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Anybody have any good FizzBuzz type questions that are not the FizzBuzz problem?

I am interviewing someone and FB is relatively well known and not that hard to memorize, so my first stop in a search for ideas is my new addiction SO.

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11 Answers

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I've seen a small list of relatively simple programming problems used to weed out candidates, just like FizzBuzz. Here are some of the problems I've seen, in order of increasing difficulty:

  1. Reverse a string
  2. Reverse a sentence ("bob likes dogs" -> "dogs likes bob")
  3. Find the minimum value in a list
  4. Find the maximum value in a list
  5. Calculate a remainder (given a numerator and denominator)
  6. Return distinct values from a list including duplicates (i.e. "1 3 5 3 7 3 1 1 5" -> "1 3 5 7")
  7. Return distinct values and their counts (i.e. the list above becomes "1(3) 3(3) 5(2) 7(1)")
  8. Given a string of expressions (only variables, +, and -) and a set of variable/value pairs (i.e. a=1, b=7, c=3, d=14) return the result of the expression ("a + b+c -d" would be -3).

These were for Java, and you could use the standard libraries so some of them can be extremely easy (like 6). But they work like FizzBuzz. If you have a clue about programming you should be able to do most pretty quickly. Even if you don't know the language well you should at least be able to give the idea behind how to do something.

Using this test one of my previous bosses saw everything from people who aced it all pretty quick, to people who could do most pretty quick, to one guy who couldn't answer a single one after a half hour.

I should also note: he let people use his computer while they were given these tasks. They were specifically instructed that they could use Google and the like.

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For item 8, would a solution based on JSR-223 (javax.script) be accepted? :-P (Admittedly the use of that is completely overkill, but some people would rather do that than use, say, java.util.Scanner.) – Chris Jester-Young Jun 24 at 2:48
That's not within my idea of the spirit of the question, but if you know enough to propose that, then you certainly know enough to pass the FizzBuzz questions, so I wouldn't hold it against you. It may even be a plus in your favor. I'd still probably ask how you'd do it without javax.script though. – MBCook Jun 24 at 13:06
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Fibonacci, reverse a string, count number of bits set in a byte are other common ones. Project Euler also has a large collection of increasing difficulty.

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Ask them to write an app to return the factors of a given number. It's easy to do and hard to do well in a short period of time. You can see their style and the way they think through problems in a small amount of time.

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How about: I want to use a single integer to store multiple values. Describe how that would work.

If they don't have a clue about bit masks and operations, they probably can't solve other problems.

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I would say it's more instructive if after having bit masks explained, or pointed out, if the person doesn't smack their forehead, and shake their head in self-mockery. Bit-masks aren't a common idiom, unless one does C, embedded devices, or networking. Lots of talented folk haven't. – Gregg Lind Oct 15 '08 at 21:41
Hmm, then you have to decide if accepting storing 1,2 and 3 in decimal 123 counts as a correct answer, even though the math would be ugly complicated compared to just declaring 3 variables. Or storing 1,2,3 by writing x=1; x=2; x=3; I mean, do we need to store these values contemporaneously? – MatthewMartin Jul 7 at 20:31
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Find a list of primes is a fairly common question but it still requires some thought and there are varying degrees of answers people might give.

You would also be surprised how many people struggle to implement a Map/Dictionary type data-structure.

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I've found checking a string if it is a palindrome is a pretty simple one that can be a decent weeder.

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I'd say that depends on the language. In C it could be interesting, in Perl it's done with scalar(reverse 'foo') == 'foo'. – jkramer Sep 22 '08 at 22:02
true, but at the same time, being able to see the simpler solution is valuable... then you say, "ok, now pretend you don't have the reverse function." – Mike Stone Sep 22 '08 at 22:13
In C++, I'd give bonus points for any "functional" solutions that don't involve a hand-written loop. e.g., "return equal(str.begin(), str.end(), str.rbegin());" or (for speed freaks) "return equal(str.begin(), str.begin() + str.size() / 2, str.rbegin());" – Chris Jester-Young Jun 24 at 3:05
Of course, upon seeing such an answer, I'd also ask the candidate to explain the working of the code. They can't get a leg up just by copying my answer above! :-P – Chris Jester-Young Jun 24 at 3:05
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Check out 6.14 from the C++ FAQ Lite:

http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/big-picture.html

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Return the index of the first occurrence of string X within string Y

Implementing strstr() requires a basic understanding of the language while providing the opportunity for clever optimization.

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If it is a C/C++ interview make sure the person knows about pointers.

General - simple algorithm ([single/double]linked list). Ask about complexity of adding in each case (at the begining, at the end, optimizations ...) ?

(General) How do you find min and max from an array (N size) with just 3*N/2 comparisons?

C/C++: How would you optimize multiple "strcat"s to a buffer ?

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It seems to me that for the problem "How do you find min and max from an array (N size) with just 3*N/2 comparisons?" it is good to clarify that number 3*N/2 is a number of comparison of elements of array, but you can compare int freely for example. e.g. (i < array size) in loops. – sergdev Nov 6 '08 at 9:59
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Any of the early ones from Project Euler would probably be good.

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Perhaps this does not answer your question directly, but I am not certain you need to come up with another problem. Besides being "easy to memorize", the FizzBuzz question is just plain "easy", and that is the point. If the person you are interviewing is in the class of people to which FizzBuzz is "well-known", then they are in the class of people that a FizzBuzz-type question would not filter out. That does not mean that you hire them on the spot, but it does mean that they should be able to breeze through it and get on to the meat of the interview.

To put it another way, anybody who takes the time to read Coding Horror is worth interviewing further. Just have them write out the solution really quickly, discuss it briefly (e.g., How do you test this?), and then move on to the next question. And as the article says, "it is genuinely astonishing how many candidates are incapable of the simplest programming tasks."

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