It depends on the company and whoever is doing the hiring as to what questions they ask and how they view the answers. I put "detail" questions into two categories:
- Things you would know if you've used what you claim to know for a year; and
- Certification style questions (eg how
int []x[]; is valid way to declare an array in Java).
(1) are a useful idiot test. (2) imho are worthless. If a company asks you questions that fit into (2) and you don't answer well, either they don't care and they're just trying to establish what you know and don't know and, more importantly, how you deal with what you don't know or they actually think such things are important.
When faced with something you don't know the answer to just say "I don't know". Don't lower your gaze in shame. Don't waffle. Feel free to take a guess but say it's a guess. And don't try and change the subject or bring up something irrelevant.
It's just as important that people know what they don't know as well as knowing what they do know. Claiming to know it all is a real red flag to most employers. Just like questions where they get you to rate your skill level out of 10 in something. It's a trap. Never answer 10 (unless, say, you're the language designer and chief architect). At best claim 8-9. If you say 10, chances are you'll get follow-up questions that'll trip you up. If you then don't know the answer, you'll look arrogant. If you only claimed 8-9 well it's one of the things you don't know. No problem.
If they think such things are important you probably haven't done well but don't feel bad. You don't really want to work for people who think that knowing int []x[]; is valid syntax is important.