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I got an interview last week for a senior developer/architect position of ASP.Net. I was confident before the interview because my skill set seems to match the job requirement and I have many years experience. But the result was totally a surprise, I was asked many detail technique questions that I don't know, although I know they are all on the book...

I have no problem if I have to study and remember them. But the question is, is it always like this in the interview or just because the current economic situation?

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It's because they want to know what you know. They're investing a lot of time and money in you. – johnny Aug 27 at 15:13
Interview standards change from company to company and business to business. Architect positions are more likely to have detailed interview questions. As for the current economic situation, that too has changed the world a bit... I saw it first-hand many timesback in the January timeframe. – Hardryv Aug 27 at 15:28
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FFS career questions are fine according to Jeff to those who insist on trying to close such questions. – cletus Aug 27 at 15:29
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@cletus: Is "I flubbed an interview, what's up with that?" really answerable, though? Estelle: Having blown an interview or two myself, you have my sympathies. – dmckee Aug 27 at 16:04
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In part, it's because these type of questions are easy to gather on the internet, and lend themselves to easy "checklist" interviews. Interviewing is a DIFFICULT thing to do well, and often the interviewer doesn't know how to get the answers to the REAL question, so they use this sort of approach. Probably, you don't want to work in such a place anyhow, right? ;-) – DarkSquid Aug 27 at 16:12
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closed as not programming related by Neil Butterworth, Noldorin, Justin Niessner, Mauricio Scheffer, John Saunders Aug 28 at 9:12

15 Answers

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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:

  1. Things you would know if you've used what you claim to know for a year; and
  2. 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.

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When I get asked in an interview to rate myself on something from 1-10, I ask the interviewer to give me an example of a 5 and an example of a 8 so that I can "calibrate" my scale to match theirs. I always tell them why I ask for the example. Since the 1-10 scale is a bit arbitrary, it's good to make sure you using the interviewers scale. It helps from rating myself to high or to low from the interviewers point of view. – Adam Porad Aug 28 at 4:02
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It can often be like this, especially for a senior position.

It may also be that the employer values the set of skills over the aptitude to learn. Many of them only check whether you know the stuff from a predefined list, which often does not contain any general questions about design, architecture and many other non-technical issues of software profession. That only speaks against them in my eyes.

I would advice you not worry too much but still work through following questions at your next opportunity.

Questions every good .NET developer should be able to answer?

Good C# Interview Questions for a Senior Dev Position

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"you know the stuff from a predefined list" ... you don't want that job anyway. – Martin Aug 27 at 20:05
@Martin: No, I don't really. – Developer Art Aug 28 at 7:32
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It depends on the the interviewer and company and their experience.

I would be wary if the interviewer didn't want to check your aptitude. It would indicate that the hiring manager has not hired well for the rest of the team.

If you are being hired as a chief architect then the hirer must be confident that you are the best candidate for the job. Why wouldn't they want to test you?

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Not very insightful. – Wahnfrieden Aug 27 at 15:16
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and yet not worthy of a down-vote either... – Hardryv Aug 27 at 15:32
I didn't down-vote. At least he updated his answer. – Wahnfrieden Aug 27 at 15:42
To be fair Wahnfrieden did have a point – John Nolan Aug 27 at 15:55
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IMHO, Detail questions are pointless. I work with SharePoint a lot and if someone were to ask timy details about the SharePoint object model, I wouldn;t know all of them either. The ASP.NET Framework and, in my case the SharePoint API, is so big, there's no way of knowing it all. Google is still a developer's best friend...

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yes, I believe as a senior level person they can expect you to know a little more specifics about the language you work in.

However, I would be surprised if they didn't ask more team or business knowledge related questions also.

I think the best thing to do in this situation is to sell your potential and try to talk in-depth about topics of the language you know alot about, so they know that while you may not know the exact answer to their nit-picky question, you can figure it out.

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Just be confident about your experience and be able to demonstrate what you have done in the past, also demonstrate that you are cabable of learning, the IT industry moves so fast, learning is a must.

