your body and mind in shape?</li> <li>How much time do you spend on reflecting on other peoples work?</li> </ol> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157466#157466 19 Answer by fiddlesticks for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? fiddlesticks 2008-10-01T13:01:23Z 2008-10-01T13:01:23Z <p>What was the last technical book you read?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157470#157470 2 Answer by fiddlesticks for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? fiddlesticks 2008-10-01T13:02:14Z 2008-10-01T13:02:14Z <p>What was the last programming language you learned? How did this compare to language X?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157542#157542 1 Answer by Vivek for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Vivek 2008-10-01T13:19:54Z 2008-10-01T13:19:54Z <ul> <li>Tell me of one (or more) extraordinary tasks in your previous job that you are proud of? </li> <li>What was the most difficult task you've done till now?</li> <li>How do you keep yourself up-to-date?</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157559#157559 7 Answer by pearcewg for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? pearcewg 2008-10-01T13:22:12Z 2008-10-01T13:22:12Z <p>When you run into a coding challenge that you cannot solve, where do you go for help? Where do you do ongoing watercooler style research for programming projects you are involved with?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157568#157568 5 Answer by fiveprime for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? fiveprime 2008-10-01T13:23:14Z 2008-10-01T13:23:14Z <p>In interviews I always get "Why are you looking to leave your current job?" I usually just say something along the lines of "I want more responsibility and I am looking for better opportunities". I never say anything negative about my current job.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157589#157589 19 Answer by dacracot for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? dacracot 2008-10-01T13:27:24Z 2008-10-01T14:17:37Z <p>You have a bowl with 200 fish in it. Of these fish 99% are not guppies. How many fish should you remove so that 2% of what remains are guppies. Show your work.</p> <p>This is about confusing requirements. It is said this way to change perspectives multiple times during the same question. It is meant to see if they can figure out what is really going on.</p> <p>You would be surprised how many people get it wrong.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157598#157598 -1 Answer by pkaeding for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? pkaeding 2008-10-01T13:27:58Z 2008-10-02T04:16:46Z <p>Do you change your own oil?</p> <p>The idea here is to see if the applicant like to 'get his hands dirty', and figure out problems for himself. Obviously, you are not interviewing a mechanic, but good programmers (and engineer-types in general) seem to like to figure out how things work.</p> <p>Edit: Wow, people really seem to react strongly to this. I thought it was a clever question when I was first asked it in an interview. So, someone suggested, "Tell me about haw you get your hands dirty." I'd like to get more specific. How about, tell me about the first time you took apart a VCR? Does that work? I think its too broad to just ask how people like to dive into things.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157616#157616 6 Answer by vIceBerg for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? vIceBerg 2008-10-01T13:32:20Z 2008-10-01T13:32:20Z <p>Do you know www.stackoverflow.com?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157623#157623 11 Answer by Rinat Abdullin for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Rinat Abdullin 2008-10-01T13:33:25Z 2008-10-01T13:33:25Z <p>I've got a couple from my experience of doing team-building</p> <p><strong>What are your career plans for the next couple of years?</strong><br /> Tells about the things that are important to the developer. Helping him out with these things could motivate him beyond what salary could do.</p> <p><strong>How often do you make mistakes?</strong><br /> Ability to learn is proportional to the amount of mistakes made and learned from.</p> <p><strong>How would you approach the task of... [put some new tech thingie that he clearly does not know, i.e.: add circuit breaker for our DAL]</strong><br /> Developer's flow of thoughts will tell, how he normally would deal with new problem, if challenged with one (development is about unexpected challenges after all).</p> <p>There is no best answer here. Some tend to ask about time they have and the other task constraints (showing management qualities of team-leader), some ask for tech details (good specialists) and some tend to surprise by going straight to the point and showing more knowledge and experience than you would expect (must-hire-now)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157645#157645 5 Answer by Jeff for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Jeff 2008-10-01T13:39:31Z 2008-10-01T13:39:31Z <p><strong>What's the most interesting project you've ever worked on?</strong> If they remember their past projects, they're more likely to remember their future projects. The better their memory, the better they'll be at maintaining their code (fewer 'why did I do THAT' statements). Plus, you'll get an idea about how passionate they are about coding: do they immediately start telling you about project x, or do they stare at you like you're speaking Greek?