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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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I was looking for good all-round Linux engineers at one point. One guy came in, we made nice, then I cut to the chase and asked him to describe his Linux experience. He gave me an unknowing look and I showed him the bits on his CV where it said X years of Linux programming experience. He looked a bit puzzled and then said "Oh, you know what? My brother must have written that in to get me more job interviews."

He was a bit surprised that I lost complete interest in resuming the interview.

None of the above is in any way a fabrication. I was even nice enough to suggest some community resources if he really wanted to learn something and to call me again in 6 months.

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After asking a question I happen to really like, and have asked a number of times, after puzzling on it for several minutes without making real headway, a senior candidate busts out with:

"I think I'm bored with this question."

And as it turns out, I was bored with his answer, so we were in complete agreement. It's a good thing you can only work on the problems that interest you when you work at a startup.

Needless to say, not someone we hired.

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I'm dying to know what the question was! – Dan Feb 8 at 9:14
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Question to a slightly gray-haired interviewee:

"So what keeps you still interested in programming?"

"Programming? Umm.. I am here for the sales manager position"

This happened to me as I was interviewing candidates for a junior developer position and didn't know that the sales dep. also was interviewing so I grabbed the first candidate I saw. Yeah yeah I was new at it. :)

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-1 OP was looking for "worst interviewee answer", but IMO that was the best possible interviewee answer at that point, to stop you when you didn't know what you were doing. – abababa22 May 21 at 10:12
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for me it was the worst inverviewee answer :) – Anders Karlsson May 22 at 2:03
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I once had the following conversation in an interview:

Q: So have you ever written a sort?

A: No

Q: Ok so how would you put a list of integers in order?

A (on whiteboard):
for (i = 0; i < MAXINT; i++)
for (j = 0; j < sizeof(array); j++)
push sorted_array, i;

Q: Uh.. Ok can you see any way to make this more efficient?

A: No

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I don't understand why MAXINT is involved. – moffdub May 20 at 22:34
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ummmm, does that create an array that just cycles through integers up to sizeof(array) and then repeat itself MAXINT times? – David Berger Jun 3 at 20:12
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@David Berger: yes, and in the most efficient possible manner. – harpo Jun 3 at 20:37
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I had a candidate tell me he had been programming in C# since 1999.

(To all you Gen-Y'ers - version one was released in 2001)

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He has flux capacitor. – Arnis L. Jun 23 at 13:36
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I had a candidate who used to work for Microsoft. He didn't say if he'd been programming in C# since 1999, but if he had said I would have believed him. – Windows programmer Aug 3 at 8:53
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We once had a candidate who had failed to answer any of our questions convincingly through the interview. At the end, we gave him a last chance to shine and asked if there was some part of his CV we had overlooked, anything he was expert on that we hadn't touched upon.

He thought for a minute and answered that what he was really good at was "thinking outside of the box". Naturally, we then followed up by asking for an example of where he had thought laterally to solve a problem, but unfortunately he couldn't think of one.

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Me: "What are some of the benefits of using stored procedures?"

Interviewee: "I'd rather do it in code"

Me: "Ok...but if you were going to use them what might the benefits be?"

Interviewee: pause..."SQL Injection...they're the best way to do SQL Injection."

Me: google.com "laughter methods restraint"

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Stored procedures don't, in and of themselves, prevent SQL injection. A paramaterized query... – Brian Feb 3 at 16:03
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Absolutely, parameterized queries are the most secure, but can we agree that stored procedures are not the optimal means to achieve sql injection against a target? – cmsjr Feb 3 at 16:24
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Me: I see on your resume that you have been using NUnit for nearly two years.

Interviewee: Yes, I even mentored a number of developers at my last job and introduced them to unit testing.

Me: Oh, excellent. Can you name some of the asserts that NUnit provides?

Interviewee: Uh. Hm... I don't remember.

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Me: "You say you have 2 years experience in Java?"

Interviewee: "Yes that's right"

Me: "Can you explain to me the concept of object inheritance?"

Interviewee: pauses "Well it wasn't exactly Java..."

She didn't actually know the first thing about java.

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I asked someone who listed himself as "expert" in OO-design on his CV:

Me: What is the dependency inversion principle?

Him: The depen... Come again?

Me: The dependency inversion principle.

Him: Is that where you can run multiple versions of the same assembly by putting it in the GAC?

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That's an awesome interview question! – Cameron MacFarland Mar 31 at 13:19
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Actually not a bad guess for someone who really has no idea. – harpo Jun 3 at 20:34
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We'd reached the "what can I tell you about us?" point of an already shaky interview and he asked "Will you hire my girlfriend when I start?"

This from a guy interviewing at KPMG Consulting for a customer-facing position in flip-flops, dirty t-shirt and corduroys with what looked like battery acid holes in them.

