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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

vote up 5 vote down

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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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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vote up 13 vote down

Interview #1

"I haven't really worked with events"

Promptly followed by one of our developers slamming down his notebook, getting up, and leaving without a word.


Interview #2

When I realized the candidate was Googling/BS'ing all the answers I threw him this gem:

me: "Have you ever worked with the XnetCookieManager class, if so, what do you think of it?" candidate: "I've used it before, it works pretty well"

This is an in-house class that he could not have ever seen before

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You should have accused him of espionage! :p – leppie May 26 at 13:52
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Or ask where he used it and then told him you are going to sue that company... – Makis May 27 at 12:20
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When asked to explain Object Oriented Programming:

"A bunch of subroutines or computer code that does something".

Then tried to explain that OOP is bad because different objects don't combine well together, giving the example that you can't use multiple javascript libraries together.

Later, when asked about testing:

"I never had any code come back...that I wrote..that failed any kind of unit test"

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It's pretty easy to never fail unit tests if you don't write them. :) – Robert P Feb 18 at 1:34
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Especially considering that the correct answer in reference to unit tests is that all code should fail unit tests at first. So if you're writing code that's not failing unit tests, you're doing it wrong. And the best devs write code that will break unit tests at some point. – Lloyd Cotten Feb 24 at 15:56
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@Lloyd: That's the correct answer if you do test-driven development. Not everyone follows that particular development strategy though. :) – Herms Feb 24 at 17:21
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vote up 18 vote down

Background: Recruiting a QA candidate that made the mistake of claiming during the interview that he did a lot of programming in his spare time and hoped the position we were hiring for would lead to a developer job.

Q: So what programming languages do you use/like best?
A: Windows?

Q: [Thinking I had been unclear] No, I mean specifically what programming LANGUAGES are you familiar with, not the platform.
A: Uhm. Unix?

Q: [Trying one more time]. I am really trying to ask about programming languages, not platforms. You know like Java, C++, or C#?
A: Yeah, that's the one I use.

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What about C-pound? – Joe White May 20 at 19:47
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Should have switched the programming languages to whitespace, lolcode or brainf**k. The answer: I like whitespace best, done lots of huge projects in whitespace. – martiert Jun 3 at 20:43
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Note: These questions were asked back-to-back

Q: What are the benefits/reasons for normalizing the database used by an application?
A: Performance. The application will run faster against a normalized database.

Q: In what situations should denormalizing the database be considered?
A: When you need more performance, the application will perform better against a de-normalized database.

Q: So which is it? Does normalization help or hurt performance?
A: I'm not sure, but everyone knows that normalized is better.

Q: Why?
A: Because it performs better.

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This actually sums up most advice I've received on database normalization. – James McMahon Mar 3 at 18:34
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vote up 20 vote down

Q: Where do you see yourself in 5 years?

A: Outta rehab, for sure!

(I didn't hire him, but we both had a good laugh at his answer)

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This topic reminds me of an old irc joke:

Myrf> I was giving some guy a job interview today, and it turned out he didn't know who the Beatles were.

Myrf> So, of course, I had to turn him down :P

bozz> wtf, a bunch of people don't know who the beatles are

bozz> whyd you have to turn him down just because of that

Myrf> Dude, I work at a RECORD STORE.

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Must be an old joke- no one works at record stores anymore. Maybe he was working at iTunes- no Beatles there. – MattMcKnight Jun 3 at 18:43
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Q: "Oh, interesting. Your resume says that you've used .NET Remoting. So, how did you use it? What was your project like?"

A: "I have never used .NET Remoting."