</p> <p><strong>What do you do in your free time?</strong> People who code in their free time are more likely to code well, but that's just based on personal experience, I can't back it up.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157709#157709 0 Answer by rshimoda for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? rshimoda 2008-10-01T13:55:37Z 2008-10-01T13:55:37Z <p>I always give some office-like scenarios I've been through such as dealing with non-technical people, dealing with hardware / hosting problems and I analyse if the person I'm interviewing would do sometihng better that I did in the past. </p> <p>If so, he/she is almost hired. I guess the bottom line is that programming is easier to learn than having a good relationship with others or knowing how to deal with stressful situations</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157729#157729 0 Answer by WACM161 for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? WACM161 2008-10-01T14:00:19Z 2008-10-01T14:00:19Z <p>Getting someone to tell you what they think are their biggest weaknesses or areas they need to improve in/on</p> <p>My answer is always that I procrastinate, as I am doing now answering this question!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157749#157749 39 Answer by McKenzieG1 for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? McKenzieG1 2008-10-01T14:04:42Z 2008-10-01T14:04:42Z <p><strong>Why did you leave your previous job?</strong> </p> <p>(Or "why do you want to leave?", if they are currently employed.)</p> <p>As an interviewer, I want to get at the story behind the resume. If I see someone who has hopped around from job to job, I want to figure out why. The most common explanation is that the candidate talks a good enough game to get hired, but is a poor employee - either not very competent or has other issues (hard to get along with, poor attitude, bad work habits). If they don't fit that profile, then I want to figure that out.</p> <p>On the other end of a spectrum, if someone has been in a previous job for a long time that is usually a good sign, but not always - it could be that they were in a seriously dysfunctional organization and were good at playing politics, or worked for an employer that was very slow to clear out dead wood.</p> <p>Unless you are such a superstar employer (via pay, prestige, or both) that you can lure good people away from your competition, your best shot at making really good developer hires is to snap up talented people who have been let go through no fault of their own (usually due to a business failure, takeover or big reorganization), or who are looking to make a big career transition. The tricky part is separating these few precious kernels of wheat from the oceans of chaff.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157751#157751 0 Answer by Eric Ness for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Eric Ness 2008-10-01T14:04:55Z 2008-10-01T14:04:55Z <p>How do you handle it when a customer/co-worker asks for something that is technically impossible?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157752#157752 12 Answer by MrZebra for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? MrZebra 2008-10-01T14:05:02Z 2008-10-01T14:05:02Z <p>Ask them <strong>"Do you know what a 'kickback' is?"</strong>, then wink a couple of times. ;)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157768#157768 1 Answer by catfood for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? catfood 2008-10-01T14:07:41Z 2008-10-01T14:07:41Z <p>What do you like to read?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157804#157804 0 Answer by MrZebra for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? MrZebra 2008-10-01T14:14:15Z 2008-10-01T14:14:15Z <p>I'd ask them what they do in their spare time. If they say "dunno really... play some games or something", then they may not be very motivated. If, on the other hoof, they launch into an enthusiastic description of their latest project or adventure, then they are more likely to be committed / motivated.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157900#157900 0 Answer by Andy Lester for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Andy Lester 2008-10-01T14:30:42Z 2008-10-01T14:30:42Z <ul> <li>Tell me about the biggest mistake you ever made in a project.</li> <li>... and what changed as a result?</li> <li>What was the last business book you read?</li> <li>What do you know about our industry?</li> <li>Tell me about a project that didn't work out so well</li> <li>What have you done in the past few years that you're most proud of?</li> <li>What makes a good team?</li> <li>What do you want to be remembered for at your last job?</li> <li>I'm working on training &amp; books budget for next year. If I were to hire you, what should I allow for?</li> <li>What haven't I asked you yet that I should know about?</li> <li>Why do you want this job?</li> <li>From what we've talked about in this interview, what are the two biggest challenges you'd face when starting here?</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/157970#157970 0 Answer by lajos for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? lajos 2008-10-01T14:43:00Z 2008-10-01T14:43:00Z <p>What's your favorite movie? I ask this question anytime I interview something. There's no wrong answer and it's a great conversation starter.