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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 32 vote down

I once went for an interview at the European Commission in Brussels. Towards the end of the interview, which seemed to go very well, they asked me how I felt about learning another language. "Great!" I said, "I would like to learn Java." (I was programming Perl and VB at that time.)

The two interviewers looked at each other with bemused/amused expressions, which I realised as I left the building was down to the fact that they were referring to a natural language (all Commission employees are supposed to speak three European languages).

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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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This is the worst and the best answers I got from an interviewee.

I was searching for a web programmer, so I did a couple of interviews.

One of them had the experience and scholarship needed, but there was something about him I didn't like. At some point the interview went something like this;

Me: What's your favorite programming language ?

Him: You mean the one I'm the best with ?

Me: Not necessarily, let's say you have a personal project at home.. which language would you chose ?

Him: Why would I want to work at home ?

Me: You never code at home ?

Him: No, why ?

Me: Well, hmm .. okay..

I wasn't impressed at all with the interview, but I decided to hire him anyway since qualified candidates seemed to be a luxury around here and I was overwhelmed with work to do.

Days passed but I never stopped searching somebody else because I was appalled by his level of ignorance and ineptitude. I have never studied about anything close to computer, let alone programming. I have learned it all by myself and yet, I felt like I was light years ahead of this guy, who supposedly had more work experience and scholarship than me.

Then one day another guy walks in for an interview. He had not a single programming experience nor he studied in this domain. He was just interested in programming and started playing with it at home, you know.. just for fun.

At first I didn't take him too seriously, but hey you never know. So I gave him a chance and it went more or less like this;

Me: What's your favorite programming language ?

Him: You mean the one I'm the best with ?

Me: Not necessarily, let's say you have a personal project at home.. which language would you chose ?

Him: Well probably LISP or Python

Me: OK you start on Monday.

When I showed him one of my biggest problem I had to resolve at the time, he said he was not sure he could tackle it. I replied I knew he could and within a week my problem was completely solved. The first guy was fired shortly after and two years later we still work together.

I'd go as far as to say that we are now friends and a helluva team.

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I understand looking at someone sideways who doesn't dabble with code at home. The best developers are also the ones sick enough to enjoy it. – moffdub May 20 at 22:38
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@moffdub: Well, I'd reword that statement a little. All the developers I know that are hobbyist developers are also excellent professional software engineers. Not ALL the great developers out there are hobbyists. – Allen Jul 8 at 20:42
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I don't like the whole "if you don't code in your spare time you are a hack" line. If I worked a 20 hour week, maybe. But someone that does 50+ hours a week of programming at work then goes home to do more needs a little diversity in their life. – JohnFx Jul 21 at 20:20
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vote up 26 vote down

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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Me: Are you familiar with any content management systems?

Candidate: (Pause...) Ruby on Rails? Is that one?

And I once fell for:

Interviewer: (Asks quickly, offtopic) What's half of 99?

Me: (Panics) 44 and a 1/2!

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took me a couple times too and then i started assuring myself that it was actually 45.5. hah – sdellysse Dec 8 '08 at 4:33
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9. Nine is half of 99 – TrickyNixon Jan 5 '09 at 0:07
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Actually it would be 49.5. – Josh G Apr 2 at 13:06
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@Josh: really? no way – Tnay May 29 at 18:19
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If its integer type its 49 :P – Prashant Jun 3 at 6:58
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vote up 25 vote down

This was a little while ago, but I still remember it well...this was an interview for a server administrator, specifically for our externally facing website server (in-house), so security and how to handle/configure dual-firewalls and hosts was required.

Now, this was a BIG guy, not fat, but the sort you wouldn't want to go up against in Rugby...I'm no lightweight, but he towered above me...

Me: I see here that you've been a sys admin for 4 years, is that correct?

Guy: Yes, mainly NT4 server, I know everything there is to know about NT4

Me: raises eyebrow I see, so you can tell me what the hosts file is and what it does, yes?

Guy: The what, what hosts file, I've never heard of that.

Me: It lives in c:\winnt\system32\drivers\etc, there's a hosts file and a sample hosts file (hosts.sam)

Guy: I don't understand the question.

Me: It's quite simple, there's a file called hosts and it does something with IP addresses and names...have you come across the term "localhost" before?

Guy: Yes, it maps to 127.0.0.1

Me: thinking 'finally some progress'* Ah, so now can you tell me what the hosts file is?

Guy: Look getting agitated, leaning forward I really DON'T like your interviewing style, I don't understand the question, can you re-phrase it?

Me: (not wanting to look like a wimp) I've already re-phrased it twice.

Guy: You think you're funny do you?

Which reminded my of Goodfellas a bit and he leaned right over and I swear he was about to grab me by the throat.

Me: No, not at all...not at all...

