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Following this question, what is the worst interview answer you've gotten from an interviewee in a technical interview?

locked by Jeff Atwood Jun 22 at 8:47

closed as not a real question by George Stocker, Rich B, Shog9, John Saunders, sth Jun 6 at 1:38

102 Answers

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vote up 32 vote down

The worst ones aren't where they say anything in particular: they just don't want to answer. They'd rather give up on a question than explain what their thinking is or to ask for clarifications if they're not understanding. It's a total waste of everyone's time.

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Modding up, since humor wasn't an element of the question. – sylvarking Oct 28 '08 at 22:51
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Modding up for reasons explained by erickson. – Erik Oct 28 '08 at 23:48
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Not modding. For no particular reason. – bmdhacks Oct 30 '08 at 21:23
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Modding sideways just to make the rest of you wonder how I did it. – Kyralessa Nov 4 '08 at 23:26
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Modding up.... then down.... then all around for reasons explained by Fry... let the infinite recursion and thus stack overflow begin! Muah ha ha ha!! – Fry Nov 24 '08 at 4:09
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Q: What is a Linked List?

A: I don't really remember my data structures from college. Could you ask me something about the Java collection classes instead, as I know those really well?

(For the record, this was a fellow interviewing for a job at another company (leaving). He got the job there even after that answer, with a substantial raise. Yes, the Java collections classes contain a LinkedList implementation... sigh.)

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In his defence. I've met a few programmers who've got 10+ years, but don't know about these. STL has vectors, MFC has CArray.. Python has no pointers (sort of).. If you're implementing a linked list id bet you're reinventing. If asked this question as a SR programmer, I'd be put off. – baash05 Nov 25 '08 at 15:03
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@baash05: I wouldn't expect a good programmer to want to implement a linked list. They should want to use the built in implementation in whatever framework they're in. But they should definitely know what it is and how they are implemented...otherwise they're not going to be making good decisions. – Beska Feb 16 at 18:45
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@Beska: Exactly... if someone calls themself an expert on Java collections classes, but they don't know about java.util.LinkedList, they've missed something very significant. :) – jsight Feb 17 at 16:16
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@baash05: anyone purporting to be an experienced developer acting "put off" by a question about data structures would be promptly shown the door. As Beska said - it's the under-the-hood understanding that's important, not a desire to reinvent the wheel. Plus - there are times when your preferred framework simply isn't an option. What happens to you as a C++ developer when your company forbids the use of open-source and won't shell out for Microsoft products? You write your own linked list.... – Ben Collins Jun 3 at 20:13
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Knowing that more than much students don't know how to write a fizzbuzz, your question was way too hard ! -_- – Nicolas Dorier Aug 3 at 9:05
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Q: What is the extent of your experience in programming?

A: I know HTML and I'll learn the rest as I go along.

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"... not here you won't" – nickf Oct 29 '08 at 7:27
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No, I said programming. – Bill the Lizard Nov 5 '08 at 15:33
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oh snap @ Bill the Lizard! I spent my first 3 months at my current job "Migrating and translating Web Pages" I didn't know too much html when I started, so when I finally learned more, my thought was "I thought I was hired as a programmer?" – Fry Nov 24 '08 at 4:12
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I cringe every time I hear someone say that they're an "HTML programmer." – rmz Feb 17 at 1:41
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Haha. I also dabble in CSS 2.1 once in a while ;) – Dmitri Farkov May 20 at 18:29
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My favorite was a candidate that told me object oriented programming was "Where you drag the components from the toolbox in Visual Studio onto the form"

I cut the interview pretty short after that and reviewed our pre-screening process.

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@Power-coder: What?! You mean to say this is not actually what VB is? ;) – sundar Nov 4 '08 at 17:54
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From the .com heyday...

Q: What is ASP and why do you like it?

A: I like it because it's processed on the client side.

Needless to say, the interview ended there (and that was only the second or third question).

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vote up 105 vote down

Q: "Can you explain how AJAX works?"