</p> <p>Or if you are in New England, you can always go: "So how'bout them redsox?"</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158028#158028 0 Answer by Justin Lawrence for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Justin Lawrence 2008-10-01T14:53:58Z 2008-10-01T14:53:58Z <p><strong>what do you do in your spare time?</strong></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158039#158039 1 Answer by Adam for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Adam 2008-10-01T14:56:05Z 2008-10-01T14:56:05Z <p><strong>How did you get started programming</strong></p> <p>I tend to lean towards people who either picked it up for fun, or some other personal motive other than <em>Hey I can use a computer, I want to make games, I'll learn programming, but oh gee, I'm stuck in IT</em></p> <p><strong>How long would it take you to pick up [Language X]</strong></p> <p>Glancing at their resume I'll come up with a language they don't have any experience in, and see how comfortable they are with programming basics. An wise developer would understand that transitioning languages is largely related to syntax and function names. Yes, doing it properly means fully understanding the range of the language.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158101#158101 0 Answer by JaredPar for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? JaredPar 2008-10-01T15:06:45Z 2008-10-01T15:06:45Z <p>"Describe project X and your role in it." Project X is whatever appears to be the most substantial project on their resume. This question serves a few purposes for my interview loops (detailed below)</p> <ol> <li>Breaks the ice. I find people are most comfortable when you start off by discussing something they are confident about</li> <li>First order lie detector. You will occassionally get someone who lies about projects on their resume and simply doesn't do any research whatsoever. I'd like to say differently but this question has identified too many falsifications in my loop</li> <li>Allows you to ask very targeted deep questions. It's not always reasonable to have a pre-determined deep question in a specific technology area. Too much of a chance you will pick a very small area the person hasn't worked with before. This is not an indication of their skill but of experience (normally you hire on skill). But in this case it's a project you know they have experience with. If you get a resume a day or two in advance (and you should) it only takes 30 minutes of googling to get enough understanding of a area to ask one or two deep questions. You don't have to be an expert to determine if they know what they're talking about.</li></ol> <p>This is all based onthe assumption that people will put projects they are proud of and contributed to at the top of their resume. I'm not concerned with people who don't</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158178#158178 3 Answer by jmanning2k for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? jmanning2k 2008-10-01T15:22:20Z 2008-10-01T15:22:20Z <p>What sort of computer setup do you run at home? OS, distro, networking setup, etc.</p> <p>Most geeks are happy to describe their systems, and it tells me a lot about their enthusiasm for computers and their technical know-how.</p> <p>Bonus points for multiple computers, PVR, SAN, security (wifi), etc. (Not just because it's cool, but because this experience is relevant to most programming jobs.)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158185#158185 1 Answer by ScottCher for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? ScottCher 2008-10-01T15:23:04Z 2008-10-01T16:47:09Z <p>I like asking logic questions that require the candidate to demonstrate they can think through a problem in a logical progression. These questions don't have right or wrong answers - there is a continuum of answers.</p> <p>For instance, the classic is you have a balance scale able to tell which of two objects is heavier. You have 9 objects of the same size and shape. One of the objects is heavier than the others - by comparing the weights of the object using the balance scale, how few steps can you use to determine which of the objects is heavier.</p> <p>Its a good test - the candidate might come to a quick conclusion that uses more steps than needed (this tells you they are more concerned about schedule than getting the best answer), or they can stubbornly continue to work the problem until they feel they've reach the absolute lowest number of steps (which tells you they will probably choose perfection over timeliness).</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158305#158305 0 Answer by dicroce for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? dicroce 2008-10-01T15:47:25Z 2008-10-01T15:47:25Z <p>I always ask what non work projects they have recently worked on. Programmers who love their work always have something to talk about. Those who are just in it for the money usually do not.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158454#158454 -1 Answer by johnfrancis for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? johnfrancis 2008-10-01T16:19:17Z 2008-10-01T16:19:17Z <ol> <li><p>Why do you want to work here? - This can usually tell you whether they know anything about your company and whether they can communicate properly.