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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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Not a question, but when interviewers constantly Umm before asking questions. Makes me feel like they didn't even have the decency to prepare properly for the interview.

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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 once asked if I had any food allergies.

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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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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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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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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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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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The worst question I had:

Interviewer: Do you have a PC in your house?

Me: ?!!@$$??

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What is my favorite TV show?

Seriously.

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Actually, that is a very good question... It tells the interviewer somehthing about the person being interviewed... There are a lot of psychology models at play here ;) – Arcturus Nov 26 '08 at 12:31
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Two questions I've been asked:

How many piano tuners are there in Cape Town?

How many one hundred rand notes are there at 12pm in a shopping mall?

I got the questions "right" (meaning they agreed with my rationale), but I thought those were terrible questions simply because of the number of variables that could affect the answer. Clearly they didn't give the question much thought themselves, because they kept telling me to ignore certain things when I asked about them. They should state all assumptions up front, rather than let the interviewee waste time travelling dead ends to an almost exponential number of answers.

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"Which was your favorite project?"

I was one of the interviewers on that panel... nearly choked!

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Totally a good question, in my mind. Asking "what are you most proud of?" gives the interviewee a chance to talk about the coolest thing they've done, and it lets the interviewer see that (and/or whether) the candidate ever cares about what they code. – ojrac Oct 29 '08 at 5:02
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This is the first question I always ask. If the person says "I worked on a video game" then I'll ask about the game loop, game state, and character AI. If they say they worked on a security product, I'll ask them about various encryption algorithms. It's a helluva lot better, in my book, to ask questions that will highlight the person's expertise and give them a chance to show their stuff than to ask a bunch of prefab questions off of a notecard. – benjismith Sep 19 at 20:47
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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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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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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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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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