A: "It's a new version of web pages that doesn't need HTML"

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Oh my, I'd hire him just to entertain the rest of the staff. – dreamlax Oct 29 '08 at 3:01
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@Lomaxx .. you hired him !! No, I mean , come on!! Seriously?? – 7alwagy May 21 at 10:43
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We asked people to rate themselves from 1-5 on certain topics with 5 being "Guru Level". A candidate rated himself a 5 on network programming. When asked what the difference between TCP and UDP was, he said "I dunno". We realized that anyone who rate himself/herself a 5 was an immediate rejection. They were most likely liars, unaware of their own limitations or were too good (i.e., expensive) for us.

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Perhaps you should find out whether asking people to rate themselves in the first place is effective? – Rahul Sep 21 '08 at 20:38
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I think it can be effective. Self-rating and then testing weeds out a certain degree of dishonesty, IMO. – jsight Sep 21 '08 at 20:43
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The comment about "too good" /"too expensive" is telling. I don't mean to be offensive, but this mindset is horrific. – tim Oct 28 '08 at 23:25
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Tim -- it's not meant to be offensive. The reality is that by our definition of a "5" we could simply not afford the person. I WISH we could. Having great people is the best way to work. Hopefully you can get someone on the way up. – dp Oct 28 '08 at 23:38
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The comment about "too good" /"too expensive" is telling. I don't mean to be offensive, but this mindset is horrific. -- Seconded. – Dmitri Nesteruk Jan 8 at 12:56
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The worst one I've had was when a candidate had WCF on his CV. I quizzed him about it and he said "Oh I haven't used it but someone at work recommended it and I might be getting to go on a course"!

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vote up 157 vote down

"Will you write out a little function for me on the whiteboard here?"

"No."

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I had one of those. He said "I might not be able to do small things, but I can do large things." – kdgregory Dec 15 '08 at 13:30
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In all honesty, I make more syntax errors writing than I do when typing. Not sure why. – Jonathan Sampson Feb 16 at 18:35
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If you can't write some code in one of my interviews, I'll be walking you to the door. Feel uncomfortable in front of others? No thanks, I need people who are willing to communicate. Don't want to show off your coding skills? Then you've just confirmed that you're going in the circular file. :) – Robert P Feb 18 at 0:54
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I love hardcore interviews. I'd rather have questions that make me think than ones I can answer off the top of my head without thinking. I'm more likely to be employed in an environment I enjoy if it's stretching me than if I can code everything in my sleep. Besides, even if I don't get the job, I'll go away with a bunch of questions I can spend some time figuring out answers for. – BenAlabaster May 20 at 19:45
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vote up 41 vote down

My answer, for the record... The worst interviewee answer was from a CS major who had written pretty much every buzzword in Electrical Engineering on his resume. It turned out he didn't know what any of them meant. When I asked about his undergrad project (a SQL server) all he could tell me was, "you give it a query and it gives you a result. My partner did the internals"

Naturally, he didn't get the job...

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But you sent a headhunter out to find his partner! – Greg D Oct 17 '08 at 13:15
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Why are we still hiring EE's for software development? – ajmastrean Feb 3 at 15:53
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Sounds like he'd be a great manager. He managed to graduate without doing any of the work! – IainMH Feb 6 at 10:08
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"I think that's a really dumb question - why would that matter?"

Yes, that's a real response.

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at this point I think everyone is curious: what was the answer? – JohnIdol Nov 6 '08 at 23:04
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Actually, I'm curious what the question was – Kevin Nov 7 '08 at 2:34
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I don't think this as a bad interviewee answer. Depending on the question, this could have been a better answer than most. – ldigas Feb 16 at 18:06
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hm, i have been asked a really stupid question once: "how do you feel being one of the few women in software development?".....WTF? That is a really dumb question and why would that matter? – gnomixa Feb 16 at 20:31
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Regardless of the question, telling the interviewer he asked a dumb question is a bad idea. – Andy Lester May 20 at 15:52
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vote up 11 vote down

"What's a variable?"

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I saw one too!!! And I don't lie... Please believe me... :( – Andrei Rinea Jan 25 at 0:51
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I couldn't tell what type it was. But I picked it up and saw it was an activeXY. – baash05 Feb 28 at 12:56
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A classmate once asked me this very question 2 minutes before a Java programming exam... Only thing i could do was stare at him... – Jeroen Dierckx Jun 3 at 10:14
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