</p></li> <li><p>What do you do when your away from the computer. - Good for telling if they ever get off a computer and also help open up a bit.</p></li> </ol> <p>I would use a technical test to gauge their technical skills and use the interview time to determine if they worth having in the office.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158599#158599 0 Answer by Victor for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Victor 2008-10-01T16:49:01Z 2008-10-01T16:49:01Z <p>How did you clean your room when you were a child?</p> <p>This often matches up with how they currently approach tasks. Not that any answer is particularly bad (such as "I didn't" or "I only did it when I was told" or "I just threw everything under the bed"). We work with some great developers who gave answers like these. But it does seem funny to see that it still shows through in how they get things done.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158625#158625 0 Answer by J.J. for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? J.J. 2008-10-01T16:56:24Z 2008-10-01T16:56:24Z <p>Why should we hire you? Why do you want to work for us?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158714#158714 3 Answer by Tom for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Tom 2008-10-01T17:21:17Z 2008-10-01T17:21:17Z <p>Tell me about a time when did something wrong. After they give the example, ask how they went about fixing the problem and what they learned from it.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/158852#158852 1 Answer by Chris Markle for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Chris Markle 2008-10-01T17:48:08Z 2008-10-01T17:48:08Z <p>Two things:</p> <p>I. I like to ask people (especially those with some experience in industry) to consider the dimensions of: 1) "those people that they've worked FOR" (aka bosses / managers / chain-of-command / etc.); and 2) "those people that they've worked WITH" (aka peers / co-workers / etc.) and then tell me about positive and negative experiences that they've had in both dimensions.</p> <p>I'm looking here to see what kind of people they like (and dislike) working with, what kind of environmental factors influence them, etc. And I can pattern-match against our own operation to see if their comments raise issues or concerns.</p> <p>I find it to be a thought-provoking question that tends to get people giving a pretty liberal amount of information.</p> <p>II. I like to ask them to tell me what I'd see in performance reviews that they've had in the past listed as positive attributes and also listed as negative or things that need to be worked on. </p> <p>The point here is to try to get the candidate to fess up to things are are areas in which they think themselves that they need to work on.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159013#159013 0 Answer by David for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? David 2008-10-01T18:29:37Z 2008-10-01T18:29:37Z <p>What do you read to keep up on the latest developments in software engineering?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159104#159104 0 Answer by koschi for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? koschi 2008-10-01T18:44:45Z 2008-10-01T18:44:45Z <p>"Mention three common design patterns and explain them!"</p> <p>People who know design patterns are one stage further than the "I've learned C++ in a 3-weeks-course" guys.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159158#159158 0 Answer by Michael Dorfman for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Michael Dorfman 2008-10-01T18:58:42Z 2008-10-01T18:58:42Z <p>Tell me about yourself.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159200#159200 4 Answer by twokats for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? twokats 2008-10-01T19:07:09Z 2008-10-01T19:07:09Z <p>My all-time favorite questions are ones that allow me to assess <em>how</em> the applicant approaches solving a problem. (This is somewhat of a variation on <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000073.html" rel="nofollow">Joel's Guerilla Guide</a> "Impossible Question") It gives me insight into how they think (big-picture vs. detail oriented) and what resources they would use to find information they need. Typically I use variation on the following</p> <p>Tell me how you would determine: - how many gas stations are needed in a 1-square mile area of downtown L.A. - how many ATMs you would place in the 3 largest Las Vegas casinos. - the fastest 5 routes from Point A to Point B.</p> <p>My variation on this is to tell them up front there is no wrong answer to the question. And along the way, I ask some clarifying questions to give me more information, based on their responses. I found I get more useful information about how the person approaches problem solving, their perspective of new problems they face, and how they go about learning things needed to get the job done.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159228#159228 0 Answer by Giao for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Giao 2008-10-01T19:11:54Z 2008-10-01T19:11:54Z <p>Tell me about a piece of software that you wrote that you personally use.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159357#159357 3 Answer by tessein for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? tessein 2008-10-01T19:42:00Z 2008-10-01T19:42:00Z <p>Is there a question I should have asked you, but did not?