vote up 13 vote down star
12

Were you asked any logic riddles in job interviews? Are you usually asking riddles in job interviews? What are they? (What are the answers..)

I was asked once how can you divide evenly 5 apples to 6 people without dividing any apple to 1/6 (or 1/12 or 1/18 etc.).

(Would love to hear answers in the comments, I'm not sure my answer was the best)

flag

80% accept rate
1  
I prefer citrus. – Kyle Rozendo Oct 27 at 7:08
3  
My first guess was split 3 in half and 2 in thirds... what's the right answer? – Tordek Oct 27 at 7:23
1  
The riddle is more to gauge your personality. Apparently you're analytical. I'd say something such as: "I just take the apples and run for the hills!" just to see the reaction of the interviewer. – Spoike Oct 27 at 8:12
1  
Depending on one's precise definition or interpretation of "divide evenly" I'd say either that the solution is technically to give every person 0 apples (with a remainder of 5) or, conversely, that the requirements are mutually exclusive (the solution set is empty). The question may be intended to see how you respond to unreasonable or ambiguous requirements. – Jim Dennis Oct 27 at 8:13
1  
This should be CW. – Ether Oct 27 at 15:38
show 3 more comments

10 Answers

vote up 14 vote down

According to this PDF

http://extension.usu.edu/aitc/lessons/pdf/apple_science.pdf

How can you evenly divide 6 apples among 7 people?

Make applesauce.

This would drive any logical person mad.

link|flag
+1 Tickled my frontal lobe. – whatnick Oct 28 at 9:01
vote up 13 vote down

Check out How Would You Move Mt Fuji: Microsoft's Cult of the Puzzle it explains some of the common types of puzzles in use and the best ways to approach problems like that. Also explains about the background of these types of puzzle and why HR people like to use them.

Basically, they test your ability to think laterally rather than give up on what appears to be an impossible situation. This means questioning initial assumptions, thinking about information in an abstract way, breaking a problem down logically and then explaining your reasoning. The key thing to remember is that there usually is a way to solve the puzzle correctly; if there isn't - like the Mt Fuji example or the "How many piano tuners are there in the world.." - then they are just curious about how you would logically approach the problem anyway. Put yourself in the hypothetical situation. Where do you start, what can you base your estimation on?

If the puzzle does have a correct answer, you have been given all the information you need to solve it. Think carefully about the wording of the puzzle and how you might extract information from the particular scenario you have been given - if Mt Fuji, for example, why that mountain in particular? What is distinguishing about that mountain that could make it easier or harder to estimate how you would move it? Where could you move it to, and how long would that take?

There are a number of sites around that try to compile lists of the puzzles asked by Microsoft that you could find by Googling or someone will paste the links. If I was interviewing for Microsoft I would definitely want to study those questions.

link|flag
vote up 8 vote down

You can read the article Job Interview 2.0: Now With Riddles! on TheDailyWTF. The comments in that post will also provide you with a lot of insight. All of them seem to conclude that riddles in a job interview are a bad idea, because people who are good at answering riddles, are not necessarily good programmers.

On the other hand, When I interviewed for my current job, my would be boss asked me one or two riddle type questions ("How many people do you think pass through the local airport each day?" being the only one I remember), but it was more to see how I went about solving problems than whether or not I arrived at the correct answer.

link|flag
Loved the article! Are there any more out there? With more examples? – Faruz Oct 27 at 7:38
2  
+1 riddles are about letting the interviewer se how you go on about solving problems… bonus points if you think out loudly outside the box (figuratively). – Spoike Oct 27 at 8:18
6  
There is a difference between riddles and estimation questions. Riddles usually have a trick and are easy to answer when you know the trick. Estimation questions are straight from engineering 101 are a good guage of critical thinking and making assumptions. – g. Oct 27 at 8:27
vote up 4 vote down

Kill one guy. Throw out an apple and divide by 3. Throw it in a blender!

Honestly I'd have frozen so bad. Even if they didn't make it a riddle (allowed 1/6th) I can't think without paper. What did you say?

link|flag
1  
I said you divide 3 apples to halves, and 2 apples to 1/3 and give each person 1 half and 1 third. But the look I got from the interviewer was that it was "an OK answer but not the best". – Faruz Oct 27 at 7:25
2  
Is the right answer "applesauce?" – trenton Oct 27 at 7:59
1  
the blender option made me laugh. – Stefano Borini Oct 27 at 9:57
vote up 2 vote down

Was reminded of another riddle: A plane leaves NY to LA (for the sake of the question, its 500 miles) at 500 mph. At the same time, a bird leaves LA to NY at 1000 mph. Everytime the bird reaches the plane -> it returns to LA, every time it reaches LA -> it goes back towards the plane etc.

The question was, what will be the distance covered by the bird by the time the plane reaches LA.

link|flag
1  
Some riddles just have irritating solutions that are out to trick you - this one is better though, as you just need to take a step back and frame the problems in simple terms. – Cybergibbons Oct 27 at 8:16
1  
Ends up, the answer is simple. You don't really care what the bird does. You just know that she's flying twice the distance the plane does, so it's 500*2 = 1000 miles. – Faruz Oct 27 at 8:25
I would be more interested in a bird that can fly at 1000mph. :D But yeah, the answer is that they both travelled for the same length of time, so the bird must have travelled twice as far as the plane. – DisgruntledGoat Oct 29 at 14:48
vote up 2 vote down

Since everyone is talking about the microsoft cult of riddles and I did a pretty fun Google interview I will throw this in.

Question 1: How would you find all road intersections in America without using any mathematics API's (just plain C) ?

Question 2: Suppose you had a very big graphics texture and you built all levels of mip-maps what would be the total size of your mipmapped texture ?

Question 3: How would you count all the words in the internet ?

Question 4: Do you have any questions for me ? - I asked what kind of car do you drive ?

link|flag
:) You asked the right question... How would you answer question #3? – Faruz Oct 28 at 9:27
Feed the google bot electricity :P . I went through the divide and conquer thingie - also beaware of chains and avoid replication. Boiled down to hashing strings and I went through string unique has algorithms. – whatnick Oct 28 at 13:38
vote up 1 vote down

Yes riddles areasked in job interviews to check the smartness and problem solving ability of the candidate.

For sites are mentioned below where you can find more riddles for job-interview:

Riddle Teasers

Puzzles

Programming Puzzles

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

What's the easiest way to bump up your Stackoverflow karma score?

link|flag
Someone actually asked this? – Arnis L. Oct 27 at 8:06
12  
Pfft, that's easy... just ask a subjective question open for debate and not make it community wiki. – Spoike Oct 27 at 8:15
My thoughts exactly ;) – trenton Oct 27 at 19:27
@Amis. No. I was hoping for a self-fulfilling prophecy. – trenton Oct 30 at 7:42
@Spoike. NOT community wiki. Darn! – trenton Oct 30 at 7:43
vote up 1 vote down

http://www.mindcipher.net/ has whole bunch.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Friend's question from his interview:

You have a deep golf-hole, 3 feet deep. How will you rescue the ball without using anything but your body? (For the sake of the question, you can spend 24 hours next to the hole but then you REALLY have to go home, with or without the ball).

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.