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showing up for a "customer-facing position in flip-flops, dirty t-shirt" was only "shaky"??!?!? – Fowl Jun 5 at 11:47
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Two good ones, different people:

Q (Me): So what was your first programming language?
A: (In a very, very confident manner) Oh, HTML!

Q (Me): So I noticed you wrote JavaScript as a skill on your resume. Can you tell me what this means?: document.getElementById("someId").
A: Oh see that's JAVA. I don't know JAVA.

Both interviews pretty much ended after that.

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vote up 7 vote down

I once referred a friend of mine to a position where he was being interviewed by someone on our team. Unfortunately, the interviewer didn't really know much about about web developing even though she was employed as a web developer. I told my friend about this and in the interview he was asked about AJAX and if he'd used it.

He said "yeah, I've used it, what about you guys?", she says oh yeah we have and he inquires as to what they've done with it, to see if she even knows what AJAX is. She says "oh you know, sort tables and stuff" heh. A bit odd since he was the interviewee, but funny nonetheless.

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vote up 6 vote down

Oh, this is a good one.

Recently I was interviewing people for a '.NET Architect' position. One of the candidates told me that he had worked briefly with VB.NET before 'specializing' in C#.

So I asked:

Can you name some C# feature that doesn't exist in VB.NET?

His answer:

.... uhmm, I really don't remember...

wait! yes I remember there was one....

but I think they fixed it already.

EDIT: Thanks everybody for the comments, but you are missing the point: the WTF is that the guy didn't even know what the meaning of 'feature' was. He thought I was asking about something that was wrong or missing in C#, like a bug or something. I would not think it is a bad answer if he had just said 'I don't know'.

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I've got one. VB.NET doesn't support emoticons at the end of code blocks such as "winky" ;} – JohnFx Feb 16 at 20:48
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Q: So, why are you motivated to work with us?

R: Because it is close to my home !

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Good answer, Also means he theoretically will be more punctual and less stressed from a commute. Local employees are better than ones further out (at least on that score) – Damien Jan 8 '09 at 13:36
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I can understand that someone wants to work close to home when he/she has children. – tuinstoel Feb 3 at 16:20
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Good answer, from my view. I've always liked being close to home (you can bike to work). – ldigas Feb 16 at 18:13
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what's wrong with this answer? i bet you wanted to hear "cause you are the bestest s/w shop in the whole world and i have been dreaming to work for you since I was 10". – gnomixa Feb 16 at 20:40
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I guess honesty isn't a trait you were looking for. – JohnFx Feb 16 at 20:49
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Gave a candidate two lines of C and noting that he had put "wrote Pascal compiler" on his resume, I asked him if he could build a parse tree of the code.

"Um...not really."

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From an interview I was in as one of the interviewers:

Interviewee: "Is this job for such-and-such" (Note - this was an MS product)

Us: "Yes, this is a new version of that product"

Interviewee: "Ah, well in that case I'm not interested in working here then."

Us (confused): "Why?"

Interviewee: "I don't want to work on MS products. I don't want to be associated with MS."

Us: "Actually, it's being published by some-other-publisher."

Interviewee: "Oh, that's OK then."

Needless to say, the type of job he was after would require him to use Windows, Dev Studio, VSS (but I guess it's OK to hate that) and so on.

Skizz

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It's really ok to have VSS – Ravi Wallau May 21 at 6:53
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@Ravi I think you mean it's ok to hate VSS. – Fowl Jun 5 at 11:43
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The worse answer I've ever received was:

"Uhhhhhhhhhhhhh............." and then silence.

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I have written about my funny experiences here. The best one was this

Me : You said you are working with VS 2003. How do you rate yourself in .net?

Candidate : 7 out of 10

Me : Great! Why are you not using VS 2008 which is the lastest verion?

Candidate : What? we have VS 2008? I thought 2005 is the latest version.

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It's worse when you're the interviee and the company doesn't realize this. – greg Feb 24 at 16:34
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There's a vs2010 beta1 already. – Arnis L. Jun 23 at 13:42
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This was a woman who was friends with the production manager. The interview was for Flash developer position. Apparently she had "been learning" ActionScript and I asked her the same questions I asked all applicants. She didn't make it past the first question.

Name three different types of loop in ActionScript.

(hesitates)

Ok, just tell me one type of loop.

Well... I know I know this one... Just give me 10 minutes with a book and I know I can tell you...

(Puts conference call on mute. Everyone in room busts out laughing)

Ok, just send us a sample of your work. Kthanks.

She followed up with a file that wouldn't even compile, and was full of unintelligible code. Lesson learned, personal friends of employees aren't always the best bet.

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Maybe she solves everything with functional programming. – tuinstoel May 27 at 12:52
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I was interviewing a guy who had 5 years Smalltalk experience for a Senior Smalltalk developer position.

Me: What's the difference between = and == ?

Him: I don't know so I always use == .