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159430#159430 0 Answer by snowgoon for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? snowgoon 2008-10-01T19:57:35Z 2008-10-01T19:57:35Z <p>See how they handle deliberately awkward and challenging issues (which helps see how they may react in the workplace).</p> <p>"If I told you this interview wasn't going well, what would you do?"</p> <p>Or pull in a technical writer and ask them to explain a technical concept to them. That way you can see how good they are at communicating concepts to a less technical co-worker.</p> <p>(disclaimer: I'm a technical writer! That's TECHNICAL writer, not technical WRITER!)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159449#159449 0 Answer by Marc Hughes for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Marc Hughes 2008-10-01T20:02:25Z 2008-10-01T20:02:25Z <p>My favorite...</p> <p>"What's the smartest thing you've done in the past year."</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159733#159733 -1 Answer by mikedopp for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? mikedopp 2008-10-01T21:03:28Z 2008-10-01T21:03:28Z <p>Why are man hole covers round? and how many man hole covers are there in the continental united states.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159904#159904 0 Answer by antonio for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? antonio 2008-10-01T21:48:29Z 2008-10-01T21:48:29Z <p>I like to know what type of developer I have in front of me. I always admire those that can go beyond their own way of looking at a problem. Understanding how others try to solve a problem is many times needed and usually hard. </p> <p>I found the following question to be quite revealing, regardless of the actual answer (beware, people try to play games trying to look what they are not, but is normally easy to tell by the examples they give):</p> <p>What is harder, write code or read code. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/159922#159922 0 Answer by timday for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? timday 2008-10-01T21:51:44Z 2008-10-01T21:51:44Z <p>"Tell us about the coolest thing you ever worked on" - the response will give you a good idea of their level of enthusiasm/passion for the field and should let you see the candidate's technical communication skills at their best. We like people who can use diagrams effectively, so provide a whiteboard or at least lots of paper&amp;pens.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/160159#160159 1 Answer by Raz for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Raz 2008-10-01T23:00:10Z 2008-10-01T23:00:10Z <p>I believe in designing the interview questions for the specific position instead of using predefined off the shelf ones. </p> <ul> <li>I spend time before the interview <strong>defining the job requirements</strong> and exact qualities I want to test for. </li> <li>I <strong>read through the candidate resume</strong> looking for events in his past where those qualities might have played an active rule. </li> <li>I then create a list of questions or tasks that would enable me to evaluate those qualities. </li> <li>I try to kind and avoid using "gotcha" questions. I prefer playing games with the applicants. This is more pleasant, and puts the candidate off guard, letting me see more of his abilities, as well as things he would normally try to hide. </li> </ul> <p>Some examples:</p> <ul> <li><p><strong>historical questions:</strong> For a job in a big established company a candidate would need to adjust to company policies and strict codes. Talking about candidate time in high school (which is usually more rebellious years) can give hints toward his attitude to authority. Army service on his resume can be another good point of reference. </p></li> <li><p><strong>Designed Task:</strong> A position I we were hiring for required a fast learner. In the interview process I required the candidates to write a simple program. 4 candidates did well, writing some 20 lines of c++ code. During the interview I showed the candidates 2 lines of code that achieve the same task, using STL, and asked each to describe what the code does. I started explaining the different STL constructs until the candidate would recognize that the code is equivalent to the sample he just programmed. The best candidate I interviewed got the idea in less then 2 minutes and had fun doing it. The others took around 10 minutes. the worst ones never got it. </p></li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/161317#161317 1 Answer by garrow for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? garrow 2008-10-02T08:15:36Z 2008-10-02T08:15:36Z <p>Do you code <strong>better</strong> when buzzing on <strong>Mountain Dew</strong>?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/161335#161335 1 Answer by jimoc for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? jimoc 2008-10-02T08:24:50Z 2008-10-02T08:24:50Z <p>I see from your CV that you have always worked alone/unsupervised/in a group. How do you think you would cope if you were in an environment where you work in a group/heavily supervised/alone? (delete as applicable) Why are you switching to a different type of working environment, do you think your work is suffering because of your current environment?