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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 interviewed a guy to fill out the position of Django developer once online over IM. The interview was general in nature, and at one point not too late in the interview, the following happened:

Me: "Have you ever toyed with ModelForm in Django?"

Him: "brb"

... and that's it! I guess I was asking for it.

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I really don't think you can interview someone over IM. I think that is contrary to the meaning and spirit of "interview." – moffdub May 20 at 22:23
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After going through all of the .NET technologies we were using heavily (threading, remoting, reflection, etc) and the guy didn't answer a single one correctly it was painfully obvious to both of us that there was no way he was going to get the job. So .... he started talking about how he didn't really know anything about what we were doing, but don't let that make me think he wouldn't be good for the position, and he's a really hard worker, and a really fast learner, and if you just give me a chance I can prove that I'm really a good fit, and ......... AHHHHHH! STOP TALKING! (or as another said before "Too many words!").

I wanted to say "Dude, you're NOT a good fit. Get over it."

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Well. Here I can say you might have missed the boat. I'm a c++ coder who was once asked to write a prototype for a blackberry. It had to thread with sockets. But all in Java. Three weeks later I had my first java app in my hands (threads and sockets) Not knowing is part of being a coder. HUNT_ON! – baash05 Feb 28 at 13:32
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Interviewer asked me " why do you think constructors don't have return types ?" i answered " why should they?" ( still believe it is apt answer, got rejected though :D).

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@Devio: Actually, it's an instance of the object class. – Software Monkey Apr 20 at 21:31
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@Software Monkey: and the instance is of the type of the class – ck May 20 at 18:29
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In Ada, they can. Heck, in C++ they can, if you want to count reference and pointered parameters. It's just a syntactic issue. – T.E.D. May 29 at 18:27
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My favorite was I had a candidate for a "Senior Software Engineer" position tell me unprompted and openly that he loves to UML diagram his work in Rational or whatever, and have it auto-generate all the code, and that he always does this on all his work.

Um, no thanks... that's fine for your own personal project, but not in a team environment where we have our own style guides and templates etc... and definitely not at a "senior" level.

I also had a candidate that was obviously googling every answer as we talked to him over the phone. We thought there was just a 4-8 sec phone lag or something, until the 'thank yous & good-byes' when replies started coming immediately.

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If your asking questions you can google and answer if 4-8 seconds, maybe you aren't asking the right questions. Just a thought. – James McMahon Mar 3 at 19:16
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OTOH if the interviewee can understand the question and formulate a research plan in <8s, maybe they'd be good ;) – Graham Lee Mar 10 at 8:21
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What is so wrong about using UML diagrams and creating code from it? It saves a bit of time and with some CASE tools you can customize the code style. – ya23 Mar 10 at 16:49
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That's only "fine for a personal project" if you have 10's of thousands of dollars to blow on your own personal copy of Rational Rose. – T.E.D. May 29 at 18:15
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This happened just last week (keep in mind the resume of this candidate showed 7 yrs of experience)

Q: How would you call an Oracle stored procedure in your java code?
A: I would use JDBC technology to call the stored proc.

Q: Could you please elaborate on the exact steps/code how would you do it in Java?
A: Well, I will write a Java program and there I will write a 'main' method and from the main method I will use the JDBC technology to connect to oracle and call the stored procedure.

Q: Don't you think this is a very generic answer? Would you like to elaborate a little more on exactly how would you do it?
A: I will use Java 1.5 and JDBC 2.0 to connect to the database and call the stored procedure.

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Senator, may I remind you that you are under oath! – moffdub May 20 at 22:48
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I once was asked a quite nice question from a lady in the HR department while being at an interview with her and the CTO:

HR: "I will not ask you what you think your biggest weakness is. I will ask you another question: What will a good friend of yours say when I ask him what your biggest weakness is?"

CTO: "Yea, that's really a completely different question."

ME: "And that was the answer ;-)"

All of us started to smile.

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When interviewing people for a tech position (read "IT Position" - not for a developer position), I was going over the requirements with one guy. I told him that occasionally he might have to run some cable, to which his response was:

"Don't ask me to do that, cause I won't do it."

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I don't think this is a bad answer, after all he was setting the expectations clear about what he was willing to do on the job. – Sergio Acosta Oct 29 '08 at 8:36
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Agreed, that's a great answer! I've had more than my fill of PHBs who think that all "computer stuff" is the same. I'm a programmer - if you need someone to run cable or type memos in Word, I'm not the guy. – Sherm Pendley Nov 5 '08 at 16:12
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This is a good, honest, answer about the type of job he is interested in. – TM Nov 24 '08 at 3:59
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Have you ever heard the Jerky Boys, the one were he's interviewing for a mechanics job?