...at which point I made my excuses and left, telling a security guard that I wanted him escorted out of the building.

I ordered panic buttons for all interview rooms shortly after that...

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+1 for panic button! – hasen j May 20 at 19:49
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He already did answer the question-> he didn't know what it was. No need to keep going on that question. – MattMcKnight Jun 3 at 18:47
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Where do you see yourself in 5 years?

I'll be retired by then...

(after negotiating on a quite large budget for personal training as well)

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The important thing is at the other end of those elipses. How about "I'll be retired by then...because we are all going to make mega-bucks and move to Tahiti with the profits from all the great software I plan to create for you guys!" – JohnFx Mar 10 at 14:18
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vote up 24 vote down

I was invited for the interview to ask technical questions for a general web development post in a non-IT company.

q: "Have you done much development?"

a: "Yes. I studied computer science at X university"

q: "Great, how about web development?"

a: "Yes, I studied that too."

q: "What is your favourite web server?"

10

a: "Um.."

q: "Ok tell me about a web server you have used"

a: "Um.."

q: "Can you name me any web servers?"

a: "Um.."

q: "Ok have you heard of Apache?"

a: "Um.."

q: "Ok let's move on to databases.."

20 GOTO 10

boss: "Ok enough of this technical crap, your salary will be Y and you will start on Z..."

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Great, I like the surprising end. – splattne Nov 5 '08 at 12:07
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What end? I'm still looping through... – Ólafur Waage Jan 5 '09 at 0:00
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Why say databases then move back to servers. I think you need a variable here ;) nice post – johnc Mar 10 at 9:49
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"I'm still looping through" I think the boss runs in kernel mode and it interrupted the interview process. – abababa22 May 20 at 21:25
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When I read that, I thought the answer to his question was "10" – Chad Okere Jun 3 at 20:25
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vote up 23 vote down

In the job description, I specified an understanding of GOF design pattern (not as a religious position, just to make sure that the applicant wasn't an indiscriminate hacker and had some concept of order and reuse)

When I asked if she knew about them, she actually answered

"Yes, I saw that on the description so I looked them up."

Me: "Oh, good, what can you tell me about them?"

Interviewee (looking proud): "I looked them up."

Me: "Anything else?"

Interviewee (still looking chuffed): "They are on the internet"

My boss insisted I hire her as she was cheap, she ended up costing the company heaps in lost time, huge bug fixes and 'mentoring' (for want of a much less positive word) time. Working with her was like pulling teeth.

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Got to disagree with that, I love giving b..., no I mean I have met a few great female developers, and a lot of awful male developers – johnc May 27 at 19:18
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@lagerdalek: Not having read the comment prior to yours, I think my overactive imagination put a different spin on "giving b..." than what you intended... – Jeremy Aug 3 at 10:26
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Sucks for you Anthony, I am a female and I work with female developers and we're really really good. – Dhana Aug 27 at 16:22
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vote up 22 vote down

good looking girl came in

me: "hello - tell me something about you"

girl: "I work at a local 7-11"

me: "okay - do you have any experience in developing software?"

girl: "no"

me: "have you ever worked as a developer? or with computers?"

girl: "no"

me: "okay - so why are you here?"

girl: "I want to work 20 hours a week and receive a full month developer loan"

me: "!?!?!?!?!!??!!?!?!"

that really happened to me ... I was a bit perplexed ;)

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she thought looks > knowledge! – hasen j May 20 at 19:41
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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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Q: What is a virtual function?

A: You mean, like, virtual memory?

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In all fairness, virtual function are not something you worry/think about in Java. So without knowing the context of the interview, I wouldn't know if this is a bad answer or not. – James McMahon Mar 3 at 18:27
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It was for a C++ programming job:) – Andrew Mar 6 at 17:26
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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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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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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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The line "You said this was a Technical Lead position, how dare you expect me to program?" is still something of a personal winner.

Close second was the guy interviewing as a Senior Developer who couldn't explain what an if/else clause did.

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Applicant for java ee programming job:

-What is JPA? AND What is HIBERNATE?

-It's in notebook, button to put it into sleep mode.

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Hahah! I hope he was trying to be funny... I really do. – Ace Oct 29 '08 at 8:00
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I was asked to join in for a panel interview with about 10 minutes notice so I scratched a couple of questions on the back of an envelope and waited for my turn. After the software architect, let's call him Bob, had finished with questions about OOP (what is is-a, has-a etc) and the candidate had done fairly well, I tried "Can you tell me what know about big-O notation?"

I say tried because Bob, the software architect at a startup building a database engine to handle terabytes, interrupted and said "well, I don't understand that stuff myself".

I left soon after.