</p> <p>The first choise was asked of me when coming from a background of being sole developer in 3 companies for 10 years and then moving to a company with 40+ developers over 10 programming groups.</p> <p>Very relevent question, and I'm now happy in my new job with a large group of programmers :)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/161359#161359 0 Answer by jimoc for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? jimoc 2008-10-02T08:32:56Z 2008-10-02T08:32:56Z <p>If they are coming from a large company that would possibly have their own hardware/software support for the company pcs and networks, ask them if they have ever gotten into trouble with the IT department for fixing their own PC problems without raising a helpdesk issue. </p> <p>If they have then it shows that they enjoy messing about with things and solving their own issues rather then relying on others to provide them with solutions to the simpler problems.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/162645#162645 2 Answer by pookleblinky for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? pookleblinky 2008-10-02T14:37:14Z 2008-10-02T14:37:14Z <p>Ask if they are familiar with the "coding couch"</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/162699#162699 0 Answer by Ilya Komakhin for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Ilya Komakhin 2008-10-02T14:45:56Z 2008-10-02T14:45:56Z <p><strong>What do you want to do in our company/project?</strong></p> <p>Question is good both in abstract form and after I have described what we are doing here and which are options. Gives me a hint what would motivate candidate and in which way. And, I could be sure that this one would be answered honestly. Also, gives a candidate a chance to speak to me in a free form.</p> <p>Variation, "What do you want to do after 6/12/24 months"</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/163224#163224 0 Answer by David Aldridge for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? David Aldridge 2008-10-02T16:09:33Z 2008-10-02T16:09:33Z <p>"Are you familiar with the employment laws that restrict the types on non-work related question I am allowed to ask you?"</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/163293#163293 1 Answer by neonski for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? neonski 2008-10-02T16:21:29Z 2008-10-02T16:21:29Z <p>In the same vein as the 'manhole covers' question I've had the following question asked in an interview:</p> <blockquote> <p>How many gas stations are there in the United States?</p> </blockquote> <p>I think the goal is to see if the applicant is able to reason, using very little input and come up with a plausible way of solving a problem. Obviously no one knows the answer to that question exactly but you can come up with a guesstimate and describe how you got to it.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/165600#165600 1 Answer by White Vans Inc for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? White Vans Inc 2008-10-03T03:36:56Z 2008-10-03T03:36:56Z <p>How do you plan on bringing value to this company?</p> <p>Now given the circumstances of the interview you may not always be able to be this direct. However, giving a candidate an opportunity to tell you exactly how they could impact your bottom line is the whole point of the interview. Why waste the interviewee's and your time posing nonsensical riddles that have nothing to do with the job they would be doing? Would you decide not to hire them if they could clearly explain how they could produce double their salary in a year if they couldn't tell you how many gas stations there are in the US?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/165614#165614 -1 Answer by Hamish Smith for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Hamish Smith 2008-10-03T03:46:09Z 2008-10-03T03:46:09Z <p>What do you know about us? </p> <p>Companies mostly have websites and there is information out there about the firm. How much research have they done before turning up? Are they motivated to work for this company or is this one of a bunch of form letters thrown out to whatever openings they could find? Might not be make or break (not going to reject someone based on not knowing all about the firm they applied to) but if you have to choose between closely matched candidates, which would you rather hire? The candidate who saw the job add or the candidate that bothered to research the company?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/165636#165636 3 Answer by mmann2943 for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? mmann2943 2008-10-03T03:55:35Z 2008-10-03T03:55:35Z <p>What gets you excited about coming to work in the morning, and what makes you dread coming to work in the morning.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/165740#165740 -1 Answer by Scott Saad for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Scott Saad 2008-10-03T04:56:44Z 2008-10-03T04:56:44Z <p>The one I always liked is...</p> <blockquote> <h3>How would you go about building me a house?</h3> </blockquote> <p>Many times the answer starts off with things like it <em>a strong foundation is important</em>. The problems is, how can you build my house if we haven't even determined what I want (i.e. number of bedrooms and bathrooms, kitchen size, one story or two, basement, etc)?