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What is the absolutely worst job interview question that you've been asked?
What did you answer? Did you get the job?

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78 Answers

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They asked me if I smoked pot in Amsterdam, and yes I got the job.

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You said "yes", right? Right?? I know I wouldn't hire anyone who'd been to Amsterdam and didn't smoke pot while there. – Sam Wessel Sep 22 '08 at 22:08
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Was the next question "Did you inhale?"? – Joe Skora Oct 13 '08 at 21:06
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I am a developer working in Amsterdam (yes, indeed right now) but I have never used any pot in Amsterdam. – tuinstoel Feb 24 at 16:40
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Nope, I just ate the brownies. :P – dotjoe Feb 26 at 20:55
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@lock, it's a good answer. I think that this is a poor interview question because your employer isn't entitled to pry into your personal life. What you do on your time is your business. – Nik Reiman Apr 6 at 18:35
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If there was a box on the floor right here [pointing to the ground next to himself] and I told you to pick it up and set it on this desk, what would you do?

I said, "Stand up, walk to the box, bend at the knees and pick up the box and put it on the desk".

It was the last question he asked, and after my answer he immediately said "Thanks, we'll be in touch". No joke, 6 months later I was offered the job. Declined, of course...

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The worst question I had:

Interviewer: Do you have a PC in your house?

Me: ?!!@$$??

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How many brothers and sisters do you have?

Why don't you leave this position for someone more backward/deserving/needy?

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Not a question, but at an interview I was asked: "Stand up and cluck like a chicken".

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+1,:D .. Did you actually did that ? – Debanjan Dec 10 at 19:32
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Interviewer: Where do you see yourself in the next five years?

Me: Not working here.

My arrogance wasn't taken lightly.

I get what the interviewer wanted to know. I just felt that he didn't have any real questions and that that one was a waste of both our time.

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I was being interviewed for a startup doing web development and there were two interviewers, though one of them looked distracted most of the time.

Interviewer: So, tell us a little about yourself.

Me: (about 3 minutes of brief intro).

awkward silence

Me: (another minute)

awkward silence

Interviewer: Could you tell us a little more?

Me: (thinking wtf... Is there a right answer that I'm supposed to arrive at?)


Later on in the interview I had the opportunity to ask some questions.

Me: So what kind of site are you planning on building?

Interviewer: Well, we will be building sites for clients.

Me: Oh? So what kind of companies are you expecting to work with?

Interviewer: Various...

Me: uh..... well are you thinking of large companies or small companies?

Interviewer: Various...

Me: Well, how many developers are you planning on hiring:

Interviewer: Around 5.


In the end I left thinking it would be a horrible job and stayed where I was. I was also pretty sure they weren't going to offer me the job but a few months later they called me out of the blue to offer the position. I declined. They called again the next day. I declined again.

I just couldn't see myself working in a place that had virtually no business plan beyond dispatching developers to other companies willy-nilly.

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"Can you do visual basics?" - Note: The pluralisation is intentional.

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Do you like to cuss a lot? Because we cuss a lot.

I don't usually cuss, and I can imagine an employer not wanting someone to cuss. But requiring someone to cuss? Seriously?

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"What are your strengths and weaknesses?"

I listed "bad attitude" and "problems with authority" as strengths and got the job. It was that kind of place. :)

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Some years ago, in one of my firsts job interviews.

"What do you need to make your job?"

I was a little confused, so I said "I write code, so I can work with an old tv and a spectrum"

then she clarify the question: "I mean, what things of your workplace make you feel confortable and make you a productive worker?"

then i said "eeehhh of course... eeeeh A window and a cactus..."

and I was working there for more than a year.

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This is not really a question, it was more of a requirement. I was looking for a job a few months ago and I stumbled at this:

We need a programmer with blah blah (regular requirements) and a great sense of style.

What did they mean? Not sure, but they sure made it sound like a good fashion style or something like that. Of course, I didn't call them =P

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"Please tell me all the design patterns that you know, and what they are used for"

All of them? Really?

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went for an interview with a large services company - and when I was there I explained that I had dyslexia.

The question was - "How do you think that will affect the revenue of my team?"

I replied = with the not at all and then asked never to be called again.

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I was given one line of very condensed C++ code and the question was, does this compile?

IMO, it alwasys depends on the compiler, if something compiles or not.

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"My code is always right! It MUST be the compilers fault!" – Rob Jun 1 at 12:50
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How many ways can you measure a building with a barometer?

My answers were things like 1) use the barometer as a measuring stick, 2) throw the barometer off the building and count how long it takes to hit the ground, and 3) sell the barometer and use the money to buy a measuring stick.

I got a job offer but didn't take it (thankfully, since the company was out of business within a couple of years).