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Thank god you didn't get to NP-Complete, his head might of exploded! – Fry Nov 24 '08 at 4:28
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Well crap, I have programmed computers for some 30 years, am considered highly skilled by my peers, but I still don't really know much about Big-O notation - and what I do know I learned sometime last year. – Software Monkey Jan 8 '09 at 9:37
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There's a lot of awkward here. – Paul Nathan Feb 18 at 1:07
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Understanding is different to knowing about. I know about and of big-O, but I probably wouldn't claim to understand it until I did a CS degree. – Fowl Jun 5 at 11:36
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In an interview for a mid-level firmware position, we started asking about memory mapped I/O. As the candidate had listed several embedded projects on their resume (in C and assembly), we figured it would be a softball question.

His answer was kind of shaky, so we asked if it would be easier to explain on the whiteboard.

He went to the board and stared at it. His hands got shakier and shakier, he started to sweat so much it was dripping off his forehead and he was hurriedly wiping it with his hand. I really can't convey how radical the change was - the man went from calm, happy, and collected to a complete wreck in just a minute or so.

Honest to goodness, 10 minutes at the board produced a function name and an open curly brace. The room was disturbingly quiet. We became concerned and tried to help, asking for just pseudo code, trying to form smaller questions, asking about bit masking, etc. Eventually one of the other interviewers asked how you could get the memory address of a variable in C. The candidate turned around, sat down, and said, "I won't be able to do that." From the time he went to the board until he left the meeting room, he never looked at any of us.

After the interview was over, the other interviewers and I were very confused. I talked with my supervisors about trying to come up with a better way to interview him. Turned out that, despite a strong resume, they couldn't get any sort of technical read on him via e-mail or phone, so they had decided to fly him in. Considering the flight cost and the poor interview, they didn't want to invest any more effort in him.

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Poor guy. It sounds like it was much impossible to tell whether he was cheating with his resume or just really terrible stage fright. – David Berger Jun 3 at 20:09
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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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vote up 12 vote down

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 12 vote down

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 12 vote down

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 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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My own answer.

I was interviewing for a position and after having gone through my five years of "professional" programming experience this is the transaction that occurred...

--(Paraphrased of course)

Interviewer: So what is it you would really like to be doing?

Me: Oddly enough... Art, 3d models and music creation.

Interviewer: You wont be able to do much of that here.

Me: Yeah. I know...

--

I still got the job as a Software Engineer, but I figure is was probably not a great answer.

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Depends, I don't think it's that bad of a question and people should have interests out side of just their job. There is something to be said for "You don't live to work, you work to live." – Rob Oct 17 '08 at 13:36
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Not a horrible answer in my book. Granted, it'd be great if all your developers live to code, but you can be a genius at it and still have other, stronger interests. Heck, you could easily care more than some of the other people we've been hearing about on this thread ;) – ojrac Nov 5 '08 at 0:10
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Well, there is the fact that it was, presumably, an honest answer. :) – BobbyShaftoe Jan 25 at 12:53
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Perfect answer! That would make them sure you are creative. Art=Creative, 3D modelling=Creative, music creation=Creative. Great interests for a programmer I think. – Stefan Jan 31 at 22:28
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You should be applying to work in the video game industry where these are actually useful skills in an engineer. – Crashworks Feb 8 at 9:28
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vote up 11 vote down

To someone who'd written SQL, Database, DBA and similar terms all over his CV:

"Could you write a SQL query that does <problem>?"

"Most of my query development has been in Access' drag-and-drop editor"

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SQL is great for spotting lying weasels. I used to ask "How would you write a query to return all the orders where a customer name is 'Brian'" Nearly half of the people I asked started with "IF customer_name = 'Brian' THEN..." – Stephen Darlington Nov 5 '08 at 12:01
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I interviewed a recent college graduate (her degree was in Computer Information Science) for a job developing VB applications back in the late 1990s. Here's how the exchange went.

Q. How do you get records out of a database?

A. You use the database thing, ADO.

Q. Ok, so using ADO, how would you just, you know, get some data?

A. Um, the Recordset object?

Q. Right, so you have a Recordset object, how do you get data out if it?

A. I think you can look inside it, you know, it has records in it.

Q. Yes, how do you do that? Would you use a loop?

A. I don't know what a loop is.

She still got the job, just with different expectations, and she grew into quite a good junior developer. But I'll certainly never forget that interview.

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Looks > knowledge? – Bill Jan 25 at 1:40
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Except for that last question, this seems like a pretty natural response to a very vague question. I don't exactly see what that line of question was trying to elicit either. – JohnFx May 24 at 18:46
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Q: What are your top 5 programming books that you reference and/or liked to read? [keep in mind we didn't have internet at this site]

A: HTML Bible, and the Bible

Hmmm...Can't count to 5 and I'm fairly sure the Bible doesn't have any programming languages in it. I'm guessing you could pray for your code.

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vote up 10 vote down

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 9 vote down

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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