EDIT: Darknight :)

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Don't sign your posts. Your posts are already signed automatically. It makes you look silly. – Wahnfrieden Aug 27 at 15:16
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its a force of habit... – Darknight Aug 27 at 15:19
--- and sometimes being silly can be so liberating. – Darknight Aug 27 at 15:21
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It's obnoxious, especially bolded. It's not the good kind of silly either :-) – Wahnfrieden Aug 27 at 15:41
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I know your right, just fooling around, however one could say that "One mans obnoxious-ness is another mans 'humility' " :p – Darknight Aug 27 at 15:48
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IMHO, the more senior the position, the more the organization expect to get the value "out of the box", so ability to learn or talent matters less than the ability to know everything on day one.

It's unfortunate because I'd rather have someone who researches the best solution then picks the one he did before and thinks is best.

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It really depends - on the job, the manager and also on the questions that were asked.

Job:

  • what kind of job is it? junior developer, senior developer, support, etc.

Manager:

  • What is he looking for? someone who knows where he can find the information or someone who knows all the information without looking it up

Questions:

  • what kind of questions have been asked? basic questions about programming concepts or questions about API/methods that can easily be found in the documentation?

In general I prefer to ask questions that show me if the candidate has a good understanding of the concepts etc., but I don't want to know if he memorized every single method.

A good article about interviewing and interview questions is the Guerrilla Guide to Interviewing v3.0 by Joel.

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Surprisingly little content, despite the pretty formatting and bolded words. – Wahnfrieden Aug 27 at 15:42
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When programmers are interviewing programmers or there is a test involved, it either consists of generic text book questions or can consists of specific questions to solve issues that they have had to come up with or by looking around the internet for difficult questions. Very specific questions require a very specific answer, but I guess if one can explain how they would solve it and explain their thinking, it might not need to be 100% syntactical or "compilable" to get right? I wouldnt worry too much, its arguably better to sometimes answer the question if you kind of know the answer than to leave it blank.

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I have had three interviews this year (lead Developer, DBA and Sr Developer) All three had no technical questions. All they wanted to know was experience regarding things like software upgrades and how you work in a team and how you build teams for the lead job. The focus was on experience not how many technical details you can regurgitate.

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This can sometimes be a sign of an inexperienced interviewer. Often when technical people are asked to conduct interviews they don't really put a lot of thought into what they should be looking for in a new coworker. They tend to focus on what they know, which is the intricate details of whatever tools they are using at the moment.

These kind of quizzes rarely provide any good insight into the capabilities of a prospective employee. As developers I think we often forget that while details are important, the ability to learn and to think critically about problems is often far more important.

Also, the interviewer may be asking questions related to what they think a good developer should know, but they are not being realistic about the position that is being filled and the real capabilities that are required to do the job.

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The real test is whether you'd still think the questions were stupid if you'd aced them all.

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The question boiled down to ...

I have no problem if I have to study and remember them. But the question is, is it always like this in the interview or just because the current economic situation?

1- Companies are certainly being more careful about hiring now, and depending on the company that might lead to more aggressive verification of technical knowledge. I would absolutely refresh my memory about technical details when interviewing for a (very specific) technical position. Why would it surprise you that they ask detailed ASP.NET questions when that is called out as a required skill set?

2- Remember that the interview is a two way street. You are evaluating the company as much as they are evaluating you. If they are asking you questions that don't make sense or seem irrelevant, quite possibly that means that they are idiots and you don't want to work there.

3- An interview is far more like an essay test than a multiple-choice test. It is quite possible to not get the technical answer exactly correct but still impress the interviewer with your intelligence and ability. Telling the interviewer something like "I don't remember the specifics of that technique as I haven't used it, but I know it is in this book" is far better than trying to fake it.

4- A good interviewer will ask some questions that you can't easily answer to see how you respond in those kinds of situations and to figure out the boundaries of your knowledge and experience.

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Perhaps the questions were asked to see how you handle the case of how do you know what you don't know. Can you say, "I don't know that, but I'd look something up on Google to find an answer," if that is the honest answer as opposed to trying to BS your way through an interview?

Alternatively there may be some places that would think if you have X years of experience then you should know A,B, and C about what you use.

I'd suggest brushing up on some technical stuff the day before the interview as a just in case practice.

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If you think you've blown the interview, there's probably no harm in sending a followup email, answering their questions in-depth after the fact, and explaining that though you weren't able to answer their questions to your satisfaction during the interview, you were able to come up with good answers after minimal research.

Done properly, it might put you back in the running.

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