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If you were going through a recruiter, be careful about throwing people out for stuff like this. More than one recruiter has, in my experience, done some creative keyword enhancement on a candidate's resume without their knowledge. – JohnFx Feb 16 at 20:41
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@JohnFx: This guy was clueless, and he definitely knew what was on his resume. True about recruiters, but IMO upon a revelation like that, one would think that the candidate would ask for a copy of their resume for their examination, and be on the phone with the offending recruiter ASAP! – Dave Markle Feb 17 at 3:34
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@JohnFX: ...and this is why I always recommend sending PDFs to recruiters. They're still editable, but I'd imagine most wouldn't think it worth their while if they could manage to edit them at all. I had my CV significantly changed once.. never again. Recruiters should work for you and the prospective employer, even if they don't want to, as such, if they want their commission they can take a read only CV. – DavidWhitney Jun 3 at 19:06
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vote up 6 vote down

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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A colleague of mine interviewing someone:

  • "Do you know ActiveX ?"

  • "Yes, I do."

then my colleague started having doubts about the sincerity of the interviewee, so he improvised this question :

  • "Do you know ActiveZ ?"

  • "Yes, I do."

He didn't get the job.

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I think they make gender-specific versions now: ActiveXX and ActiveXY... (here comes the bad joke)... Unfortunately, ActiveXX overflows for a few days every month and ActiveXY tries to mount drives it shouldn't. – gnovice Feb 17 at 3:34
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It is like we have been laughing at one of I-know-it-all nontech managers after we have convinced him to switch from Base64 encoding into "new version" Base65. – smok1 May 27 at 11:33
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vote up 42 vote down

This happened a month ago:

Q : How do you rate yourself in JavaScript (out of 10)?
A : 8/10?

Q: Great! Could you write a function to validate an email address?
A : (... few minutes ...) Well, I would rate myself as 3.

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Do not ask how to validate an email unless you have the answer in hand. Hint: if you think you have it you don't. – Joshua Feb 16 at 18:14
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Is he to rate himself in javascript, or regular expressions? :) – Jonathan Sampson Feb 16 at 18:31
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Your regular expression is probably wrong. – recursive Mar 31 at 13:24
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The email address format is defined in section 3.4.1 of RFC 2822. It is a bit too complex for an interview question. – wcoenen Apr 7 at 23:46
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The smart thing to here would be to google a regular expression on the internet... – Carra May 27 at 12:32
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vote up 6 vote down

The worse answer I've ever received was:

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

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Q: How many constructors does the SqlCommand class have? (ADO.NET)

Me: (in my mind : why the f... should I know their count?!) More than one :P

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I would have thought the same. – Eduardo León Jan 25 at 1:24
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haha, I thought about it for a second and then got the answer right :\ (it's 4 FYI) – Slace Jan 25 at 1:32
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I think the correct answer is to politely thank the interviewer for there time and tell them it is not a good fit and get out of there. – BobbyShaftoe Jan 25 at 13:22
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That's probably one of the worst interview questions ever. – Beska Feb 16 at 19:06
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Been asked one just like that. Glad I didn't end up there! – asp316 May 21 at 3:09
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My favourite is interviewing contractors and you pose them a programming question to write some code.

At least 60% in our experience will reply with "Sorry, I don't give free consulting". Ummm, so now what? Goodbye. ;)

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I have been at an interview, explained at length a solution to a problem - and heard no more from them. Then I interviewed for another part of the company a month later, they mentioned the same problem - I gave the same tour and their reply "we tried that last week". – Martin Beckett Feb 16 at 18:41
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Hurray for no-spec work! – Adam Davis Mar 3 at 16:59
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I am giving this a +1 for MGB's comment. – James McMahon Mar 3 at 18:52
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@mgb - that is AWESOME! +1 – tim May 20 at 19:56
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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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vote up 7 vote down

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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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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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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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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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 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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We once had a student here who had about 5 different programming languages on her CV. I started asking design questions, but she knew nothing. So I asked simpler and simpler questions, until I finally asked "Why do you have Java and C# on your CV when you cannot write a single line of code?" She stared at me and finally said "I did not write that I have experience!" So all her knowledge about programming was that there exist 5 programming languages that she could name.