I hate these types of questions because it's hard to see how they do a good job measuring programming skills. I also hate the brain teaser questions and questions like "how much water flows past the St. Louis Arch everyday" or "how much gas is consumed in Texas everyday".

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Niels Bohr test =) – Carl Bergquist Jun 1 at 11:44
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Q: If you could be any animal, what would it be? A: Giraffe (it just popped into my head, but I am just 5 foot 9)

I didn't get the job but this answer did not rule me out and apparently was comparatively normal compared to some they received, e.g. snake.

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"If your life philosophy were a bumper sticker, what would it say?"

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null reference exception – Matthew Whited May 9 at 4:38
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Invalid Argument – Boo May 20 at 20:34
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I am an unhandled exception! – Arcturus Aug 19 at 10:38
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Which one between batman and spider-man is the best superhero?

Spend 10-15 minutes discussing the answer. Got the job, still there after 5 years!

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Once on the interview, after some casual and tech. conversation, the guy asked me how much I can drink in one evening. It seemed to be very important, not to him (he didn't drink) but for the job. It turned out that the job was in Ireland, and the guy managing the local team there failed completely because the team was regularly going to the pubs after work.. that guy didn't survive the project and team members didn't like him.

I turned down that offer.. :)

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If there was a problem, what steps would you take to solve it?

Naturally, I said "it depends... is it an IT problem? A car accident? A drinking problem? ... etc."

The interviewer refused to narrow the scope and left it a "general problem", whatever the hell that is.

I could tell he was not happy with my "general answer" of "try to solve it, if I can't solve it on my own find someone or some others who can."

Really, how are you supposed to even answer this?

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"I'd analyze the specifics of the problem, formulate a series of steps to solve it, and then execute them?" – Sukasa May 27 at 15:43
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If there was a problem, yo -- I'll solve it! (even dun dun dun da da dun dun - under pressure) – Christopher Galpin Jun 5 at 14:31
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Someone once asked my wife "How many fingers do you have?" during a phone interview.

At a retail sales job, my manager asked a guy we were interviewing, "When do you quit taking your medication?" The guy looked dumbfounded for a moment, looked down and then answered, "Oh, about 2 weeks ago."

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"Do you want a baby?"

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A: "I just met you. Ask me again on our 3rd date." – JohnFx Apr 27 at 23:36
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I was once asked if I had any food allergies.

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"Write an algorithm that, given an integer, produces the next highest integer with the same number of the same digits".

I immediately gave him the "brute force" answer, but it turns out that for some integers, there is no answer. I was not only expected to know this, I was expected to figure out how to write the algorithm to recognize when there was no answer.

I was told I should apply for a job commensurate with my programming ability.

Strangely, I haven't needed to be up on properties of positional number systems in over 30 years...

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@Liran: There are cases where there is no "next highest". The given number may already be the highest of all integers that are permutations of the set of digits. 987654321 is an example. 987654312 has 987654321 as next highest. – John Saunders May 7 at 10:05
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Getting asked a specific nitty-gritty question off the top of your head. Like some nuance in a language that the interviewer is proficient at...

The bad part is, I've listened to top-tier corporations think this is what makes a good programmer. :/

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I was asked a given some long math equation and asked what is represented. I replied "I have no idea what that represents, I am assuming its something relative to your industry."

I got the job.

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Inquiring minds want to know. – Adam Backstrom May 27 at 16:30
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the one where they are asking you a legit question but they accidently spit when they talk and a little piece of spit lands on your face. should you wipe it off or what? I DONT KNOW IT S JUST SO AWKWARD!!!!!!!!

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I've had quite a few unconventional ones:

  • Who's hotter: Jessica Alba or Scarlett Johansson? [I said Scarlett.]
  • Apples or oranges? ["Tangerines."]
  • How quickly can you tie shoelaces? [Never figured out where this one was going.]
  • Are you ambidextrous? ["Yes, for some things." The interview looked disappointed when I said that I was.]
  • Do you ever wake up in the morning, look in the mirror, and say "f--- my life?" ["... No, not really." I think he was having a bad day.]
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Heh. +1 for tangerines. – Joe White Apr 17 at 15:37
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+1 for scarlett – knittl Oct 1 at 11:57
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I don't have a particular one, but for me, questions that the interviewer can answer by reading my resume shouldn't be asked. For example, a couple of weeks ago I had an interview with an Indian guy, and here's a part of it:

Interviewer: what do you know about a data type called varchar2?

Me: do you mean varchar(2)-pronounced varchar of 2?

Interviewer: No, varchar2

Me: No, never heard of it. He looked at me, handed me my resume saying "Alright, I'm finished, you can take this".

Later when I searched I found out that varchar2 is a data type only for Oracle's P-SQL, and I never mentioned anything about Oracle in my resume.

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