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/168296#168296 0 Answer by Ricardo Villamil for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Ricardo Villamil 2008-10-03T18:44:26Z 2008-10-03T18:44:26Z <p>What are your goals? I like people who are goal oriented, people who are, are almost guaranteed to be passionate about something. Then you expect to hear that their goals are inline with the job you are hiring them for. This applies to any job, not just programming.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/169652#169652 0 Answer by Reid Wilson for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Reid Wilson 2008-10-04T03:08:23Z 2008-10-04T03:08:23Z <p>What's the coolest thing you've done in the past five years, your biggest braggable?</p> <ul> <li><p>Lets you get a sense of the the scope of their accomplishments</p></li> <li><p>Lets you see them get excited about something (hopefully!)</p></li> <li><p>Might let you get to see a side of them you haven't seen yet, as their answer might not have anything to do with IT</p></li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/169669#169669 1 Answer by KevBurnsJr for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? KevBurnsJr 2008-10-04T03:16:55Z 2008-10-04T03:16:55Z <p><a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/GuerrillaInterviewing3.html" rel="nofollow">How many gas stations are there in Los Angeles ?</a></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/169974#169974 1 Answer by OnesimusUnbound for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? OnesimusUnbound 2008-10-04T08:23:37Z 2008-10-04T09:58:24Z <ol> <li>Did you failed? If you did, could you describe it.</li> <li>If you did, how you managed it?</li> <li>How did you move on from your failure?</li> </ol> <p>Those who failed and managed to move on are good candidates. At least, they are honest and they can handle failures, and they those who are resilient.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/173198#173198 0 Answer by akvalley for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? akvalley 2008-10-06T04:24:02Z 2008-10-06T04:24:02Z <p>What do <strong>other</strong> people find <strong>irritating</strong> about <strong>you</strong>?</p> <p>I've used this question in interviews for two purposes:</p> <p>(1) Determine if a candidate is receptive to open criticism (positive or negative) and see how they respond to the criticism</p> <p>(2) Determine if a candidate will answer questions that may expose them or put them at risk.</p> <p>When candidates "spin" the answer to this question to make it positive, I give them a lower score. For instance, "my coworkers always say that I irritate them by being a hard worker or always on task..." In my opinion, this is not answering the question.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/175839#175839 0 Answer by Sandman for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Sandman 2008-10-06T19:37:51Z 2008-12-05T12:30:15Z <p>I'd ask the candidates if they have an account here on Stackoverflow. If they do, I'd ask them to tell me their nicknames on SO. I would then check out their profile, the questions they posted and the answers they gave to other people's questions. I think that would give me a fairly good knowledge of the candidates' abilities ;-).</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/179551#179551 0 Answer by Cameron Pope for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Cameron Pope 2008-10-07T17:37:25Z 2008-10-07T17:37:25Z <p><em>Tell me about the toughest bug you've ever fixed.</em> I like this question because it forces the interviewee to talk in depth about detailed technical topics and make them understandable. I want to know that someone I hire will be able to describe a difficult bug, why it's broken and how they will fix it. Also you can tell how in-the-trenches someone has been.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/179588#179588 1 Answer by Nick for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Nick 2008-10-07T17:43:34Z 2008-10-07T17:43:34Z <p>I like to ask this:</p> <p>"When reviewing someone else's code, what is your biggest pet pieve?"</p> <p>If you get answers like, formatting, or not following coding conventions, that is a red flag. I really like the people who talk about lack of exception handling, saw tooth code, long run on functions, etc.</p> <p>The other thing I like to ask is dependent on how long they've been programming. If I see someone who has made a transition from one major language/framework to another... for instance from VB6 to VB.NET, I like to ask how they made the jump (books, classes, etc) and also to describe any hurdles they had to overcome when doing it.</p> <p>Some people answer that question in a way that makes clear that even though they are writing VB.NET code, they still use VB6 methodologies, and they don't follow good OO practices. I stay clear from those people.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/179646#179646 1 Answer by ChalkTrauma for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? ChalkTrauma 2008-10-07T17:57:58Z 2008-10-07T17:57:58Z <p>My favorite question is <strong><em>"What makes a good application/program?"</em></strong>, which doesn't have an exact right answer, but I've always been surprised how many candidates lock up when they get asked that because they are more concerned about appeasing the reviewer then actually thinking about the question and giving their opinion. It ends up revealing a lot..