I had a candidate show up for the interview start to drill me (the interviewer) about what he wasn't qualified for. "He clearly met all the requirements listed in the job description" (in his mind). He was very confident in himself and assertive, but...

All I could hear in the back of my mind was the Jerky Boys' "..I'll be here tomorrow with my tools, I'll work circles around you, cupcake!..."

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Q: What data structure would you use to implement a list of words for a spell-checker?

A: Linked list?

Doh!

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My own answer...

I was working for an outsourcing company (let's call it Helping Hands), and went to so many interviews I could do it in my sleep (by the way, great skill to have... when you're looking for a job, go to as many interviews as possible, even those you really aren't interested in). I wasn't looking to leave my job, but I needed to ace the interviews.

Many times the interviewer, unaware of the fact that I was interviewing for an outsourcing position, asked me:

"So why do you want to leave 'Helping Hands'?"

and I would retort with a smile:

"Who said anything about leaving them?"

At which point the interviewer would look at me all baffled for a minute, look through his/her papers and try to figure out what had just happened. All this time I would sit there smiling, which usually makes the interviewer even more nervous and confused. I knew that's a bad answer and a nasty thing to do to, but I couldn't help it...

Yuval =8-)

EDIT: Just to make things clearer, I wasn't going to these interviews for my health. Part of my job at the time was to go to interviews and be accepted to work on client projects, usually at the client's office. The process is similar to being accepted as a regular employee, and the interviewer wasn't always aware that I was interviewing for an outsourcing position. My answer above to the automatic question would shake them awake.

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I have no idea what's going on in this question. – bartek Sep 18 at 12:27
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I often ask interviewees to be introspective. I ask them a question like, "If you had your last project to do over again, what would you do differently?"

What I usually expect from this question is for the person to identify some risk item that bit them severely. Sometimes when added to their other answers, you can establish a better idea of their team dynamic (do they admit mistakes, deflect blame, notice their surroundings, pay any attention at all to the project, etc)

About the third time I used this question in an interview, the candidate intimated to me that he would do nothing differently. He wasn't a candidate for much longer after that.

I guess I must have been more polite in my younger days. I'm pretty sure today I would have stared slack-jawed or laughed. Instead I asked a couple of perfunctory additional questions and thanked him for coming in.

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Mmmm. Had you asked "Is there something you would have done differently in a past project, and why?" I would agree with you. However it could be the case that his previous project exceeded all expectations and performed fine. – BlueNovember Nov 5 '08 at 13:03
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If you had to do that interview over again, what would you do differently? – 01 Nov 30 '08 at 1:04
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I have to side with BlueNovember on this; this isn't a good question. Or at least your expectation for what the "right" answer to this question is--namely that good candidates will always want to do things over again--presumes a lot. – SoaperGEM May 20 at 18:39
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The problem here is that the interviewer is biased in the belief that something should have been done differently, and that the person being asked had the authority to do something differently if they wanted to. Neither is necessarily true and shows does nothing more than the interviewer pushing their opinion that there is alwasy something should have been done differently. This may often be true but is not a rule or necessarily within someones control to change. – Robin Jun 1 at 15:28
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I agree with Robin and BlueNovember -- it's entirely possible that the candidate's previous project was a simple, problem-free success, in which case, your loss! – harpo Jun 3 at 20:46
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I think the worst interview answers I've had have been non-answers.

I've asked candidates tough questions, not with the intent that they get the answer right, but that they talk through it, and apply their knowledge, making progress towards understanding the problem and getting closer to an answer.

But in several cases, the interviewee just locked up, stammering, "ummm.... wait.... umm.... I think..." and never saying anything more.

Really, if you're being interviewed, and can't give the answer, start saying SOMETHING. Basic statements of fact, simple observations of the problem, statements of what won't work, are all better than saying nothing at all.

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Well it's obvious. Most programmers aren't exactly the most socially skilled people in the world. Add that to the fact that they are in a situation where anything they say can, and will, be used against them. Being nervous and trying not to say anything stupid is not the easiest thing. – John Nilsson Jan 25 '09 at 2:28
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I agree, I think some of this sort of thing is very biased against personality types that are fairly common among brilliant programmers. – BobbyShaftoe Jan 25 at 13:18
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Add to comments by putting the money that's going to feed thier kids and you've got a programmer in fear. Put a gun to your head and see how you feel answering questions that can't be answered. – baash05 Feb 28 at 13:44
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"Add that to the fact that they are in a situation where anything they say can, and will, be used against them." Yeah-- like right here in this thread! – pjbeardsley Jun 3 at 16:56
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