I don't know which was more horrifying -- that he didn't know the difference or that he knew he didn't know and never bothered to look it up.

In Smalltalk = tests equality and == tests identity. They are definitely not interchangeable.

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I asked a candidate for a programming position what he knew about database to which he replied "Oh no, that's not my job. That's the DBA's job. I don't do dumb stuff like that." Needless to say he never got the job.

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Bad answer.. Rude and such.. But it could be accurate. Think the guy who wrote the kernal for your OS give a thought to a DB. Doubt it crossed his mind. – baash05 Feb 28 at 13:52
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Wow! I know several DBAs and I wouldn't regard their job as "Dumb stuff" – Colin Mackay Jul 19 at 0:13
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Interviewer: Explain your approach to designing software.

Me: I see software design as an art...

I didn't get the job. Four years later, and I can now confidently answer the question!

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Actually me as well I see at as an art. What's the catch|? – User Mar 31 at 13:17
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There are just as many principles for art: color, form, line, etc. I still see plenty of room for creativity in my code. – munificent May 20 at 17:03
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Google: "Hackers and Painters" – Jon Romero May 20 at 17:05
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It certainly IS an art. Just as any art form has it's constraints (paintaing has a canvas, sculpture has materials), so does programming. Do you leave behind code that makes people angry when they have to upgrade it 2 years later? I inherited code from a strict mathematician that was, to say the least, NOT flexible - but the function needed new features. I had to practically re-write the whole thing. – David May 27 at 13:00
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[Me] - We see you currently work in a different state. Are you willing to relocate to this area?

[Them] - I have a restraining order taken out against someone.

While I'm glad they were trying to leave a bad situation, a simple "Yes" would have sufficed.

Edit

As an aside, I have nothing against someone trying to leave a bad situation, and the candidate was not dinged for their statement. Rather, it was the "unasked for answer" to the question - we were looking to see if they were willing to relocate, not why they wanted to relocate. The fact that their answer only invited questions that we legally could not ask in an interview is what makes it such a horrible answer to a question.

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Seriously. Too much information starting ... now! – Bob Cross Jun 5 at 1:45
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In an interview for a junior ".NET Developer" position:

Me: "What would a function look like that checked that a string was a valid postal code?"

Interviewee: "Well, I'm not really a programmer."

Me: "Ok..."

(Turns out they were actually a rather talented young DBA, but still.)

That resulted in a heated (but productive) discussion with the HR department.

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Q: How did you learn at university?

A (cross oneself): I'm graduated and Thanks God!

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When asked what his goals were he said:

"I'm just looking for a paycheck."

When asked if he was willing to work extra hours sometimes if there was an upcoming deadline:

"I worked 50 hours in a week once and got really stressed out."

But then the kicker (not really a question but still), when I described a co-worker as "hacking" something. He proceeded to tell me I shouldn't use the term "hack" because I did not know what it meant and it had "negative connotations. When I tried to explain the difference in definitions he flat out told me I was wrong. I guess he didn't want the job.

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First answer was dead honest. Second answer was I suspect honest too. If the upcomming deadline requires extra hours then you need to plan better. Not over work your coders. Sorry some of us can work 60 but adding more hours does not always add more. I am shit useless after about 8pm. – baash05 Feb 28 at 13:47
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I hate it when I'm asked if I'm prepared to do overtime work. The problem is I get the feeling that it's common practice in this company rather than an exception and if it is, there can't be too many reasons why, and all of them are bad. – Makis May 27 at 12:34
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[me] On your CV you say you have experience of J2EE. Can you elaborate?

[interviewee] I wrote a JSP page.

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Question: "Describe how you think an IT department should be perceived by the organisation?" (Or something like that)

Answer: Long rant about how he has gained weight, how fat people are lazy, how IT people are usually lazy/fat, and how he isn't lazy"I live just around the corner. I've gained a lot of weight recently. If I get the job then I can work out at the gym before, during, and after work. It would be really convenient for me. So yes, I would love to work here."

I should note that he didn't once mention anything about the job, only about the perk of having a free gym, and that he looked fine. Given his attitude about laziness & IT, I was happy to see him go.

So in summary - he should have just answered the bloody question!

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  1. Q: Are you familiar with design patterns?
    A: Yes, I am.
    Q: Tell me about some patterns that you know about.
    A: Singleton.
    Q: Anything else?
    A: Well, I didn't find myself in need of other patterns and forgot about them.

  2. Q: What's the difference between Session Bean and Entity Bean?
    A: Entity Bean stores its state in the DB while Session Bean stores its state in the web server's session.

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...and the design patterns are exactly against these ad-hoc solutions. Especially if you have to discuss the solutions with others. When I say "visitor" or "template method" or "factory" everyone (whom we hire) knows what I'm talking about. I like to invent, not re-invent. – Gaspar Nagy Dec 22 '08 at 15:26
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