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Ah that is superb! I'm going to put Russian, Swahili and Japanese on my CV! – endian Feb 18 at 17:29
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I asked an interviewee to declare a data structure that he would use as a phone book. He first writes the usual C++ class PhoneBookItem with a couple of members, and then:

PhoneBookItem phonebook[100];

Me: Um, ok, but what if I wanted to have two hundred contacts in my phone book?

Him: That's really easy, you just change this number here, and put 200 instead of 100!

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Indeed. Surely in some circles (embedded, for example) it is desirable to allocate all the memory when the program starts. But when I asked if other possibilities exist, he simply didn't have a clue. – Pukku Feb 3 at 17:05
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"Dude, I know you don't have that many friends. I was actually being nice when I put down 100, but if it makes you feel better let's put down 1,000, ok?" ;-D – Adam Davis Mar 3 at 16:58
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vote up 2 vote down

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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Interviewing an experienced programmer and one of the questions was "How would a typical day go at your previous job?" Answer: "Got coffee in the morning as I'm not much of a morning person...so we would mainly just talk about the project or whatever. I'm not much good at night either as I get tired. I'm really good only between 11 and 3. Plus I like to golf so I would want some afternoons off."

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Good for government job in India – Manoj Doubts Jan 27 at 12:48
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Damn, you just described me on most days. Trick is not stating this in an interview as if you expect these terms officially. Start your job, produce great work, and the work schedule will be looked at less critically. – Mark Renouf Feb 3 at 16:17
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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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vote up 4 vote down

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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Q: So what editor did you use for the PHP forum that's on your CV?

A: mmm ... I don't really remember the name

Q: Was it notepad?

A: (laughing) No it was definitely not notepad

Q: So what was it? Were you writing straight into the web server?

A: I am sorry - I really don't remember the name

Interview ended there.

This was a few years ago and sadly I was the one being interviewed, and the correct answer was Dreamweaver (my fellows from college I did the PHP forum with reminded me when I got back form the interview).

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how annoying... you can forget things. I would have moved on to another question. – John Nolan Dec 21 '08 at 22:44
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:| Why would they care about the editor? – FlySwat Dec 21 '08 at 23:03
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MAKE SOMETHING UP!! Well, I hope I would have :P – MDCore Feb 4 at 6:36
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This, like a lot of posts on this thread, is really an example of a bad interviewer as much as a bad answer. The interviewer could have easily followed with "well, what editors do you know that you might have used on this project." In my experience, it's not uncommon for good programmers to have panic issues in interviews when they search for the "perfect" answer, rather than a good one. – tnyfst May 20 at 18:01
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vote up 136 vote down

Q: So write a method to convert a string to uppercase

A:

double string;
int main{
         cout >> "Please Enter an uppercase string >>;
         cin << string;
}

....sadly I am not kidding and this is exact.

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Solving a problem by not letting it occur in the first place. What a genius. – Tobias Nov 24 '08 at 22:15
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If the guy immediately foloow up with "but seriously... toUpperCase()" I'd hire him on the spot – annakata Dec 21 '08 at 22:26
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Among the zillion wtfs in the code, the string type is double!! That is awesome! I nominate this for thedailywtf.com interview column. – Jim Buck Feb 18 at 1:22
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@Jim, yes he actually stated that he chose double in case it was a really big string – Alex Feb 18 at 13:51
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Hey, now, in some places of the world it's cheaper to hire a data entry person to do the conversion than it is to rent the CPU time from EC2 to run it. – Adam Davis Mar 3 at 16:40
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Q: What is encapsulation?
A: I'm not sure. You start answering the question and I'll follow up.

Q: You haven't a clue.
A: No.

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Is that what you swallow when you get sick? ;) – Fry Nov 24 '08 at 4:31
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Q: What is encapsulation? A: I could tell you, but then I'd be letting you see my internals. – Matt Cruikshank Mar 24 at 19:55
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Q: What is encapsulation? A: Now, that's private! – Vegar Jun 3 at 7:21

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