</p> <p>I think I only got, 'Meets or exceeds the clients requirements and is maintainable' once.. and a lot of panicked 'it's fast?' answers...</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/179703#179703 0 Answer by crashmstr for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? crashmstr 2008-10-07T18:15:04Z 2008-10-07T18:15:04Z <p>I've used this at least once: <b>"Emacs or vi?"</b></p> <p>I don't really care what the answer is, but a blank stare would not be reassuring!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/197360#197360 1 Answer by RoadWarrior for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? RoadWarrior 2008-10-13T12:10:13Z 2008-10-13T12:10:13Z <p>What was your biggest development screw-up, and what insight did you gain from it? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/216750#216750 0 Answer by mark for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? mark 2008-10-19T18:06:25Z 2008-10-19T18:06:25Z <p>How would your fellow programmers describe you?</p> <p>I use this as it is quite open-ended but often makes the candidate think about how they are perceived by their team.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/228155#228155 3 Answer by Rob Allen for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Rob Allen 2008-10-23T01:12:29Z 2008-10-23T01:12:29Z <p>"You've told us why we should hire you. Why do you want to work with us?" </p> <p>One guy actually had to look at his notes to see where he was interviewing before answering. If they're excited to be a part of your company, they will have a good answer (and will know the name of your company without checking their notes).</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/277705#277705 2 Answer by Assaf for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Assaf 2008-11-10T11:58:12Z 2008-11-10T11:58:12Z <p>What blogs do you read?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/277763#277763 0 Answer by David Robbins for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? David Robbins 2008-11-10T12:37:37Z 2008-11-10T12:37:37Z <p>What steps did you take when the business unit / customers of your project insisted you reduce time spent on requirements gathering, and how did you explain to them why they were missing certain features or had bugs that were the result of the inappropriate requirements analysis?</p> <p>We have all faced this situation, and if the candidate says that this has "never happened to me" then you need to move on to the next candidate.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/345486#345486 1 Answer by Ben Griswold for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Ben Griswold 2008-12-05T23:17:23Z 2008-12-05T23:17:23Z <p>After completing your first coding assignment, your technical lead says, ‘The code looks good, but please replace [X] with [Y].’ You go back to your desk and you give the solution a lot of thought and you decide that your original solution – [X] – is the right approach. How do you go about convincing your lead that he should retract his request and you should move forward with the [X] implementation? </p> <p>Wait for answer... </p> <p>What if, after your attempt(s) to convince your lead, he responses with, ‘Sorry, Newbie. I don’t care. Do it my way.’ What do you do?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/410266#410266 3 Answer by Evgeny for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? Evgeny 2009-01-04T01:50:50Z 2009-01-04T01:50:50Z <p>Do you read <strong>The Daily WTF</strong>?</p> <p>Have you ever had your work published there?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/489638#489638 0 Answer by David for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? David 2009-01-28T22:12:39Z 2009-01-28T22:12:39Z <p>Ask some design questions: eg How would you design a dayplanner.</p> <p>Personally, I like this question "How would you proceed a project if you are given a non-specific requirement?"</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157361/whats-a-good-non-programming-interview-question-when-hiring-a-programmer/507411#507411 0 Answer by toshi for What's a good non-programming interview question when hiring a programmer? toshi 2009-02-03T15:00:10Z 2009-02-03T15:00:10Z <p>I ask the interviewee to describe one of their favorite technologies, frameworks, product. I ask them to describe the motivation of the technology, its architecture and theoritical background and the ideas behind the design.</p> <p>For example, if the interviewee had experience in Spring Framework, questions would be:</p> <p>-How the Spring implements AOP behind the scene?</p> <p>-What is the motivation of IoC (or DI)? What is the benefit? What problems it solved?</p> <p>After a dozen of interviews with potential programmers, I found the above question effective to evaluate not only the interviewee's ability to communicate efficiently but to learn and apply the technology with depth of understanding, which indicate how well he/she makes design decisions.</p> <p>I seek programmers who can make sensible design decisions with supporting rationales. I do not prefer programmers who are only interested in make the code work and only knows how to use the API of the technologies. Such programmers are using technologies blindly and they are likely to make bad design decisions.</p>